Monthly Archives: February 2017

Sunday fireside

A fireplace burning, Super Bowl viewing, my Sunday offs are becoming special.  We are working fifty-five to sixty hours a week so a day of rest proves essential.  The home has become a bit of a focus.  I have committed to staying, vowing an increased responsibility regarding maintenance.  The home possesses potential.  Where I use to feel no concern, due to the home owners lack of direction, I now see the home perfect for my goal of accumulating money.  Rent is close to nothing, and with the home owner taking residence in Virginia, he is rewarding when I take action.  It really is a decent situation, ripe with possibilities.  Today, I spent four hours cleaning, disinfecting, and organizing the basement.  I am confident I have eliminated all rodents.  Friday, I met with a new personal physician.  The visit went well, a game plan put into action.  She is approaching matters that we need a complete overview of my health.  Due to my post-fifty age, she wants a battery of test done.  Tomorrow morning, I will have blood work done, an emphasis placed upon thyroid testing.  In the coming weeks, we will schedule a colonoscopy, a prostrate screening, and an EKG.  She is a quiet, matter of fact, soft-spoken doctor, yet I think I was guided in a good direction.  She wants me to provide her with information on all the vitamins and supplements I am taking and an overview of my diet and exercise.  I have never had a doctor take this approach.  I have been taking enzymes at night with a glass of water, a practice holding over from my days of fasting.  My digestion is improved and there is a noticeable decrease in bloating and gas.  I am interested to experience this new relationship with a personal physician.  She asked me about my history with alcoholism and what happen over Christmas.  I appreciated her silent manner of listening; fully present, observing while not commenting.  When I assured her I was confident difficult days were behind me, she responded with a question: “Will you be honest and tell me if you are drinking?”  Her eye contact held me.  I responded, “I am an honest man.  Not to tell you would be dishonest.”  I also need to get to the optometrist, a new testing of my vision and prescription glasses.  I lost my last pair and it has been over a year since my last eye exam.  Securing my home and body, I move into a greater wrestling with peace as a solitary man.  Within the short work of St Albert the Great, the teacher of St Thomas Aquinas, I read words that cut to the bone, an idea others have touched upon in different ways.  St Francis de Sales stresses patience, another I cannot pinpoint emphases the inner and outer man—the inner man remaining detached from the actions of the outer man, others accentuating the need to accept imperfection—that to be overwhelmed by one’s tendency toward and conducting of sin is a grievous sign of pride.  Here are St Albert the Great’s written words: “So if the will is good and is obedient and united to God with pure understanding, he is not hurt even if the flesh and the senses and the outer man is moved to evil, and is slow to good,”  I think it is first necessary to understand my interpretation of the idea of good will and obedience to God with pure understanding mandates the establishment of interior presence, a prayer life devoutly exercised to the quieting of one’s self, listening in silence before the Eucharist, participating daily in the celebration of Mass.  It is not an intellectual achievement, rather a humbling and perseverance in prayer and partaking of the sacraments: communion and confession.  Once the inner man is fortified and fed, nothing else matters, nothing else can compare, as the Song of Songs poetically states:

With great delight
I sat in his shadow,
And his fruit was sweet to my taste.
He brought me to the banqueting house,
And his banner over me was love.

Sustain me with raisins,
Refresh me with apples;
For I am sick with love

St John of the Cross elaborates in a poem on into my embracing of St Albert the Great’s idea:

For when once the will
Is touched by God himself
It cannot find contentment
Except in the Divinity
But since his Beauty is open
To faith alone, the will
Tastes him in I-don’t-know-what
Which is so gladly found

Once the inner man has taken root into a deeper path, truth dominates his heart.  Even his own weakness will not usurp the grace.  Exterior activities and worldly matters will become wearisome.  The inner man will comprehend his calling is to cultivate within his prayer life.  With the support of grace, the outer man will not be able to thwart the command.  All efforts, even thorns and failures, lead to God.  Time and life demand moments away from Mass and prayer, the fortifying of the body and the establishment of a home necessary, the passing of idle time constructively—enjoying and contributing to life.  I have considered reigniting my bedside vigils with the Hospice, however proper discernment tells me no.  I am working too many hours.  My time away from work will be dedicated to my faith life, and for the winter a concentration upon my physical health—establishing a relationship with my personal physician, proper diet, and exercise.  My time is thoroughly filled.  Socially, I seek the space of being alone.  Companionship during Mass is enough for meaningful encounters.  Next Sunday, I was invited to a downtown luncheon with a group from St Paul’s Shrine.  The organizing woman lost her husband the Christmas season of 2015.  She puts together a mature pleasant crowd.  There is an elderly man who serves during Mass that seems to be gravitating toward me as I gravitate toward him.  He and his wife attended the last luncheon.  We were seated across from one another.  I am confident to say amidst what turned out to be a men’s gathering, five men situated together at one end of the table while the women gathered at the other end, we enjoyed splendid conversation in a wide-ranging exchange.  The strong man’s serious demeanor, while rarely speaking, plus ever present faith comforts, provides proper companionship.  The luncheon, appearing as providence, provides enough socializing to satisfy my need for the week.  St Dominic’s early morning Saturday Mass and Holy Hour has also become an anticipated endeavor, a highlight to my week.  The powerful Holy Hour is quite small, under five people participating.  The woman who organizes the readings, conducting most of them, is a beautiful authentic woman radiating holiness, quiet and receding from others, while open and friendly, obviously psychologically sound.  Her presence endears, yet there is no call to seek friendship or familiarity—a hello and smile is comforting enough.  The Eucharist, meditations before the Presence, Rosary beads, a crucifix in hand, and silence is enough.

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Focus within distractions

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St Dominic early morning Holy Hour

Teach me, my Lord, to be sweet and gentle in all the events of life, in disappointments, in the thoughtlessness of those I trusted, in the unfaithfulness of those on whom I relied. Let me put myself aside, to think of the happiness of others, to hide my little pains and heartaches, so that I may be the only one to suffer from them. Teach me to profit by the suffering that comes across my path. Let me so use it that it may mellow me, not harden nor embitter me; that I may make me patient, not irritable. That it may make broad in my forgiveness, not narrow, haughty and overbearing. May no one be less good for having come within my influence. No one less pure, less true, less kind, less noble for having been a fellow-traveler in our journey toward Eternal Life. As I go my rounds from one distraction to another, let me whisper from time to time, a word of love to Thee. May life be lived in the supernatural, full of power for good, and strong in its purpose of sanctity. Amen.

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Naked understanding

The more you strip yourself of the products of the imagination and involvement in external, worldly things, and the objects of the senses, the more your soul will recover its strength and its inner senses so that it can appreciate the things which are above. So learn to withdraw from imaginations and the images of physical things, since what pleases God above everything is a mind bare of those sorts of forms and objects, for it is His delight to be with the sons of men, that is those who, at peace from such passions, seek Him with a pure and simple mind, empty themselves for Him, and cleave to Him. Otherwise, if your memory, imagination and thought are often involved with such things, you will be filled with the thought of new things or memories of old ones, or identify with other changing objects. As a result, the Holy Spirit withholds, itself from thoughts bereft of understanding. So the true lover of Jesus Christ should be so united through good will in his understanding with the Divine Will and goodness, and be so bare of all imaginations and passions that he does not even notice whether he is being mocked or loved, or something is being done to him. For a good will turns everything to good and is above everything. So if the will is good and is obedient and united to God with pure understanding, he is not hurt even if the flesh and the senses and the outer man is moved to evil, and is slow to good, or even if the inner man is slow to feel devotion, but should simply cleave to God with faith and good will in naked understanding. He is doing this if he is conscious of all his own imperfection and nothingness, recognizes his good to consist in his Creator alone, abandons himself with all his faculties… –St Albert the Great ‘On Cleaving to God’

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Proper order

Providence presented a video while seeking a prayer video on Youtube upon waking. It was first on my list of videos ‘recommended for you’. Let us beware of the Jezebel spirit roaming about the earth, the female voice, or voices, in our lives that seek to dominate and establish authority. The subtle usurping of the ways of God are not Godly, no matter how hard a force of will attempts the subterfuge.

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Renunciation with an open heart

Certainly, anyone who desires and aims to arrive at and remain in such a state must needs above all have eyes and senses closed and not be inwardly involved or worried about anything, nor concerned or occupied with anything, but should completely reject all such things as irrelevant, harmful and dangerous.  Then he should withdraw himself totally within himself and not pay any attention to any object entering the mind except Jesus Christ, the wounded one, alone, and so he should turn his attention with care and determination through Him into Him that is, through the man into God, through the wounds of His humanity into the inmost reality of His divinity. Here he can commit himself and all that he has, individually and as a whole, promptly, securely and without discussion, to God’s unwearying providence… –St Albert the Great ‘On Cleaving to God’

This statue of saint Albert the Great can be found in the Angelicum, the Dominican University in Rome.

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