Catholic Church of the Most Blessed Sacrament

Rosary Rally & Prayer For Life

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  Anniversary International Celebration Rosary Prayer Crowning of Mary Divine Mercy Sunday
 

  Communal prayer of the Rosary is celebrated on the 2nd Sunday of every month at 10:45 a.m. in the Church. The communal prayer is lead by the Knights of Peter Claver, Ladies Auxiliary #376.

 
Our annual Rosary & Prayer Rally is held on the 2nd Sunday of October at 10:45 a.m. in the Rosary Garden. We especially encourage all adults and families with children to participate. The annual Rosary Rally is part of parish’s petition to God that our country grow in being Pro-Life: being pro-life is living a life which rejects an attitude where human life is not important, from rejecting the acceptance of abortion, tolerating domestic violence, the exploitation of women and children in human trafficking, gang violence, euthanasia. We pray the Rosary during this month of October asking Mary to intercede for us before her Son, Jesus Christ, for strength and courage to be a parish that promotes a culture of life. We honor God, especially as celebrate our Catholic Faith, through the Rosary Prayer.

  

T he word Rosary means "Crown of Roses". Our Lady has revealed to several people that each time they say a Hail Mary they are giving her a beautiful rose and that each complete Rosary makes her a crown of roses. The rose is the queen of flowers, and so the Rosary is the rose of all devotions and it is therefore the most important one. The Holy Rosary is considered a perfect prayer because within it lies the awesome story of our salvation. With the Rosary in fact we meditate the mysteries of joy, of sorrow and the glory of Jesus and Mary. It's a simple prayer, humble so much like Mary. It's a prayer we can all say together with Her, the Mother of God. With the Hail Mary we invite Her to pray for us. Our Lady always grants our request. She joins Her prayer to ours. Therefore it becomes ever more useful, because what Mary asks She always receives, Jesus can never say no to whatever His Mother asks for. In every apparition, the heavenly Mother has invited us to say the Rosary as a powerful weapon against evil, to bring us to true peace. With your prayer made together with Your heavenly Mother, you can obtain the great gift of bringing about a change of hearts and conversion. Each day, through prayer you can drive away from yourselves and from your homeland many dangers and many evils.

 

Respect Life At All Stages

REMEMBER!

Violence is a cycle of learned behavior.

Violence flourishes as the result of social and personal tolerance of it.

Violence will only be reduced if we enact change on the most basic level.

Abortion, Non-Violence and the Black Community
by Deirdre A. McQuade

June 16, 2006


Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. never lived to see the infamous Roe v. Wade decision, but state abortion laws had already started becoming more permissive in his lifetime. His niece, Alveda King, recalls his words: "The Negro cannot win as long as he is willing to sacrifice the lives of his children for comfort and safety."

Ms. King takes her family's civil rights work to its logical extension, fighting for the most basic civil right, the right to life. She calls for faithfulness to the principle of nonviolence: "How can the 'Dream' survive if we murder the children?...Abortion is at the forefront of our destruction...By taking the lives of our young, and wounding the wombs and lives of their mothers, we are flying in the face of God."

The National Black Catholic Apostolate for Life sets aside June as "Abortion and All Acts of Violence Awareness Month." Abortion is an act of violence. No matter how the abortion is performed – whether by lethal chemicals like RU-486 or by surgery – it destroys innocent, defenseless life. It robs children of their siblings and cuts to the core of the family.

Black children are especially at risk for experiencing violence in the womb, as African-American women have abortions at disproportionately higher rates than both white and Hispanic women in the U.S. According to the Guttmacher Institute, the abortion rate among black women decreased between 1994 and 2000, but remains at twice the national average.

Just as it is wrong to discriminate against someone because of skin color, it is wrong to discriminate based on location or stage of development. To kill a human being developing in the womb – or even during the process of being born – is discrimination based on a child's location.

Many claim that the tiniest humans don't deserve protection because they are so small – or have not yet implanted in their mother's womb. But that is also flagrant discrimination based on size and arbitrary developmental stages.

Abortion does violence to women and pits them against their own children. As many women who have had abortions explain, "something inside dies after an abortion." What seemed at first like a solution causes a whole new set of problems they didn't bargain for. Like other acts of violence, it can send shock waves through the family and even into the broader community. So many women and their families today are suffering silently in the aftermath of abortion.

Logic and charity compel us to relate the noble principle of non-violence to the unborn and their mothers. The dream of justice for all God's children applies not only to people of color in public spaces, but also to the most vulnerable ones hidden in the private space of the womb.

 

Our parish participates in the National Black Catholic Apostolate for Life, an organizational network that seeks to end the disrespect of human life ... abortion, hand gun violence, gang violence, domestic abuse, euthanasia, glorified violence in the mass media (television, music and movies), and the unnecessary use of capital punishment. Let us witness God’s Glory and follow the Gospel of Life. Join us in actively supporting our parish’s efforts in promoting the value of every human life.

Help bring an end to the culture of death and violence. Support the end of the promotion and acceptance of violence through the media (music, television, radio, movies and video games).

Promote reconciliation in your home instead of retaliation, especially among your children and all youth.

Embrace and encourage any means which teach us respect and love of every person.

 

 

 
 

Most Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church * 2971 Butner Road SW * Atlanta, GA 30331

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