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Christmas Day Daily Prayer

Christmas Day Daily Prayer 940 788 SVDP USA

Daily Prayer for Saturday, December 25, 2021 (Christmas Day):

Joyful, joyful, comes the Lord!
God’s light and love on earth!
Shadows fade from every corner
And every heart is full
Infinite power and glory,
Infant tender and mild,
We welcome you,
We praise you,
We celebrate you!

Amen

Written by National Vincentian Formation Director, Tim Williams.

12-24-2021 Daily Prayer

12-24-2021 Daily Prayer 940 788 SVDP USA

Daily Prayer for Friday, December 24, 2021 (Christmas Eve):

O God in Your love,
You sent us Your Son
Born in the cold of night
Fully human, fully divine
Child of holy light.
Child we adore
With the peace of a dove
With hearts like a child
That knows only love

Amen

Written by National Vincentian Formation Director, Tim Williams.

Contemplation – To Give and Receive with Joy

Contemplation – To Give and Receive with Joy 940 788 SVDP USA

There is an old saying about gift-giving, that “it is the thought that counts.” In a similar way, the assistance, or gifts, that we offer to the neighbor must be more than “appeals from below,” but instead gifts of true love, of putting the needs of another before our own.

As so often is the case, Blessed Frédéric offers us a wonderful example. On New Year’s Day of 1852, Frédéric was unable to relax and enjoy the day with his family, unable even to eat the candies his beloved daughter Marie offered him. He couldn’t stop thinking of the young family that had sold their chest of drawers, the young mother’s treasured family heirloom, so that they could pay other bills.

When he told his wife Amélie of his desire to bring them the chest as a gift, she reminded him that the husband, suffering some health issues, might not be able to work in coming weeks, and it would be more practical to give them the money that would have purchased the chest in smaller amount in coming weeks.

Although he first agreed that this was indeed practical, he remained unconsoled, explaining to Amélie that even a fraction of what they’d spent on their own amusement and gifts could have brought true joy to that poor family. She agreed, and urged him to go.

Frédéric left his home, purchased the family’s chest, and along with a porter he’d brought with him, delivered it to them. When he returned home, all sadness had left him; his face was glowing with his own joy.

When we make our home visits, we often help the neighbor to prioritize needs, so that we can care for the most urgent of them first. Like Frédéric, sometimes we need to remind ourselves that the most urgent needs are not always material; that when we are refreshed by joy and by love, our burdens become lighter.

We are called to form relationships based on trust and friendship with the neighbors we serve; not coldly assess the books, but to seek their good, even before our own. In doing so, we will receive in joy exactly what we give.

It is truly better to give than to receive, and better still to be a cheerful giver. With joy we will drink the waters of salvation!

Contemplate

How can I bring not just assistance, but joy to the neighbor?

Recommended Reading

The Gospel of Luke

12-23-2021 A Letter From Our Servant Leaders

12-23-2021 A Letter From Our Servant Leaders 1367 1520 SVDP USA

Dear Vincentian Friends,

I wish each of you a blessed Christmas and pray that you may experience the joy of the season.

The Manual of the National Council of the United States tells us, “Central to an understanding of Vincentian spirituality is the Mystery of the Incarnation, the mystery and grace that God became human. Vincentians expect God in the unexpected: in unexpected people, times, ways and places. God wears a human face. When we see Jesus in others and try to be Jesus for others, the Mystery of the Incarnation comes alive for us.”

I invite you to ponder this profound way of understanding the Incarnation. Let it influence how you understand this joyful season and give meaning to how you live your Vincentian vocation.

As you encounter family, friends, coworkers and our neighbors in need this Christmas season and beyond, I hope you will be blessed with the grace to experience in them the presence of God among us.

Serviens in spe,
Ralph Middlecamp
National Council President

12-23-2021 Daily Prayer

12-23-2021 Daily Prayer 940 788 SVDP USA

Daily Prayer for Thursday, December 23, 2021:

Lord and Savior, come to us
Join Your children
Walk with us
So we may walk with you!

Amen

Written by National Vincentian Formation Director, Tim Williams.

12-22-2021 Daily Prayer

12-22-2021 Daily Prayer 940 788 SVDP USA

Daily Prayer for Wednesday, December 22, 2021:

You have blessed me Lord
With the gift of life
To accept in humble faith
To be inspired by eternal hope
To live as an act of love
Like a song lifted to heaven,
Sung with joy for all who will hear.

Amen

Written by National Vincentian Formation Director, Tim Williams.

12-21-2021 Daily Prayer

12-21-2021 Daily Prayer 940 788 SVDP USA

Daily Prayer for Tuesday, December 21, 2021:

In turmoil and in troubles,
In sickness and in health,
I know this, too, shall pass, my Lord.
My soul in silence waits.

In triumph and in glory,
Over all the world to reign,
I know You will return, my Lord.
My soul in joy awaits!

Amen

Written by National Vincentian Formation Director, Tim Williams.

12-20-2021 Daily Prayer

12-20-2021 Daily Prayer 940 788 SVDP USA

Daily Prayer for Monday, December 20, 2021:

Lord, I long to see Your face,
When You come in glory,
Your hands outstretched and beckoning,
Your kingdom come on earth.

Lord I long to see Your face,
When you come in rags,
Your hands outstretched and pleading,
Your kingdom served on earth.

Amen

Written by National Vincentian Formation Director, Tim Williams.

Contemplation – The Primitive Spirit

Contemplation – The Primitive Spirit 940 788 SVDP USA

”Ozanam is no longer with us to remind us of our primitive spirit,” remarked President-General Adolphe Baudon after Frédéric’s death in 1853. [Baunard, 407] Indeed, from the Society’s earliest days, Frédéric urged fellow members not to encumber themselves with restrictive or bureaucratic structures, nor to praise ourselves for our accomplishments, which might make us, he explained, “more eager to talk than to act… to forget the humble simplicity which has presided over our coming together from the beginning…” [310, to Amélie, 1841]

He urged his friends to imitate the life of our Patron Saint, “as he himself imitated the model of Jesus Christ.” [175, to Lallier, 1838] It is in imitating Christ that we capture the primitive spirit, the spirit that animated the early church. As Frédéric explained, “the faith, the charity of the first centuries … is not too much for our century.” [90, to Curnier, 1835]

Vincentians seek this primitive spirit by living our Vincentian Virtues, and especially the first three: simplicity, humility, and gentleness. These three, St. Vincent explained, come directly from Gospel teachings, and from the life of Christ. “The first,” he further explained, “concerns God; the second, ourselves; and the third, our neighbor.” [CCD XII:249]

Vincent often said that simplicity was his favorite virtue. In simplicity, we are dedicated to the truth, because God Himself is truth. In serving the truth, then, we serve both God and the neighbor. In serving the neighbor, Vincent taught, “how careful we must be not to appear wily, clever, crafty, and, above all, never to say a word that has a double meaning!” [CCD XII:246] Simplicity is faith, unencumbered.

Our humility reminds us that “all that God gives us is for others and that we can achieve nothing of eternal value without His grace.” [Rule, Part I, 2.5.1] We act as God’s instruments in serving the neighbor, unconcerned with receiving any credit or reward, because all the glory goes to God. Humility is hope, unencumbered.

Finally, we act with gentleness; with a tender love for all of our neighbors, as well as our fellow Vincentians. Gentleness, in our hearts and in our acts, means being kind, being patient, taking no offense when others may return our patience with impatience, our courtesy with rudeness. Gentleness is love, unencumbered.

This simple, humble, gentleness embodies the primitive spirit of the church and of our Vincentian vocation, as it was in the beginning, unencumbered.

“For God is especially pleased,” Frédéric wrote, “to bless what is little and imperceptible: the tree in its seedling, man in his cradle, good works in the shyness of their beginnings.” [310, to Amélie, 1841]

Contemplate

How can I unencumber the primitive spirit in my service and in my Conference?

Recommended Reading

‘Tis a Gift to be Simple

12-17-2021 Daily Prayer

12-17-2021 Daily Prayer 940 788 SVDP USA

Daily Prayer for Friday, December 17, 2021:

In imitation of You, Lord Jesus,
May I give of myself each day.
May I act with humble simplicity,
And with gentle, patient kindness.

Amen

Written by National Vincentian Formation Director, Tim Williams.