Prayer for beatification

Prayer for beatification

On Good Shepherd Sunday, May 11, 2025, in the University Church of the Holy Name of Jesus in Wrocław, once again, we, the Sisters of Mary Immaculate, together with the faithful, prayed for the gift of beatification of the Servant of God, Fr. Jan Schneider, the Wrocław apostle of mercy and founder of our Congregation. During the Mass, in his moving homily, Fr. Arkadiusz, the parish priest, presented our Servant of God as a prophet for our times, a priest with a pure heart, completely devoted to God. He who, in the second half of the 19th century in Wrocław, saved young girls standing on the brink of evil, he who devoted his life to serving poor girls by running a shelter for them, is still a sign of hope for the world today. Today, when so many spiritual dangers lurk for young people, Fr. Schneider points to Mary as the way to Jesus and a pure heart as the source of true love and happiness. After Mass, together with the faithful, we prayed before the image of Our Lady Help of Wrocław. We entrusted ourselves, our families, and especially young people to the care of Mary with the words of entrustment of our servant of God, Fr. Jan Schneider.
Sister Barbara

Wednesday 14 May

Wednesday 14 May

Saint Matthias, Apostle – Feast
First reading – Acts 1:15-17,​20-26
The feast of Saint Matthias invites us to contemplate the essence of true discipleship: to be with Jesus “the whole time”—through His preaching and silence, His glory and humiliation, His baptism and His ascension. Easter reminds us that the Resurrection is not a moment detached from the rest of Christ’s life but the radiant crown of His entire earthly journey. To witness the Risen Lord, as the Apostles did, means to walk with Him in all seasons: to listen at His feet, to serve with His hands, to suffer with His heart, and to hope with His promise. In this light, Easter becomes a call not just to celebrate an empty tomb, but to commit our lives anew to a companionship that does not falter, from Jordan to Golgotha to glory. Let’s reflect: Easter is the radiant fulfillment of a lifelong companionship with Jesus, calling us to be witnesses of His Resurrection by sharing fully in His life, death, and glory.

Don Giorgio

Tuesday 13 May

Tuesday 13 May

Tuesday of the 4th week of Eastertide
Our Lady of Fátima
First reading – Acts 11:19-26
On this Tuesday of the Fourth Week of Eastertide, as we honor Our Lady of Fátima, we are reminded through the Acts of the Apostles that true joy arises from recognizing the grace of God at work in the lives of others. Just as Barnabas rejoiced upon witnessing the fruits of divine grace in Antioch and encouraged the faithful to remain steadfast in heartfelt devotion, so too are we called to cultivate this inner fidelity—a personal, living relationship with the Risen Christ. Heartfelt devotion is not mere sentiment; it is the soul’s response to the presence of the Lord, a steadfast gaze fixed on Him through prayer, trust, and love. As Mary at Fátima invited the world to conversion and deeper union with God, may we, like Barnabas, become encouragers of faith, rejoicing in grace wherever it blooms and urging hearts to cling to the Lord with all their might. Let’s reflect: Easter is the joyful recognition of God’s grace at work in our lives, calling us to a heartfelt devotion that deepens our personal relationship with the Risen Lord and inspires us to encourage faith in others.

Don Giorgio

Monday 12 May

Monday 12 May

Monday of the 4th week of Eastertide
First reading Acts 11:1-18
Easter continues to unfold as a season of widening horizons and breaking barriers, as revealed in the episode from Acts 11. Here, Peter recounts his vision and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon the Gentiles, affirming that God’s saving plan knows no bounds—no ethnicity, no culture, no past can exclude someone from His mercy. This moment, so crucial in the early Church, resonates deeply with the message of the Resurrection: Christ rose not for a select few, but for all humanity. The empty tomb is not a private revelation but a cosmic proclamation—God has thrown open the doors of grace to every heart. In this light, Easter beckons us to live as witnesses of this universal embrace, refusing to draw lines where God has built bridges. Let’s reflect: Easter is the radiant proclamation that, through Christ’s Resurrection, God has opened the gates of salvation to all people, without exception, inviting every heart into the fullness of His mercy and life.

Don Giorgio

Sunday 11 May

Sunday 11 May

4th Sunday of Easter
First reading Acts 13:14,​43-52
The Fourth Sunday of Easter shines with the bold clarity of a turning point in salvation history—a moment when the early disciples, moved by the Spirit, begin to grasp the boundless horizon of the Resurrection. In the synagogue at Antioch, Paul and Barnabas courageously affirm that the message of Christ is not confined to a chosen few but destined for all peoples. This is a decisive awakening: the universality of the Christ Event becomes the heartbeat of the Church’s mission. Easter, then, is not a closed chapter of triumph for an isolated group, but an open door through which the light of the Risen One pours into every nation, inviting all to the joy of redemption. In this paschal season, we too are called to live with that same apostolic courage—proclaiming, by word and witness, that the love of Christ is for all. Easter is the radiant proclamation that the Risen Christ is not the Savior of a few, but the light of salvation offered to all peoples, calling the Church to a universal mission of hope.

Don Giorgio