<!--
/* What it does: Remove spaces around the email design added by some
email clients. */
/* Beware: It can remove the padding / margin and add a background
color to the compose a reply window. */
html,
body {
Margin: 0 !important;
padding: 0 !important;
height: 100% !important;
width: 100% !important;
text-align: center;
}
/* What it does: Stops email clients resizing small text. */
* {
-ms-text-size-adjust: 100%;
-webkit-text-size-adjust: 100%;
}
/* What is does: Centers email on Android 4.4 */
div[style*="margin: 16px 0"] {
margin:0 !important;
}
/* What it does: Stops Outlook from adding extra spacing to tables.
*/
table,
td {
mso-table-lspace: 0pt !important;
mso-table-rspace: 0pt !important;
}
/* What it does: Fixes webkit padding issue. Fix for Yahoo mail table
alignment bug. Applies table-layout to the first 2 tables then removes
for anything nested deeper. */
table {
border-spacing: 0 !important;
border-collapse: collapse !important;
table-layout: fixed !important;
Margin: 0 auto !important;
}
table table table {
table-layout: auto;
}
/* What it does: Uses a better rendering method when resizing images
in IE. */
img {
-ms-interpolation-mode:bicubic;
}
/* What it does: Overrides styles added when Yahoo's auto-senses a
link. */
.yshortcuts a {
border-bottom: none !important;
}
/* What it does: A work-around for iOS meddling in triggered links.
*/
.mobile-link footer a,
a[x-apple-data-detectors] {
color:inherit !important;
text-decoration: underline !important;
}
-->
<!--
/* What it does: Hover styles for buttons */
.button-td,
.button-a {
transition: all 100ms ease-in;
}
.button-td:hover,
.button-a:hover {
background: #555555 !important;
border-color: #555555 !important;
}
/* Media Queries */
@media screen and (max-width: 600px) {
.email-container {
width: 100% !important;
}
/* What it does: Forces elements to resize to the full width of their
container. Useful for resizing images beyond their max-width. */
.fluid,
.fluid-centered {
max-width: 100% !important;
height: auto !important;
Margin-left: auto !important;
Margin-right: auto !important;
}
/* And center justify these ones. */
.fluid-centered {
Margin-left: auto !important;
Margin-right: auto !important;
}
/* What it does: Forces table cells into full-width rows. */
.stack-column,
.stack-column-center {
display: block !important;
width: 100% !important;
max-width: 100% !important;
direction: ltr !important;
}
/* And center justify these ones. */
.stack-column-center {
text-align: center !important;
}
/* What it does: Generic utility class for centering. Useful for
images, buttons, and nested tables. */
.center-on-narrow {
text-align: center !important;
display: block !important;
Margin-left: auto !important;
Margin-right: auto !important;
float: none !important;
}
table.center-on-narrow {
display: inline-block !important;
}
}
body {
background-color: #fff;
width: 100%;
margin: 0px 0px 0px 0px;
}
p{
line-height:20px;
}
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5{
color:#7A9534;
}
.signup a {font-family: Roboto Condensed, sans-serif; font-size: 14pt;
color: #4F4293; padding-bottom:0px; padding-top: 15px;
font-weight:600; margin-bottom: 0px; text-decoration: none}
-->
Catholic Charities USA
Thursday of the First Week in Lent
Readings of the Day
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"Help me! Please! I'm begging you!"
This cry of fear and petition is a clear theme in the Mass readings
for today. From the desperate Esther whose entire nation was in danger
if she could not change the hardened heart of a king, through the
responsorial giving thanks for prayers answered, to the promise of
Jesus that at all times all we have to do is ask and God will respond,
the theme of our asks and God's responses fills our history. We
just need to ask, to seek, to knock.
As those in service to people in need, we often find ourselves being
the instruments that God uses to respond to these cries for help. It
is easy to forget the honor we have been given to be a part of
God's responses to petitions for heavenly help because we do so
every day, sometimes seem to fail, and often are exhausted by the
effort. But we are important tools in God's workshop.
The hardest step in this process is often the first-finding
where to look, how to knock on the right door, and what to ask. Those
steps often bring people to us in a state of frustration, fear, and
despair. It is our role to hear what they really need and provide the
guidance and help they are begging for. Ours isn't an easy
mandate, because even when we are busy being a part of God's
response to others, we also have the need to seek, to knock, and to
ask for help in our own lives. May God give us the courage to be on
both sides of that door.
Sister Mary Louise Stubbs, Daughter of Charity currently serves as the
director of International Project Services finding resources to help
her sister Daughters of Charity fund programs and projects in very
low-resourced countries around the world. Her background in leadership
positions in several diocesan Catholic Charities organizations, health
care, and community development supports her in her current ministry.
Sign up to receive the Daily Lent Reflection emails and other CCUSA
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