Monthly Archives: March 2018

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Meditation

A Charterhouse couples in a quite inseparable manner both the heady prescriptions for union with God and a brutal rupture from what in traditional monastic language is called `the world’. Despite certain misrepresentations, there is nothing in this of Manichaeism, pessimism or contempt for those who are part of `the world’. The world is the whole of humanity engaged in the splendid enterprise of co-operating with the action of the Creator. It is man tending towards God across the whole spectrum of his creation. It is religious man who reflects the face of God in Christ through a thousand forms of apostolate.

All of this is good and all reflects God; but none of it is God. Choosing God consequently implies a separation from every-thing that is not God without even considering all that is involved, and we would not dream of compromising on its exigencies. Even the most wonderful of his creations is nothing compared with him and he it is whom we seek.

http://transfiguration.chartreux.org

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Sisters of bonding

I have been unable to celebrate daily Mass at St Paul Shrine due to a first shift schedule. I found this video online.

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“Crying, My Little One, Footsore and Weary”

a poem by Christina Rossetti

Crying, my little one, footsore and weary?
Fall asleep, pretty one, warm on my shoulder:
I must tramp on through the winter night dreary,
While the snow falls on me colder and colder.

You are my one, and I have not another;
Sleep soft, my darling, my trouble and treasure;
Sleep warm and soft in the arms of your mother,
Dreaming of pretty things, dreaming of pleasure.

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Feast day of Saint Joseph

“What obstacles you might ask?”  You are too faithful to receive Holy Communion poorly disposed.  Likewise, it is not sin which presents the sacramental action of divine grace from taking place in you.  No, the obstacle is a lack of trust.  You simply do not sufficiently esteem the indescribable visit of the Body and Blood of Our Savior.  You do not pray to Our Lord with the burning faith and holy expectation that conquers Our Lord’s heart.  In those precious moments of actual grace, present to Him the litany of your woes.  Mention them all without forgetting a single one.  Say to Him: “I believe firmly that from this heap of dung Thou canst cause virtues to flourish.  I ask Thee this in the name of Thy promises, and I go as far as to demand that Thou dost transform my heart.  Day and night will I cry out to Thee until Thou dost accomplish this miracle of love.”

Without doubt, He will tell you what He told others during His ministry: “As you have believed, so be it done to thee.”  If your trust is small you will obtain little; if it is great, you will obtain much.

Perhaps your faith is asleep.  Perhaps you are gripped by secret anxieties.  Ask the Blessed Virgin to inspire in you with an unshakable trust in Jesus truly present in the Eucharist.  Ask her for this favor in the name of maternal love and the name of the final words of her agonizing Son to her on the Cross.  Whatever your weakness or pain, surrender them with closed eyes to God Who loves you to the point of concealing Himself for you under the veil of the Host.  “The Virgin Mary” Father Raymond de Thomas de Saint-Laurent

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A son

I was  introduced to this story, during a homily, while going through supporting times with my own son.

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Introspection and reflection

This study should not be merely speculative. It must have practical applications. Let us then speak with frank brutality and merciless cruelty. I pray this humble and gentle Virgin will deign to give me just and propitious words!

All men are naturally vain. There is, however, a pride that is more subtle, more dangerous, and more difficult to cure than any other, that of pious souls. In the Temple, Mary did not cling complacently to the favors she received. Some devout persons lose considerable time scrutinizing their progress in virtue. If they experience some sweetness or consolation in prayer, they become ecstatic and immediately see themselves as favored by God. Yet, these insignificant feelings often come from purely natural sources.

In the Temple, Mary preferred herself to no one. Certain pious souls judge their neighbor with extreme severity. It is not that they occasionally let loose biting remarks about the exterior faults of others. Indeed, their conscience forbids them to utter such caustic remarks—regrettable without doubt—but which are not in themselves grave sins. They do not do this, but instead very candidly and sincerely think themselves superior to those who do not cast sighing looks of longing towards the Blessed Sacrament.

In the Temple, Mary had no suspicion of the sublime mission God had reserved for her. Occasionally one finds pious souls who think they have some special mission. They apply themselves to a thousand devotional practices that God has not asked of them but neglect the most essential aspects of their state in life. The seventeenth century produced one of these false saints who believed herself called to finally make “pure love” known to the world. She unabashedly described herself as the most perfect image of the spouse from the Canticle of Canticles. For a while, she led astray even the enlightened mind of Fenelon by her dangerous delusions.

Let us sincerely examine our consciences. If we find some complacency or fail to consider our complete nothingness, then we are undoubtedly dragging along miserably at the basest level of mediocrity. God cannot pour His gifts into a proud heart. When He discovers a soul that is full of itself, either. He lets it stagnate or He uses the only means of healing it, allowing it to fall prey to its own faults—at times considerable—in order for it to open its eyes and recognize its miserable state. –‘The Virgin Mary’ Father Raymond de Thomas de Saint-Laurent

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