Showing posts with label Suffering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suffering. Show all posts

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - August 14, 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. Alphonsus Liguori 

"With regard to evil thoughts, there may be a twofold delusion. God-fearing souls who have little or no gift of discernment, and are inclined to scruples, think that every wicked thought that enters their mind is a sin. This is a mistake, for it is not the wicked thoughts in themselves that are sins, but the yielding or consenting to them. The wickedness of mortal sin consists in the perverse will that deliberately yields to sin with a complete knowledge of its wickedness with full consent. And therefore St. Augustine teaches that when the consent of the will is absent, there is no sin. However much we may be tormented by temptations, the rebellion of the senses, or the inordinate motions of the inferior part of the soul, as long as there is no consent, there is no sin. For the comfort of such anxious souls, let me suggest a good rule of conduct that is taught by all masters in the spiritual life. If a person who fears God and hates sin doubts whether or not he has consented to an evil thought or not, he is not bound to confess it, because it is morally certain that he has not given consent. For had he actually committed a mortal sin, he would have no doubt about it, as mortal sin is such a monster in the eyes of one who fears God that its entrance into the heart could not take place without its being known. Others, on the contrary, whose conscience is lax and not well-informed, think that evil thoughts and desires, though consented to, are not sins provided they are not followed by sinful actions. This error is worse than the one mentioned above. What we may not do, we may not desire. Therefore, an evil thought or desire to which we consent comprises in itself all the wickedness of an evil deed."

(From 12 Steps to Holiness and Salvation


Bishop Joseph Strickland 

“So what does that [love for one another] look like? It looks like quietly offering your Holy Communion for someone who’s abandoned the faith. It looks like fasting for a family member caught in sin. It looks like sitting beside a sick friend at midnight because no one else would. It looks like mentoring a struggling young Catholic – patiently, faithfully, over time. It looks like defending the unborn, even when it makes you hated. It looks likes staying loyal to the Church when shepherds fail – and loving her more in Her wounds. It looks like comforting a parent with a child in prison, or a widow who grieves alone. It looks like pending time in Adoration not just for yourself-but for the whole world.”

(From By This Shall Men Know: A Church that Carries, A Love That Saves, The Wanderer, July 24, 2025 issue) 

 

Venerable Fulton J. Sheen

"At the foot of the Cross, Mary witnessed the conversion of the good thief, and her soul rejoiced that he had accepted the will of God. Her Divine Son's second word, promising paradise as a reward for that surrender, reminded her of her own second word thirty years before, when the angel had appeared to her and told her that she was to be the Mother of Him who was now dying on he Cross...The second word of Jesus on Golgotha [Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in paradise] and the second word of Mary in Nazareth [Be it done to me according to thy word] teach the same lesson: Everyone in the world has a cross, but the cross is not the same for any two of us. The cross of the thief was not the cross of Mary. The difference was due to God's will toward each. The thief was to give life: Mary to accept life. The Thief was to hang on his cross, Mary was to stand beneath hers. The thief was to go ahead; Mary to remain behind. The thief received a dismissal; Mary received a mission. The thief was to be received into paradise, but paradise was to be received into Mary."

                                               (From The Cries of Jesus From the Cross)

 

 

Pondering Tidbits of Truth - July 17, 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.



Dom Lorenzo Scupoli

"No creature ever loved Jesus Christ more ardently, nor showed more perfect submission to His will, than Mary, His mother. If then, this Savior, immolated for us sinners, gave His mother to us, an advocate and intercessor for all time, she cannot but comply with His request, and will not refuse us her assistance. Let us, then, not hesitate to implore her pity; let us have recourse to her with great confidence in all our necessities, as she is an inexhaustible source of blessing, bestowing her favors in proportion to the confidence placed in her."

 (From Spiritual Combat)

 

Alice von Hildebrand

“But the recognition of our nothingness should go hand in hand with an awareness that God, the infinitely good and merciful God, loves His creatures, these poor beggars that He has knighted by making them to His image and likeness. The moment that man perceives both his misery and his greatness, the consciousness that he is loved brings him to such overwhelming joy that, appropriately, he prefers to be nothing because the one who loves him and whom he has learned to love is everything.” 

(From The Privilege of Being a Woman)

 

St. Therese of Lisieux

"I realize as never before that the Lord is gentle and merciful; He did not send me this heavy cross until I could bear it. If He had sent it before, I am certain that it would have discouraged me . . . I desire nothing at all now except to love until I die of love. I am free, I am not afraid of anything, not even of what I used to dread most of all . . . a long illness which would make me a burden to the community. I am perfectly content to go on suffering in body and soul for years, if that would please God. I am not in the least afraid of living for a long time; I am ready to go on fighting."

 (From The Story of a Soul)

 


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 - June 5, 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.



Hubert Van Zeller, O.S.B.

"The weight of evil in the world seems overwhelming. We feel it everywhere and our effort to resist is smothered. But God does not see things in this way. God must still see the world as good or he would not allow it to continue its existence. He prefers, so St. Augustine tells us, to draw good out of evil rather than not to permit any evil at all."

(From The Mystery of Suffering)

Father Benedict Baur, O.S.B. 

"Think of all of our omissions with regard to opportunities for and impulses toward prayer. All those free moments we have in the course of each day: we could use them for prayer, but we omit to do so…Think of all the inspirations of grace and all the impulses to good we neglect or to which we turn a deaf ear. We know that God is speaking to us in them and moving us, urging us on to do good. Our hope of making progress in the interior life depends entirely on the inspirations of God, that is to say, on how we attend to them and follow them."

(From In Silence With God)

 

St. Catherine of Genoa

"The greatest suffering of the souls in purgatory, it seems to me, is the awareness that something in them displeases God, that they have deliberately gone against His great goodness. I can also see that the divine essence is so pure and light-filled—much more than we can imagine—that the soul that has but the slightest imperfection would rather throw itself into a thousand hells than appear thus before the divine presence."

(An excerpt from Hungry Souls)

 

 

 


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 - December 29, 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.

 

 

 

David Torkington

 “ ‘Prayer’, he [Cardinal Hume] said, ‘is trying to raise the heart and mind to God.’…

The quality of our prayer is ultimately determined by the quality of our endeavor. It was for this reason that the great Mystic and mother Saint Angela of Foligno said that prayer is the School of Divine Love. In other words, it is the place where we learn how to love God by trying daily to raise our hearts and minds to him. I intend to introduce you to the different means and methods that tradition is given us to help us keep trying to turn and open our minds and hearts to God in this book but first let me say this. There are no perfect means to help us keep trying to raise the heart and mind to God, just different means. What helps you at the beginning, may not help you later. What helps you in the morning, may not help you in the evening. What helps me might not help you. Remember the famous words of Dom John Chapman, ‘Pray as you can and not as you can't.’ The acid test is does this means of prayer help me to keep trying to raise my heart and mind to God?”

(From The Primacy of Loving the Spirituality of the Heart)

 

Venerable Fulton J. Sheen 

 “The man who thinks only of himself says only prayers of petition; he who thinks of his neighbor says prayers of intercession; he who thinks only of loving and serving God, says prayers of abandonment to God’s will, and this is the prayer of the saints.”

(From Go to Heaven)

 

Father Donald Haggerty

"Work for God is too easily considered by a standard of achievement in the world. But there are no real successes in any spiritual work that are equivalent to an accomplishment in the world. Certain patterns, however, begin to show after a time. A work desired by God seems always to include some measure of frustration and failed exertion. At the same time, failure in a work undertaken for God often conceals fruits whose delay in manifesting themselves is only temporary. It is hard to accept these patterns until they are observed over a certain length of time in our lives. Nothing significant is ever done for God and for souls without some taste of crucifixion and the offering it requires from us."

(From The Contemplative Hunger)

 

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...