Saturday, June 28, 2008

Suffering - Pope Benedict XVI

“We can try to limit suffering, to fight against it, but we cannot eliminate it. It is when we attempt to avoid suffering by withdrawing from anything that might involve hurt, when we try to spare ourselves the effort and pain of pursuing truth, love, and goodness, that we drift into a life of emptiness, in which there may be almost no pain, but the dark sensation of meaninglessness and abandonment is all the greater. It is not by sidestepping or fleeing from suffering that we are healed, but rather by our capacity for accepting it, maturing through it and finding meaning through union with Christ, who suffered with infinite love.”

- Pope Benedict XVI, Spe Salvi

Thursday, June 26, 2008

God and Mammon

1. Christ says: "The dollar you have
is the dollar you give."

2. The Banker says: "The dollar you have
is the dollar you keep."

3. Christ says: "You cannot serve two masters,
God and Mammon."

4. "'You cannot.' And all our education consists
in trying to find out how we can,"
says Robert Louis Stevenson.

5. "The poor are the true children of the Church",
says Bossuet.

6. "Modern society
has made the bank account
the standard of values",
says Charles PĆ©guy.

- Peter Maurin, Easy Essays

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Detachment

Wherefore, if the soul rejects and denies that which it can receive through the senses, we can quite well say that it remains, as it were, in darkness and empty; since, as appears from what has been said, no light can enter it, in the course of nature, by any other means of illumination than those aforementioned. For, although it is true that the soul cannot help hearing and seeing and smelling and tasting and touching, this is of no greater import, nor, if the soul denies and rejects the object, is it hindered more than if it saw it not, heard it not, etc. Just so a man who desires to shut his eyes will remain in darkness, like the blind man who has not the faculty of sight. And to this purpose David says these words: Pauper sum ego, et in laboribus a indenture mea.85Psalm lxxxvii, 16 [A.V., lxxxviii, 15]. Which signifies: I am poor and in labours from my youth. He calls himself poor, although it is clear that he was rich, because his will was not set upon riches, and thus it was as though he were really poor. But if he had not been really poor and had not been so in his will, he would not have been truly poor, for his soul, as far as its desire was concerned, would have been rich and replete.

For that reason we call this detachment night to the soul, for we are not treating here of the lack of things, since this implies no detachment on the part of the soul if it has a desire for them; but we are treating of the detachment from them of the taste and desire, for it is this that leaves the soul free and void of them, although it may have them; for it is not the things of this world that either occupy the soul or cause it harm, since they enter it not, but rather the will and desire for them, for it is these that dwell within it.

- St. John of the Cross, Ascent of Mount Carmel, Bk 1; Ch. 3:4

Friday, June 20, 2008

The darkness of faith

Stripped of all consolation whether human or divine, the soul must walk in the darkness and obscurity of faith. This is the true test of love for God. He requires that we give our entire being to Him when things seem the most challenging and the most trying. It is easy to say "I love you Lord" when we have received all sorts of human consolations, when we have achieved great material comforts, when our lives undergo a minimum of obstacles. It is easy to walk with Our Lord when He was receiving the adulation from the crowds, the same ones who shouted "Hosanna" on Palm Sunday, yet how difficult it is to walk with Our Lord towards Mt. Calvary. A love which is completely self-centered, which seeks everything from the other but does not seek out the good of the other,is simply no love at all.

Please Lord help me to continue loving you.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Rich and Poor

1. Afraid of the poor
who don't like to get poorer,
the rich who like to get richer
turn to the State for protection.

2. But the State is not only
the State of the rich
who like to get richer,
it is also the State of the poor
who don't like to get poorer.

3. So the State sometimes chooses to help
the many poor
who don't like to get poorer,
at the expense of the few rich
who like to get richer.

4. Dissatisfied with the State,
the rich who like to get richer
turn to the Church
to save them from the poor
who don't like to get poorer.

5. But the Church can only tell the rich
who like to get richer:
"Woe to you rich
who like to get richer,
if you don't help the poor
who don't like to get poorer."

- Peter Maurin, Easy Essays