"It is better for a man to be silent and be [a Christian], than to talk and not to be one. It is good to teach, if he who speaks also acts." - St. Ignatius of Antioch
(Photo ©Father Lawrence Lew, O.P. Used with Permission)
Worth Revisiting - Stomach, Sex and Money
Thank you Allison Gingras and Elizabeth Riordan for your weekly invitation to re-post our favorite articles on Worth Revisiting.
Go here now (and every Wednesday) and let an interesting group of Catholic bloggers nourish you in your Faith journey.
Visit Allison at Reconciled To You and Elizabeth at Theology Is A Verb during the rest of each week. They have much to offer.
Here is my contribution:
Monday Musings - Stomach, Sex and Money
(Originally posted June 27, 2016)
[What follows pretty well describes our current culture. This clear thinking and prophetic Bishop saw this coming more than 30 years ago. Yet, the majority of his brethren remained silent over the ensuing decades. Even now, some have still not found their voices.]
“…contemporary paganism is characterized by the search for material well-being at any I cost, and by the corresponding disregard- or to put it more accurately, fear and genuine terror – of anything that could cause suffering.
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Image source: Wikimedia Commons) |
With this outlook, words such as God, sin, Cross, mortification, eternal life…become incomprehensible to a great number of people, who are ignorant of their meaning and content. You have witnessed the incredible fact that many people began by putting God in parentheses, in some aspects of their professional lives. But then, as God demands, loves and asks, they end up throwing Him out - like an intruder - from their civil laws and from the lives of their nations. With a ridiculous and presumptuous pride, they want to lift up in his place the poor human creature who has lost his supernatural and human dignity, and has become reduced – it is not exaggeration, one can see it everywhere – to a stomach, sex and money."
(From Pastoral Letter of December 25, 1985 by Blessed Alvaro del Pontillo)
Eucharistic Reflection - I Contemplate You and My Heart Breaks!
“I contemplate You, red with
blood and dying for me, O Jesus, most pure Ideal of my soul! If, giving my
life, I could save Yours! But it necessary that my Treasure should die to give
me the life of grace and of love.
Photo©Michael Seagriff
|
My heart breaks upon
contemplating that innocent Body broken, but
it is my own doing, and I tremble upon contemplating it! But, nonetheless,
since I have been the cause of Your suffering, I wish to console You…and with
my breath…and with my voluntary sacrifices, and with all the tenderness of my
heart, today I want to bring You solace…I will never offend You again, my
Jesus, and from now on I will give You only caresses…the best of my soul, my
vitality, my entire being, hiding You from Your enemies deep in my heart.
Monday Musings - Making Pain Sweet and Bearable
Most of us would prefer to avoid pain of any type - physical, emotional, mental or spiritual.
But pain, suffering and tribulations are part and parcel of the human condition and an integral part of God's plan of salvation.
St. Gregory reminds us that God "grants us a greater mercy when He gives us the strength to bear sufferings and tribulations than when He takes them from us".
St. Gregory reminds us that God "grants us a greater mercy when He gives us the strength to bear sufferings and tribulations than when He takes them from us".
So as difficult and unwanted as suffering may be, may God grant us the grace to heed St. Pio's advice and embrace it as Jesus did His Cross:
That We May Have Eyes to See and a Heart to Respond
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(Image source: Wikimedia Commons) |
In today’s Gospel we are reminded
of the form God’s justice will take – each of us will be held accountable for
the things we have done and that we have failed to do, the manner in which we
have loved others or failed to do so. It really is that simple.
Stop acting like
others are there to serve us; serve others first. There are Lazarus’ all
around us - most of the time we either don’t see them or consciously chose to
ignore them.
If we don’t open our eyes
and lend a helping hand now, we will be in the same plight as the rich man in
today’s Gospel. When we know the truth and fail to act on it, we condemn
ourselves to eternal punishment. Is it time to change the way we live?
Pondering Tidbits of Truth - September 22, 2016
Pondering Tidbits of Truth is my simple and inadequate way of providing nuggets
of spiritual wisdom for you to chew on from time to time.
Father Francis Fernandez
"Apostolic zeal, the desire to draw many people to Our
Lord, does not require us to do anything odd or peculiar, and much to neglect
our family, social or professional duties, It is precisely in those situations –
in our family, at work, with our friends, in everyday human relationships –
that we find scope for an apostolic activity which may often be silent, but
which is always efficacious."
(In Conversation With God, Volume 4:75.2)
Worth Revisiting - Have We Forgotten The Guilty One?
Once again, I thank Allison Gingras and Elizabeth Riordan for their weekly invitation to re-post our favorite articles
on Worth Revisiting.
Go here now (and every
Wednesday) and let an interesting group of Catholic bloggers nourish you in your Faith journey.
Visit Allison at Reconciled To You and
Elizabeth at Theology Is A Verb during the rest of each
week.
They have much to offer.
I decided to share the following:
Have We Forgotten The Guilty One?
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(Photo©Michael Seagriff)
|
Last
week I suggested that our individual and collective loss of any sense
of sin and the moral decline in our current culture might well be
attributed to our failure and reluctance to ponder the Passion,
Sufferings and Death of Our Lord.
If you missed that short post you can find it here.
In thinking further about this point, I recalled reading an excerpt some time back from an an article in an old issue of The Sacred Heart Messenger, entitled "The Guilty One".
This compelling reflection may explain our reluctance to spend time at the foot of Christ's Cross. I hope it, and the words of Monsignor Hugh F. Blunt which it quotes, will provide additional fruit for your contemplation:
Eucharistic Reflection - Lay Them All Down At His Feet
Eucharistic Reflection - My Listening Lord
“O Jesus, hidden God,
more friendly than a brother, I believe most firmly that You are present, a few
feet only from where I kneel.
You are behind that little wall, listening to
every word of confidence and love, and thanksgiving, and praise. Listening when
my heart is free to pour itself out to You as the brook to the river in the
days of spring. Listening more tenderly when the stream is ice-bound; when I
kneel before You troubled, wearied, anxious about many things – about may souls
perhaps – yet dry and hard, without a word to say.
Make my heart so perfectly
at ease with You, O Lord, that it may be able to turn to You even in its
coldness and inertness; to confide to You naturally all that most intimately
concerns it; to be content with this, when discontented with all else, with
self most of all – that You know all men and need not that any should give
testimony of man, for You know what is in man.”
(Mother Mary Loyola
from Coram Santissimo)
Monday Musings - Unlike Any Other Place On Earth
I recently discovered an article by James Monti in The Wanderer Online Daily. It was entitled
Restoring the Sacred…Coram Sanctissimo;
An Afternoon With God.
Monti powerfully
reminds us of an essential and foundational Truth so many have forgotten e.g. “A
Catholic church is unlike any other place on earth, for it is the dwelling
place of God on earth.”
The author does this in a number of ways. One is by quoting the reactions of Charles
Reding, a fictional character in Blessed John Henry Newman’s novel, Loss and Gain: The Story of a Convert. Sadly, the sense of the Sacred depicted in the following
paragraph is no longer common place in many of our Churches today:
(Image Source: Wikimedia Commons) |
“A priest, or at least an assistant, had mounted for a
moment above the altar, and removed a chalice or vessel which stood there; he
could not see distinctly. A cloud of incense was rising on high; the people
suddenly all bowed low; what could it mean? The truth flashed on him, fearfully
yet sweetly; it was the Blessed Sacrament — it was the Lord Incarnate who was
on the altar, who had come to visit and to bless His people. It was the Great
Presence, which makes a Catholic church different from every other place in the
world; which makes it as no other place can be, holy.”
Pray that more of us will respond to the Blessed Sacrament as Reding did when he first came
to understand what the Real Presence meant.
I recommend you read Monti's article in its entirety. He will also introduce you to Mother Mary Loyola.
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