Dana Rachel 🇻🇦
1.1K posts

Dana Rachel 🇻🇦
@thyflameoflove
Loving God through His Mother’s Immaculate Heart 🕊️ I’m nothing but a soul in love with God.
Los Angeles, CA Bergabung Ekim 2023
87 Mengikuti848 Pengikut

“Turn all your thoughts and aspirations to heaven. Work hard to secure yourself a place there forever.”
— Saint Damien of Molokai
📅 Feast Day: May 10
St. Damien of Molokai gave his life serving people with leprosy on the island of Molokai in Hawaii during the 1800s. He lived around suffering, sickness, rejection, and death almost every day. So when he tells us to keep our thoughts fixed on Heaven, he is not speaking from comfort. He is speaking from experience.
The world constantly pulls our attention toward money, status, pleasure, distractions, and temporary things that will not last forever. But Jesus taught, “What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his soul?” (Mark 8:36). St. Damien reminds us that this life is short, and eternity is real.
“Work hard” does not mean we earn Heaven by ourselves. Salvation is a gift from God’s grace. But it does mean living seriously for God through prayer, repentance, the sacraments, charity, and faithfulness even when it is difficult.
💬 At the end of your life, what do you think will matter more: how comfortable you were, or whether you truly lived for God?
A lot of people are exhausted chasing things that never satisfy. Someone out there may need this reminder today.

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MASS ETIQUETTE
(Do’s and Don’ts When Attending the Holy Mass)
FAST
Do not eat any food at least one hour before receiving Holy Communion. Water and medicine are allowed. This small sacrifice helps prepare your heart and body to receive Jesus in the Eucharist with reverence and love.
COME EARLY
Try to arrive 10–15 minutes before Mass begins. Use this time to quiet your mind, pray, reflect, and place yourself in God’s presence before the liturgy starts.
DO NOT EAT
Avoid eating, chewing gum, or drinking during Mass unless necessary for health reasons. The church is a sacred place of worship, and our attention should remain focused on God.
DRESS PROPERLY
Wear modest and respectful clothing. We are coming before God in His house, and the way we dress can reflect reverence, humility, and honor for the sacredness of the Mass.
NO PHONES
Silence or turn off your phone before Mass begins. Avoid texting, scrolling, or distractions so you can be fully present in prayer and attentive to the Word of God.
GENUFLECT
Before entering your pew, genuflect by kneeling on your right knee toward the tabernacle if the Blessed Sacrament is present. This is a sign of reverence to Jesus truly present in the Eucharist.
PARTICIPATE
Join in the prayers, responses, singing, and listening during Mass. The Mass is not something we watch like an audience. It is an act of worship we enter into together.
COMMUNE
Before receiving Holy Communion, examine your conscience prayerfully. Catholics should be in a state of grace and properly prepared to receive Our Lord worthily in the Eucharist.
THINK OF OTHERS
Be respectful and mindful of those around you. Keep the pews clean, maintain order in Communion lines, and practice patience, kindness, and charity toward others.
BE STILL
Do not rush out immediately after Mass unless necessary. Spend a few moments thanking God for the graces received and remaining quietly with Him in prayer.
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In 1917, Our Lady came to three shepherd children with a message the world needed then and needs even more now.
Our Lady gave a message about sin, prayer, repentance, and eternal life. But she also gave them hope.
During the first apparition on May 13, Lúcia asked the Blessed Virgin, "Will I go to Heaven?" Our Lady answered, "Yes." She also said that Francisco and Jacinta would go to Heaven too, though Francisco would first need to pray many Rosaries. This reminds us that Heaven is real, and prayer truly matters.
Stop for a moment. A child asked if she would go to Heaven and received an answer. When did you last ask that question yourself?
Sister Lúcia later wrote that Our Lady opened her hands and a light came from them that reached deep into their souls. She described this light as God's grace. In her memoirs, Lúcia said they saw themselves in God "more clearly than we see ourselves in the best of mirrors." The children were moved to kneel and pray silently in adoration.
This was not the Beatific Vision itself, which belongs to Heaven alone, but it was a profound mystical experience that drew them deeply into the presence of God. The Church teaches that the Beatific Vision is seeing God face to face in eternal glory. That is the destiny God desires for every faithful soul.
Three shepherd children, poor, uneducated, unknown to the world, were given a glimpse of what every human soul was made for. Not kings. Not scholars. Shepherds.
At another apparition, Lúcia noticed that Jacinta and Francisco seemed to be in the part of the light rising toward Heaven, while she remained in the light spread across the earth. Later, she understood this connected to her mission to remain in the world longer and help spread devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
The message of Fatima is not only about warnings.
It is about hope, repentance, prayer, and the reality that Heaven is worth everything.
💬 And here is the uncomfortable question: if you truly believed Heaven was real, not as a concept, but as a destination you are either moving toward or away from right now, what would you do differently today?

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A record 550 people entered the Catholic Church this year in the Archdiocese of Melbourne during the Easter Vigil.
Last year, there were about 350. That means there was a clear increase. A 57% increase in one year... and it shows that something real is happening.
These are not random decisions. Most of these people spent months preparing through a process called Order of Christian Initiation of Adults (OCIA). They learned the teachings of the Church, prayed, asked questions, and slowly moved toward a decision. By the time they reached the Easter Vigil, they were ready to be baptized or received into full communion.
The Easter Vigil is the most important night of the Church year. It is when the Church celebrates the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is also when new Catholics receive the sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation, and the Eucharist. This is not just symbolic. The Church teaches that these sacraments truly give grace and unite a person to Christ.
In a place like Australia, where many people no longer practice religion, this stands out. It shows that even in a culture that is becoming more secular, people are still searching for truth, meaning, and a real relationship with God.
This is not about numbers.
It is about souls.
Each person who entered the Church made a personal decision. Some came from no faith. Others came from different Christian backgrounds. Many had doubts, struggles, or questions along the way. But they still chose to move forward.
The Church has always taught that God calls each person personally. Conversions like this remind us that grace is still at work, even when it is not always visible.
💬 Why are more people choosing the Catholic Church right now, even when the world seems to be moving in the opposite direction?
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“All the saints began their conversion by prayer and persevered in it by prayer. All the damned are damned because they did not pray.”
- St. John Vianney
Many people forget this today...
Prayer is not optional for the Christian life. It is how we stay connected to God. Every saint struggled, fell, fought temptation, and carried weaknesses, but they kept turning back to God in prayer. That is what changed them over time.
Prayer is not only about asking for things. It is about opening your heart to God, listening to Him, trusting Him, and letting Him slowly transform you. Without prayer, the soul becomes weak. We start relying only on ourselves, and little by little, we drift away from God without even noticing it.
Jesus Himself prayed constantly, even though He is God. The saints followed His example because they knew they could not persevere alone.
A person does not end up far from God overnight. Usually it begins with slowly abandoning prayer.
And honestly, many people today say they believe in God… but rarely speak to Him.
🗨️ Do you think most people truly pray every day, or have we become too distracted to even notice how far from God we are becoming?
A lot of people are silently struggling with this more than they admit.

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An ancient Christian tradition tells a story most people have never heard... about the moment God revealed exactly who He wanted to protect Mary and raise Jesus.
This story is not found in Sacred Scripture, but it comes from early Christian writings such as the Protoevangelium of James (around 150 AD) and was later repeated in devotional works and Catholic tradition. The Church does not require Catholics to believe every detail of these accounts, but many Christians throughout history have reflected on them with devotion.
Stop for a moment and picture this scene.
When Mary reached the age when she could no longer remain in the Temple, the priests gathered unmarried men or widowers from the House of David. Each man brought a staff or rod, and they prayed for God to reveal who should protect and care for Mary.
When Joseph stepped forward, a sign was given.
Some accounts say a white dove came forth and rested upon him. Other traditions say his staff blossomed with flowers or lilies. The priests understood this as a sign that Joseph had been chosen by God.
Venerable Mary of Ágreda wrote in *The Mystical City of God* that Joseph’s staff blossomed and “a dove of purest white and resplendent with admirable light” rested upon his head. She also records these words spoken interiorly to Joseph:
“Joseph, my servant, Mary shall be thy Spouse; accept Her with attentive reverence, for She is acceptable in my eyes, just and most pure in soul and body, and thou shalt do all that She shall say to Thee.”
Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich also described seeing Joseph’s dry branch blossom into a lily as a sign of God’s choice.
These accounts are devotional traditions, not defined Church dogma. But they point to something important: God chose a humble, faithful, and pure man to guard the Holy Family.
And here is what makes that remarkable: Joseph did not campaign for the role.
He did not seek honor or attention. In many traditions, he even hesitated at first because he felt unworthy. Yet he accepted God’s will with humility and obedience.
Mary had consecrated herself completely to God, and Catholic tradition has long held that Joseph respected and protected her perpetual virginity. Their marriage was real, holy, and fully dedicated to God’s plan.
Think about the men celebrated by our culture today. Now think about Joseph.
The contrast is striking, isn’t it?
St. Joseph became the protector of Jesus and Mary, the patron of fathers, workers, families, and the universal Church. His life reminds us that holiness is often quiet, hidden, and faithful.
Saint Joseph, Most Chaste Spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary, pray for us. 🙏
🗨️ Do you think the world today still values humility, purity, and quiet obedience to God… or have those virtues become unpopular?

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@blueskylou @LarrySu82513479 Something like, stop trying so hard to preserve your image in front of others, be humble enough to accept being overlooked, criticized, or misunderstood, or don’t hide behind pride when you’re corrected or misunderstood
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The 15 Steps to Humility
(Attributed to St. Mother Teresa of Calcutta)
1. Speak as little as possible of yourself.
2. Keep busy with your own affairs and not those of others.
3. Avoid curiosity about others’ lives.
4. Do not interfere in the affairs of others.
5. Accept small irritations with good humor.
6. Do not dwell on the faults of others.
7. Accept correction even if it is undeserved.
8. Give in to the will of others when it is reasonable.
9. Accept insults and injuries.
10. Accept being slighted, forgotten, or disliked.
11. Be kind and gentle even under provocation.
12. Never stand on your dignity.
13. Choose always the more difficult task when it leads to love.
14. Yield in discussions even when you are right.
15. In all things, seek only the will of God.
This list shows humility as something lived in hidden, ordinary moments through patience, surrender, and charity, mirroring the humility of Christ who “came not to be served but to serve.”

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What do angels look like? 👇
These visual depictions were inspired by Sacred Scripture, Catholic tradition, writings of the saints, and centuries of sacred Christian art.
The imagery draws especially from the biblical visions found in Isaiah 6, Ezekiel 1 and 10, Daniel 7, Revelation 4 and 5, the Book of Tobit, and traditional Catholic angelology explained by St. Thomas Aquinas and Pseudo-Dionysius.
The Church teaches that angels are real spiritual beings created by God, though their exact visible appearance is not fully defined by the Church. Many of these depictions are artistic attempts to reflect the awe, holiness, mystery, power, and heavenly symbolism found in biblical visions and mystical writings.
The goal was not to create fantasy creatures or “Hollywood angels,” but to visually communicate the terrifying beauty, majesty, order, and glory of Heaven described throughout Scripture and Catholic tradition.
These images combine biblical symbolism, historical sacred art, and cinematic realism to help us reflect on the reality that Heaven is far greater, more powerful, and more holy than we often imagine.
👼 FIRST HIERARCHY
(Closest to God • Focused on worship and direct contemplation of God)
Seraphim — The highest choir of angels, burning with perfect love and ceaselessly worshipping before the throne of God crying “Holy, Holy, Holy” (Isaiah 6).
Cherubim — Heavenly guardians associated with divine wisdom, sacred mysteries, and the throne of God, especially seen in Ezekiel’s visions and Eden.
Thrones — Angelic beings connected to God’s justice, authority, and heavenly governance, often associated with the mysterious wheels seen in Ezekiel.
👼 SECOND HIERARCHY
(Focused on cosmic order and governing creation under God)
Dominions — Heavenly rulers who govern lower choirs of angels and maintain divine order according to God’s will.
Virtues — Angels associated with miracles, divine strength, courage, and the movement of God’s power throughout creation.
Powers — Warrior angels entrusted with restraining evil, defending creation, and carrying out spiritual warfare under God’s authority.
👼 THIRD HIERARCHY
(Most directly involved with humanity)
Principalities — Angels traditionally associated with guiding nations, cities, churches, and communities according to God’s providence.
Archangels — Major heavenly messengers sent for important missions, including Saint Michael, Saint Gabriel, and Saint Raphael.
Angels — The choir closest to humanity, including Guardian Angels who protect, guide, and assist souls according to God’s will.
#catholic #ufofiles #christianreels #biblicalangels
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“Jesus is with you even when you don’t feel His presence. He is never so close to you as He is during your spiritual battles. He is always there, close to you, encouraging you to fight your battle courageously. He is there to ward off the enemy’s blows, so that you may not be hurt.”
— Padre Pio
A lot of people think God has abandoned them the moment prayer feels dry, temptation gets stronger, or life becomes heavy. But Padre Pio reminds us that feelings are not the same thing as reality. Jesus does not leave you just because you cannot feel Him.
In Scripture, Christ tells us, “I am with you always” (Matthew 28:20). Not sometimes. Not only when life feels peaceful. Always.
Some of the greatest saints went through seasons of darkness, fear, spiritual attacks, and deep suffering. Yet many of them later said those were the moments God was closest to them, even if they could not see it at the time. Spiritual battles do not always mean God is far away. Sometimes they are proof that your soul is worth fighting for.
This quote matters because many people today silently struggle with anxiety, temptation, discouragement, loneliness, or feeling spiritually numb. The worst thing you can do is believe the lie that God stopped caring about you because you are struggling.
💬 Have you ever gone through a season where God felt silent, but later realized He was carrying you the whole time?
A lot of people are fighting battles they have never told anyone about. Sometimes they just need a reminder not to give up.

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St. Don Bosco worked with struggling youth his entire life... and he left us a blueprint most Catholics have forgotten...
St. John Bosco (aka Don Bosco) had a deep concern for young people growing up in a world filled with temptation, impurity, and bad influences. He taught that purity is not something outdated or impossible. It is a virtue worth protecting because it helps keep the heart close to God.
And honestly? The world today often treats purity like a joke.
What used to shock people is now pushed as normal everywhere: on phones, in entertainment, in conversations, and even in the way many people talk about relationships. Don Bosco warned young people to be careful about the influences they allow into their lives because he understood how easily sin can take root in the heart.
A quote commonly attributed to him says: “Guard your eyes, for they are the windows through which sin enters the soul.” While the exact wording is difficult to verify, it reflects his real teaching about guarding the senses and being careful with what we choose to look at and entertain in our minds.
One careless habit can slowly shape what your heart accepts.
Don Bosco gave simple and practical advice that still matters today. Stay busy with good work, prayer, study, and serving others. Avoid people, places, and habits that pull you toward sin. When temptation comes, turn to prayer quickly instead of trying to fight it alone. He had a strong devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary and encouraged young people to pray the Hail Mary often in times of struggle.
He also taught self-discipline and custody of the senses. That means learning to say no to things that damage the soul, even when the world says they are harmless. Purity is not weakness. It takes real strength to live differently in a culture that constantly pushes lust, impurity, and selfishness.
Most people today protect their phones better than their souls.
Don Bosco believed God’s grace could help anyone begin again, even after falling into sin. The Church does not teach that a person is hopeless because they struggle. God’s mercy is real, and holiness is still possible.
If you are struggling today, do not give up. Go to Confession. Pray honestly. Stay close to Jesus in the Eucharist. Ask Our Lady and St. John Bosco to pray for you. Holiness is still possible, even in a distracted and impure world.
💬 What do you think is the biggest thing making purity so hard to live out today?

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Today, there is a growing push to treat Mary as just an ordinary woman and to set her aside in the spiritual life. The Church does teach that she is fully human, but also that she was given a unique role in salvation history as the Mother of God (Luke 1:43). Ignoring her place can slowly lead people to pray less, trust less, and drift in their faith without realizing it.
Mary is not a rival to Jesus.
She helps us stay close to Him, especially when life feels confusing or overwhelming. Many saints have taught that those who entrust themselves to her care often remain more steady in prayer and more faithful in difficult times.
St. Louis de Montfort taught that the “surest path to Christ” is through Mary. He did not mean that Mary replaces Jesus. He meant that God chose her to lead us to Him, and that staying close to her helps us stay faithful to her Son.
In the Gospel, Mary makes this clear. At the wedding at Cana, she tells the servants, “Do whatever He tells you” (John 2:5). She points away from herself and directs us to Jesus. This is why the Church has always seen true devotion to Mary as something that strengthens our relationship with Christ, not weakens it.
The Rosary is one simple way the Church has always encouraged this. It keeps our mind on the life of Christ and helps us stay focused when the world pulls us in many directions.
Be honest. Has the Rosary ever brought you peace during a season when nothing else could?
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“Trust all things to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament and to Mary Help of Christians and you will see what miracles are.”
- Saint John Bosco
Saint John Bosco is reminding us where real trust belongs. Not in our own strength, money, plans, or ability to control everything, but in Jesus truly present in the Eucharist and in the care of the Blessed Mother.
When he says “trust all things,” he means the parts of life we usually hold onto tightly: fear, sickness, family problems, anxiety, confusion, and even our future.
The Blessed Sacrament is not just a symbol in Catholic teaching. Jesus said, “This is my body” (Luke 22:19). Catholics believe He is truly present there. And Mary Help of Christians is a title that reminds us Mary intercedes for us and leads us closer to her Son, never away from Him.
St. John Bosco saw many young people changed through prayer, confession, the Eucharist, and devotion to Mary. The “miracles” he talks about are not always dramatic signs. Sometimes the miracle is peace returning to a restless heart. Sometimes it is strength to keep going when life feels heavy.
The real question is this: when life falls apart, what do you honestly trust in first?
A lot of people are carrying burdens silently right now. They may need this reminder more than we realize.

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the price of our salvation...
our sin had a cost, and Jesus chose to pay it for us.
He didn’t suffer by accident. He freely accepted the Cross out of love. Scripture says, “by His wounds we are healed” (Isaiah 53:5).
Every blow, every moment of pain, was part of Him taking on what we could not carry ourselves. Not to shame us, but to save us.
This is what mercy looks like. Not ignoring sin, but paying for it.
When we see His suffering, we’re not just seeing pain. We’re seeing what our salvation cost… and how much we are loved.
if this is what it cost to save us, how seriously should we take sin in our own lives?
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“We all have a cross to carry. I have to carry my own cross. If we don't carry our crosses, we are going to be crushed under the weight of it.”
— Jim Caviezel
Jim Caviezel is an American actor best known for portraying Jesus Christ in The Passion of the Christ. He has spoken openly about his Catholic faith for many years and is known for supporting pro-life causes, defending Christian values, and encouraging people to stay faithful to Christ even through suffering and persecution.
Jesus never promised a life without suffering. In fact, He said, “Whoever does not take up his cross and follow Me is not worthy of Me” (Matthew 10:38). Every person carries something heavy: grief, temptation, anxiety, rejection, sickness, loneliness, or wounds from the past. The problem is not that crosses exist. The problem is when we try to run from them, numb them, or carry them without God.
Jim Caviezel’s quote points to a hard truth. The crosses we refuse to carry often end up crushing us anyway. Avoided pain can turn into anger, addiction, bitterness, hopelessness, or despair. But when suffering is united to Christ, it can change us instead of destroying us. That is why so many saints became stronger through trials, not weaker.
Your cross is not proof that God abandoned you. Sometimes it is the very place where He is teaching you to trust Him more deeply.
💬 What cross changed your life the most, even though you never would’ve chosen it?
Someone out there may need this reminder today more than you realize.

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Jonathan Roumie has been using his platform to do something rare online. He is pointing people back to prayer.
Day after day, he invites his followers to pray the Rosary. Not as a habit for “holy people,” but as a real source of strength, peace, and closeness to God. His message is simple: prayer changes hearts, and the Rosary has power when life feels heavy, confusing, or broken.
When was the last time you truly prayed the Rosary, not rushed, not distracted, but with trust?

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