Sunday, October 25, 2020

Episode 30: Mary Kloska Speaks about the Carmelite St. Teresa Margaret Redi -Being a Victim of the Sacred Heart's Love

 

My radio/podcast this week speaks about being a VICTIM of THE SACRED HEART'S LOVE. I specifically talk about St. Teresa Margaret Redi (Carmelite) and St. Margaret Mary Alacoque who gave their entire lives to burn of victims of love in Jesus' Heart. I also tie it with St. Teresa of Avila (whose name St. Teresa Margaret took) and St. Therese of Lisieux who later lived and taught the same spirituality as Teresa Margaret, and even was named Doctor of the Church for living and teaching what her 'older sister' had 150 years earlier.

These are the waters where Mary Kloska lives. 🙂
Please LISTEN, and please SHARE.


Title: Episode 30 –Mary Kloska Speaks about the Carmelite St. Teresa Margaret Redi –Being a Victim of the Sacred Heart’s Love
Description: In this episode, Mary continues with her theme of the saints finding union with Jesus through their experience of His Love on the Cross. She especially focuses on the Carmelite St. Teresa Margaret Redi, who took her name from St. Teresa of Avila and St. Margaret Mary Alacoque and who shared their deep love for Jesus, especially of His Sacred Heart. She also explains the similarities between the spirituality of St. Teresa Margaret and St. Therese of Lisieux who would come to live a similar hiddenness and childlike confidence almost 150 years later. Mary explores what it means for St. Teresa Margaret to live as a victim in the fires of Love coming forth from the Sacred Heart of Jesus and how such an intense devotion was able to completely consume her in God’s Love and conform her to Christ in the very short 23 years of her life. The listeners will hopefully be inspired to immerse themselves in Jesus’ Sacred Heart and imitate His Love in their ordinary lives.
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Help the Persecuted Church and Abused Women in Pakistan Receive a Free Copy of My Book, "The Holiness of Womanhood"!



 

Can you please help me help the persecuted Church and wounded women of Pakistan?
Even just $5 would provide one book for one woman.
We change the world one soul at a time.













These are pictures of the Urdu translator of my book, "The Holiness of Womanhood" speaking at different seminars for various religious denominations about my book in Pakistan. The incredible teaching of St. Edith Stein and St. Pope John Paul II on the Dignity and Vocation of Women from my book is being taught to the people (specifically women) of Pakistan regardless of religious background in the simplest ways. But getting them physical books would be incredibly transformative. PLEASE CONSIDER DONATING TO THIS CAUSE.
The link to my GoFundMe page is at the end of this post.
I have a new GoFundMe project having to do with providing my book, “The Holiness of Womanhood” to Persecuted Christians.
PLEASE BE KIND ENOUGH TO READ AND SHARE THIS!
Can you imagine your daughter being kidnapped, raped and then forced into a marriage with an older Muslim man? It sounds horrifying, but this is the situation of women and girls in Pakistan. I have personally been contacted by several parents begging me to get them out of the country in order to save their daughters because they are afraid. Both the National Geographic and the Telegraph named Pakistan along with two other countries as the top three worst countries in the world in their treatment of women. Just googling articles on this I found these that relate horrifying first person stories of what life is like there for women.
Open Doors, an organization that helps the persecuted Church throughout the world has said that they had to withdraw their on-ground help in Pakistan because of the threat it caused to the lives of those they served. They provide very thorough information here about the plight both of Christians, as well as women in general, in Pakistan. They list the persecution of Christians as ‘Extreme’.
My translator in Pakistan has shared detailed information about how my book, “The Holiness of Womanhood,” and the Church’s teachings on the Dignity and Vocation of Woman has already healed many men and women who have come into contact with the Urdu text. And we are still working on the printed version. Unfortunately, women are treated terribly in their society –both inside and outside of the Church –and he said that by reading this book their eyes have been opened to a new way of thinking and approaching women. To synthesize the situation he explains:
• I hope our main concern of Urdu translation is to heal many women who are spiritually and physically wounded in Pakistan.
• These women belong to different fields of life. They come from urban and rural places. They are simple and many times not very educated and rich.
• I have healed myself after reading this book and wish that other men and women get healed too.
• This book gave me new vision and eyes to see my daughter, wife, mother, sister and many other women.
• Our women in Pakistan have been badly treated by society and church.
• This book will give them some hope to find Jesus.
• Our church even catholic church has not been fair to women. Women have been treated as an object. Women do not have any visible or decision-making place in church.
• So, may be this book might give us less profit but it will bring hope and new life in women.
• I know the importance of this book. This book is so insightful. Our women are going to read something that they have never thought. For this thanks to Mary.
· I am sure this book will quench the spiritual thirst of many men and women.
• Though people do not have this book in Urdu yet, Mary really has inspired our women already. I have shared her amazing life story with my people especially women (both young and aged).
Already my translator has been gathering rural, uneducated women into small groups and reading excerpts from my book to them. They are inspired. They realize their worth as daughters of God. The whole society (Muslim, Protestant, Catholic –rich, poor) is being challenged by these thoughts.
Books are very expensive for Pakistani people. Most homes can’t even afford to buy a Catholic Bible. And so I suggested that I set up a GoFundMe to see if we could raise money to purchase copies of the Urdu translation of my book (once it is printed in Lahore, Pakistan) to distribute to those who are most in need, as well as those who would have the greatest influence on society. If women knew their worth and how to connect with God, they would be healed. If priests read the Church’s teachings as laid out in this book, how could they not relate differently with women –in a new way different then their Muslim-influenced culture, instead inspired by the teachings of Pope John Paul II, St. Edith Stein, Archbishop Fulton Sheen and above all else, the women saints and Our Lady as presented in it?
The first several thousand dollars of this GoFundMe will go towards providing books for those in Pakistan. After we are able to provide a few thousand, some of the funding will go towards providing books for a few poor areas of Africa and India with the same needs. For example, in Uganda often teenage moms are abandoned and there is a couple who runs a home for these young women and their children who would love to use this book in formation. And I am already working with people to translate it into two Ugandan languages. But once the translation is completed, we will have to get printed texts to Uganda (or print them there) and distributed to the most poor and persecuted in their society. There is another girls’ school run by a good priest in Tanzania in an area dominated by Muslims and Muslim thought (which is very contrary to the dignity of women). I would love to eventually provide him with books for his school. There is another girl’s home in India who I have regular contact with that is in the same predicament. These people are poor and caring for the poorest of the poor –but through the teachings of this book, their eyes and minds could be open to a new beautiful truth about the dignity of women and this, in turn, could transform their societies.
But we will start with Pakistan.
There are 204 million people in Pakistan -4 million of which are Christian. We are unsure of the price of the books in Pakistan as of yet –most likely we will try to make them available in Urdu for around $4-5 considering the plight of the people. I hope to at least provide 2000 free books to people (at least at the beginning). Which means we need at least $10,000. Of course, I would like to do much more. After the first 2000 books are set, I will look at providing some for these pockets of homes for abandoned/abused women/girls in Africa and India. And after providing books for them, continue on with more books for Pakistan. Unless I find a donor who is set on all of their donation going towards one particular country.
CAN YOU PLEASE HELP ME?
In prayer, yes. But also with a donation? We seriously could change the tide of women in the Middle East with this project.
St. Thomas (the patron saint of Pakistan), St. Bernadine of Sienna, St. John of God, St. Gabriel, St. Maximillian Kolbe, St. Claret, St. Vincent Ferrer, St. Clare, Bl. Carlos, St. Augustine, St. Genesius, St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Bridget of Ireland (all patron saints of media, books and printers) –pray for us!
St. Agatha, Agnes, Dymphna, Bakhita, Alphonsa, Philomena, Miriam the little Arab, Rita, Germaine, Adelaide, Maria Goretti and women victims of abuse, pray for us!
Our Lady, Queen of Peace, St. Joseph and all of the angels and saints, pray for us!

Sunday, October 18, 2020

Episode 29: Mary Kloska Speaks on the Holy Rosary and Her Book, “The Holiness of Womanhood “.

 

My new podcast this week is on the Rosary and my new book, the Holiness of Womanhood. Please listen, SHARE and pray both for the spread of this work in English, as well as all of my translations.

Description: In this episode, Mary speaks about the Rosary in this October Month of the Rosary. In her explanations of the mysteries of the Rosary, she connects each one to the various chapters of her new book, 'The Holiness of Womanhood.' She shows how each set of mysteries (the Joyful, Luminous, Sorrowful and Glorious) corresponds to the chapters in her book and the various mysteries surrounding the gift of holy womanhood. In this episode the listener is guided through a mediation on the call to holiness in womanhood by stopping at each mystery of the Rosary and seeing how it was lived by Jesus, Mary and the other saints of Scripture. Surely this podcast will set you on fire with a deep understanding of God's great beauty in the vocation of being a woman.

Audio: https://wcatradio.com/heartoffiatcrucifiedlove/
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Video: https://youtu.be/aKEA49Pp0-s


Monday, October 12, 2020

Episode 28: Mary Kloska Speaks about St. Teresa of Avila and Pere Jacques Bunel




 My radio program/podcast this week is on ST. TERESA of AVILA and the French Carmelite priest PERE JACQUES BUNEL, who died from the concentration camps.

If you haven’t seen the last few weeks about these holy Carmelites (St. Therese of Lisieux, St. John of the Cross, St. Edith Stein, Blessed Titus Brandsma) and how the found Union with Christ through the suffering of darkness, abandonment, rejection and sometimes physical pain of the Cross, please GO BACK and LISTEN. These are such important lessons for us all in the midst of such difficult times.

And please LISTEN to this week’s episode and SHARE!

Title: Episode 28: Mary Kloska Speaks about St. Teresa of Avila and Pere Jacques Bunel

Description: In this episode, Mary continues discussing the idea of how God uses darkness, abandonment, suffering and other experiences of the Cross to unite as one with the soul. She specifically focuses on the teachings of the Carmelite St. Teresa of Avila on this topic, as well as showing the reality of these teachings in the life of the French Carmelite Pere Jacques Bunel (who died from what he suffered as a prisoner in a concentration camp, shortly after it was liberated after WWII. ) Mary ties together this process of union with Jesus Crucified that God leads many of His saints through -including mystical sufferings, as well as exterior sufferings imposed by the world around them. Through it all she offers hope that suffering is actually a sign of God's predilection and a means to make one holy.

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Monday, October 5, 2020

Episode 27: Mary Kloska Speaks on Blessed Titus Brandsma -Carmelite Priest Who Died in Dachau

Title: Episode 27: Mary Kloska Speaks on Blessed Titus Brandsma -Carmelite Priest Who Died in Dachau
Description: In this episode, Mary continues exploring the mystery of Jesus bringing a soul through darkness, suffering and even death in order to conform it completely to Himself crucified. She speaks about the life of Bl. Titus Brandsma, a Dutch Carmelite Friar who taught at the University, was involved heavily in journalism and quite outspoken against the Nazis and who eventually was imprisoned and died in the concentration camp in Dachau. Mary explains this holy friars spirituality of creating an 'enclosed garden' for God inside of one's soul, and how this sustained him and even helped him to grow towards union with God during his stay in the prison cells of several concentration camps. Drawing from his love of St. John of the Cross and St. Teresa of Avila, Blessed Titus was able to turn his prison cell into a paradise where he could meet with God. Please LISTEN and SHARE.