Monthly Archives: May 2018
Meditation video: Lake Erie Crane Sunset Silhouette
To be ‘filled with the utter fullness of God’ (Ephesians 3:19)
The full response to this objection (rejection of St John of the Cross’ Nada theology) may be positively explained in our chapter on freedom, for thorough understanding is the best answer to partial views. A few short comments will suffice for now. People who argue against detachment and self-deniel are perhaps unaware that they are simultaneously rejecting the same teaching found in the New Testament. Jesus lays it down that to be his disciple, anyone and everyone must “renounce all that he possesses”, not just part or most of it. In Titus 2:12 we read that “what we have to do is give up everything that does not lead to God”. John and Teresa ask not a whit more…or less. Texts like these could be multiplied. We must further note that in our human, finite condition, every choice necessarily entails negations. If I spend money for one thing. I cannot spend it on something else. No man can love two women with his whole heart. No one can serve God and mammon. No one can attain an ecstatic joy in God without giving up paltry, self-centered pleasures in things less than God. People who reject Gospel detachment cannot have clearly thought it through. Like the adolescent who sees no value in Dante or Shakespeare or Michelangelo because comic strips have captured his fancy, the adult who discounts evangelical detachment cannot have experienced the sublime infused love found in advanced prayer. One can only wonder if this individual has ever tasted even a morsel of it. Can he know what St Paul meant when he spoke of rejoicing in the Lord always or “having nothing, possessing all things”? Does this person believe what Jesus himself taught, namely, that it is a hard road and a narrow gate that leads to life and that there is no other way to happiness on earth? —Father Thomas Dubay ‘Fire Within: St Teresa of Avila St John of the Cross and the Gospel on Prayer
Profound thoughts on Contemplative Prayer
Mother and Son
Mary the Dawn, Christ the Perfect Day;
Mary the Gate, Christ the Perfect Way!
Mary the Root, Christ the Mystic Vine;
Mary the Grape, Christ the Sacred Wine.
Mary the Wheat Sheaf, Christ the Living Bread;
Mary the Rose Tree, Christ the Rose blood-red.
Mary the Font, Christ, the Cleansing Flood;
Mary the Chalice, Christ, the Saving Blood!
Mary the Temple, Christ the Temple’s Lord;
Mary the Shrine, Christ the God adored.
Mary the Beacon, Christ the Haven’s Rest;
Mary the Mirror, Christ the Vision Blest!
Mary the Mother, Christ the Mother’s Son.
Both ever blest while endless ages run. Amen.
Writing stumbled upon: freedom from bondage to self
Let us be frank enough to accept the unpleasant truth that much of the strain of our lives can be traced to the assertion of the unsubdued self. Self-centeredness makes of life a field of tensions. We are so constituted that self-seeking inevitably brings inner disharmony. It is significant that the word “idiot” is derived from the Greek idios, which means “oneself”.
The soul that desires serenity must take strong action. It must ruthlessly expose every apparent trace of the self-life and not let it masquerade under dignified disguises. It will examine its holiness for that “weasel-like thing, pride”; and its attachment to self-display and its maneuvering for self-advantage. It will than bravely, decisively abandoned self, and every manifestation of it, to Christ, to be carried to His Cross for crucifixion. The surrender of self is a very careful, detailed, costly action, but nothing less will suffice. It will, moreover, bring the happy result of “a heart at leisure from itself”, with new possibilities of joyous living. –“The Quest For Serenity” G.H. Morling, an Australian Baptist minister.
Wearied
Simplicity coupled with intimacy,
God centered,
A profound stillness descends.
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