Showing posts with label Contemplation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contemplation. Show all posts

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - May 9, 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.



Archbishop Luis M. Martinez, Servant of God

"As an audience maintains silence to hear better the voice of an orator, as music lovers keep silence during a symphony to admire its artistic beauty, so the silence of contemplation is nothing other than the indispensable condition for hearing the voice of God and addressing to Him our heartfelt words."

(From When God is Silent: Finding Spiritual Peace Amidst The Storms of Life)

 

Father Donald Haggerty

"To give ourselves to God in prayer is to find a door in our heart unlocking and opening to the hearts of other people."

(From his Contemplative Enigmas) 


St. Jean-Pierre de Caussade

"Sometimes we live in God and sometimes God lives in us. These are very different states. When God lives in us, we should abandon ourselves completely to Him, but when we live in Him, we have to take care to employ every possible means to achieve a complete surrender to Him."

(From Spiritual Masters)

 

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - October 13, 2022


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

 

 

 

Alexander de Rouville

"The Holy Spirit does not tell everyone: 'Give away all that you have.' He does not require that degree of perfection from everyone, but He does say to everyone: 'Do not be attached to possessions.' God cannot establish His rule in a heart that is attached to the passing things of earth."

(From The Imitation of Mary)

 


Father Andrew Haggerty

"The idea that contemplation could be at one's personal disposal and available on demand is an obvious misconception. The only proper expectation is that the soul's yearning to love God has come from God and cannot be fruitless. A soul becomes contemplative on the condition that it takes seriously a need in love to give itself in a complete surrender to God."

(From The Contemplative Hunger)

 

 Servant of God Dolindo Ruotolo

"Amid the disharmony of our chaotic lives, the rosary is the instrument, the harp or the psaltery with its ten chords, for each group of harmonies. With the Rosary we continually raise a song of love from earth."

(From  Champions of The Rosary)

  

Today Is Good Friday

It's Good Friday. Gaze into His eyes and then ponder these words.


PLEASE TAKE NOTE

I HAVE BEEN CENSURED. MY IMAGE AND POST HAVE BEEN REMOVED. WHY? I HAVE NO IDEA. BY WHOM? I ASSUME BY BLOGGER. I HAVE NO IDEA WHY THIS WAS DONE, WHAT OFFENSE I MAY HAVE COMMITTED. NO ONE CONTACTED ME BEFORE OR AFTER THEY REMOVED MY POST. 

THIS ACTION SHOULD UPSET EVERYONE WHO VALUES FREEDOM OF SPEECH. I HAVE BEEN UNABLE TO CONTACT BLOGGER TO GET AN EXPLANATION. THEY MAKE COMMUNICATION WITH THEM NEARLY IMPOSSIBLE.  IF ANYONE HAS HAD A SIMILAR EXPERIENCE OR HAS FOUND A WAY TO CONTACT AND GET AN ANSWER FROM BLOGGER I WOULD APPRECIATE YOUR CONTACTING ME.

BUT WAIT. A MIRACLE??? SUDDENLY AFTER INSERTING  THE PLEASE TAKE NOTE TEXT ABOVE, THE LINK TO MY TEXT REAPPEARS AND WORKS...DON'T UNDERSTAND WHAT'S GOING BUT AM THANKFUL... 


Book Review of Wisdom From the Christian Mystics - How To Pray The Christian Way

Have we been selling ourselves short on the importance of prayer and our need to persevere in prayer? St. Teresa of Avila warns us against doing so: “You must believe that if you give up prayer, you are, in my opinion, courting danger.”

Who among us is not distracted during prayer? How many of us feel like our prayer time is lifeless and useless? Why do so many give up on prayer and never reach the point where God gives them the undeserved blessing and gift of infused contemplation? What is infused contemplation and how does it differ from meditation? Why are we not taught about this form of prayer? What are the origins of this type of mystical prayer? Who is called to such prayer? How many have abandoned their prayer life just when they might be on the precipice of real communion with the Lord they love?

David Torkington, noted Spiritual Theologian, Author and Speaker, answers these questions and countless others in his easy to read, instructive and inspiring book, Wisdom From the Christian Mystics - How To Pray The Christian Way.

The author writes in a clear, compelling and interesting way. He is a master of the written word, as you can appreciate from the following excerpt:

“Two things are necessary for prayer to grow beyond the stage of set formulas and petitions, to the stage when it becomes a personal encounter with the most loveable man ever to walk on this earth. The first thing is to find some space and time in which to stop being busy about many things so that there can be time to come to terms with Christ’s death, and to celebrate his life and love, and his continuing life and love. The second thing needed is to read and re-read every word that has been written about him in the Gospels and to read everything that he said, because what he said is addressed to us personally… These sacred words are precious, so they should be read slowly and carefully, as you would pore over poetry to penetrate its meaning and experience its impact. Gradually in time and under the influence of the Holy Spirit, the faith that once seemed solely cerebral will deepen, as hearts and minds that were like stone before, soften and become porous to receive and experience the love of Christ ever more deeply…

I particularly enjoyed the way in which he seamlessly weaved into his narrative the words and wisdom of several saints. Here are two of my favorite quotes:

If the heart does not pray, then the tongue labours in vain”. – St. Bernardine of Siena

“You will never love someone unless you know them, but you will never really know them unless you love them.” – St. Thierry

Wisdom from the Christian Mystics - How To Pray The Christian Way includes "A Blueprint for Daily Prayer". It is a must have volume on your book shelf. This book is a resource that will give you the tools to enrich your prayer life. You will consult it regularly. It is a treasure-trove of meditative resources. It will draw both the prayer novice and veteran closer to the loving embrace of God.

Blessed indeed was the day David asked me to review this book. I shall be forever indebted to him, as will all read it. Get a copy now.

Book Review - The Contemplative Rosary with St. John Paul II and St. Teresa of Avila

Bringing the Mysteries of the most Holy Rosary to Life

Let me be frank. Dan Burke and Connie Rossini are fine outstanding lay Catholics whose efforts on behalf of the Lord they serve have touched the hearts of countless souls seeking a closer union with God. Nary a day passes without my being enriched by the wisdom and insight they share at spiritualdirection.com  and at authenticcontemplativeprayer.


But I am upset with both of them! Why you ask? Because I was too weak to stand my ground, to honor the promise I made not to buy another book this year! It is THEIR fault that I was unfaithful to that promise and succumbed once again to that “buy with one click” button on Amazon.

Had they not written The Contemplative Rosary with St. John Paul II and St. Teresa of  Avila, I would have been successful in fulfilling my promise. They should have known that this rosary loving Lay Dominican, who never leaves home without his beads, would rush to get a copy. It’s unfair that they chose this particular point in time to write a book that will enhance the prayer life of those who read and follow its recommendations, that will bring the mysteries of the Rosary to life, and that will draw souls closer to the eternal embrace of a loving God.

Most of the concepts in this book were not completely foreign to me. Some had been forgotten or weakened by inattention and distraction and others had become too routine. What an excellent job the authors have done to incorporate their unique insights and the wisdom of St. John Paul II and St. Teresa of Avila into one concise volume. The pictures and reflections are lush with fruit for meditation. 

Let me end with a suggestion and a plea: get your copy of The Contemplative Rosary with St. John Paul II and St. Teresa of Avila now; and Dan and Connie, please do not write or publish any more books this year. I don’t want to break another promise.

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - October 5, 2017




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 of the Cross

"Never give up prayer, and should you find dryness and difficulty, persevere in it for this very reason. God often desires to see what love your soul has, and love is not tried by ease and satisfaction."


(From The Collected Works of St. John of the Cross) 



St. John Paul II

"We could say that suffering, which is present under so many different forms in our human world, is also present in order to unleash love in the human person, that unselfish gift of one's 'I' on behalf of other people, especially those who suffer. The world of human suffering unceasingly calls for, so to speak, another world: the world of human love; and in a certain sense man owes to suffering that unselfish love which stirs in his heart and actions."

(From Apostolic Letter, Salvifici doloris, 29)




St. Josemaria Escriva

"We children of God have to be contemplatives; people, who, in the midst of the din of the throng, know how to find silence of soul in a lasting conversation with Our Lord, people who know how to look at Him as they look at a Father, as they look at a  Friend, as they look at someone with whom they are madly in love."

(From The Forge)


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...