Showing posts with label Praise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Praise. Show all posts

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - June 19, 2025



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. Ignatius of Loyola

"Man was created for a certain end. This end is to praise, to reverence and to serve the Lord his God and by this means to arrive at eternal salvation. All other beings and objects that surround us on the earth were created for the benefit of man and to be useful to him, as means to his final end; hence his obligation to use, or to abstain from the use of, these creatures, according as they bring him nearer to that end, or tend to separate him from it."

(From The Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius)


Deacon Alex Jones

"How do you tell God no? How do you look into the face of truth and say, ‘That’s nice, but it will cause me problems?’ I said yes, and that yes has cost me dearly. But deep down in my heart is a passion for our Lord and a love for his Church. I love the Church—that sweet, holy, sanctifying Bride of Christ. I love the bishops, the priests, the nuns, the smells, and the bells. I love it all because I have discovered it. It has cost me much, but thank God I’m home at last!"

(From Testimony to Truth)


 Dom Lorenzo Scupoli

“Remember also that the more unjustly you suffer, and consequently the more grievous your affliction, the greater is your merit in the sight of God. For in the midst of your suffering you adore His judgments, and willingly submit to His Divine Providence which draws good from the greatest evil and makes the malice of our enemies subservient to our eternal happiness.”

(From The Spiritual Combat and a Treatise On Peace of Soul)

 



 

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - January 18, 2024


Pondering Tidbits of Tr
uth  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

"What more do you want, O soul! And what else do you search for outside, when within yourself you possess your riches, delights, satisfactions, fullness, and kingdom - your Beloved Whom you desire and seek? Be joyful and gladdened in your interior recollection with Him, for you have Him so close to you. Desire Him there, adore Him there. Do not go in pursuit of Him outside yourself. You will only become distracted and wearied thereby, and you shall not find Him, nor enjoy Him more securely, nor sooner, nor more intimately by seeking Him within you."

(From The Spiritual Canticle)


Mother Julienne Morrell, O.P.

“Human praises are indeed to be shunned on account of the great harm they produce. They are nothing else, in the words of St. Bernard, but a hollow whistle, a little wind in the ears, blinding and inflating the heart, fanning the flames of envy, causing delusions and pride with regard to self. They are poison to humility.”

(Commentary from A Treatise on the Spiritual Life by St. Vincent Ferrer, O.P.)


Rev. M. Raymond, O.C.S.O. 

"We moderns shrink from pain; we shun all that can afflict body or mind. We have forgotten that we were saved by the Body's agony and the Mind's torture. We have forgotten that the problem of evil was solved by ropes, whips, and thorns, nails that were pounded through the flesh of God and by three hours of anguish such as no other human has or ever will know. We have forgotten that pain has a sacred purpose; that all suffering can be and should be sublimated into Sacrifice - His Sacrifice. We have forgotten that we are Christians — members of a Body whose Head is thorn-crowned! We have forgotten that since there is sin, there must be suffering that will atone."

(From God, A Woman, and the Way)



Pondering Tidbits Of Truth - May 27, 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

 

 

 

Father Jacques Philippe

The Eucharist is the highest expression of Divine Charity, of God's love for His creations. Through it, God shows how much He wants to be with us forever, sharing His own life with us, living with us and in us. As Father  Jean-Claude Sagne said, ‘What makes the Eucharist the Sacrament of love is that Jesus here gives Himself in person, in the fullness of His presence. He gives all that He is, the entirety of His life. More than any word or action, it is Jesus Himself who comes to us and delivers Himself into our hands. The Eucharist is a giving without limit on Jesus’ part: ‘This is My body, given up for you.’ What we receive in the Eucharist is Jesus in the very act of giving His life for all mankind, the act in which He personally loves each of us with the greatest of loves: ‘Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends’ (John 15:13). Each time we receive the Eucharist, we should be moved with the same awe that Saint Paul had, in knowing: [He] loved me and gave Himself for me (Galatians 2:20).

(From Fire & Light – Learning to Receive The Gift of God)

 

St. Leonard of Port Maurice

“Treasures, however great and precious, are never appreciated until examined, counted over, and summed up. Hence it is, dear reader, that by many there is formed no due estimate of the holy and awful Sacrifice of the Mass. Though the greatest treasure which glorifies and enriches the Church of God, it is still a hidden treasure, and known to few. Ah, if this jewel of paradise were but known, who would not give up all things to obtain it! No one would then permit to escape from his mouth the scandalous words, ‘A Mass more or less makes little difference.’

Rather, like the merchant in the Gospel, would each man sink his whole fortune to render himself master of a treasure so precious: Abiit et vendidit omnia quae habuit, et emit eam, ‘he went and sold all that he possessed, and bought it’.’ (St. Matthew 13:46).

(From The Hidden Treasure)

 

Venerable Bruno Lanteri

“We proclaim God's holiness ‘with Angels and Archangels, with Thrones and Dominions, and with all the hosts and Powers of heaven.’ When we pray, ‘Holy, Holy, Holy Lord God of hosts. Heaven and earth are full of Your glory,’ we say this prayer together with the Heavenly Court. Joined with them in praise, Venerable Bruno invites us to pray these words with their same sentiments and heart, with deep gratitude for God's saving love, with hearts raised in thanksgiving and adoration, and with the joy of those who sing the heavenly song.

Have you ever considered that, when the priest prays the Preface, when you join your heart to his words as you listen, and when you say or sing the 'Holy, Holy, Holy,' you are praying with the Angels, the Archangels, and all the heavenly host? Stop briefly now and consider this truth.

Contemplate the Heavenly Court for a moment. ‘See’ and ‘hear’ the Angels and the blessed gathered around the throne as they worship, adore and sing God's praises with glad hearts. Let the warm and joyful sentiments of their hearts fill your own heart.”

(From A Biblical Way of Praying Mass - The Eucharistic Wisdom of Venerable Bruno Lanteri)

Eucharistic Reflection - Put On The Garment of Reverence

"Further, one must go to church not inattentively. For, it is always possible that one may go to church not in a way worthy of praise but rather of condemnation, i.e., by going and not receiving any spiritual benefit. Approaching the church, you must leave every care and worry about your affairs at the threshold in order to enter with a serene mind. 

(Photo©Michael Seagriff)

Entering the church, you must put on reverence like a garment, remembering to Whom we are coming and to Whom we intend to address our prayers. Having taken your place in the church (best of all, the same place each time), you should gather your thoughts and mentally stand before the face of the omnipresent God, offering Him reverent worship in body and spirit, with a contrite heart and in humble reverence. 

After this, you must follow, without wandering thoughts, everything that is going on — what is being sung and read in the church — all the way to the end of the service. That is all! 

In this way, we won’t be bored in church, looking here and there and starting conversations, and we won’t be wishing that the service be over soon. Instead, passing from one prayerful feeling to another and from one reverent thought to the next, we will be like those in a fragrant garden, moving from one group of flowers to another."
 

St.Theophan the Recluse

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...