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     Sunday, November 22 - Feast of Christ the King

Thursday,Nov 26 - Thanksgiving Mass 9:00 am
Parish Office closes at Noon Wednesday, Nov 25 - will be closed Thursday and Friday
Eucharistic Adoration closes at Noon Wednesday, Nov 25 - will be closed Thursday and Friday


Holy Spirit Church at 355 E Champlain Dr, Fresno, CA 93730-1273 US - PRAYERS TO THE HOLY SPIRIT

PRAYERS TO THE HOLY SPIRIT

Come, Holy Spirit.


PRAYER TO THE HOLY SPIRIT

Come, Holy Spirit
Replace the tension within us with a holy relaxation.
Replace the turbulence within us with a sacred calm.
Replace anxiety within us with a quiet confidence.
Replace the fear within us with a strong faith.
Replace the bitterness within us with the sweetness of grace.
Replace the darkness within us with a gentle light.
Replace the coldness within us with a loving warmth.
Replace the night within us with your light.
Straighten our crookedness.
Fill our emptiness.
Dull the edge of our pride.
Sharpen the edge of our humility.
Light the fires of our love.
Quench the flames of our lust.
Let us see ourselves as You see us
That we may seeYou as You have promised.
and be fortunate according to Your word;

- Virginia Garey

 
Prayer for the Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit

O Lord Jesus Christ Who, before ascending into heaven did promise to send the Holy Spirit to finish Your work in the souls of Your Apostles and Disciples, deign to grant the same Holy Spirit to me that He may perfect in my soul, the work of Your grace and Your love.

Grant me
the Spirit of Wisdom 
that I may despise the perishable things of this world and aspire only after the things that are eternal,

the Spirit of Understanding
to enlighten my mind  with the light of Your divine truth,

the Spirit of Counsel
that I may ever choose the surest way of pleasing God and gaining heaven,

the Spirit of Fortitude
that I may bear my cross with You and that I may overcome with courage all the obstacles that oppose my salvation,

the Spirit of Knowledge
that I may know God and know myself and grow perfect in the science of the Saints,

the Spirit of Piety
that I may find the service of God sweet and amiable,

and the Spirit of Fear
that I may be filled with a loving reverence towards God and may dread in any way to displease Him.

Mark me, dear Lord, with the sign of Your true disciples and animate me in all things with Your spirit. Amen.


 

An Act of Consecration To The Holy Spirit


O Holy Spirit, divine Spirit of light and love, I consecrate to You my understanding, my heart and my will, my whole being for time and for eternity.  May my understanding be always submissive to Your heavenly inspirations and to the teachings of the Holy Catholic Church, of which You are the infallible Guide.  May my heart be ever inflamed with love of God and of my neighbor; may my will be ever conformed to the divine Will, and may my whole life be a faithful imitation of the life and virtues of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, to whom with the Father and You, Holy Spirit, be honor and glory forever. Amen.

St. Pius X
June 5, 1908

From the Catholic Encyclopedia

Doctrine of the Catholic Church

The doctrine of the CatholicChurch concerning the Holy Ghost forms an integral part of her teaching on the mystery of the Holy Trinity, of which St. Augustine (On the Holy Trinity I.3.5), speaking with diffidence, says: "In no other subject is the danger of erring so great, or the progress so difficult, or the fruit of a careful study so appreciable". The essential points of the dogma may be resumed in the following propositions:

 
The Holy Ghost is the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity.

Though really distinct, as a
Person, from the Father and the Son, He is consubstantial with Them; being God like Them, He possesses with Them one and the same Divine Essence or Nature.

He proceeds, not by way of generation, but by way of spiration, from the Father and the Son together, as from a single principle.

 

The Gifts of the Holy Spirit

The gifts of the Holy Ghost are of two kinds: the first are specially intended for the sanctification of the person who receives them; the second, more properly called charismata, are extraordinary favours granted for the help of another, favours, too, which do not sanctify by themselves, and may even be separated from sanctifying grace. Those of the first class are accounted seven in number, as enumerated by Isaias (11:2-3), where the prophet sees and describes them in the Messias. They are the gifts of wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety (godliness), and fear of the Lord.

The gift of wisdom, by detaching us from the world, makes us relish and love only the things of heaven.

The
gift of understanding helps us to grasp the truths of religion as far as is necessary.

The
gift of counsel springs from supernaturalprudence, and enables us to see and choose correctly what will help most to the glory of God and our own salvation.
 

By the
gift of fortitude we receive courage to overcome the obstacles and difficulties that arise in the practice of our religious duties.

The
gift of knowledge points out to us the path to follow and the dangers to avoid in order to reach heaven.

The
gift of piety, by inspiring us with a tender and filial confidence in God, makes us joyfully embrace all that pertains to His service.

Lastly, the
gift of fear fills us with a sovereign respect for God, and makes us dread, above all things, to offend Him.


Fruits of the Holy Spirit

Some writers extend this term to all the
supernaturalvirtues, or rather to the acts of all these virtues, inasmuch as they are the results of the mysterious workings of the Holy Ghost in our souls by means of His grace. But, with St. Thomas, I-II.70.2, the word is ordinarily restricted to mean only those supernatural works that are done joyfully and with peace of soul. This is the sense in which most authorities apply the term to the list mentioned by St. Paul (Galatians 5:22-23):

"But the fruit of the Spirit is, charity,
joy, peace, patience, benignity, goodness, longanimity, mildness, faith, modesty, continency, chastity."

Moreover, there is no
doubt that this list of twelve -- three of the twelve are omitted in several Greek and Latin manuscripts -- is not to be taken in a strictly limited sense, but, according to the rules of Scriptural language, as capable of being extended to include all acts of a similar character. That is why the Angelic Doctor says: "Every virtuousact which man performs with pleasure is a fruit." The fruits of the Holy Ghost are not habits, permanent qualities, but acts. They cannot, therefore, be confounded with the virtues and the gifts, from which they are distinguished as the effect is from its cause, or the stream from its source. The charity, patience, mildness, etc., of which the Apostle speaks in this passage, are not then the virtues themselves, but rather their acts or operations; for, however perfect the virtues may be, they cannot be considered as the ultimate effects of grace, being themselves intended, inasmuch as they are active principles, to produce something else, i.e. their acts. Further, in order that these acts may fully justify their metaphorical name of fruits, they must belong to that class which are performed with ease and pleasure; in other words, the difficulty involved in performing them must disappear in presence of the delight and satisfaction resulting from the good accomplished.




 

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Contact Holy Spirit Parish :  355 East Champlain Drive  Fresno, Ca  93730-1273
(559) 434-7701         holyspiritchurchfresno@yahoo.com
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