Daily Reflection: 7 March 2023

“Take your slumber, you’ll awake to eyes like your eyes

Two hands that fit in your hands, bone of your bone.” —Arcadian Wild

I recently learned in a podcast called “Why Catholic” that when God created the first woman, the word to describe her is ezer. It’s a Hebrew word that means “helper.” But, before you get ruffled by that meaning, it goes deeper. It usually is in reference to God’s aid or help and we know that God is not inferior to man.

It’s more of a word that means “the help of God” and that’s what’s used to describe what a woman would be for man. She is his equal in dignity, but she is able to serve beside him and with him, adding in her unique way to their care of creation.

“So the Lord God cast a deep sleep on the man, and while he was asleep, he took out one of his ribs…then built the rib that He had taken from the the man into a woman. When He brought her to the man, the man said:

‘This one at last is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh.’” Genesis 2:22-23

This is what God intended from the beginning, Catholic Pilgrims. This wasn’t designed and set up by man, but by God. Only God’s ways are always perfect.

Be blessed this Tuesday.

See more at CatholicPilgrim.net

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Daily Reflection: 18 Jan 2026

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Daily Reflection: 11 Jan 2026

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Today, in our reading from Matthew, the Trinity is revealed. At the Baptism of Our Lord, the Father speaks of His love for His Son, The Son gives us the Sacrament of Baptism, and the Holy Spirit descends like a dove letting us know that this action is sanctified. It is holy and pleasing to God. This is why we baptize in the Trinitarian formula and every single time we do the Sign of the Cross it is a beautiful reminder of our baptism and the saving grace we received from it. We must continue to cooperate with those graces throughout our life, but it/was our entrance into the family of God. So many things happen at baptism: You become a child of God and an heir to the Kingdom. Original sin is washed away and any actual sins if above the age of reason. Your soul is permanently marked as belonging to God. Your soul is filled with grace--the Divine life. You receive the three theological gifts of Faith, Hope, and Charity. You receive the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit. Jesus didn't need to be baptized, but He was showing us what He wanted us to do--this was the new covenantal ritual, circumcision would not be needed anymore. Baptism is the start of our Christian life with God, Catholic Pilgrims. Through it, we are brought into the life of the Blessed Trinity. Have a beautiful Sunday.

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Daily Reflection: 7 Jan 2025

My husband and I were talking to our daughter on the phone the other day and as we were talking, my husband told her about all the different Masses we had been to in one week. We went to our first Latin Mass the Sunday after Christmas. Then, we went to a funeral Mass in San Jose. The day after that, we went to a bilingual Mass at Mission San Juan Baptista--my 12th California Mission. And this past Sunday, we were back at our base chapel with all the familiar faces of our friends that we live with on base. It never ceases to amaze me how good it feels to just walk into a Catholic Church and know that I belong. I don't even have to know anybody. It's always nice when I do know people, but, even when I don't, I feel a great sense of belonging. As the Catholic Pilgrim, I've visited literally hundreds of Catholic Churches in the 16 years since I converted. I've been to Masses where the people spoke French, Turkish, Portuguese, Polish, and Spanish. Latin can now be added to the list. I've been to Mass in enormous cathedrals and in small caves. I've attended Mass outside with over a million Catholics and I attend daily Mass on base where sometimes it's just my son and me. In all of these different circumstances, I sense the universality of the Catholic Church. Even when I'm surrounded by people that don't look like me, I feel such a connection because of our Faith and our one shared Feast at the altar--the Eucharist, which is Jesus Christ. What a blessing to be part of this one, big, universal family, Catholic Pilgrims. Live the Faith boldly and travel well this Wednesday.

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