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Deacon_Ed_B
Guest
Yes it is. However, the Feast of Divine Mercy, celebrated the Sunday after Easter, is a feast approved by the Church’s office of liturgy and worship. The feast, through private revelation to Sr. Faustina Kawalska and is chronicled in her diary. I would conclude by your statement that you have not read her diary. If you do so, I can only say that you will not be the same. She, Sr Faustina was the first saint canonized in this century. This is not just a devotion. Divine Mercy is a way of life. The Church is actively promoting it and endorsing it and has set the Sunday after Easter, on the world wide liturgical Calendar as the Feast of Divine Mercy. Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI both endorse and encourage it. Through the private revelation, which the Church so far has endorsed in part, the promises made by Jesus as recorded in the diary for those who celebrate this feast in accord with the directions specified , are endorsed in the Church and are in fact bound under the power of the keys, for this annual celebration.Isn’t all of Holy Week and Pascha–yea, every Eucharistic Sacrifice–a celebration of Divine Mercy?
When it was first being celebrated, I remember asking some priests if they were going to have the Divine Mercy liturgy. Several scoffed and said every mass celebrates Divine Mercy. This told me they had not heard of it or of St. Faustina. I gave each of them a copy of her diary. All, but one, are now celebrating this in their parishes. I even got the devotion started this past April in another parish, where I was asked to be the homilist and deacon of the Mass. I can only ask you and all reading this to please get a copy of her diary and read it. You will not be the same once you do so.
I am privileged to be on the official Archdiocesan cenacle for my archdiocese where we promote the expansion of and education of this for all parishes.
Prayers & blessings
Deacon Ed B