2cornucopias

“You should walk at God’s pace, not at your own”

In 01 Daily Meditations on 2015/08/28 at 12:00 AM
You say yes, you are determined to follow Christ. All right. Then you should walk at his pace, not at your own. (The Forge, 531)

You want to know on what our faithfulness is founded? I would say, in broad outline, that it is based on loving God, which makes us overcome all kinds of obstacles: selfishness, pride, tiredness, impatience|… A man in love tramples on his own self. He is aware that even when he is loving with all his soul, he isn’t yet loving enough. (The Forge, 532)

In the interior life, as in human love, we have to persevere. You have to meditate often on the same themes, keeping on until you re‑discover an old discovery. “How could I not have seen this so clearly before?” you’ll ask in surprise. Simply because sometimes we’re like stones, that let the water flow over them, without absorbing a drop. That’s why we have to go over the same things again and again ‑‑ because they aren’t the same things ‑‑ if we want to soak up God’s blessings. (The Forge, 540)

God does not let himself be outdone in generosity. Be very sure that he grants faithfulness to those who give themselves to him. (The Forge, 623)

St. Ann

In 05 Homilies by Fr. Reid on 2015/08/28 at 12:00 AM

 

Inside the Scrovegni Chapel in the city of Padua are some remarkable frescos painted by the Giotto, one of the fathers of the Italian Renaissance. Completed in 1305, the frescoes of the Scrovegni Chapel detail the lives of Jesus and the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Through 7 of these frescoes the story of how our Lady’s birth came about is explained.
The frescoes show us that the elderly Sts. Ann and Joachim endured a great deal of sufferingand shame for being childless, so much so that Joachim was even expelled from the Temple
and had to go live amongst the shepherds outside of Jerusalem.

But eventually both St. Ann and St. Joachim received a message from an angel that theywould have a daughter. After a joyful reunion at the Golden Gate of Jerusalem, which was
near to their home, they conceived and St. Ann gave birth to the Mother of our Savior.

Today, September 8th, is the day that we celebrate the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary –9 months, of course, after the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception.
While today’s celebration of our Lady’s birth is a rather low-ranking feast on the liturgicalcalendar, and therefore is suppressed in lieu of the Sunday Mass propers and readings, we cannot underestimate how important this feast is, for in Mary’s birth we see the light of hope just beginning to dawn for mankind who had been hopelessly trapped in the darkness of sin.
Truly, in Mary we are given not only the Mother of our Redeemer, but we are also given the perfect model for holiness and Christian discipleship. Of all who have followed Christ, none have followed Him as perfectly as His very own mother.
So as we celebrate her birth, we celebrate as well her role in the economy of salvation, her perfect union with Christ’s divine will, and her willingness to help by her prayers and intercession us poor sinners, so that we, too, might His disciples be.
Once again this Sunday we are given another Gospel passage in which our Lord sets the bar for discipleship. And as usual, He sets it high!
What we must understand, my brothers and sisters, is that no one stumbles into Heaven by accident or dumb luck. Going to Heaven requires that we be our Lord’s disciples, and this is not easy.
For today’s Gospel makes it clear that being Jesus’ disciple requires absolutely everything from us: not only all of our possessions, but even our relationships with loved ones.
These are hard words, indeed, but this message from our Lord should not trouble us greatly. Rather we should strive to understand His words in the context of the entire Gospel message.
In telling us that we must hate our loved ones, our Lord is teaching us today that our love forHim should have pride of place in our hearts! Therefore, we must avoid or expunge from our
lives anyone that keeps us from loving God as we should.

You see, my brothers and sisters, there should be a hierarchy of loves in our hearts, with thelove of God being our highest priority. This is the demand of discipleship, and this is the
proof that we truly are our Lord’s disciples.

But we must also be willing to avoid or expunge from our lives any material goods to whichwe might become overly attached.
In saying that we must renounce all of our possessions in order to be His disciple, Jesus is notsaying that absolute poverty is a prerequisite for discipleship.
But while God doesn’t demand strict poverty, He does demand detachment from worldly goods. Knowing how easily man becomes attached to created things, and how attachment of this type can be an obstacle to salvation, our Lord spoke strongly on this issue several times.
We see this especially in His interaction with the Rich Young Man, who went away sad at the prospect of giving up his many possessions (cf. Mt 19:16-22). And what does our Lord say to His disciples after that encounter?
He says: “Amen, I say to you, it will be hard for one who is rich to enter the kingdom of heaven. Again I say to you, it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for one who is rich to enter the kingdom of God” (Mt 19:23-24).
In other words, riches and the good things of this world can certainly be a blessing, but they can also be a hindrance to our salvation. And so if we are blessed with material wealth, we must be willing to part from our goods in order to love God as we should.
In fact, my brothers and sisters, our love for God must be so strong that we are willing to suffer anything, willing to carry any cross, out of love for God.
One of the great perspectives that Christianity provides to mankind that other religions don’t is that suffering – even in its most grievous and painful forms – doesn’t have to be a tragedy. Indeed, we believe that suffering is redemptive – if we unite it with Christ’s suffering.
Carrying our crosses is a powerful means of uniting ourselves with Jesus, of growing in virtue, and of making reparation for our sins. By willingly carrying our crosses, we share in our Lord’s work of redemption, and this is a great privilege.
Of course embracing suffering of any kind seems counter-intuitive, does it not? Certainly the notion of carrying one’s crosses is antithetical to the wisdom of the world.
But that’s the point of the first reading from the Book of Wisdom. This reading tells us that left to his own devices, man is limited in his capacity to find and understand true wisdom, which only comes from God.
Distracted by the cares of life, we are in need of the Holy Spirit if we are to walk in the ways of God. But we also need the Holy Spirit’s spouse: Mary, for she is the one who shows us just how beautiful Christian discipleship can be.
Sometimes when we hear Gospels like the one we have today, we may be tempted to either disbelieve the strict demands of discipleship, or to look upon our discipleship to Christ as a great and terrible burden.
But in our Lady we see that the radical detachment from others and from the things of this world that Jesus asks for is not only necessary but also beautiful and good.
Mary’s life was a life of virginal simplicity, unencumbered with material goods or unhealthy relationships. This enabled her to develop a true poverty of spirit by which she desired to possess only one thing: God Himself. So we can see in her how detachment from the things of this world helps us to be attached to the things of God.
While there can be no doubt that our Lady loved her parents, her other relatives, and dear St. Joseph with that gentle intensity that springs from genuine charity, there can also be no doubt that her greatest love was reserved for her Son.
But most importantly Mary proved her worth as a disciple by her willingness to suffer and to carry her crosses. And aside from our Lord Himself, no one suffered as much as she. Being perfectly united with Jesus, Mary suffered her own Passion right along with Him.
My brothers and sisters, true discipleship is costly. Our Lord demands much of us if we are to follow Him. But let us not be daunted or deterred by the demands of discipleship.
Instead, let us turn to our Lady for timely help. Let us place ourselves in her hands, and she will show us how best to love and follow her Son.
Mary, Help of Christians, pray for us!

8 September 2013

© Reverend Timothy Reid

Fr. Reid is the pastor of St. Ann Catholic Church, Charlotte, NC

Homilies from June 17, 2012 onward have audio.
To enable the audio, lease go directly to Fr. Reid’s homily homilies and select the matching date.

Link to Homilies:
http://stanncharlotte.org/content/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&id=8&Itemid=61

The Final Confrontation

In 04 Fr. John McCloskey on 2015/08/21 at 12:00 AM

The Final Confrontation

by Father John McCloskey

We are now standing in the face of the greatest historical confrontation humanity has gone through. I do not think that wide circles of American society or wide circles of the Christian community realize this fully. We are now facing the final confrontation between the Church and the anti-Church, of the Gospel versus the anti-Gospel.
We must be prepared to undergo great trials in the not-too-distant future; trials that will require us to be ready to give up even our lives, and a total gift of self to Christ and for Christ. Through your prayers and mine, it is possible to alleviate this tribulation, but it is no longer possible to avert it. . . .How many times has the renewal of the Church been brought about in blood! It will not be different this time.
– Bicentennial talk given in the United States by the future St. John Paul II, then Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of Kraków, Poland
My eyes almost popped out when I first read this. I could not believe it was authentic, but I have checked it repeatedly and yes, he did say it. And he said it to us Americans, who were at perhaps the apogee of our greatness, short of the fall of the “Evil Empire.”

Well, how seriously should we take this? Very, very seriously. After all, the speaker was about to become one of the greatest popes in the history of the Church. In addition, he was a mystic and, yes, a prophet and truth-teller who suffered under Nazism and communism, as well as in a certain sense also from Islam. (Recall that he was almost killed by a Muslim assassin, only to be saved by the intercession of Our Lady of Fatima, according to his own words.)

Let me be clear: my musings on the words of John Paul are not meant to encourage you to sell your property, close the bank account, build a bomb shelter, and await the rapture. That is not the Catholic thing to do. But it’s hard not to “ponder these things in [our] hearts.” What exactly did the pope see or have revealed to him? Perhaps the best place to seek the answer is his writings, although we lack space to comb through them all here.

We can also look around us at the remains of what was once called the Christian West, noting a host of behaviors and beliefs that seem custom-made to initiate and accelerate decline. For example, we find in the West depopulation, legal abortion, open homosexuality and same-sex “marriage,” epidemic levels of pornography use, declining marriage rates, and rising cohabitation rates.

Politically, even supposedly tolerant and democratic states like our own are beginning to deny the religious liberty rights of families, businesses, and churches. In addition, we observe growing centralization of power in the hands of those unfavorable to any faith except the idolatry of health, wealth, and technology. They place their long-term hope in the possibility that science may one day arrest death. They watched too many Star Trek and Star Wars movies as children. Unfortunately, they may well go where many men have gone before – and not simply into outer space.

This, surely, is the Anti-Church that St John Paul foresaw – in any event it is here, it is growing, and to a great extent it has already demolished Europe.

What are we to do? First, of course, do not despair. As Catholics we live this life looking forward to the next. We can’t lose, for as St. Paul put it, for us death is gain, not something to fear.

How then to confront and combat the Anti-Church? Imitate the lives of the first Christians! Consider this justly famous description of Christians in the anonymous “Letter to Diognetus,” written in 79 A.D.:

For the Christians are distinguished from other men neither by country, nor language, nor the customs which they observe. For they neither inhabit cities of their own, nor employ a peculiar form of speech, nor lead a life which is marked out by any singularity. . . .They dwell in their own countries, but simply as sojourners. As citizens, they share in all things with others, and yet endure all things as if foreigners. Every foreign land is to them as their native country, and every land of their birth as a land of strangers. They marry, as do all [others]; they beget children; but they do not destroy their offspring. They have a common table, but not a common bed. They are in the flesh, but they do not live after the flesh. (2 Corinthians 10:3) They pass their days on earth, but they are citizens of heaven. (Philippians 3:20) They obey the prescribed laws, and at the same time surpass the laws by their lives. They love all men, and are persecuted by all. . .they are in lack of all things, and yet abound in all; they are dishonored, and yet in their very dishonor are glorified. They are evil spoken of, and yet are justified; they are reviled, and bless; (2 Corinthians 4:12) they are insulted, and repay the insult with honor; they do good, yet are punished as evil-doers.
If we live as the first Christians did, we too can confront and triumph over the Church of the evil Global Empires.

First appeared on The Catholic Thing in June, 2014.