Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 120

Hope you had a blessed week!

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday. ✝️ 🙏

🕒🙏
😅😅😅
My hint: This bird is smaller than an emu.
The Mass is beautiful. 🙏
What would you bust through to get your friends to Jesus?
And Paul would use Times New Roman font. ✉️
That escalated quickly!
😊😊😊
Happy Belated Feast of Saint Polycarp! 🙏
Had to include another Polycarp meme. 😊
God is the Lord of all Creation. 🙏🙏🙏
🐳🙏😊😅
(echoes) WOW! 🙏🙏🙏
😅😅😅
It’s one of the questions I think about at night. 😅
John 20:7 one of the most interesting details of the Fourth Gospel.
Email me (Chicoine.matt@live.com) “Linen” to learn why Jesus folded his burial cloth.

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!

A 978 Word Interview with Deacon Andy Weiss


Editor’s Note: Matthew Chicoine interviewed Dcn Andy Weiss, Deacon in the Diocese of Las Cruces, New Mexico, via phone call on February 10th, 2024. Some of the questions have been rearranged and edited to provide the best reader experience without losing any integrity of the answers given.


Tell me a bit about your faith journey.

I was born and raised Catholic. I was in the Air Force and had a temporary stay in Spain, but those I listened to had anti-Catholic sentiment and this caused me to leave the Church when I was 20. For three and a half years, I was an anti-Catholic Protestant. I bought the King-James Bible and got to a point of crisis. At his point, I told God to explain to me or I will leave organized religion. I opened the Bible to the book of Romans and this was what helped keep me in organized religion.

Coming back to the Catholic Church was a long journey, but because of my experience with reading the Bible and listening to various arguments from Protestants. I would study the arguments using a bible dictionary, concordance, Bible, notepad. I would do a word study to look up all the references to better understand what that meant.

In the 1990s, I met my wife in a “chat-room” on Catholicity. And after we got married, my wife and another Catholic we also met online “ganged up” on me and said that I should be a deacon. In 2009 the formal process started, I had a desire to preach and bless things. I got ordained in 2015.

How has the sacrament of Holy Orders impacted your marriage?

It’s a balancing act. We must make time for one another. You can get sucked into the ministry. We were taught in our studies that my primary vocation is marriage and to my family. The diaconate is my secondary vocation.

I have to be conscious of my schedule. In addition to the diaconate, I also design websites. We have a Shroud Museum in our city, and I made the website. I must organize my time and ensure I make time for my wife and daughter. The permanent diaconate has made me more conscious of my time and how I spend it.

Describe the fruits of the permanent diaconate in your life.

It started in the program itself, I could have taught a lot of the classes but I was there to learn. The diaconate is about forming you into a person.

One of the important aspects of the diaconate is our devotion to Mary. The last part of Church teaching was Mariology, and I didn’t understand at this time. We wrote an article about our relationship to Mary. It was then that I realized that I couldn’t be a good diaconate without Her help. I formally gave myself to the Blessed Virgin Mary in January 2018 using the book “33 Days to Morning Glory.” I scheduled to have the book end on January 1st, the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God. During my homily, I said, “It’s like I’m looking at my Mother for the first time.” This was a deep experience for me.

What do you see as the fruits of the permanent diaconate for the Catholic Church?

What happened to me was a transformation. The Church ordaining men who have one foot in the secular world and one foot in the faith world, leads to transformation. I noticed when I wore my clerics while doing ministry people would assume I was a pastor. It gave me an opportunity to explain I was a Catholic deacon.

The deacon models to the laity what it means to be a servant for the Church. While the priest stands In persona Christi (in the Person of Christ), the deacon represents Christ the Servant. Paragraph #1570 of the Catholic of the Catholic Church says: 

“Deacons share in Christ’s mission and grace in a special way. The sacrament of Holy Orders marks them with an imprint (“character”) which cannot be removed, and which configures them to Christ, who made himself the “deacon” or servant of all.”

Well said, the diaconate is like a bridge to God. What’s the most misunderstood aspect of the diaconate?

I don’t think Catholics are catechized well. One day I had my alb on and a fellow parishioner said, “Hello Father.” I clarified I wasn’t a priest. It’s interesting to see the laity’s relationship with deacons.

The diaconate opens opportunities to ask questions about the faith. People feel more comfortable reaching out to us when we are out in public (i.e. the store, etc). The permanent diaconate opens a channel to extend the ministry of the priest. We are there to assist the priest. Even while at the store, we are extending his pastoral mission.

Who’s your favorite saint-deacon?

Probably Saint Ephraim. He likely saw the Shroud of Turin. He was a great preacher and a Doctor of the Church. Of course, I can’t leave out Saint Francis of Assisi, he would be my number two.

What advice would you give men discerning the permanent diaconate as a vocation?

Have a regular prayer life. Once ordained, deacons have to pray as a minimum Morning and Evening Prayer. Then they should talk to their priest.

The laity are known for their devotional life: praying the Rosary, the Chaplet, etc. But I think if the clergy kept a better devotional life we would have a better clergy. We have to use our own personalities in our faith and work.

Could you tell me about your Facebook profile picture?

That’s an interesting one. I’ve been working for the Air Force for 43 years. There’s an organization within the Air Force, the 49th Materiel Maintenance Group, Base Expedition.

I’ll leave you with a few last thoughts. In my honest opinion, the greatest fruits of Vatican II are the permanent diaconate and the Mass of Paul VI. The New Mass has the more active participation in the liturgy with the vernacular and the role of the deacon.


About Deacon Andy Weiss:

Dcn. Andy Weiss is a Deacon in the Diocese of Las Cruces, New Mexico, assigned to St. Jude’s parish. He is a husband and father, an IT professional, and volunteer speaker and webmaster, creating http://ShroudNM.com, a non-profit New Mexico Corporation dedicated to the study and popularization of the Shroud of Turin.

Weiss has a Masters in Religious Education from Loyola University, New Orleans through their LIMEX program. He has been interviewed several times by the hosts of the podcast StrangeCatholics.

Thank you for sharing!

Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 119

Hope you had a blessed week!

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday. ✝️ 🙏

🎵🎶😅😅

Way too punny. 😅😂⚛️🙏
How many middle names do you have? Do you know someone named Cletus or Sixtus??
Do you prefer fish or grilled cheese on Lenten Fridays? 🐟🧀
Last weekend it was a struggle during bedtime. I at least got to read one of my four kids a story about Saint Augustine. 🙏
😅😅😅
Original meme credit: Fete in Heaven
A be(head)lated Valentine’s Day meme.
Kids and money during Mass. 😅🙏
Had to include this belated Ash Wednesday meme. 😅🙏
Let’s end on an inspiring note! 🙏🙏🙏

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!

Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 118

Hope you had a blessed week!

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday. ✝️ 🙏

😂🙏♥️
Do you prefer waffles or pancakes? 
😂😂😂
Waiting for the answer for your prayer is tough. Ask the Holy Spirit for perseverance and understanding.
The Father welcomes the repentant with open arms.
Don’t mistake this as a knock on football. I love that sport. 🏈
But I love God more! ♥️
😂😂🙏🙏
A Valentine’s Day poem. 🙏
God is merciful. 🙏🙏
The most romantic thing is to take your Valentine to Mass.
Too punny not to share! 💦 😂
Gotta end with another Ash Wednesday meme. 😂🙏

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!

A 1532 Word Interview with the Owner of Cobblestone Games


Editor’s Note: Matthew Chicoine interviewed Peter Schultz, owner of Cobblestone Games, via email between February 1st and February 6th, 2024. Some questions have been rearranged and edited to provide the best reader experience without losing any integrity of the answers given.


Briefly describe your faith journey.  

My faith journey started at an early age without a lot of fanfare. I grew up in a Christian home, was raised learning about God and Jesus, reading the Bible, and praying, and accepted Jesus as my savior around the age of four. Obviously, at that time my faith was childlike, but grew over time. I recommitted myself to the Lord as a teenager. However, like many people I drifted some during my college years, never truly doubting, but not on fire either.

In my early 20’s I was hanging out one night with one of my best friends who was in a similar state, drifting a bit further than I, and the topic of conversation turned to God and if He is there. As my friend voiced his doubts, the front door to my apartment suddenly swung open. Now, I lived ghetto-adjacent at the time and religiously locked my door, so this startled us. We checked out front and neither the landlord nor anybody else was visible. There was not even a touch of a breeze either.

While I was sure I had locked the door (deadbolt and all), we assumed I must have forgotten. We closed, locked, and bolted the door. As we turned and started to head back to the couch, the door opened again. This time God left no room for doubt, and it helped to reinvigorate my work for the kingdom.

Interesting! God sends us a variety of signs to lead us back to faith in him.

Things continued over the next decade, as I met my future wife, helped to bring her to Christ, and later got married and had two beautiful girls. Then, my wife was tragically taken from us at too young of an age. I’ve seen it go both ways. Following great loss, I leaned into the Lord, and he rewarded me with comfort.

Later, he further rewarded me by leading me to my current wife, who was not only a strong Christian herself, but even chose to legally adopt my girls. As they say, God is good.

That is quite a powerful story. And so sorry to hear about the loss of your first wife, but I’m glad to hear how God has comforted you with your new wife. How did you get into board gaming?

I got into board games in the late 90’s, after the earliest waves of euro games, but while the top games were still all coming from European designers. Growing up I enjoyed all manner of games, be it traditional board games, card games, RPGs, or miniature gaming. Over the years traditional board games had dropped off as they became stale. I stumbled across BGG one day and my eyes were opened to a whole new world of possibilities. My wife and I enjoyed several games that played well at 2 players (even a couple cooperative ones). As my daughters have grown, we’ve introduced them both to games as well. We hold a weekly game night every Friday, with a rotating game pick.

My wife and I also enjoy playing board games (especially cooperative ones like Pandemic). Why did you create The Acts? 

As any Christian board game enthusiast knows, there is a dearth of good Christian game titles available. When I started working on The Acts, nearly all Christian games on the market were either trivia related or a Christian theme thinly pasted onto an existing game. I had just finished my first board game, Builders of Blankenburg, and wanted to create a Christian game, even though I wasn’t sure there was a market for it.

As a Christian in the digital age, I felt board games were a great way to encourage community and fellowship. These are two things often lacking in life (and the church) today. For The Acts, I wanted to create a game that was mechanically solid and enjoyable to play, so Christians could subtly introduce non-believing gamer friends to the gospel through it.

Likewise, I wanted it true to the Bible and authentic, so gamers could introduce Christians to the beauty of board gaming. It was originally going to be called The Great Commission, but as we were wrapping up playtesting, Commissioned came out on Kickstarter. I decided to change the name even though the two games are completely different.

I think it’s great you found a balance between the theme (making it faithful to the Bible) and game mechanics. Both are important aspects to any good board game. Describe your creation process.

With each game I design, the creation process is a bit different. With The Acts, I felt called to build a game tied to the growth of the early church. As a Biblical game, I felt accuracy to the Bible and a thematic connection to gameplay were of utmost importance. As in real life, all the disciples in the game begin in Judea, but you must spread to the ends of the earth to truly succeed in adding believers. To encourage spreading out, there are richer returns as you get farther from Judea. This mirrors reality in that the farther the disciples moved from Jesus’ ministry grounds, the more unreached people were encountered.

The game also features diminishing returns as you preach in the same region. Again, this makes sense, since preaching the message over and over in the same place has a lessening impact. Some people have already believed and others have hardened their hearts.

On the flipside, the impact of prayer in the game increases over time as there is a larger gathering of the Saints. I also made sure to pull all the miracles directly from the pages of The Acts, utilize appropriate scripture passages on the cards, and ensure the spiritual gifts were balanced and aligned well with their in-game abilities.

On a more practical note, play testing is a family affair for the first few dozen iterations. I always try to focus on gameplay in my designs. Your playtesting involves a barebones mock-up with almost non-existent art. This way if the game is enjoyable while lacking aesthetic value, I know it’ll be great once everything comes together at the end.

I love how you include Bible verses on the cards and it’s neat how the game itself begins in Judea. How do you get inspired (in creating your board games)?

The inspiration for my games beyond The Acts has all come from the pages of history. Builders of Blankenburg takes place in medieval Germany (what was the Holy Roman Empire at the time). Flight of Icarus is based on the famous Greek myth of Icarus and Daedalus. Quatermain is taken from King Solomon’s Mines and the other adventure tales by H. Rider Haggard during the turn of the century. I’m a big fan of history, especially ancient history, and feel there are near limitless stories to be told through board games.

Other ideas I have planned include a game about the Viking invasions of England, succession in Rome following the death of the emperor, and an archaeological dig (a more modern theme literally about digging up history).

History certainly gives us many examples of great stories to tell (and play out) in board games. What are your top five favorite board games to play. 

In no particular order: With a larger group, I still love 7 Wonders – I received Encyclopedia for Christmas and enjoy its interesting scoring mechanisms – Through the Ages remains an all-time favorite for a game weekend (instead of game night) – Our family always enjoys Serenissima as a good mix of player interaction – For classic worker placement, Agricola or Settlers so many different strategies to employ.

I’ve heard good things about Agricola and Settlers of Catan is one of my favorites. How do you think board gaming can have a positive impact on today’s society?

I mentioned a bit earlier about the beauty of board games and how they promote community and fellowship. The importance of that cannot be overstated. When you sit down at a table with others to play a game, you’re generally eating, drinking, chatting, and sharing in each other’s lives as you play. I feel fellowship is lacking in the church today, but even in broader society interacting in person is becoming a lost art, especially among the younger generations.

In addition to the sense of community, board games are also very educational. People today are more frequently taught what to think and have forgotten how to think. Board games encourage critical thinking, observational skills, practical application of probability and cost-benefit analysis, and more depending on the specifics of the game.

Agreed! Board games are a great way to develop friendships and form community. It was awesome to learn about your work and faith journey Peter. Where can my audience find your work? 

All my games can be found at my website, CobblestoneGames.net, as well as through distribution, including a few brick-and-mortar game stores and online ventures. My latest project, Letters from Rome, is exclusively available through Kickstarter: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/cobblestonegames/the-acts-letters-from-rome-christian-strategy-board-game?ref=dxwd4y The Kickstarter campaign runs through February 15th. At present, several exclusive bonuses have been unlocked, including custom metal coins for all Kickstarter backers.


About Peter

Peter Schultz is the owner of Cobblestone Games. He is a Christian, husband, father, and longtime avid gamer, whether with board, card, miniatures or RPG. Modern publishing options have finally made sharing some of his creative game ideas a possibility. His designs are always rooted in strategy, but allow for some level of luck to ensure they’re enjoyable for casual gamers as well. When not designing games, Peter holds down a day job in the financial services industry. Being a numbers guy, gaming and its basis in probability became a favored hobby of his. Peter loves playing games with his family (they have a weekly game night), and his children provide an extra insight into what makes games enjoyable for a younger audience. He has created four base games, multiple expansions, and two decks of custom playing cards. A student of history and voracious reader, many of his games are set in past time periods and feature famous tales from long ago. Though gameplay is his primary pursuit, a heavy focus on theme leads to immersive games that the entire family can enjoy.

Thank you for sharing!

Catholic Meme Monday— Issue 117

Hope you had a blessed week!

Time for another Catholic Meme Monday. ✝️ 🙏

Looks pretty accurate. 😆🙏
😆😆😆
Too funny! 😆
Happy Belated Feast of Saint Blaise! 🕯️🕯️
I still need to take down the tree. 🎄🙈
God is merciful
Candlemas is over— time to take down the 🎄
At least they aren’t ash-flavored. ♥️ ✝️
😆😆😆
You can’t unseen it!
For Seinfeld and John Bosco fans. 😆🙏

That’s all I have this week. Stay tuned for next week’s Catholic Meme Monday. Receive updates straight to your email inbox by subscribing to The Simple Catholic blog.

P.S. If you prefer receiving quality Catholic humor in daily doses follow me on Instagram @thesimplecatholic.

Thank you for sharing!

A 584 Word Interview with the Founder of the Lego Church Project


Editor’s Note: Matthew Chicoine interviewed J.M. Kraemer, founder of The Lego Church Project via phone call on January 29th, 2024. Some of the questions have been rearranged and edited to provide the best reader experience without losing any integrity of the answers given.


It’s great to have you back J.M.! Refresh my audience how did the Lego Church Project begin?

Growing up I was always into Legos. My friends were building spaceships and I wasn’t good at that. I started building buildings and it slowly developed into me building churches and a ministry.

I’ve had a mild form of cerebral palsy, in this ministry I’m showing others that God can still use your talents.

How many blocks do you use on a project (on average)?

Between 25,000 and 30,000. There’s a lot of interior details. I have one feature at the altar that has over 150 pieces.

Do you ever keep a build constructed?

I tear down the Lego Church every year. It takes about 3 days to deconstruct.

How do you organize the Legos?

Normally, by color.

Did you ever imagine the Lego Church Project would reach the 25th year mark?

Honestly, no. To realize where I’ve been and where I’m going has been a surprise. Our society is not geared towards those with disabilities. This project has helped bring awareness and led to conversations that people with disabilities have a place in the Church.

How often do you think about the future of this project?

I think about the future all the time. I trust in the Lord’s wisdom and timing. As long as I’m doing this ministry for the right reasons, I trust the Lord will guide me. I’m open to the fact that God may shift plans.

Where do you get your supplies?

Bricklink.com

Do you put figurines inside the church?

Yes, and this season I’ll have close to 300.

Do you grow your collection of mini-figures?

I have an Amazon wishlist. People also gift me various Lego sets, and I use those min-figures.

Has Spider-Man attended Mass?

Not yet, but I do have a mini-figure of Optimus Prime. I have an R2D2 (he’s in an easy to find place for kids to notice). I like to show that if these interesting figures can be at church then there’s a place for them (the kids) at Mass too.

You mentioned last time your favorite saint was Blessed Solanus Casey. How has his intercession helped your faith life the past few years?

He has given me wisdom in ways I could not have anticipated. His intercession is more subtle. Not like a trumpet blast but like a whisper.

What’s your favorite quote of his?

I’ve found this quote impactful: “Do not pray for easy lives, pray to be stronger people. Do not pray for tasks equal to your powers, pray for powers equal to your tasks.”

Another quote I find insightful is:

“Worry is a weakness from which very few of us are entirely free. We must be on guard against this most insidious enemy of our peace of soul. Instead, let us foster confidence in God, and thank Him ahead of time for whatever He chooses to send us.”

Where can my audience find your work?

https://prayingbricks.substack.com/

https://www.facebook.com/LegoChurchProject

About J.M. Kraemer:

JM Kraemer is the the builder of the annual Lego Church Project. A disability focused ministry that is based in Saginaw Township, Michigan.

Thank you for sharing!