Monday, March 31, 2008
The Heavens Open
Years pass by. The time has arrived when the great sacrifice is to be consummated. We find Mary at the foot of the cross. With the dying breath of Jesus she receives the Church as an inheritance. Mary becomes our Mother.
These are the two great titles which give Mary a claim on our veneration and affection.
-- The Little Book of Our Lady
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Divine Mercy Sunday
Heart of Jesus, wounded by my infidelities, forgive me my sins.
Saturday, March 29, 2008
More Grace and Merit
-- St. Francis de Sales
Friday, March 28, 2008
Change
How different a rule of life, how great a reform of conduct is required of me before I shall be able to say with the Apostle: "I live, now not I, but Christ liveth in me."
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Certain Sign
-- St. Aloysius Gonzaga
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Help in Temptation
-- St. Paul of the Cross, Flowers of the Passion
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Intra tua vulnera, absconde me
-- Madame Cecilia, Retreat Manual
Monday, March 24, 2008
Tree of Life
-- American Ecclesiastical Review
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Our Foundation
-- Rosmini, A Spiritual Calendar
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Child of Tears
Suppose two baptized infants were both to die before they reach the faintest use of reason, the one after enjoying good health and spirits and every luxury an unconscious baby-soul can possibly enjoy, the other after a precarious life of illness, pain, and privation; what certainty have we that the child of tears will not have greater joy in heaven than the other, which constantly beamed over with happy smiles?
-- Rev. Joseph Egger, SJ, God and Human Suffering
Friday, March 21, 2008
Merit
-- Rev. Joseph Egger, SJ, God and Human Suffering
Thursday, March 20, 2008
A Tried Life
We do not read that before the birth of Jesus, Joseph was exercised by great tribulations; he doubtless led the kind of humble and modest life which finds its happiness in what suffices. But after the birth of the divine Child, the life of Joseph was one long martyrdom.
- Until then, he had not been without a home; afterward, his retreat was a stable.
- Until then, he had lived tranquilly, surmounting his poverty by labor; afterward, he was persecuted, and constrained to lead a life of exile in a strange land.
- Until then, desiring little, he had known but little anguish; afterward, his compassionate soul was torn . . .
- Until then, possessing little, he had little to lose; afterward, he had Jesus, and he lost Him at Jerusalem . . .
Joseph was calm and resigned. He understood that tribulations are the crucible in which God purifies the virtue of those whom He loves, that the way of the cross is the only one which leads to heaven, that all the just must pass along it, and that Jesus never visits a soul without taking His cross with Him.
Are these our dispositions? Do we not imitate, on the contrary, the man of the world who lives only for pleasure, who will always have his comforts and be at his ease, who will deprive himself of nothing, and who is irritated by suffering and contradiction?
Let us adore the great design of God, who exposes His dearest friends to trials (Job 13:13). We find a difficulty in understanding, here below, this arrangement of Providence, but let us have patience, and we shall understand it hereafter (John 23:7).