The Most Impressive Eucharistic Miracle? - Fr. Mark Goring, CC

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  • @guillermodeleon3547
    @guillermodeleon35472 жыл бұрын

    The most important and greatest miracle is the Holy Eucharist, the body of Christ, the Paschal Lamb who takes away the sins of the world, the living God risen from the dead. -St Sharbel ✝️

  • @ElCid48

    @ElCid48

    2 жыл бұрын

    why we should receive HIM on the tongue while we kneel. and receive HIM without being in mortal sin.

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ElCid48 John 6:56-58 "Whoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood remains in Me, and I in him. Just as the living Father sent Me and I live because of the Father, so also the one who feeds on Me will live because of Me. This is the bread that came down from heaven. Unlike your fathers, who ate the manna and died, the one who eats this bread will live forever.” John 17:22-23 "I have given them the glory You gave Me, so that they may be one as We are one-I in them and You in Me-that they may be perfectly united, so that the world may know that You sent Me and have loved them just as You have loved Me."

  • @tonygville2969

    @tonygville2969

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ElCid48 I only receive Jesus while kneeing and on my tongue 🙏 Viva Cristo Rey 🙏 And sadly I have been denied 😕 And I'm very unworthy, but it's The Holy Blood of Jesus Christ who Covers me 🙏😘

  • @maximopablo4295

    @maximopablo4295

    2 жыл бұрын

    Amen brother

  • @rosemaryclarke6250

    @rosemaryclarke6250

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful. Thank you

  • @patriciaconiglio6717
    @patriciaconiglio67172 жыл бұрын

    With Jesus nothing is impossible.

  • @science1941

    @science1941

    2 жыл бұрын

    or *Quantum mechanics, remember for the last 3K years of recorded history, only the *Math & science Blokes went to higher learniing the same Blokes who ran the *Romans & the same Blokes that moved into 1st Century Rome now my cousins the Catholics, & the same Blokes who put the *Bible together. That's where*scinece comes up with all the stuff, *I can't believe peeps haven't noticed that hmm*Cainite Priest here, *Science just proved what our Jesus said a long time ago, we came from the earth & going back, Science just proved our *ATOMS never stop vibrating *when our consciousness leaves the body & goes back to Jesus, we just vibrate a different way & back into the earth we go. Ta-da. By the by, instant *Nobel for the math equation for consciousness. Believe me, the Blokes have been working on that for years & years.

  • @mercyme8299

    @mercyme8299

    2 жыл бұрын

    Before receiving the Blessed Eucharist pray this ‘Jesus your body knew of no sin and disease. Take away my sin and disease’ . A man suffering from AIDS was given 6 weeks to live and he would pray this before receiving The Holy Eucharist. He was healed from the disease.

  • @tonygville2969

    @tonygville2969

    2 жыл бұрын

    And we must remember that with our Loved One's who have been conned into receiving the JAB 🙏 As a life long addict, and I know that I know that I know that I've taken posion when I thought it was something else. Anyone who has been involved with street drugs have done the same, and it's only the Holy Grace of God that we are still here. I must remember that when I get stressed about my loved ones who have received the jabs 😕 NOTHING IS IMPOSSIBLE WITH GOD 🙏 NOTHING 🙏 VIVA CRISTO REY 🙏 Greater is HE who is within YOU, than the bioweapon jab. PERIOD 👍 Jesus I will Trust in You 🙏

  • @tonygville2969

    @tonygville2969

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mercyme8299 Praise God Almighty 🙏 I used to work at South Miami Hospital when AIDS HIV Hit Miami Hard and Fauci was a CURSE WORD back then too 🤨 I can't believe he's not in solitary confinement for life 😕 But I really like your prayer and I hope you don't mind that I use it 🙏👍 Viva Cristo Rey 🙏 Love the Clear and Direct Prayers 👍🙏 Happy Father's Day to all the Dad's 🙏

  • @mercyme8299

    @mercyme8299

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tonygville2969 please say this prayer all the time. Pass it on to family and friends. I heard this from a preacher called Aneel Aranaha. His testimony is a true miracle.

  • @cheraybisaya
    @cheraybisaya2 жыл бұрын

    What a blessing, only God can truly satisfy our longing, desires and emptiness!

  • @mistyviolet3825

    @mistyviolet3825

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yesssssss 🕯🙏🏻🕯

  • @drifterman319

    @drifterman319

    2 жыл бұрын

    Only the Truth.

  • @nicolelandry7448
    @nicolelandry74482 жыл бұрын

    Happy Father’s Day Father Goring🙏🏻😁🙏🏻🎁!!!

  • @judyheller8814

    @judyheller8814

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 true, but he is a spiritual father to many.

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @judyheller8814

    @judyheller8814

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 The priest in a way is like Jesus. He blesses the Holy Eucharist as a sacrifice for our sins like a priest. He intercedes to God on our behalf to forgive our sins. Father Goring gives us spiritual teaching that brings us closer to God the Father. The Holy Spirit is with us on Earth, but sometimes we need a representative of Jesus in human form.

  • @judyheller8814

    @judyheller8814

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 thanks for your concern over my salvation. You are wrong I do need someone to help guide me to Heaven, so I can be a better person. Remember the people I look up to are the Kardashians and the Real Housewives franchise. As far as the sacrifice goes at mass goes, we are to remember the sacrifice Jesus made on the cross for our salvation. The bread we eat is actually Jesus and the wine we drink is Jesus blood. Before Jesus, the Jewish priests would eat the animal sacrifices the people made to God in reparations for their sins. Look I tried I believe six different Protestant churches and I never found God in those churches. I did not find anything that I could believe in. In many of them, I was the only person who actually read the Bible.

  • @fitlw

    @fitlw

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 hopefully you never called your biological father "father".

  • @lindamcnelis6374
    @lindamcnelis63742 жыл бұрын

    Happy Father’s Day, Father Mark. Please keep shepherding us, your flock. Praise be Jesus Christ. We are so blessed to have you with us during these very different times

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @sharonthompson8061

    @sharonthompson8061

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@leannebernard2185 Thank you for taking the time to provide that very comprehensive information. You explained it in terms anyone can understand. 👍💕🙏🏻✝️

  • @lukemccann

    @lukemccann

    2 жыл бұрын

    Waowza 👌🏼👌🏼🙏🏼

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sharonthompson8061 I am passing on what I have received.

  • @catholiclife9304
    @catholiclife93042 жыл бұрын

    I can anyone not believe? Jesus is trying to show us he is here...

  • @riverwildcat1
    @riverwildcat12 жыл бұрын

    This highlights the stark fact that only the Catholic Church is so rich in miracles, revelation, visions, and signs; not to mention saints. As a former Protestant, I can say without question they're strongly biased against such things as sanguine hosts which have been transformed. If three Protestant children told their parents they'd seen the Virgin Mary, it's almost a certainty that they'd be shunned until they recanted. No priest or authority would take their side. These attitudes toward the Eucharist and the saints turned me to the Holy Church.

  • @vinceschenden7349

    @vinceschenden7349

    2 жыл бұрын

    Welcome!

  • @michaelibach9063

    @michaelibach9063

    2 жыл бұрын

    God converted me out of atheism like He converted Paul from Judaism. For ten years I wandered around Protestantism. Pastor after pastor, “that wasn’t God” “God doesn’t do that anymore” “God only speaks through scripture”, blah blah blah. Here’s what I say to that, if God doesn’t speak to you, how do you know your interpretation of scripture is correct?

  • @ElizaLL0621

    @ElizaLL0621

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have also experience such complete shutting out of anything supernatural among these non-Catholic "Christians". My priest went so far as to tell me not to engage them in any discussions about the Virgin Mary or Eucharist, since most of them are not even Christian!

  • @vinceschenden7349

    @vinceschenden7349

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelibach9063 That's just it! Regarding the various "interpretations" of Scripture, there are--as of the most recent count I heard--35,000+ denominations (churches) in Christianity. How many did Christ found? ONE, that which we today call the Catholic Church. And as to interpreting scripture, you have to have someone to be the final authority in doing so. That would be the Magisterium, or teaching authority, of His Church--else you'll splinter off into another "church".

  • @michaelibach9063

    @michaelibach9063

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@vinceschenden7349 my conversion to Catholicism was also like Paul’s. I was raised antiCatholic so I avoided orthodoxy and Catholicism, but spent ten years studying Protestant teachings. Finding no rest, finding no Protestant denomination that was actually agreeing with what the Holy Spirit was teaching me personally. God started pushing me towards orthodoxy and Catholicism. Surprise, surprise, everything I had been taught about Catholicism in Protestantism was wrong and Catholicism lined up very well. I intellectually converted to Catholicism on the feast of Saint Paul’s conversion and was confirmed Paul when I entered the church. I hadn’t selected a name by the time my confirmation came around. God whispered that to me when the priest asked what name I wanted. It was literally the only name in my head.

  • @terriomalley181
    @terriomalley1812 жыл бұрын

    *Happy Feast of Corpus Christi* ♥️ “I am the living bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever; and the bread that I will give is my flesh for the life of the world.” (John 6:51) ♥️ “There He is: King of Kings and Lord of Lords, hidden in the bread. To this extreme has He humbled Himself for love of you.” - St. Josemaria Escriva ♥️ Viva Cristo Rey! ♥️

  • @arryserrano4373

    @arryserrano4373

    2 жыл бұрын

    🕊🙏🏼♥️

  • @michelemcdermott75
    @michelemcdermott752 жыл бұрын

    How Blessed we Catholics are🙏❤️

  • @paulom1315
    @paulom13152 жыл бұрын

    Viva Christo Rei Eucharist and Sacraments should never be locked away from Jesus's People... Fr. MARK FOR BISHOP...

  • @LauraMcAleer79

    @LauraMcAleer79

    2 жыл бұрын

    The Bishop for Companion of the cross which would be Father Mark's Bishop is amazing too. I was blessed to have him as a Priest at my church for a year. Bishop Christian ✝️

  • @businessacc179
    @businessacc1792 жыл бұрын

    If I remember correctly all the Eucharistic miracles that have been studied, the tissue was shown to be of a male human heart, of the left ventricle. The blood types always match and everything. So amazing 💕💖 Viva Cristo Rey!!

  • @AJ-jp7fz

    @AJ-jp7fz

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hey Kevin, if you’re interested, check out “Inspired By Carlos Acutis - Scientific Evidence of Eucharistic Miracles” by JoyofFaith on KZread. This video explains the studies and results from doctors/researchers who analyzed various Eucharistic miracles. God Bless.

  • @AJ-jp7fz

    @AJ-jp7fz

    2 жыл бұрын

    The channel is actually called “The Joy of the Faith”

  • @businessacc179

    @businessacc179

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kevinkelly2162 indeed there have been many- I have seen some even with my own eyes 😍 The dna indicates the gender. They have been very well checked and verified. Do a little research- you just may be surprised. In fact scientific study is a necessary part of any event being determined a true miracle. Pretty amazing. God bless!

  • @themonsterunderyourbed9408

    @themonsterunderyourbed9408

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kevinkelly2162 Tissue contains DNA. DNA makes up our chromosomes. Chromosomes determine your gender. Every single cell in your body contains your entire genetic code. If someone could map out the entire genome of those tissue samples, you could tell the race, eye color, hair color, etc of the person.

  • @AJ-jp7fz

    @AJ-jp7fz

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kevinkelly2162 Hi Kevin, did you get a chance to watch the full video? It isn't based on the KZread channel's own personal opinion… he is relaying facts, pictures, videography, and findings from scientific studies conducted by doctors, some of whom he even interviews in this video. He also provides links in the description to the full interviews with doctors and published papers of the miraculous findings. It is all pretty amazing!

  • @MelaniesManicures
    @MelaniesManicures2 жыл бұрын

    Love that Jesus wants us to know He shed His blood for us and He can truly dwell in us physically and spiritually in the Eucharist.

  • @arryserrano4373

    @arryserrano4373

    2 жыл бұрын

    🕊🙏🏼♥️

  • @mediterranean3002

    @mediterranean3002

    2 жыл бұрын

    Amen!

  • @irenedsouza794
    @irenedsouza7942 жыл бұрын

    For the Lord nothing is impossible 🙏 he is our real God not wood or stone 🙏 🙌 thank you fr for your holyness may you always be strong in God's love to proclaim good news all over the world 🌎 I tell my people about you fr to put on and listen the word fr have blessed Sunday 🙌 from Bombay.

  • @terriomalley181
    @terriomalley1812 жыл бұрын

    *Happy Father’s Day Father Mark!!* Thank you so much for being such a wonderful spiritual father, as you lead and guide us all to our Father in Heaven. Hugging you with my prayers. 🙏🏼 God bless you always!! ♥️ Viva Cristo Rey! ♥️

  • @terriomalley181

    @terriomalley181

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Cindy Maureen - Thank you Cindy. God bless you too. You and your mom are in my prayers. 🙏🏼

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @mags9

    @mags9

    2 жыл бұрын

    JPD, if you read Luke 15:11-32 you will see Jesus himself use the word father 9 times in the story of the prodigal son. Only one example of our Lord and savior using the word “father” in the Bible. A man will leave his father and mother an cleave to his wife, have you read Mt 1:2 “ Abraham became the “father of Issac, and so on through the Genealogy of Jesus. My 10:35. Or the reading of “what father would hand his son a snake. Plus many more references to earthly “fathers”

  • @mags9

    @mags9

    2 жыл бұрын

    JPD correct that’s why when reading scared scriptures one must take into account context. As Jesus said to Peter you will head His church, when He gave him the keys, therefore the person at your local church would be the father of it, not the whole universal church that Jesus started. It’s a respect issue. Which by the way Jesus didn’t create many different denominations, just one universal church, and didn’t relinquish the keys to anyone else. Same goes for taking oaths, see Mt5:33. Do you swear to tell the truth…..

  • @cindyrobertson3798
    @cindyrobertson37982 жыл бұрын

    Jesus promised to be with us to the end of time. He is with us in the eucharistic miracle of the mass

  • @irishman.
    @irishman.2 жыл бұрын

    Our God is an awesome God...

  • @sdDiadel
    @sdDiadel8 ай бұрын

    God is mi Idol and only HERO AMÉN

  • @annekowallcheck7436
    @annekowallcheck74362 жыл бұрын

    Hence why the Eucharist deserves to always be handled with the utmost reverence hence no one but a priest certainly not your neighbour and not not in our hands.

  • @arryserrano4373

    @arryserrano4373

    2 жыл бұрын

    More reverence was shown for Most Holy Himself 🕊🔥🕊🔥🕊🔥🕊

  • @Herdingcats1917
    @Herdingcats19172 жыл бұрын

    Was in town visiting from Montreal today and made a special point to attend mass at your church. Wonderful service father. So much strong energy. I loved it! Your parishioners are lucky to have you and you them. And it Was nice saying hello in person

  • @arryserrano4373

    @arryserrano4373

    2 жыл бұрын

    🕊🙏🏼♥️

  • @amandawoods847
    @amandawoods8472 жыл бұрын

    Many thanks with important Sunday reflections, may we all enjoy our day with the gospel, and appreciate the thoughtfulness Father Mark shares & inspires here, greatly enhances our love of daily prayers 💞🕊

  • @amascia8327
    @amascia83272 жыл бұрын

    We -- my wife and I -- love you and your work. You are remembered in our Rosary daily. ... And, still, the most impressive Eucharistic Miracle is our reception of Jesus at Mass today... not to diminish these others, of course. 🖒🤠

  • @carolradlinger8661
    @carolradlinger86612 жыл бұрын

    Blessed and happy Corpus Christi, and happy Father’s Day Father Mark, we love and appreciate your inspirations ✝️🙏🥰

  • @pcb8639
    @pcb86392 жыл бұрын

    Happy Feast of Corpus Christi, Happy Father's Day and God Bless

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @lindamartin6798
    @lindamartin67982 жыл бұрын

    Happy Father's Day, Father Mark! Blessed Feast of Corpus Christi! Continued prayers for you and all of our clergy. God bless!

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @leannebernard2185
    @leannebernard21852 жыл бұрын

    Happy Father's Day Father Mark! Viva Cristo Rey!!!

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @LauraMcAleer79
    @LauraMcAleer792 жыл бұрын

    What's interesting are the year's of this miracle 🤔 My daughter you met at Easter time is getting her first commioun next Sunday ❤🙏

  • @mirianshewfelt9256
    @mirianshewfelt92562 жыл бұрын

    Happy Father’s Day to all our Priests. Thank you

  • @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567
    @ShelaghDonnellyMinist75672 жыл бұрын

    All Glory and Honour and Praise and Thank you to You Lord God The Heavenly🕊️ Father and Your Son The Lord and Saviour Jesus🙏🏻❤️ Christ the Lord Amen On this Wonderful and Most Holy Feast Day of Corpus Christi💒✝️❤️ Have a Lovely Blessed Sunday everyone. Happy Corpus Christi Happy Fathers Day to My Dad❤️ and All Fathers❤️ around the world Viva Cristo Rey

  • @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567

    @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Maybe you might like to read my message Thoroughly again before you judge incorrectly 🤔

  • @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567

    @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 I can wish Happy Fathers day to all who are Fathers with children Fathers around the world if I want Leave me alone😔 The Lord God is my only Judge 🙏🏻

  • @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567

    @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 God Bless to you and All of your Family🙏🏻👪🕊️ Happy Feast Day of Corpus Christi 💒✝️❤️ kzread.info/dash/bejne/fpaWp5mQYJmcdbg.html Viva Cristo Rey

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567

    @ShelaghDonnellyMinist7567

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@leannebernard2185 God Bless you and your Wonderful family Today Tommorrow and Always Dear Leanne🙏🏻👪❤️❤️❤️ Have a Great Week in advance Best wishes and Greetings from Ireland🇮🇪 Shelagh Happy Feast Day of Corpus Christi to you and All of your Family This is for Corpus Christi 🙏🏻👪❤️🕊️🎵 kzread.info/dash/bejne/fpaWp5mQYJmcdbg.html Viva Cristo Rey

  • @Cpripri85
    @Cpripri852 жыл бұрын

    MY LORD AND MY GOD PRAISE BE JESUS CHRIST NOW AND FOREVER

  • @saintpaul2337
    @saintpaul23372 жыл бұрын

    I've been to the Church where it happened... because of that miracle I met my husband. But the most amazing thing about the Church is that it has many statues, but I think maybe one or two are of Saints, the rest are of His Mother. And the biggest one was of our Sorrowful Mother. I smiled at our Lord, the most Powerful mamma's boy I know! 🥰 Like St. Maximilian Kolbe said , not to be afraid to love her with all our might, because we will never love her as much as Jesus does.

  • @gdgggggg

    @gdgggggg

    2 жыл бұрын

    Which church is this ?

  • @denisedube2340
    @denisedube2340 Жыл бұрын

    The Living Bread of His Sacred Heart 💕🙏

  • @mariyadepeche1658
    @mariyadepeche16582 жыл бұрын

    Happy Corpus Christi, Father. 💕💖🕊🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼📿✝️🎼🎶I hope you have a joyous day! Viva Christo Rey!

  • @Abby-GodLovesYou
    @Abby-GodLovesYou2 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful 🌷 Thank you Father Mark 🌷 Blessed Carlo Acutis 🌷 Pray for Us 🌷🌷🌷

  • @Abby-GodLovesYou

    @Abby-GodLovesYou

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Cindy Maureen God bless you Cindy! 🌷🌹🌻

  • @Abby-GodLovesYou

    @Abby-GodLovesYou

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Cindy Maureen Beautiful!🌻🌻🌻

  • @brendamyc3057
    @brendamyc30572 жыл бұрын

    The Eucharistic Heart of God is the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

  • @gloriafarley5105
    @gloriafarley51052 жыл бұрын

    What a beautiful, inspirational story! Praise be to Jesus Christ now and forever! Thank you Father Mark for all your thought provoking videos. Viva Christo Rey! ❤️🙏

  • @vivacristorey9108
    @vivacristorey91082 жыл бұрын

    I started coming back to the Church about 24 years ago and *always took Communion in the hand* It wasn't until the pandemic hit that I began to know more about the Sacred Body of Christ and Eucharistic miracles that opened my eyes - I began to feel nervous and uneasy thinking that small pieces of His Body stayed in my hands and would fall to the floor so I stopped, completely, receiving Holy Communion since everywhere around me was given in the hand... Thankfully, after months, I found a Mass where I can receive with devotion and on the tongue His Sacred Body. I have read many comments of people witnessing or knowing of desecrations : the Holy Eucharist on the heel of a shoe (!!!) people swiping churches finding Holy Eucharists on the floor, one story involved a First Communion where the Host was on the floor with the teeth mark of the child (it's not the child fault but apparently, the child bit the Host didn't like and threw the Host on the ground) _It is scary so many sacrileges_ . Our Blessed Mother warned us in Garabandal : " *less and less importance is being given to the Eucharist* " May God help us✝️🛐

  • @themonsterunderyourbed9408

    @themonsterunderyourbed9408

    2 жыл бұрын

    I dropped the eucharist once. I was horrified. I took communion in hand and took down my mask to put the Eucharist in my mouth. As I raised my hand, the eucharist hit my mask and broke in half. I picked it up right away and put it in my mouth. I made sure there was no crumb left. I spoke to the priest after mass. He didn't seem too concerned after I told him that I made sure there were no pieces left on the floor.

  • @kentd4762
    @kentd47622 жыл бұрын

    So much of the world, especially our Protestant brothers and sisters, are missing so much by having discarded the truth about the Eucharist. Pity. Come Holy Spirit and renew every human's heart.

  • @eman2498
    @eman24982 жыл бұрын

    Blessed be God forever! Viva Christo Rey! He is alive and with us, always! Never despair in His Glory and Power.

  • @josephzammit8483

    @josephzammit8483

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/g6yiu9ZygZa_pKw.html

  • @josephincorvaja4336
    @josephincorvaja43362 жыл бұрын

    Please bless me with your Precious Blood Jesus.

  • @DadaDios213
    @DadaDios2132 жыл бұрын

    Sacred heart from God.. Viva Cristo!!

  • @lisamarie426
    @lisamarie4262 жыл бұрын

    Praised be Jesus Christ forever!! ❤🙏🙌🙏

  • @purplegreen5436
    @purplegreen54362 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful moment to start my day. Thank you Fr Mark

  • @cosmicexaminer1600
    @cosmicexaminer16002 жыл бұрын

    From what I understand the blood in the Eucharistic Miracles is type AB, which is also the blood type on the Shroud of Turin.

  • @billyhomeyer7414

    @billyhomeyer7414

    2 жыл бұрын

    With only a Y chromosome- yet most still have doubts - oh WE of little faith. Should all change our name to Thomas...✝️🕊✝️

  • @cosmicexaminer1600

    @cosmicexaminer1600

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@billyhomeyer7414 Really? Wow. Not XY, just Y?

  • @billyhomeyer7414

    @billyhomeyer7414

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cosmicexaminer1600 yup, look it up. Plenty of places to find out. The shroud and examined hosts all have only the one chromosome donated by Mary

  • @catherinepinckney6296
    @catherinepinckney62962 жыл бұрын

    Happy Fathers Day to God Our Father & to all our Fathers & Spiritual Fathers especially you Fr Mark!

  • @kwkw5711
    @kwkw57112 жыл бұрын

    Afternoon father. God bless

  • @donnamariebradley8283
    @donnamariebradley82832 жыл бұрын

    We are so blest that when we receive the Eucharist we are receiving the body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ.

  • @juanaguitierrez1801
    @juanaguitierrez18012 жыл бұрын

    Happy Father’s Day Fr Goring May this be a joyful and wonderful day and always 🙏🏻❤️🙏🏻

  • @ChristinaMacDonald777
    @ChristinaMacDonald7772 жыл бұрын

    And Thank You for telling everything in detail and with the scientific studies! What more do people want to believe!

  • @zencombatinstitute
    @zencombatinstitute2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Fr. Mark. May God grant you strength to continue your important work.

  • @masterartist6786
    @masterartist67862 жыл бұрын

    Thankyou Fr. Mark I appreciate your videos Happy Corpus Christi Day we are so Blessed By Jesus he gave us and gives us so many gifts like this day to feel Truly Blessed and Happy Praise Be Jesus Viva Christo Rey Glorious Corpus Christi Day To All Hallelujah

  • @timclancy871
    @timclancy8712 жыл бұрын

    The love of Jesus for us knows no bounds. If only we could love him half as much in return. Thank you so much Father. Truly inspirational!

  • @mattberg916
    @mattberg9162 жыл бұрын

    My Lord and my God! ALLELUIA!

  • @glennrogers5568
    @glennrogers55682 жыл бұрын

    Praised be Jesus Christ! Happy Feast Day.

  • @jimvermeer9451
    @jimvermeer94512 жыл бұрын

    Our blood is holy as children of God. With Jesus nothing is in possible hallelujah ❤️✝️♥️

  • @myaustrianfarmhouse
    @myaustrianfarmhouse2 жыл бұрын

    Amen! Our lord is truly present in the holy communion 🙏🙏✝️✝️

  • @mariabastone3244
    @mariabastone32442 жыл бұрын

    Praise God!

  • @victoriah.6970
    @victoriah.69702 жыл бұрын

    Dear Fr. Goring, We were lucky enough to attend Mass this past Sunday at your parish and hear your preach about this Eucharistic miracle first hand!! We felt truly blessed to be there. What a beautiful congregation, the faith and church were visibly thriving! And the Communion rails, just amazing! God bless you!!

  • @hannahwessell5905
    @hannahwessell59052 жыл бұрын

    Happy Corpus Christi father.. Viva Christore

  • @lizzierixom1676
    @lizzierixom16762 жыл бұрын

    And YES HAPPY Father's Day Fr Mark

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @estherlimon4150
    @estherlimon41502 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful message from on such a great day. Happy Father’s Day ! Father Mark.

  • @paulinanungchim2005
    @paulinanungchim20052 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your amazing message about the Eucharistic miracle and Happy Feast of Corpus Christi. God bless you Fr. Mark Goring.

  • @mistyviolet3825
    @mistyviolet38252 жыл бұрын

    Just finished your Holy Mass on your Parish channel Father Goring and what a great blessing indeed to be a part of that beautiful Holy Mass on THE FEAST OF 🤍CORPUS CHRISTI! May our LORD GOD YESHUA BLESS us, The USA 🇺🇸 CANADA 🇨🇦 AND our children….. 🕯🕯🕯 ALLELUIA ALLELUIA!!!

  • @mariapepper6175
    @mariapepper61752 жыл бұрын

    Jesus said He would be with us always. Thank you, Fr. Mark. Happy Feast day and Happy Father's day!! 🙏

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @mkn2929
    @mkn29292 жыл бұрын

    Wow. 13,000 views in 7 hours! Job well done Father! God be praised forever! I remember when after a conversion experience I stumbled upon Eucharistic miracles and was astounded. What struck me was this question to myself: 'Why, having grown up going to Catholic grammar school, have I never heard of these? Why did I not hear of all the miracles surrounding our faith? Why did I hear a priest saying in a homily; 'We don't need miracles...' well, I don't know of anyone else but my conversion was NOTHING short of a miracle in of itself! Praise God forever! Not because I was so great, but because of the greatness of God. I am nothing without Him and still am nothing and THAT is the way, the truth and the life. Jesus I thank thee for all you do. I can never thank you enough. Amen.

  • @George-ri5pr
    @George-ri5pr2 жыл бұрын

    Viva Cristo Rey ❤️ Happy Corpus Cristi Day and Padres Mark 😀 Happy Father’s Day to You and all Fathers in this world. My God bless us all❤️✝️

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @Gudregerar7
    @Gudregerar72 жыл бұрын

    Amen! Oh my beloved Jesus!!! 🙏❤️

  • @hacker4chn841
    @hacker4chn8412 жыл бұрын

    Happy Corpus Christi Father!

  • @ericmadsen7470
    @ericmadsen74702 жыл бұрын

    Happy Father's Day Fr. Mark and have a glorious Corpus Christi.

  • @joanne4120
    @joanne41202 жыл бұрын

    Thank You Fr Mark! Happy Corpus Christi! To you also!🙏🌹😇

  • @britviking5960
    @britviking59602 жыл бұрын

    Thanks be to God

  • @gabytere75
    @gabytere752 жыл бұрын

    Hi, I live in Mexico and i didn’t know about this miracle 😍🥰🥰🥰 viva Cristo Rey 🤴 God bless you

  • @Heart_on_Fire1
    @Heart_on_Fire12 жыл бұрын

    Very special miracle and Corpus Cristi celebration indeed. My profound conversation came about after witnessing miracles during the Eucharist Adoration in Medjugorje 15 years ago. God is good all the time especially for sinners to convert.

  • @lucysoevyn8004
    @lucysoevyn80042 жыл бұрын

    The greatest love story ever told is found in a tiny white Host. God Blesses

  • @josephonuh4515
    @josephonuh45152 жыл бұрын

    Happy corpus christi.

  • @peterf7821
    @peterf78212 жыл бұрын

    Love this video. God bless you Viva Cristo Rey! Viva La Virgen!

  • @davidmontez5971
    @davidmontez59712 жыл бұрын

    May the most precious blood of Jesus heal the wounds in the sacred heart of Jesus Christ.

  • @ChristinaMacDonald777
    @ChristinaMacDonald7772 жыл бұрын

    Father Goring! Thank You for making this video! People need to know about this all over the world.May God Bless and Protect You For All You Do In Jesus Name!

  • @lollylolly483
    @lollylolly4832 жыл бұрын

    ThankYou Father for sharing ....I BELIEVE !!!!! all the way from South Africa

  • @Joyce-kz8vp
    @Joyce-kz8vp2 жыл бұрын

    I believe Jesus is truly present in the Eucharist 100%, body, soul, blood and Divinity. i receive the Eucharist daily for the graces this offers-the strength to get thru life and the spiritual intimate connection with Jesus.

  • @gladysruiz258
    @gladysruiz2582 жыл бұрын

    Awwww 😍😍😍🥰🥰🥰 I love you my Jesus !!

  • @lovetruth5733
    @lovetruth57332 жыл бұрын

    It’s a miracle really. Thankyou JESUS CHRIST.

  • @catherineholmes2254
    @catherineholmes22542 жыл бұрын

    Blessed be God Forever❤️Happy Fathers Day Fr Mark❤️🌹🙏🏻God Bless

  • @anc974
    @anc9742 жыл бұрын

    Why is this not front page news every day? (Rhetorical)

  • @themonsterunderyourbed9408

    @themonsterunderyourbed9408

    2 жыл бұрын

    The obvious is that it's the devil that controls the media.

  • @margaretoconnor7077

    @margaretoconnor7077

    2 жыл бұрын

    ❤️

  • @nj5023
    @nj50232 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Jesus! ❤️

  • @palmina77italiana
    @palmina77italiana2 жыл бұрын

    happy father's Day Fr. Mark Goring :) I saw a rainbow in the sky today no rain and clear skies...I took it as a sign :)

  • @KathRyan

    @KathRyan

    2 жыл бұрын

    A sign of God's love?

  • @palmina77italiana

    @palmina77italiana

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@KathRyan Maybe ? :) ...or just precipitation in the clouds lol

  • @deborahbaker1171
    @deborahbaker11712 жыл бұрын

    May Carlos be blessed by God as a saint! Such a love he had for Jesus and Him gifting us these miracles for our hard hearts….

  • @uteme
    @uteme2 жыл бұрын

    Happy Father's Day to all the good, decent, loving & truly faith-filled priests; thank you for all you impart to us!

  • @leannebernard2185

    @leannebernard2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jpd4676 Question: Often non-Catholics ask, Why do Catholics call their priests "father"? They call our attention to Matthew 23:9, "You must call no one on earth your father." Answer: A Catholic might respond, “How do you refer to your mother’s husband? What do you call him?” If a Catholic is wrong in calling his priest “father,” then everyone who refers to his own natural father as “father” is also in the wrong. Both usages would be prohibited by a literal interpretation of Jesus’ words. Jesus came not to abolish but to fulfill the Law of the Old Covenant (Mt 5:17). If in Matthew 23:9 he literally forbids us even to acknowledge our natural fathers as our fathers, how can we keep the fourth commandment (“honor your father and your mother”)? Taken literally, Jesus’ words in Matthew 23:9 contradict his claim in Matthew 5:17, but we know that the Son of God never contradicts himself. Look again at the passage in which Jesus says we must call no one “father.” In contrast to the attitudes of the Pharisees and others, Jesus is specifying the qualities Christian leaders must exhibit (Mt 23:1-12). The Pharisees aspired to being called “rabbi” (or “master” or “teacher”), leaders of schools of thought. Among the schools headed by teachers called “rabbi” there were divergences of belief, some of them in actual contradiction. A similar situation prevailed with regard to the term “father” (in Aramaic, abba, a title of honor). The title was given to well-known Jewish religious authorities of the past. As with “rabbi,” so with “father.” The term designated the progenitor of a particular, even contradictory, interpretation of the Jewish faith. Why did Jesus declare that no Christian leader is to be called “rabbi” or “father”? He was telling us that no leader may set up his own interpretation of the Catholic faith and seek followers for his opinions. The role of leaders in Christ’s Church is faithfully to hand on Christ’s teaching received through the apostles (Mt 28:19). The words of the apostle Paul epitomize the essential attitude of the Christian teacher: “This is what I received from the Lord and in turn passed on to you” (1 Cor 11:23). Paul condemns in the church at Corinth “these slogans you have, like ‘I am for Paul,’ ‘I am for Apollos,’ ‘I am for Cephas’ (1 Cor 1:12). The history of Protestantism is essentially the story of this very process-the unending proliferation of sectarian groups, saying “I am for Martin Luther” or “I am for John Calvin” or “I am for John Wesley.” The World Christian Encyclopedia (David B. Barrett, ed.; Oxford, 1982) reported that in 1980 there were 20,780 distinguishable Christian denominations in the world. Moreover, at the time the encyclopedia was published, an average of 270 new denominations were springing up each year-more than five every week. If that rate has continued, then there are over 25,000 denominations today. Every single one of these competing, contradicting denominations was formed by some person who said, in effect, “Call me ‘Master,’ call me ‘Teacher’; I will tell you what the Christian truth is!” Jesus foresaw this problem and provided the means for avoiding it. In the passage under discussion, he tells us, “you have only one teacher, the Christ.” And how are we to be taught by our one Teacher? By the means he provided. He founded the Church on the apostles and their successors, with a special role for Peter, the Rock, the earthly head of the Church. A Catholic knows that when the Church Christ founded speaks solemnly, Christ himself is speaking through her to each member. Every follower of Christ wants to know the truth, for “the truth [and only the truth] will make you free” (Jn 8:22). For acquiring that truth in its fullness, the Catholic Church established by Jesus Christ offers the only alternative to the chaos of ever-expanding denominationalism. Incidentally, both Old and New Testaments associate priesthood with fatherhood (cf. Jgs 17:10, 18:19, and 1 Cor 4:15), but in this case, Jesus’ command is not violated. Being a simple priest is in no way turning yourself into a guru and founding your own school of thought.

  • @lindabrown4485
    @lindabrown44852 жыл бұрын

    How amazing is this. ❤️

  • @mariesaintvictor8373
    @mariesaintvictor83732 жыл бұрын

    Happy father's day to you fr. Mark.🎈 Que viva Corpus Christi.🙋‍♀️🙋‍♂️

  • @ChersJourney
    @ChersJourney2 ай бұрын

    Amen🙏🏻I am blessed to receive the Body & Blood of Christ Bless You

  • @katieann1908
    @katieann19082 жыл бұрын

    Stories of eucharistic miracles brought me back to the faith.

  • @lindasusanmadamba7127
    @lindasusanmadamba71272 жыл бұрын

    Christ died & rose again & left us his body & blood for eternal life, hands down, the greatest Eucharistic miracle! A Blessed Corpus Christi, & grateful for Christ Divine Presence! Also grateful for the Eucharistic miracles, which reveal more of God's gift of love! ❤ Blessings & prayers on this Corpus Christi & a blessed Father's Day to the fathers world wide & also to you Fr. Mark & your brother priests.Viva Christo Rey!☘🌹🙏🍞🍷 📿 🕯

  • @surainfernando3769
    @surainfernando37692 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Father for explaning about the Eucharistic miracle in Mexico. About 25 years ago, I read the book titled " Wonders of the Mass" by Fr. Paul O Sullivan. It taught me that the Holy Mass is the Calvary Sacrifice performed on the alter by the power of the Holy Spirit. Thereafter, I attended daily Holy Mass and I fervantly receive the Holy Eucharist. I cannot explain the inner peace and joy when I start the day with Holy Mass. Our present Assistant priest, at the beginning of the Holy Mass says " Let us participate in the Calvary Sacrifice fervantly". If all the priests can say it, the fervour of the participants will increase. Thank you Father for all you do to bring us closer to the love and mercy of Jesus, our Saviour.

  • @pacopeso8474
    @pacopeso84742 жыл бұрын

    In these times Christ is showing us He is the Way the Truth and the Life.

  • @judyheller8814
    @judyheller88142 жыл бұрын

    I am going to look up this miracle to find more information. It sounds interesting.

  • @kathrynkoch8340
    @kathrynkoch83402 жыл бұрын

    We are Wash by The BLOOD ,Protected by BLOOD ,Saved by the BLOOD!!!Jesus We Love with all of Our Hearts!!!

  • @paulschneweis3492
    @paulschneweis34922 жыл бұрын

    Happy Corpus Christi to you also and first of all, Fr. Mark! Thank GOD and you for this awesome re-affirming, re-up lifting Catholic Orthodox video, Fr. Mark!

  • @jdayday6435
    @jdayday64352 жыл бұрын

    Awesome.

  • @kategoddard5076
    @kategoddard50762 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this wonderful video Fr. Mark, and a blessed Corpus Christi to you and everyone! It never ceases to amaze me that we are supremely privileged to receive Jesus, whole and complete into us - the greatest miracle on earth that we will ever encounter and to be part of! But also by grace, we are able to ‘become’ more perfectly conformed to Christ so that he can completely ‘move in’ to us. This shows me with what incredible humility and deep desire that the Lord must have for each of us, weak and imperfect as we are, to want to give himself to us in this way!! What an example of humility and love to live up to, but with Christ we can, because nothing is impossible to him! Let us adore for evermore the most holy Sacrament.

  • @johnlong8037
    @johnlong80372 жыл бұрын

    YOUR SO BUSY SAVING SOULS... THANKS