Google Translation:
March 19. 21 / 09:00 am (ACI) .-
The Amoris Laetitia Family Year begins on March 19 and continues until June 26,
2022, convened by the Vatican on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of the
Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia. To mark the beginning of
this special year, ACI Digital brings the testimony of the life of a large
Catholic family.
In his Exhortation, Pope
Francis points out that “large families are a joy for the Church. In them, love
manifests its generous fruitfulness ”.
This great joy is experienced
by Ana Braga-Henebry, born in a large Catholic family in Brazil and who, following
the example and advice of her parents, now has, in the United States, her seven
children, one of whom is religious.
The seventh of Lucia and
Cláudio Braga's ten children, Ana gratefully recalls the teachings she received
from her parents, still in Rio de Janeiro. The couple, who were part of a group
of young Catholics in the 1950s, "studied and followed their Catholic
faith."
In their marriage, Lucia and
Cláudio "had insisted on nuptial mass and communion, which was rare at
that time". For Ana, the celebration of their parents' wedding “set the
tone for the rest of their married life: what was important to them that happy
morning — the sacrament and simplicity — remained important to them throughout
their lives”.
As she remembers, she and her
brothers grew up in an “environment of faith, prayer, love and dedication”.
From childhood, she keeps in mind the dinners or “nights in the living room”,
when the family shared cultural moments, knowledge. “On Sundays, Mass was
sacred, as well as prayer before dinner, every night, around the big table with
benches on both sides. We also prayed at bedtime, not only for our family, but
for the world”.
Ana also says that her family
had the grace to see an early daughter born. “As I remember my mother waiting for
my little sister Marta at 46 years of age”, she expresses. According to her,
"at a time when it was believed that the Church was going to change its
age-old teachings on artificial contraceptives, our parents were an eloquent
and courageous witness of fidelity to God."
“Mom told me, when I was
already married, how she and Dad knelt, crying, in a prayer of gratitude to
God, when the encyclical Humanae Vitae was promulgated. The beautiful
encyclical, whose text is a true love letter, reiterated the defense of life
and prophesied the evils that artificial contraception would bring to the world
”, she reports.
This youngest daughter was a
“great blessing” from her parents “in old age” and, after they died, “she
entered a Benedictine abbey in Bavaria”, Germany, and today she is known as
Sister Martina.
Over the years, after
completing college in Brazil, Ana went on to do a master's degree in the United
States, where she met her husband, Geoff. He soon fell in love with her
parents, because of "their authentic faith".
“At the beginning of our
marriage, we asked them for good advice, advice that we used during our married
and family lives. These were very precious to us: to follow and trust the
teachings of the Church, because they bring peace, joy and security; remain
open to life, with generosity and confidence; to live the marriage knowing
that, at the wedding ceremony, when we promise to accept the children that God
in his generosity sends us, we already expect and love each of our children in
advance ”, she says.
Ana had seven children and
guarantees that the family's life "was never easy" and they always
lived "with economy". "We never had a Disney vacation budget,
and the end of the month was always tight ... but my days with them were so
happy, and the shopping cart at the supermarket always had several little
helpers and at least one baby," he says.
“Walking through life with our
children, I began to glimpse how many have a heavy and sad heart due to the
choices they made regarding the family, believing in the empty promises of
living in selfishness, of false freedom, without ever having lived the life
that seems to others' chained to the house and the children '”, laments Ana
Braga, stressing that, this family life, in fact,“ brings peace and freedom to
be living a natural vocation, and so spiritually fulfilling ”.
Thus, she says she is very
grateful to live her marriage "in peace and joy, following the advice and
example" of her parents. “Until today, it is what we have and give the
most valuable to our children”, she guarantees and tells that she sees the
fruits, with the children “finding their vocations, some starting their
families” and one in the religious life.
For Ana, "Catholic life in
the family can reign in all activities at home". “From the beginning, we
led a life of prayer with the children, and every night we met in the living
room before bedtime”, she quotes.
On these occasions, each child,
"even the smallest, said to whom or what he would like to pray for".
"This brought a lot of communication between the family about what was on
the mind and heart of each one," she underlines.
“Prayers ranged from a simple
ten of the third to a specific novena of a liturgical season. One aspect that
the children always liked was to call their patron saints in a litany of saints
‘personalized’ for our family,” she recalls.
Other activities that added to
the family's life of faith were participation in the parish community, daily
Mass when possible, the sacraments, religious education, volunteering in
parishes, in addition to opening “the doors for visits by priests and nuns”.
Thus, he recalls that, “for
many years, with children growing up at home, this was our life: to live each
day the best we can, trusting and asking every night with the family that God
guides us, day by day, our plans, our decisions. That left us to sleep each
night in the peace that really rests”.
"Nowadays, with our
youngest already far away, in university life, and the others headed in life,
we look back and marvel at how God guided and helped us around every corner of
life," she observes.
Cultivating a religious life at
home
Among the fruits of Catholic
family formation, Ana Braga-Henebry saw her vocation to religious life grow in
one of her seven children, Sister Maria Perpetua O. Praem. However, she points
out that it is not a family merit, because "a religious vocation is a call
from God" and, "at home, the family can be an environment where that
call is cultivated".
“With the grace of God, one of
our daughters entered the religious life. We miss her a lot at home, but also a
heart full of joy and pride for her courageous and mature option for the
cloister,” she says.
Asked about how to cultivate
this call of God in her children, Ana indicates: “Living the faith at home,
through prayers, the exercise of virtue, the study of the history of the Church
and the life of the saints, this way we can cultivate an environment conducive
to this answer.
For her, “parents can always
include the priesthood or religious life in conversations about the
possibilities of future occupations for their children. Opening the doors for
priests or nuns to visit is also very good, so that the children have the
opportunity to get to know them better”.
In addition, she points out the
importance of “volunteering in the parish”, as well as “looking for other
family opportunities such as the adoration of the Blessed Sacrament or the Way
of the Cross”.
Finally, she quotes her own
daughter's words to the families before entering monastic life: met you before
forming you, and created you for a reason. So take a sincere look at yourself,
your interests and desires, and ask Him to show you what to do with all of
this. She prays with Santo Afonso de Ligório: ‘Lord, make me love you always,
and then do what you will with me’ ”.
2 comments:
Just a lovely testament to a Catholic life well-lived, Ana. XOXOX
Thanks so much for the kind comment, Kathie!
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