Showing posts with label Johann Tauler OP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Johann Tauler OP. Show all posts

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - January 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.

 

 

 

Johann Tauler, O.P.

"Everyone should do for his neighbor what his neighbor  cannot do so well as he, and in this way, by his love for others, he thanks God for His graces. Be sure of this: if we are not useful, profitable and helpful to our neighbor, we shall have much to answer for before God. The Gospel says that everyone will have to give an account of his stewardship. Each one of us has an obligation to pay back as best he can what he has received from God, because God gave it to him for the benefit of others."

(From Spiritual Conferences

 

St. Peter Julian Eymard

"Another characteristic of the charity of our Lord is humility. Our Lord did not regard Himself as anything but a servant of His Apostles. Never put your self above others; never believe yourselves greater than they on account of your learning or virtues."

(From The Eucharist and Human Perfection II)

 

St. Vincent de Paul

"Let each of us accept the truth of the following statement and try to make it our most fundamental principle: Christ's teaching will never let us down, while worldly wisdom always will. Christ Himself said that this sort of wisdom was like a house with nothing but sand as its foundation, while His own was like a building with solid rock as its foundation." 

(From Vincent de Paul and Louise de Marillac: Rules, Conferences, and Writings)

 


Pondering Tidbits of Truth - December 16, 2021




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.

 

 

Catherine Doherty, Servant of God

“I had worked with Catherine for many years in our gift shop and handicraft department. One day, Catherine stopped to dictate an article for our paper Restoration, probably concerning our needs for craft materials and gift shop items. It was a fairly extensive article, but she dictated it aloud, without pausing.

I was somewhat astonished that she could do this and I asked, “B, how can you create that way? Don’t you have to be in the mood to write? Don’t you need time to think about what you want to say and just how to say it?

Catherine looked at me, as she often did, with a look that betrayed a combination of disappointment and despair in her spirit. 'Sweetheart, don’t you understand? This is God’s work. I simply say a prayer to do it well. I know He will give me the grace to do so, so I proceed in peace. I just do it. I suggest you learn to do the same.'

(Susanne Stubbs, member of Madonna House, from Was Catherine a Mystic?)

 

Johann Tauler, O.P.

“Children, if you want to grow in holiness and become saints, remember these two little points. First, that you keep your heart free from all created things, even from yourself, and observe due order in all things, in thought and in deed, so that there may be nothing to hinder the work of the Holy Ghost in you. The other is that you take good care to receive whatever may befall you, inwardly or outwardly, as coming direct from God and no one else. Take everything as sent by Him to prepare you for His gifts, which are supernatural and wonderful and to which you could never come except by suffering and assaults from the devil and from churlish people.”

(From Spiritual Conferences)

 

St. Peter Julian Eymard

“We sometimes hear people say: ‘What harm, after all, can sin do to God? It does not destroy nor actually touch the essence of God; it takes away nothing from His happiness. What can pygmies accomplish against a giant?’

That is the reasoning of the world. It also exists, more or less, among religious, as an excuse for their sins.

Here is the answer: in order for God to show exactly what sin meant to Him, He gave His own Son to pay exactly its debt and to expiate it in a manner equal to the offense. Sin called for all that Jesus had to suffer: God did not do anything but satisfy the exigencies of His justice in condemning Him to that terrible Passion and to that death on Calvary.

Jesus came and, having taken upon Himself our sins, making Himself our respondent, He submitted to all that we would have had to suffer. If then you wish to understand the enormity of the evil, you have only to study the enormity of the atonement: sin means Jesus Christ crucified.”

(From The Eucharist and Christian Perfection II)

 

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...