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Ephesians 6 Ministry

64 members • Free

Saints John and James Parish

85 members • Free

9 contributions to Ephesians 6 Ministry
Share some good news!
Hi friends! Please take a moment and share some good news. We always need good news to encourage one another in the faith! Here’s my good news: God has heard my special intention over the last few weeks and has brought about a peaceful resolution! Please share yours!
1 like • 12h
My in-laws welcomed Penny into the family this morning! 🐾
2 likes • 4d
defining terms again was super helpful!
COUNT YOUR BLESSINGS — RESULTS
Sorry for the delay… BUT>>>> WE have a winner! BEFORE I announce the winner! I have a few special mentions. @Adam Habershaw Came in with 16 points even with a busy seminary schedule! Keep it up! @Elsa came in with 24 points! @Andrew Lanchoney Came in with 2 points. @Elizabeth Wright came to 37 points! But… @Kristen Hazard came in with a whopping, …… 44 points! Great work! Let’s get ready for our next challenge! Congrats all! Happy New Year!
COUNT YOUR BLESSINGS — RESULTS
1 like • 7d
congratulations @Kristen Hazard !!! 👏
Baptism of Jesus in the Jordan
Today’s Gospel reminds us to let Jesus take the Lead. I’m not sure that we can, from this bird’s-eye view two thousand years later, fully appreciate the scene unfolding between Jesus and John the Baptist in the Jordan River. John is a man who always follows God’s prompting. In the desert he announces the coming of Christ. He tells his own disciples that he is not worthy even to untie Jesus’ sandals. And now he is asked to do the unthinkable—to baptize Jesus Himself. Then the heavens open, and the voice of the Father speaks: “This is my beloved Son. Listen to him.” Jesus deliberately takes the lower place. He steps into line with sinners. He identifies Himself with those who need repentance, in order to meet them exactly where they are. And only then does heaven reveal His glory and command the crowd to follow Him. This reveals a profound truth about the life of Jesus. We first saw Him in a manger, identifying with the lowly, and yet summoning kings, shepherds, and angels to worship His glory. Now He walks among sinners as one of them, not to remain there, but to show them the way to glory. Here is the lesson: the art of the Christian life — for each baptized Christian — is learning to let God take the lead. We become real disciples only when we learn how to follow the Lord. But if God is in the lead, then I am not—and that is where our resistance begins. We worry that if God’s plans are not our plans, then we will lose our freedom. What will become of us? What will life look like? We want a say in what happens to us and for us. So instead of listening, we try to take charge. We say, Bless my plans. Support my timing. Endorse my priorities. And yet St. Thomas Aquinas reminds us that grace does not destroy our freedom—it perfects it. God’s leadership does not diminish us; it heals us. If we are honest, we have been in charge for quite some time—and we are still broken, still discouraged, still struggling with sin and vice. We act as though handing our life over to God is like giving a teenager with a learner’s permit the keys to an expensive sports car. We hesitate. And yet every time we insist on control, every time we try to lead, we go astray anyway. We wander. We crash.
1 like • 7d
🤯🔥👏
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Pray for Us!
As we enter a new year, many reflect on 2025. It's joys, it's sorrows; all culminating into how the last 365 days were for us. While it's important to look back, it's even more important to look forward. As such, we should look at the Patron Saint of new beginnings, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton. The first American-born Saint, she had a path that only God could foresee. Born into an Episcopalian family in New York, she was married off to William Magee Seton. But not even 10 years into their marriage, her husband caught tuberculosis. While they moved to Italy with hopes of recovery, he passed away, leaving her a widow with five children. After his passing, she moved back to America. While she left her husband behind, she came home with a heart radically in love with Catholicism. While her conversion resulted in a loss of social status, financial security, and many family relationships; her love for Christ, the Holy Mother, and the Eucharist was stronger. From here, she would move to Baltimore to teach. After only one year in Maryland, she founded the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph’s. Here, they ran Saint Joseph’s Academy and a free school for girls. While there was no way she could have known at the time, this educational model would go on to shape Catholic schools in America. Furthermore, her religious organization would go on to establish orphanages, hospitals, and social service centers worldwide. St. Seton had an incredibly difficult decision to make. She could have kept her life as it was, being scared of the unknown; but she trusted God to steer her life towards him. While trusting God may not always be the easiest thing to do, it's important to remember that God can do amazing things in your life. Let God direct 2026; He just needs your trust. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Pray for Us! https://missions.ewtn.com/dailysaint/st-elizabeth-ann-seton/#:~:text=The%20families%20of%20her%20husband's,caused%20her%20to%20lose%20students
1 like • 7d
love this!
1-9 of 9
Keira Scalzi
2
6points to level up
@keira-paget-8383
Luke 1:49 ✨

Active 11h ago
Joined Dec 30, 2025
West Warwick
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