Catholic Diocese of Saginaw Podcast

Catholic Diocese of Saginaw

Talks and presentations to help you in your Catholic faith. We participate in activities of social justice, support the good works of persons locally and in other countries, prepare our children and young people to be faith-filled, responsible members of the community — and we do all this in the name of our Lord, Jesus Christ.The Catholic Diocese of Saginaw includes 56 parishes in 11 counties of Mid-Michigan.Our Mission Statement: Trusting in the Holy Spirit and nourished by the Eucharist, we, the faithful of the Diocese of Saginaw, are companions on the journey to share the love of Jesus Christ.

  1. Jun 1

    Bishop Gruss: A witness is someone who says, ‘I have met the Lord and He has changed my life'

    During the First Friday gathering in Saginaw on May 1, Bishop Gruss quoted Pope Francis and reminded listeners that every baptized person is called to be a missionary disciple. “A missionary disciple is someone who knows Jesus personally, loves Him deeply, follows Him faithfully, and shares Him boldly,” he said in his talk. (View the video below or watch it HERE.) He stressed that evangelization is not about having all the answers, but about sharing one’s encounter with Christ. “A witness is someone who says, ‘I have met the Lord and He has changed my life,’” Bishop Gruss said. Bishop Gruss reflected on the Sacrament of Confirmation and missionary discipleship, and encouraged Catholics to rediscover the power of the Holy Spirit already at work within them through the Sacraments. He emphasized that Confirmation is inseparable from missionary discipleship. “The Spirit was poured upon the Church for one reason,” he said. “To evangelize.” “Wake Up the Sleeping Giant” Bishop Gruss encouraged Catholics to develop a personal relationship with the Holy Spirit and rely less on self-sufficiency. “The Holy Spirit is already in you,” he said. “But perhaps He’s dormant. Wake up the sleeping giant in your life. You have everything you need to live as a disciple of Jesus in the world today.” First Friday attendees were encouraged to pray simple prayers each day asking the Holy Spirit to become more active in their lives. He also encouraged young people preparing for Confirmation to approach the Sacrament with openness and courage. The Sacrament of Confirmation is meant to be a life-changing moment in one's life and call to discipleship, as it was for the disciples of the early church." “Don’t be afraid to live an extraordinary life in Christ,” he said. “Christ is calling all of us to be saints.” Speaking during the Diocese’s confirmation season, Bishop Gruss reflected on visiting parishes across the Diocese to celebrate Confirmation with young people.  “Confirmation is not an ending. It doesn’t complete anything. It’s a beginning,” Bishop Gruss said. He explained that Catholics often reduce the Sacraments to events they attend rather than encounters with Jesus Christ himself. “When we look at the Sacramental life merely as events, then we have diminished them by 99.9%,” he said. Instead of saying, “I’m going to Mass,” Bishop Gruss suggested Catholics think differently: “I’m going for an encounter with the risen Lord Jesus.” Jesus Is the One Who Confirms Bishop Gruss reminded attendees that Jesus himself is the minister of every Sacrament. “Jesus baptized you. He confirmed you. He gave himself to you in Holy Communion,” he said. “In the Sacrament of Confirmation, he uses my thumb.” Reflecting on his own Confirmation and Baptism dates, Bishop Gruss encouraged Catholics to learn and celebrate those dates as important milestones in their lives of faith. “These are two of the most important dates,” he said, “more important than your birthday.” He urged Catholics to contact the parish where they were baptized to obtain their Sacramental records and reflect more intentionally on those moments of grace. Confirmation and the Holy Spirit Drawing from the Acts of the Apostles, Bishop Gruss compared Confirmation to the transformation experienced by the apostles at Pentecost. Before receiving the Holy Spirit, the apostles hid in fear. Afterward, they boldly proclaimed the Gospel. “Peter went from fear and denial of Jesus to being a strong, faithful witness of the Gospel,” Bishop Gruss said. “Everything changed.” "That same Holy Spirit is given to the disciples is given to each person in the Sacrament of Confirmation, not diminished in any way. This is why it should be a profound life-changing experience." Bishop Gruss encouraged Catholics to ask the Lord to “bring alive the grace” of Confirmation again in their lives. “The Spirit is never dead,” he said. “Ask the Holy Spirit to ignite your faith.”

    42 min
  2. Jun 1

    Bishop Gruss: God created you out of love and He wants to spend eternity with you

    Earlier this year, Bishop Robert Gruss shared a talk about purgatory at St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Saginaw. He invited those gathered to reflect deeply on God’s mercy, holiness and eternal life promised through Jesus.  "You never know the day nor the time," Bishop Gruss told those in attendance. "We always have to be prepared."  The evening began with prayer as Bishop Gruss asked the Holy Spirit to open hearts and minds to receive what God wanted to reveal through the discussion.  Understanding purgatory  Throughout the presentation, Bishop Gruss emphasized that purgatory is often misunderstood. While many people think of purgatory as a physical place, he explained that the Church teaches it is better understood as a process of purification.  "Purgatory is not a place," Bishop Gruss said. "It is a condition of existence."  Quoting St. John Paul II and the Catechism of the Catholic Church, Bishop Gruss explained that purgatory comes from the Latin word purgare, meaning "to make clean" or "to purify."  He pointed to paragraphs 1030 and 1031 of the Catechism, which describe purgatory as the purification of souls who die in God’s grace and friendship but are still imperfectly purified before entering heaven.  "Nothing unclean will enter the presence of God in heaven," Bishop Gruss said, referencing the Book of Revelation (Chapter 21, Verse 27).  Because of this, every soul must be fully purified before experiencing what the Church calls the beatific vision — seeing God face-to-face in His glory.  God’s mercy and purification  Bishop Gruss explained that after death, every person undergoes what the Church calls a particular judgment, where the soul immediately understands its eternal destiny.  "There are only two choices," he said. "Heaven and hell."  However, Bishop Gruss reminded those gathered that purgatory is not separate from salvation. Rather, it is part of God’s mercy for souls destined for heaven.  "If you’re experiencing purgatory, you’re in [going to Heaven]," he said. "There’s no turning back the other way."  The bishop emphasized that most people die in what he called an "imperfect state of grace," still carrying attachments to sin, selfishness or worldly desires.  He encouraged frequent confession and honest examination of conscience, asking participants to reflect on the areas of their lives that still need healing and conversion.  "People die with unforgiveness in their soul," he said. "People die with attachment to jealousy or envy or lust or hatred."  Yet the message of the evening was ultimately one of hope.  "The beautiful thing about purgatory," Bishop Gruss said, "is that it exists as a result of God’s mercy and His love and His desire for you and for me to be with Him for all eternity."  Created for love  At several points during the talk, Bishop Gruss reminded listeners that the Christian life is deeply personal because every person was created intentionally by God.  He encouraged those present to prepare their hearts for eternal life through prayer, repentance and trust in God’s mercy.  The evening concluded with a renewed invitation to holiness and deeper conversion, reminding the faithful that God’s desire is always to bring His people into the fullness of His presence.  "Purgatory is meant to purify us so that we can love as completely as God," Bishop Gruss said.

    1h 35m
5
out of 5
18 Ratings

About

Talks and presentations to help you in your Catholic faith. We participate in activities of social justice, support the good works of persons locally and in other countries, prepare our children and young people to be faith-filled, responsible members of the community — and we do all this in the name of our Lord, Jesus Christ.The Catholic Diocese of Saginaw includes 56 parishes in 11 counties of Mid-Michigan.Our Mission Statement: Trusting in the Holy Spirit and nourished by the Eucharist, we, the faithful of the Diocese of Saginaw, are companions on the journey to share the love of Jesus Christ.

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