Pondering Tidbits of Truth - October 31, 2024



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 Jose Gonzalez

"Reflect upon the scenario in which you were supposed to receive a very large inheritance but were cheated out of it. How would you react? The right reaction would be to care more for the soul of the person who cheated you than to care about actually being cheated. A person who is fully detached from material possessions will care little about losing such an inheritance or gaining one. It will truly matter not. If that is hard to accept, know that this is a sign that your soul is too attached to the things of this world. Pray for freedom from all greed. That is the only way to obtain the true riches of God."

(From Daily Reflections - October 21, 2024)

 

St. Teresa of Calcutta

"How did Christ love us? He made Himself the Bread of Life. He made Himself a living bread that you and I may eat and live. He made himself so small, so weak, just bread to satisfy our hunger for God.” 

(From Kathy Snider He Comes in Grandeur and Humility published in the Oct 2024 issue of Restoration)

 

Peter Kreeft, Ph.D.

"Of course, technology itself is innocent. It is the worship of it, the idolization of it, that is evil. Adam tilling the garden was technology. Noah's ark was technology. Solomon's temple and Notre Dame Cathedral were technology. So was Cain's rock and the Roman art of crucifixion and the gas chambers in Auschwitz and the bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki."

(From How to Destroy Western Civilization and Other Ideas from the Cultural Abyss)


 

 

 

Eucharistic Reflection - The Heaven of Our Souls

(Image Source: Wikimedia Commons)



"He does not come down from Heaven each day to stay in the gold ciborium. He comes down to find another Heaven He cherishes infinitely more than the first, the Heaven of our souls, made in His image, living temples of the Most Blessed Trinity!"

St. Therese of Lisieux 

Monday Musings - Going to the Well

(Image source: Wikimedia Commons)

A few nights ago, several of us got together online to engage in an informal Lectio Divina exercise. Let me share a bit of that experience with you.

The moderator chose the well-known story of the Samaritan woman at the well - a passage most of us have read many times (see John:4:7-26).  

The exercise prompted these thoughts:

“How often I have been unwilling to come to the well, to ask for the spiritual nourishment I so deeply need.

How foolish it would be for me to now offer Jesus excuses as to why I had not come to Him. He knows!

I was afraid to ask for that living water – afraid I would be unwilling to drink the cup He would give me.

For a fleeting second, I then recalled the few times in my life where I did drink gluttonously of that living water and relived the amazing things God did in, and through me, when I simply did as He had asked.”

Later in the session, our spiritual adviser emphasized that our Lord never seeks or desires for us to grovel at His feet. He wants to liberate us from fear and sin.  

“God speaks to all of us,” Father stated. "Do we listen to Him?”   He continued: “The hour to listen to Him is now. Say “yes” to Him and He will come rushing into your heart."

Then He left this gem for us to ponder and live:

“We must know God as Love – Love is Who He is!”

Eucharistic Reflection - Indifference To Holy Communion

"You who only communicate rarely are like someone between two sleeps. You know that Jesus Christ is truly in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, that this food is absolutely necessary for your poor soul. Nevertheless, one sees in you little desire. There are long intervals between your

Confessions and Communions.

You decide to go because of a great feast or a jubilee or a mission, or because others are going, and not because your poor soul needs it. Not only do you not try to merit this happiness, but you do not even envy those who taste it more often. Thus you imitate the Jews. 

They are reproached for refusing shelter to Jesus Christ on the first Christmas night although they did not know Him. You treat Him with the same discourtesy, you who neglect to receive Him into your hearts in Holy Communion. 

Do not forget that at the Particular Judgment Jesus Christ will judge us on all the good we could have done. He will show you all the sacraments that you could have received during your life. How many more times you could have received His Body and His Blood if you had wished to lead a better life. Ah, great God!" 

(From The Eucharistic Meditations of the Cure of Ars)


Monday Musings - A Catholic Blogger's Prayer

 


“Lord my mind and heart, I believe, are in the right place. Make sure, Lord, that my keyboard is there as well.”

A Catholic Blogger’s Prayer

 

 

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - October 17, 2024



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.



Scott Hahn

"There are many ways of looking at confession, and all of them are valid. You can look at it as a courtroom with a divine judge. You can look at it as an accounting of debts. I think it's most helpful to look at it as healing - as health care. Confession does for our souls what doctors, dieticians, physical therapists, and pharmacists do for our bodies. Think about all we do to keep our bodies in working order. We go for regular checkups with a primary-care physician, a dentist, an eye doctor. And no one has to remind us to brush our teeth, take a shower, and pop the pills for whatever ails us. All this is good for us, and it's good for everyone around us, too. No one wants to work beside us if we decide to stop showering. Well, if we spend so much effort on the care of our bodies, shouldn't we be spending more time on our souls? After all, our bodies will pass away soon enough, but our souls will live on forever." 

(From Signs of Life)

 

Pope Benedict XVI 

At the heart of all temptations… is the act of pushing God aside because we perceive him as secondary, if not actually superfluous and annoying, in comparison with all the apparently far more urgent matters that fill our lives. Constructing a world by our own lights, without reference to God, building on our own foundation; refusing to acknowledge the reality of anything beyond the political and material, while setting God aside as an illusion – that is the temptation that threatens us in many varied forms… We are dealing here with the vast question as to how we can and cannot know God, how we are related to God and how we can lose him. The arrogance that would make God an object and impose our laboratory conditions upon him is incapable of finding him. For it already implies that we deny God as God by placing ourselves above him, by discarding the whole dimension of love, of interior listening; by no longer acknowledging as real anything but what we can experimentally test and grasp. To think like that is to make oneself God. And to do that is to abase not only God, but the world and oneself, too.

(From Jesus of Nazareth)

Father Jose Gonzalez

The first step to a blessed life is hearing the Word of God. To “hear” implies that we do much more than become familiar with the Gospels. Hearing means we are not only aware of all that our Lord has revealed, it also means that we have truly internalized it, understanding all that our Lord requires of us.

Have you heard our Lord? It’s important to understand that the Gospel is alive. In other words, becoming familiar with the Word of God is not the same as reading some ancient book of lessons. Rather, hearing the Word of God means we hear a Person: the Son of God, speaking to us and guiding us each step of our lives. God’s Word is something that must speak to us every moment of every day, inspiring us to do this and avoid that. It is accomplished through a lifelong habit of prayerful communion with our Lord through which we are attentive to His voice always.

Hearing the very Person of the Son of God, the Word made flesh, necessarily implies that we also observe all that He speaks to us. In fact, failure to follow His continuous and gentle command to love will result in us being unable to clearly hear Him at all. We will become confused and will easily become directed by the many other voices in our world, unable to discern the glorious path chosen for us by our Lord.

 (From Daily Reflection for October 11, 2024)

 

 

 

 

Eucharistic Reflection - Be A Living Tabernacle


"On the day that we receive Holy Communion we should endeavor to keep our hearts as living tabernacles of our Eucharistic Jesus, and then visit Him often with acts of adoration, love, and gratitude; this is what divine love will teach us."

Saint Paul of the Cross 

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - October 3, 2024



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.




St. John Paul II

"You must learn to think, speak and act in accordance with the simplicity of the Gospel: Yes, yes; no, no. You must learn to call white, white; and black, black. To call sin, sin; and not to call it liberty or progress, even if the fashion is to stand against this teaching."

(Address to Youth in Rome, 1981)



Catherine Doherty, Servant of God

"Communion is the union of man's soul with God the source of all strength. Our communions could change the world if the fire of the Holy Spirit were really allowed to fall on the earth and to renew it through you and me. Our faith centers around the truth that God loved us first and all we have to do to be fiery Apostolic Catholics is to love Him back. If we meditate deeply on the Eucharist we will distinctly hear the loving, powerful, immense heartbeat of God. We would hear more. We would hear that heart speaking to us. We would hear our hearts beating in unison with His. We will be united with our Lord and our God."

(From Communion is a Flame Bursting Within)


Father Wilfrid Stinissen

"As soon as one notices a lack of unity, at home, at work, or in the congregation at church, one ought to conclude: The Holy Spirit is missing in this place. We must begin to open ourselves to him here." 

(From The Holy Spirit, Fire of Divine Love)


Eucharistic Reflection - Would A Stranger Know?

  "The Eucharist is alive. If a stranger who knew nothing about the Eucharist were to watch the way we receive, would he know...