Wednesday, 14 March 2012
POTUS has Mao-Envy
Posted by
Supertradmum
Take a look at this....the States are in trouble if the Narcissist can get away with this and has his party's support. Ugh!
http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/vets-angry-over-american-flag-featuring-obama/nLR5Q/#comments
http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/vets-angry-over-american-flag-featuring-obama/nLR5Q/#comments
More Persecution of Christians to Come in Northern Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales
Posted by
Supertradmum
I know I have several posts today, but I need to refer to the new movement in England to ban the wearing of crosses or crucifixes in the workplace. Here is the news item. Although Muslims, Sikhs and other persons can wear their symbols, the cross seems to bother some Conservatives in the government. This is out and out persecution of Christians. Thankfully, some Anglicans, including the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Carey, have come out against this. Carey said ministers and courts were "dictating" to believers, calling it another example of Christianity being marginalized in the public square."The reasoning is based on a wholly inappropriate judgment of matters of theology and worship about which they can claim no expertise," he charged. "The irony is that when governments and courts dictate to Christians that the cross is a matter of insignificance, it becomes an even more important symbol and expression of our faith," he added.
The Pope and the Irish Eucharistic Congress
Posted by
Supertradmum
Today, on the news in Ireland, it was announced that the Pope, Benedict XVI, will broadcast on live television, some type of homily or commentary at the last Mass of the Eucharistic Congress. He will not be in Ireland, contrary to rumors here.
On Benedictine Balance
Posted by
Supertradmum
This is a dangerous posting. So many people have fallen into hedonism and selfishness that to write about not being vigilant and strict with one's self all the time may seem inappropriate. However, I want to caution some of my traditional friends on being too harsh with themselves. Perhaps my perspective is so Benedictine, a way which always considers the weak, that I write this cautionary tale from St. Anthony Abbot: A desert hunter saw Anthony Abbot “horsing around” with his fellow monks. The hunter expressed shock, even scandal, when he saw the monks enjoying themselves at some recreation. Anthony Abbot told the hunter to string his bow and shoot at a near target. The hunter did so. Then, the Abbot told the hunter to shoot another arrow. The hunter did so. When the Abbot asked the hunter to shoot a third, the hunter replied, “If I bend my bow so much at a time, it will break.” Anthony Abbot replied. “So it is with my monks. If I do not give them rest and recreation, they will break.”
The point of this story is relatively clear. But I think the larger question has to do with the works of piety and prayer. Christ warns us not to pile on repetitious prayers one after another. He decidedly does tell us to pray and fast. Fasting is ignored for the most part today. And, so much fasting is what I call “token fasting”, such as giving up luxuries, such as chocolate or going out to dinner. Such is the wealth of the States, that fasting resembles ordinary life for the rest of the world.
However, there is a stage wherein the great words of St. Benedict apply to all. When he writes of the balance of work, study and prayer, he indicates that all three activities are important in a day for a person pursuing holiness. An entire day of prayer is not natural for us lowly humans. The necessity of work and the need for study, such as the reading of Scripture daily, create a rhythm of activity, all focused on Christ. To omit one is folly and shows a lack of appreciation for the needs of the human, who is body and spirit. Above all rules, that of St. Benedict reveals an understanding of what it means to be an organized, healthy human being.
That Anthony Abbot recognized the needs of his community shows the Holy Spirit working within the Church in all ages.
To balance this approach, one must be more harsh with one's self than most people in the world. We cannot slack off in the pursuit of salvation, that is, in cooperating with grace. However, we are clay, and God has given us guidelines for the good of our bodies and our souls.
St. Thomas More wore a hair-shirt and he said when in prison that he wished he had been harder on himself in order to prepare for his martyrdom. His example were the Carthusians being stretched on hurdles and taken to Tyburn, singing in the mud and grime. If one is called to such serious penances, one must have a spiritual director. But, for the lay person, the joyous accepting of daily sufferings without complaining may be enough penance. May we all realize that complaining is a sin and if we refrain, we change our entire outlook on life to one of gratitude and joy.
On the Laity Using the Breviary
Posted by
Supertradmum
Several months ago, Father Z on his famous and excellent blog, ran a poll on how many and what type of the Liturgy of the Hours were said by his readers. I was pleasantly surprised not only at the number of lay people who prayed the Breviary, but how many hours some actually covered in a day.
Now, I must admit, I rarely do more than either Lauds or Vespers, choosing one or the other depending on my schedule. Rarely do I do Sext, Prime and Terce, which are in my Monastic Diurnal, which is from St. Michael's in Farnborough. Now that the Baronius Press has published a three volume set of the Breviary in the Extraordinary Form, I shall be interested in looking at that in detail, although I am partial to my Benedictine Breviary.
What seemed a great blessing and encouragement to me were the numbers of the laity who said two or more of the hours per day. I find that a refreshing obedience to the call of several Popes in the past asking the laity to take part in the Daily Office. What does this trend mean?
I think, ironically, it means two habits among the laity which are distinct. The first is that there are more single lay people, who take time to say the Liturgy of the Hours alone, or possibly, in a group. That younger people have picked up the Daily Office and are using it for prayer exhibits a sign of renewal among the younger adults.
The second trend is that more married couples are praying the Divine Office, or parts of it, together. I am reminded of a humorous story told by an old Irish friend of mine, Paddy. He is in his eighties, and was telling me that his brother in his late sixties was getting married for a third time, being a widower twice. When his brother, Mike, went to the local priest, the priest asked him why he wanted to get married again, seeing that Mike and his wife-to-be were beyond child-bearing age. Mike did not miss a beat and answered, “I want someone to answer the rosary I start up every night.” Mike's point was that for him, praying was easier with someone than without. Several of my married friends pray with their husbands, especially now that some are retired. They find this so rewarding, that they admit they wished they had done this their entire married life instead of waiting until the children were raised and gone.
Here is a lovely painting of St. Dominic reading the Breviary. There is something to be said about praying out loud with others. The interaction between the body and the soul is important to us mortals. Community prayer also keeps us from too much introspection and selfish concerns. However, there are thousands of clergy and lay people who say the Divine Office daily alone.
Those of us single ones may find praying alone easy as we have been doing it for such a long time, but the point of using the Breviary as laity should be considered by all. May I quote St. Benedict, on the Opus Dei, whose Rule I have been revisiting here for a week or so. Please note that eleven of the chapters in the Rule are dedicated to praying, and for the Benedictine, this means praying the Divine Office. Indeed, nothing is to be preferred to the work of God.
Can Ireland become the Isle of Saints Again? Oliver Plunkett and Margaret Ball
Posted by
Supertradmum
I have had the joy and privilege of seeing the preserved head of St. Oliver Plunkett in Drogheda. Now, I have a personal tie to him, as part of him is at Downside Abbey, which is connected to my academic training. Also, I have met and spoken with the postulator of St. Oliver Plunkett, and the seventeen martyrs of Ireland, Msgr. John Hanley, former rector of the Irish College in Rome and a great scholar as well as a gentleman. Msgr. Hanley's knowledge of St. Oliver Plunkett makes him the world expert on this saint and possibly all the seventeen saints of Ireland. He talked with me several times and gave a fantastic presentation in the local church on St. Oliver.
I would like to highlight one of the saints, St. Margaret Ball. Here is a link on these martyrs for your perusal. St. Margaret was betrayed by her son and husband, a cruel event, marking her as a martyr before her death in prison.
Born Margaret Bermingham about 1515 in Skreen, Co Meath, she married Bartholomew Ball, a prosperous merchant in Dublin. Her eldest son, Walter, however, became a Protestant and an opponent of the Catholic faith. Margaret provided 'safe houses' for bishops and priests passing through Dublin and would invite Walter to dine with them, hoping for his re-conversion.
I would like to highlight one of the saints, St. Margaret Ball. Here is a link on these martyrs for your perusal. St. Margaret was betrayed by her son and husband, a cruel event, marking her as a martyr before her death in prison.
Born Margaret Bermingham about 1515 in Skreen, Co Meath, she married Bartholomew Ball, a prosperous merchant in Dublin. Her eldest son, Walter, however, became a Protestant and an opponent of the Catholic faith. Margaret provided 'safe houses' for bishops and priests passing through Dublin and would invite Walter to dine with them, hoping for his re-conversion.
Walter was elected Mayor of Dublin. He had his mother arrested and drawn through the streets on a wooden hurdle, as she could no longer walk, to Dublin Castle. Here she remained imprisoned for the rest of her life. If she had renounced her faith she could have returned home, but she refused and died in prison aged 70 in 1584. The chapel-of-ease at Santry in Larkhill parish was named in her honour.
Tuesday, 13 March 2012
Indwelling of the Holy Trinity Part Two-charity
Posted by
Supertradmum
One of the marks of the real Christian is charity. Serenity in the face of interruptions to our lives or inconveniences caused by the real needs of others shows us the presence of charity in our hearts and minds.
In addition, as Garrigou-Lagrange tells us, only those who live in charity keep the Indwelling of the Holy Trinity. Why is that? That we receive the Trinity in Baptism and Confirmation marks us as Christians. That we preserve this Life of God in us means that we must cooperate with grace, sanctifying grace given only through the Sacraments.
There is no other way to obtain sanctifying grace except through the Sacramental Life of the Church. There is no running around the goal post in order to score. When the Church teaches that we are all saved through the merits of the Catholic Church, this is partly what is being taught.
How sad that several generations of Catholics think they will get to heaven just because they are good.
There is no other way to obtain sanctifying grace except through the Sacramental Life of the Church. There is no running around the goal post in order to score. When the Church teaches that we are all saved through the merits of the Catholic Church, this is partly what is being taught.
How sad that several generations of Catholics think they will get to heaven just because they are “good”. This is not the teaching of Christ or the Church.
Many of the Church Fathers in the earliest centuries of our theology have pointed out the fact that the Holy Trinity dwells in those who are “in charity”. This means that if one “abides in Love”, as taught by St. John the Evangelist, and practices that Love (practice means pragmatic, that is reality, doing things, not merely feeling, but duty).
There are stages of love, just as there are stages of the interior life. Pope Benedict XVI in his encyclical on love, explains the different types, which have been mentioned on this blog as well. But, a married couple, for example, move from the romance of eros, to the self-dying pure love of giving without expectation, that is, Divine Love. A couple may have a life-time to learn this type of self-giving. But, the mark of the Christian is just this same type of charity.
Above is an icon of the Transfiguration. Christ left the glory of the Trinity to share Himself with us in the Incarnation. The ultimate charity is sharing who we are with others, not merely what we have materially. We have the lives of the saints to show us charity in action. We need only think of the Little Flower and her little way of accepting daily crosses and offering up sufferings to God. We have the charity of the great St. Vincent de Paul, or the love in action of St. Francis travelling to the Saladin in order to convert him. We have the example of the French Jesuits, who even after returning to France, came back to the States and were killed in horrible ways. But, charity can mean the simple acceptance of the loved one for who he or she is. The acceptance of another human being, the recognition and encouragement of that person's uniqueness and gifts, is also charity.
On the Indwelling of the Holy Trinity: thoughts for Lent
Posted by
Supertradmum
Theophoroi” or God-bearers. When was the last time you heard a sermon on the Indwelling of the Trinity? I referred to this Truth of the Catholic Church before on this blog, but I return to it today after several discussions with lay friends who had never heard of this before.
Garrigou-Lagrange is my basis for explanation, but we have the Fathers of the Church, and the Scriptures as the foundation of all following teaching. The great Dominican synthesizes centuries of teaching. I am not going to emphasize the Indwelling of the Trinity is all created things, but in the specific soul which is Baptized into Christ. Garrigou-Lagrange notes the Scriptures relating to the Coming of the Spirit in the Gospels, and particularly the Priestly Prayer of Christ in the Gospel of John. But, I want to move on from the references to the Holy Spirit and comment on the Indwelling of the entire Trinity, the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. But, before I do that, I want to look at Garrigou-Lagrange's shedding light on the foundations necessary for this Indwelling.
Obviously, only those who are Baptized, and I capitalize the word for emphasis, have this Indwelling. But, there is more to the Life of God in each one of us than the first Sacrament of Initiation. The spiritual writer notes St. Thomas Aquinas, stating, that Pope Leo XIII (why is he not canonized?) used Thomistic explanations in his encyclical on the Holy Spirit Divinun illud munus: For God is in all things by His essence, power, and presence, according to His one common mode, as the cause existing in the effects which participate In His goodness. Above and beyond this common mode, however, there is one special mode belonging to the rational nature wherein God is said to be present as the object known is in the knower, and the beloved in the lover. And since the rational creature by its own operation of (supernatural) knowledge and love attains to God Himself, according to this special mode, God is said not only to exist in the rational creature, but also to dwell therein as in His own temple. So no other effect can be put down as the reason why the divine Person is in the rational creature in a new mode, except sanctifying grace. . . . Again, we are said to possess only what we can freely use or enjoy: but to have the power of enjoying the divine Person can only be according to sanctifying grace.
The great heresies of our time deny the need for sanctifying grace for salvation or for spiritual growth. Someone commented to me one time that to “be good” was the only thing necessary to get to heaven. Sadly, this is not the case, nor are the young taught, even in so-called Catholic schools, the real need for the Sacraments.
Notice in the above selection that the term “rational” in relationship to human nature is clearly delineated. Why? Catholicism stresses knowing God and loving Him, not merely experiencing Him in some sort of Quietist or Pentecostal manner. Do we not want to know everything about a person we love? Do we not want to find out all about that person? That sanctifying grace moves us to knowledge of the Indwelling of the Trinity demands that we receive the Sacraments on a regular basis. Without sanctifying grace, the initial gift of God at Baptism is starved of spiritual food.
Garrigou-Lagrange is clear that we all share in the Indwelling of the Trinity, only in degrees. This is true not only of all of us, but of the saints. The saint who has the fullness of the Indwelling of the Trinity is, of course, the Theotokos, the Mother of God. That the Doctors of the Church exhibit this rational knowledge and are God-bearers in a smaller sense than Mary, Mother of God, indicates a degree of holiness. But, Garrigou-Lagrange shows us over and over again, that all are called to such holiness, albeit in different degrees. God-bearers is the term quoted from St. Ignatius of Antioch, who used the term “theophoroi” or God-bearers. This term applies to us, the members of the Church Militant today, in 2012. I include an icon of St. Joseph of Arimathea, who brought Christ and the Grail to England. He, indeed, is a model God-bearer. To be continued...
Monday, 12 March 2012
New Catholic Shrine in England
Posted by
Supertradmum
If you are in England and have not heard this great news, check out Father Ed Tomlinson's site. St. Augustine's in Ramsgate is now an official Catholic Shrine. Praise God.http://www.tunbridgewells-ordinariate.com/blog/?p=2461
There is a weekly, Sunday Tridentine Mass at this parish. I love this church, and it is a little gem of Pugin beauty.
The Holy Well of St. Ciaran and the Book of Kells
Posted by
Supertradmum
I suppose there are enough holy wells in Ireland to fill the Thames, but yesterday I visited the holy well of Saint Ciarán of Disert-Kieran, in Country Meath. St. Ciarán the Devout who apparently wrote a 'Life of St Patrick', shares a name with two more famous saints. He died on June 14th, 775 and that date is his feast day.
Now, this place is very small, with limestone outcroppings and the cold, cold water coming from the well. As it is not built up, the entire ambiance is one of prayer and peace. Gypsies place ribbons and other pieces of cloth on the trees for favors in prayer. This custom pre-dates Christianity, and goes back to the Romans, at least. I blessed myself with the water, and felt like this was the "real Ireland". May St. Ciaran bless this country with many more saints.
In addition, for those who cannot get to Dublin, to Trinity College Library, there is a facsimile of the Book of Kells in Kells itself. This stunning book is open to two pages, which one may study for hours and not absorbed all the symbolism. The artwork is stunning and, indeed, proves this book to be one of the treasures of the world.
The fact that the original was saved from the violent Vikings is a large miracle in and of itself. I saw the page of the earliest Western depiction of the Virgin and Child, created before 800 A.D. Here is the wiki link. And, thanks to wiki for the picture here. Perhaps, I am reading too much into it, but Jesus has bright red Celtic hair, and Mary, the Theotokos, has a strong, maternal Irish face. The facsimile communicated the glory of the artists.
Now, this place is very small, with limestone outcroppings and the cold, cold water coming from the well. As it is not built up, the entire ambiance is one of prayer and peace. Gypsies place ribbons and other pieces of cloth on the trees for favors in prayer. This custom pre-dates Christianity, and goes back to the Romans, at least. I blessed myself with the water, and felt like this was the "real Ireland". May St. Ciaran bless this country with many more saints.
In addition, for those who cannot get to Dublin, to Trinity College Library, there is a facsimile of the Book of Kells in Kells itself. This stunning book is open to two pages, which one may study for hours and not absorbed all the symbolism. The artwork is stunning and, indeed, proves this book to be one of the treasures of the world.
The fact that the original was saved from the violent Vikings is a large miracle in and of itself. I saw the page of the earliest Western depiction of the Virgin and Child, created before 800 A.D. Here is the wiki link. And, thanks to wiki for the picture here. Perhaps, I am reading too much into it, but Jesus has bright red Celtic hair, and Mary, the Theotokos, has a strong, maternal Irish face. The facsimile communicated the glory of the artists.
Perfection Part Eleven -Silence
Posted by
Supertradmum
On Perfection continued...
These posts seem to be popular, so I shall do two today. It is Lent, and such meditations may be helpful for some, including myself.
The overlap of the Carmelite, Benedictine and Dominican spiritual ways can be clearly seen in the the call to some silence during the day. Now, as busy lay people, we must create these little shells of silence so that we can hear the Voice of God, the small, still Voice. Without silence, one is not in touch with one's own soul or with God.
I have known extremely busy people. Not only are these people busy during the day, but when they come home at night, they have the television on until they go to bed. From the minute they wake up in the morning, when they turn on the radio, read the paper, run about doing necessary or unnecessary activities, these Catholics are never silent. I would be exhausted without silence.
If I do not have time in the morning and in the evening, at the very least, for reading Scripture, one of the Hours, such as Vespers, I cannot act as a serene, human being. Silence gives me grounding for the entire day, and if I practice silence, it can remain within me for the entire day. This is the beauty of silence, it becomes a wellspring of life within us, overcoming other noises and confrontations.
Silence breaks down anxiety and fear. The most fearful people I know cannot bear silence. They must keep moving, keep doing, even if they are retired. The rhythm of life which includes silence gives a richness to one's existence and keeps one from falling into superficiality.
Why some people are afraid of silence is that they are afraid of suffering. In silence, I see my sins, my failings, my failures. In silence, I face the need for conversion daily. In silence, I meet God, who is All Goodness, All Innocence, All Perfection.
Only in Faith can one approach silence, as in silence one meets the God of Mercy and Forgiveness.
I have talked with friends as to how to create more silence in their day. Some want to do so and some want to keep running away from God, which to me, is running away from Love.
Silence is never boring, as some may believe, unless one thinks God is boring. The Infinite is so beyond me, that only is silence can I meet God.
We are fast approaching Holy Week, when in the Passion of Christ, we see Him keeping silent before both the Sanhedrin and Herod. Christ said little in front of Pilate, but He was calling Pilate to Himself, and was trying to make the Roman see. Christ remained silent because He did not need to defend Himself. He is God. He is Man. He stood in silence, in Perfection, and those who judged Him unfairly could not see the Silence which stood before them, as they had never met Him in silence. Those who meet God, know Him when they see Him.
Perfection Part Ten-Docility
Posted by
Supertradmum
Reading Garrigou-Lagrange again and again, I am struck with the idea of docility. Now, some of us are made more or less docile. As a person with a strong will and strong character, docility is something I have had to learn. My saintly mother, who is 84, is docile by nature, most sweet-tempered, and a joy to be around. Not all of us are created the same. The idea of modern psychologically which states in popular terms that we can be all we want to be is simply not true in one sense and very true in another. Garrigou-Lagrange insists that docility may be learned or acquired by all, and should be the goal of the saint. In fact, one cannot grow in holiness without docility.
Now, docility is not “wimpiness” or a lack of character. One must have character and person-hood in order to seek spiritual docility. To live in fear, fear of anything or anyone, is no docility. In fact, really craven fear hinders one from coming to trust in Providence, another great theme of Garrigou-Lagrange. Unless one trusts in Providence, one cannot grow in docility of spirit.
Perhaps two of the most individual and strong saints, mentioned last week on this blog, SS. Teresa of Avila and Therese, the Little Flower, demonstrated in their autobiographies, that they had powerful, personal characters. They knew who they were, they knew their talents and limitations, they were capable of facing their own lack of perfection and cooperating with grace to attain such perfection.
In my little mini-series on perfection, in which I have tried to make Garrigou-Lagrange more accessible to modern readers, I have found that the simple message of perfection rests in the desire and seeking of docility. Now, for any woman in the modern world who is a feminist, my statement sounds like heresy. In the age of the emerging woman, which is a false idea by the way, as one only has to look at the great saints here mentioned, plus SS. Etheldreda, Gertrude, Brigid, Bridget, Matilda, Hilda, Eanswyth, Catherine of Siena, and so on to see powerful women acting in public spheres in the Church for centuries, women are supposed to be what I call “Bolsheviks”, that is, contradictory and totally independent. Of course, this is a physical, psychological and spiritual impossibility, created to destroy vocations as well as society. The Bolshevik mentality lends itself to splendid and, indeed, painful isolation. Some men fall into this mode of being, to the loss of their soul's growth and even salvation, as it is in dying to self that one gains heaven.
Docility requires greater courage than action. One must control one's desires, tongue, plans, in fact, give up control one's own life and trying to control the lives of others. This is also a goal of the Benedictine Rule, which I love so much. To be obedient to one's superior is to give up control. To give up control, is to become docile.
Obedience, dying to self, docility. The great spiritual masters, such as Garrigou-Lagrange and St. Benedict tell us that this is the only way to happiness and holiness.
As Garrigou-Lagrange notes, the ultimate docility is the giving of our soul completely to God. This action is connected to detachment and to listening in contemplation. By the way, without some silence in one's life, one cannot attain either docility or detachment. Silence is the absolute sine qua non of the spiritual life.
And now for something completely different
Posted by
Supertradmum
And now, for something completely different.
How does one make Dwarves into heroes? For the coming movie of The Hobbit, the Disney idea of dwarves simply would not work. The idea of small creatures (they are not homo sapiens in Tolkein's world) being mighty warriors and winners of battles has been deftly portrayed by the actors and make-up personnel of the coming epic. I share a photo from one of the fan websites.
If I had boys and girls at home adolescent age and up, I would encourage this type of movie, as they need role models of all shapes and sizes. The Church Militant in the making, that is our children, can learn good material and spiritual lessons from The Hobbit.
Sunday, 11 March 2012
Read this, please
Posted by
Supertradmum
If you do not read any other blog in America except the great Fr. Z's, may I again suggest a look at Dr. Sanity. Check this out for style and brilliance. http://drsanity.blogspot.com/2012/03/obamas-duplicitous-stance-toward-israel.html
A tip of the hat to the Headfort Arms
Posted by
Supertradmum
I would like to thank Olivia and her brother at the Headfort Arms for letting me blog away in their hotel. This hotel has great food and great hospitality. It is located in one of the oldest buildings in Kells, in County Meath. The old family of the Headfort's held sway over the land here for a long time. The hotel is part of a group of Irish businesses who are trying to turn back the "chill" of the Celtic Tiger; that is, the impersonalism and harshness which came with the sudden prosperity in the '90s and early 2000's here. Sadly, the old Irish businesses and the local produce need encouragement to come back to the older, more hospitable times. Most of the meat, vegetables, and even the soaps and toiletries in the rooms are from local producers. Olivia and her family, who have owned the establishment for over forty years, are doing a great job in bringing back the old Ireland. If you visit, come here for a stay.
Saturday, 10 March 2012
Pelagianism and the Youth Culture
Posted by
Supertradmum
In 1994, a long time ago for the modern era, Blessed John Paul II's Crossing the Threshold of Hope was published. At the time, the book was highly read and successful, especially in the United States. I returned to it yesterday and today as I wanted to refresh my mind on two poignant selections from the book. The first is an entire chapter on youth and the hope of the youth. I return to this theme as I see so many youth without hope. When I get together with people of my generation, at least those of us who were NOT hippies, we saw ourselves as energetically inspired by hope. We were a generation of optimism. We could to things, and be someone, be helpful in the world. I had leadership training in high school and in college. We were told point blank that as special students in private institutions, we were the future of the Church and of society. Some of us took these words and skills seriously, as we wanted to “make a difference”. We had hope, and for some of us, this hope was based on Christ and His Gospel.
That some of us fell into Liberation Theology or communism was a result of the misinterpretation of the Suffering Servant, Who is Christ. Some of us repented and started over, in the Truth of pursuing personal holiness before attempting to change the world. This decision was our salvation, as it brought us back to the Church, to the Sacraments, to God.
But, our hope was not misplaced. Focused on Christ, and not ourselves, we could understand the real Gospel message. That youth today lack hope is because they lack Christ. Period. So many of the parents I talk to discuss the lack of hope in political terms, in the language of utopianism, the great brainwashing of the Left. They speak of the lack of hope in the youth as if material goods could change their entire outlook.
Hope has nothing to do with status or material wealth. It has everything to do with being one with the Creator. Now, this may seem like an adult act of the will or spiritual wisdom, but more than ever, the youth among us need to focus on Christ....and His Church.
What I have seen in almost a year in Europe is the lack of hope in the youth, who content themselves with instant gratification and temporary numbing of the mind and spirit. Those anarchists who are so active in the European Union, and are, ironically, highly organized anarchists, are youth who have no hope but in destruction. There is really nothing to take the place of the very structures they are denying and trying to destroy. Such a lack of positive political planning is a lack of hope. Part of this lack is based on ignorance and very bad educational systems removing the ideals of Western Civilization, including Christianity, from the curricula of the past 50 years.
Going back to Blessed John Paul II's work, I see his comparison of the youth who grew up in World War II, or under the tyrannies of communism as strangely archaic now. The youth to which the Pope was referring are my parent's generation. The youth of which he refers in 1994, are the generation beneath me. We baby-boomers had hope, and the generation after us placed their hope in materialistic dogmas and materialism. This new generation of youth, no longer the “John Paul II Generation”, as those are married and having children of their own, has a different set of problems.
As I have written many times before here and elsewhere, the youth of today are so individualistic and separated from real relationships, they have no hope in society and fall naturally into either anarchy or complete isolationism.
I am currently travelling in Ireland, as you know from this blog. This country is the suicide capitol of the world, and many who destroy themselves are youth. They have lost hope. Their idols of sex, drugs, drink and success have let them down. Their repudiation of the Church, the very link to Hope Himself, have left them without the anchor they need in their lives. They have chosen these ways. No one has made them leave the Church or society. No one has purposefully cast them out. They are not victims, but have chosen to leave the mainstream of civilization. That socialism and communism have worked to undermine the family, even in Ireland, is a factor. But the greatest danger for the youth are their own peers. No longer looking for heroes or role models among the older generations, and there are many, they look at each other in a strange idolatry of self-the same idolatry which causes homosexuality and lesbianism. This love of self, this narcissism, has destroyed the hope of youth. As long as they only look towards each other, they are doomed to unhappiness.
Let me quote the book mentioned in this post, a selection from Blessed John Paul II: This danger (Pelagianism) already existed in the time of Saint Augustine, and seems to be surfacing again in our time. Pelagius asserted that even without divine grace, man could lead a good and happy life. Divine grace, therefore, was not necessary for him. But the truth is that man is actually called to salvation; that a good life is the condition of salvation; and that salvation cannot be attained without the help of grace. Ultimately, only God can save man, but He expects man to cooperate. The fact that man can cooperate with God determines his authentic greatness. The truth according to which man is called to cooperate with God in all things, with a view toward the ultimate purpose of his life—his salvation and divinization—found expression in the Eastern tradition in the doctrine of synergism. With God, man “creates” the world' with god, mane”creates his personal salvation. The divinization of man comes from God. But, here, too, man must cooperate with God.
That we have a generation of youth who do not cooperate because they do not believe either in their own responsibility to cooperate with grace, or that they do not believe in grace, is the tragedy of their age. That they have given up responsibility for creating the person God created them to be is the tragedy of their generation. We are witnessing the lost generation. One does not have to be old to be a saint...
Perfection Nine--Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the Kingdom of God
Posted by
Supertradmum
A few days ago, I wrote of the lack of the work ethic. What I did not elaborate in the post was the downside of the Calvinistic idea that if a person is saved, one of the elect, that person is blessed materially in this world. The entire Protestant heritage is imbued with this falsehood, but if pervades the Western world, or more correctly, America, Great Britain and Ireland, those countries which inherited Calvin's hatred of poverty and symbol of grievous sin. Now, growing up in an area of the Midwest where Catholics still are and always have been since Columbus, the minority religion, the Calvinist idea of the blessed elect was in the very air. Comments from adults and even skewed teaching taught us children that to be poor was not only a great shame on the family, but a curse from God.
Does this sound familiar? How Catholics feel into judging those less fortunate than themselves can only be attributed to this encroachment of the Calvinist idea of the material elect. However, I have seen this heresy grow as the faith of Calvin dwindles on the fact of the earth. Something else is pushing the agenda that poverty is to be eradicated at all costs and is an evil in and of itself.
Christ never said this. Christ Himself chose poverty and the call to radical holiness in the world demands a certain detachment from the things, and more importantly, the status of this world.
![]() |
| I do not want to hear about suffering! I do not want to hear about the poor! |
How many times do the Gospel writers quote Christ and His parables about not preferring the rich man to the poor man. But, the politics of envy contradict Christ. And, the socialist and communist agendas hate both the rich and the poor. How convenient.
But, what is worse, are the Catholics who hate the poor and do not want to admit such people into their society, homes, conversations. It is as if poverty were some sort of disease, like the measles, which one can catch from a poor person. They do not want to hear about poverty.
And, yet, Mary, the Queen of the Universe married a poor man and bore the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity in a stable. I am convinced that people really do not believe this, or somehow have brought antiseptics and central heating into the cold, dank and dirty place where Christ was born. I know a couple who are probably the holiest people on earth I can call friends. They live in poverty. They never have new clothes and eat the same thing every day-cabbage, turnips, fish, potatoes, tea. They have a car which is twenty-two years old and runs because the head of the house is a genius at mechanical things. They rent a house which is partly over a pub and put up with smoke, horrible language and music, until early hours. They always wanted their own house, but now, as they aregrowing older, they are seeing this may not happen, ever.
And yet, they are content. They go to daily Mass and pray the fifteen decades of the rosary daily. They fast for souls and pray for the dead. They do missionary work quietly and consistently. They help those poorer than themselves. For such humans is heaven waiting.
But, they are judged mercilessly by others. They are considered low class, unhealthy, uneducated. They are scorned and thought odd. They are judged as having some horrible sin or failure in their lives which must account for their lack of financial success. Their fellow Catholics see them with the eyes of Calvinism.
Even their families betray them and think them “too poor and too proud”, that is, taking pride in their poverty. This is not true. They have no pride, only a simply humility which shows that they know God and God knows them.
And yet, people prefer others to their company. No one gives them meat to enhance their diet. No one notices that they use firewood and not their central heating. No one notices because the poor are invisible. And, already, I know that some of the readers will be saying, “Why didn't the man do something else besides carpentry?“Why don't they move?” “Why doesn't she get a job? And, why doesn't the family help” Simply because he wants to live near his old mother until she dies and because the building industry is at a stand-still. Because they cannot afford to move, because the woman was ill and whether one believes it or not, people who have been ill, especially with cancer, do not get hired. And, some families either do not help or cannot help. It doesn't matter what the reasons are, these good people are very poor. Judge not...
Mother Teresa made the dying of Calcutta visible to the world. No one makes the poor visible, unless there is an underlying, heretical agenda. That the poor remain invisible is the largest sin of the Catholic Church. And, they are in our midst, daily. Only, we do not see them. We do not want to see them. Our blindness is our judgement and death.
It is not for governments to help the poor, but for the Catholics who can to do so. Such is the call of holiness for those who have riches. Such are the words of Christ.
What does it take to give to the poor? It takes humility to see that someone actually has a need that one may not have, and that there is a duty to respond. It takes humility to reach out and be involved with someone different, someone vulnerable, someone outside one's comfort zone, someone who does dress like you or talk like you. One must become “personal” to help the real poor. Throwing money at charities is not what Christ had in mind.
This Lent, I challenge my fellow Catholics not to just see the poor in the desperate third world countries, but to see the poor down the street, waiting for the bus, sitting near you in Church at Mass. We shall all be judged on what we saw and what we did not want to see, and therefore ignored. Could it possibly be that God allows poverty for our holiness? Could it be that the poor are always with us for our own benefit so that we come to see Christ in all men and women? The answers are yes and yes.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
























