Archive for July, 2011


Matt 25:36

How many of us will ever get an opportunity to visit someone in prison in his/her lifetime? But if you did have an opportunity to visit someone, then is that all you have to do?  How many trapped behind prison walls have more freedom then those on the outside because they have found God’s love through his son Jesus?  And it was all because someone like you had brought the love of Jesus to them.

Still there are many, maybe more on the outside who are trapped in their own personal ‘prisons’ and remain trapped because they never knew the love, peace and comfort that God offers them through His son Jesus Christ.  Someone like you and me can share Him with them to set them free!

Let us first identify some of them who are in ‘prison’ :-

  • Those who have an addiction…..
  • Those who are lonely…..
  • Those who feel abandoned….
  • Those who are sick and depressed….
  • Those who are aged and depressed because their children no longer make the time to visit them….
  •  Those who are hurt and angry and refuse to forgive…
  • Those who have never experienced true love…
  • Those searching for God and feel they have not found him…
  • Those who remain in sin….
  • Those who have been brought up to believe that survival is for the fittest only….
These are just a few examples and as you know there are many other forms out there.  So how do we help? Where do we start?
We can start by telling them that God loves them and move on from there…….Pray….listen….share…..pray….listen….share……pray……
God loves you my dear sisters and brothers and so do I !

July 31st, 2011 – 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Posted: July 29, 2011 by CatholicJules in Sunday Reflections

Sunday Bible Reflections with Dr. Scott Hahn

Food in Due Season

Readings:
Isaiah 55:1-3
Psalm 145:8-9, 15-18
Romans 8:35,37-39
Matthew 14:13-21


 

In Jesus and the Church, Isaiah’s promises in today’s First Reading are fulfilled. All who are thirsty come to the living waters of baptism (see John 4:14). The hungry delight in rich fare – given bread to eat and wine to drink at the Eucharistic table.

This is the point, too, of today’s Gospel. The story of Jesus’ feeding of the 5,000 brims with allusions to the Old Testament. Jesus is portrayed as a David-like shepherd who leads His flock to lie down on green grass as He spreads the table of the Messiah’s banquet before them (see Psalm 23).

Jesus is shown as a new Moses, who likewise feeds vast crowds in a deserted place. Finally, Jesus is shown doing what the prophet Elisha did – satisfying the hunger of the crowd with a few loaves and having some left over (see 2 Kings 4:42-44).

Matthew also wants us to see the feeding of the 5,000 as a sign of the Eucharist. Notice that Jesus performs the same actions in the same sequence as at the Last Supper – He takes bread, says a blessing, breaks it, and gives it (see Matthew 26:26).

Jesus instructed His apostles to celebrate the Eucharist in memory of Him. And the ministry of the Twelve is subtly stressed in today’s account. Before He performs the miracle, Jesus instructs the Twelve to give the crowd “some food yourselves.” Indeed, the apostles themselves distribute the bread blessed by Jesus (see Matthew 15:36).

And the leftovers are enough to fill precisely 12 baskets – corresponding to each of the apostles, the pillars of the Church (see Galatians 2:9; Revelation 21:14).

In the Church, as we sing in today’s Psalm, God gives us food in due season, opens His hands and satisfies the desires of every living thing. Now, as Paul reminds us in today’s Epistle, nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus.

Prayers For Catechists And Teachers

Posted: July 28, 2011 by CatholicJules in Great Catholic Articles, Memory Book

I think this little booklet is very well prepared and a beautiful gift for Catechists and Teachers.

May the prayers and reflections contained within it, enable you to excel in all you do for God’s Kingdom.

Amen.

Click Here to download or down below on the left hand side i.e. from my Catholic Flash Widget.

Jesus Beads

Posted: July 26, 2011 by CatholicJules in Life's Journeys, Prayers

Jesus beads called Chotki originates from the tradition of the Orthodox and Eastern Catholic churches.

I love it for it’s simplicity. Even the accompanying prayer is simple in form yet rich and deeply penetrating and when said in deep contemplation and reverence can bring about an inner transformation.

An instrument to help us pray always.

Luke 18:1

1 Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart.

Ephesians 6:18

18 Pray in the Spirit at all times in every prayer and supplication. To that end keep alert and always persevere in supplication for all the saints.

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God’s Ministries

Posted: July 25, 2011 by CatholicJules in Life's Journeys

Nowadays when it comes to matters of faith, I no longer believe in coincidences. Miracles and signs are present today as they were some 2000 years ago, we only need to open our hearts to be able to see God’s loving hand at work.

Last night after our family prayer session, my wife and son Seth, mentioned to me how awkward it felt for them to receive the Eucharist from me. It just so happened that on Sunday I was positioned towards serving the far right hand side of the Church, in which they were seated. And so they had little choice but to receive the Eucharist from me. I explained to them that nothing should ever distract them from the fact that they are receiving Christ – body,blood,soul and divinity. And it should not matter whether they are receiving Him from a priest,deacon,bishop or even an extraordinary minister of communion such as me. ( i.e. Even from a family member )

I went on to say that being in the EMC ministry did not make me extra special, holy or better than anyone else. In fact the term extraordinary simply meant Super Ordinary! The ordinary ministers of communion are the priests,deacons and bishops. We on the other hand are just acolytes that take a little more effort to dress in our Sunday best and are given the opportunity to share Jesus with our fellow sisters and brothers in Him.

Like all who serve in the various Church Ministries, we too must do our very best in the vocation or service we were called to do all for the Glory of God our Father. So if I am in the Choir then I should sing my best at all times, were I a Lector then I should do my very best in proclaiming the Word making every effort to ensure that my diction, timing, pronunciation etc. are correct. As an EMC I have to be reverent at all times even in the way I present the body of Christ. I have an added responsibility of living as a true disciple of Christ; that is to say, not just in Church but at home and at work. Yes I know…! In actual fact all the members of all the various ministries (the whole church community) should all strive to live as true disciples of Christ especially the leaders. But what I am merely pointing out is that as an EMC you are highly visible to ALL, especially when you have to go up to the sanctuary and then later serve the congregation, hence begs the question how can you then behave badly in public and still serve?

All of us in the various Ministries should never ever forget, that we serve God and His people and it is never Our Ministry but God’s! In Holy Communion our ‘I’s’ are transformed to ‘We’ so it does not matter how much we do individually, what matters is how much we do it for God and His kingdom.

And so it was amazing to me that just after saying all this last evening, this morning’s Gospel was about how certain disciples of Christ had wanted positions and Jesus saying to them at the end, that whoever wishes to be great among you shall be your servant; whoever wishes to be first among you shall be your slave. Just so the son of Man did not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many. Matt 20:20-28

A few days ago I was troubled, when I took it upon myself to try and point out certain things to a brother which I felt was doing or saying things which was contrary to Church teaching, even if he had the best of intentions. Needless to say that the exchange direct and indirectly did not go well. It ended with us praying for one another’s soul. 🙂 So I prayed very hard for an answer, I wanted to know if I was personally being self-righteous, even though a few others had shared similar sentiments about this brother before, though not at length. And I was led to this passage in Scripture :

Colossians 3:16

16 Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly; teach and admonish one another in all wisdom; and with gratitude in your hearts sing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs to God.

So my sisters and brothers in Christ, feel free to admonish me if I am doing or saying anything contrary to Christ’s teaching, so that I may grow in humility and love.

July 24th, 2011 – 17th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Posted: July 22, 2011 by CatholicJules in Sunday Reflections

Sunday Bible Reflections with Dr. Scott Hahn

Treasures of the Kingdom

1 Kings 3:5,7-12
Psalm 119:57,72,76-77,127-130
Romans 8:28-30
Matthew 13:44-52


 

What is your new life in Christ worth to you?

Do you love His words more than gold and silver, as we sing in today’s Psalm? Would you, like the characters in the Gospel today, sell all that you have in order to possess the kingdom He promises to us? If God were to grant any wish, would you follow Solomon’s example in today’s First Reading—asking not for a long life or riches, but for wisdom to know God’s ways and to desire His will?

The background for today’s Gospel, as it has been for the past several weeks, is the rejection of Jesus’ preaching by Israel. The kingdom of heaven has come into their midst, yet many cannot see that Jesus is the fulfillment of God’s promises, a gift of divine compassion given that they—and we, too—might live.

We too must ever discover the kingdom anew, to find it as a treasure – a pearl of great price. By comparison with the kingdom, we must count all else as rubbish (see Philippians 3:8). And we must be willing to give up all that we have—all our priorities and plans—in order to gain it.

Jesus’ Gospel discloses what Paul, in today’s Epistle, calls the purpose of God’s plan (see Ephesians 1:4). That purpose is that Jesus be the firstborn of many brothers.

His words give understanding to the simple, the childlike. As Solomon does today, we must humble ourselves before God, giving ourselves to His service. Let our prayer be for an understanding heart, one that desires only to do His will.

We are called to love God, to delight in His law, and to forsake every false way. And we are to conform ourselves daily ever more closely to the image of His Son.

If we do this, we can approach His altar as a pleasing sacrifice, confident that all things work for the good—that we whom He has justified, will also one day be glorified.


The word illuminism, comes from the Latin for light: lumen

When one talks to an illuminist, evidence contrary to the latter’s view has little or no effect on his conviction.  Even if the evidence is objectively compelling, it does not penetrate his mind or will.  This is natural illuminism.

On the supernatural level this disease shows itself in the conviction that “I have a special light from the Holy Spirit; you do not.  Therefore, I am right and you are wrong.” I like to call this form of the aberration the privileged-pipeline-to-God idea.  One can present to this person objective evidence from reason, Scripture, the teaching Church, brilliant theologians, and once again, no dent is made on the illuminist’s mind.  The reaction is the same:”I know better; you are wrong.”  It is clear that disagreements with an illuminist spouse, relative, friend, fellow worker or parishoner will go nowhere until humility enters the picture – and that requires conversion.  Psychology may help somewhat, but it cannot bring about the inner transformation we are talking about in this volume.

 

 

An extract from the book Deep Conversion Deep Prayer by Fr. Thomas Dubay, S.M.

 

 

For Reflection…

Posted: July 20, 2011 by CatholicJules in Personal Thoughts & Reflections

“I bless you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth for hiding these things from the learned and clever and revealing them to mere children” ( Lk 10:21 JB)

Doctoral degrees are usually worthwhile, but they can trigger conceit in some people and it is the conceit that is the problem.  So also with vanity stemming from other gifts and accomplishments.  It blocks insight into the most important of all human questions, the ultimate whys and hows of being fully beautiful and fulfilled.

Love joins humility as the source of this superior light.

Let us journey from born egocentrism to true love for one another.

You Have Christ Within You

Posted: July 20, 2011 by CatholicJules in Memory Book

From a letter to the Magnesians by Saint Ignatius of Antioch, bishop and martyr

Let us not be insensible of Christ’s loving kindness. For if he had acted as we do, we would have been lost indeed. Therefore let us become his disciples and learn to live in the Christian way; those who are called by any other name are not of God. Cast out the evil leaven that has become old and sour, and replace it with the new leaven, which is Jesus Christ. He must be the salt of your lives, so that none of you may become corrupt, since it is by your wholesomeness that you will be judged. It is absurd to profess Christ with the lips and at the same time to practice Judaism; for Christianity did not develop into faith in Judaism, but Judaism into faith in Christianity. It was in this that men of every tongue believed and were brought together unto God.

I do not write this to you, my dear friends, because I have heard that any one of you is thus disaffected, but because, though I am a lesser man than yourselves, I would have you all guard against falling into the snares of false doctrine. Have a firm faith in the reality of the Lord’s birth, and passion and resurrection which took place when Pontius Pilate was procurator. All these deeds were truly and certainly accomplished by Jesus Christ, who is our hope; may none of you ever be turned away from him!

May you be my joy in all things, if I am worthy of it. For although I am in chains, I do not deserve to be compared with any of you who live in freedom. I know that you are not inflated with pride, for you have Jesus Christ within you. And I know that you blush when I praise you, as the scripture says: The just man is his own accuser. Take care, then, to be firmly grounded in the teachings of the Lord and his apostles so that you may prosper in all your doings both in body and in soul, in faith and in love, in the Son, and in the Father and in the Spirit, in the beginning and in the end, along with your most worthy bishop and his spiritual crown, your presbyters, and with the deacons, who are men of God. Be obedient to the bishop and to one another, as Jesus Christ was in the flesh to the Father, and the apostles to Christ and to the Father and to the Spirit, so that there may be unity in flesh and spirit.

I have exhorted you only briefly, for I am aware that you are filled with God. Remember me in your prayers, that I may attain to God. And remember the church in Syria, from which I am unworthy to be called. How I need your united prayer and love in God! Remember, then, the Church in Syria, that it may be strengthened through your prayers.

The Ephesians at Smyrna, where I write these lines, send their greetings. They have come together here like yourselves for the glory of God; they have consoled me in every way and so has Polycarp, their bishop. The other churches, too, greet you for the glory of Jesus Christ. Farewell; may you abide in God’s harmony, possessing that undivided spirit which is Jesus Christ.

 

Prayer

Posted: July 20, 2011 by CatholicJules in Prayers

O Lord, as we travel through this day of our life, our strength is in you; in our hearts are the roads to our eternal destination, the place where you dwell for ever with your people in joy and in peace.  Sustain us as we pass through the bitter valleys of suffering; shield us as dangers threaten; let us rejoice in the springs of living water which refresh us on our way. And always keep us faithful until journey’s end, through Christ our Lord. Amen

 

July 17th, 2011 – 16th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Posted: July 15, 2011 by CatholicJules in Sunday Reflections

Sunday Bible Reflections with Dr. Scott Hahn

Of Wheat and Weeds

Readings:
Wisdom 12:13,16-19
Psalm 86:5-6, 9-10, 15-16
Romans 8:26-27
Matthew 13:24-43


 

God is always teaching His people, we hear in today’s First Reading.

And what does He want us to know? That He has care for all of us, that though He is a God of justice, even those who defy and disbelieve Him may hope for His mercy if they turn to Him in repentance.

This divine teaching continues in the three parables that Jesus tells in the Gospel today. Each describes the emergence of the kingdom of God from the seeds sown by His works and preaching. The kingdom’s growth is hidden – like the working of yeast in bread; it’s improbable, unexpected—as in the way the tall mustard tree grows from the smallest of seeds.

Again this week’s readings sound a note of questioning: Why does God permit the evil to grow alongside the good? Why does He permit some to reject the Word of His kingdom?

Because, as we sing in today’s Psalm, God is slow to anger and abounding in kindness. He is just, Jesus assures us – evildoers and those who cause others to sin will be thrown into the fiery furnace at the end of the age. But by His patience, God is teaching us—that above all He desires repentance, and the gathering of all nations to worship Him and to glorify His name.

Even though we don’t know how to pray as we ought, the Spirit will intercede for us, Paul promises in today’s Epistle. But first we must turn and call upon Him, we must commit ourselves to letting the good seed of His Word bear fruit in our lives.

So we should not be deceived or lose heart when we see weeds among the wheat, truth and holiness mixed with error, injustice and sin.

For now, He makes His sun rise on the good and the bad (see Matthew 5:45). But the harvest draws near. Let’s work that we might be numbered among the righteous children—who will shine like the sun in the kingdom of the Father.

Personal Reflection

Posted: July 13, 2011 by CatholicJules in Life's Journeys

When the windows of your heart are open, you’ll find that it is not blind faith that leads you; But one that is grounded in intellect, coupled with grace that lets your spirit soar.

Julian Tan 2011

Chaplet Of Our Lady Of The Snows

Posted: July 12, 2011 by CatholicJules in Life's Journeys, Prayers

This is a Gorgeous Chaplet and the accompanying prayer for the chaplet is just as beautiful to pray for the intercession of Our Lady of The Snows.

  • Pure white glass beads are reminiscent of the legend of Our Lady of the Snows
  • The rose spacers, made of a sturdy yet pliable clay, will remind you of Our Lady’s simple beauty
  • Centerpiece features the image of Our Lady of the Snows holding the Christ Child in her arms and the words, “OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS, PRAY FOR US” on the back
  • The crucifix is designed with interesting cuts and delicate designs

Our Lady Of the Snows Chaplet

1. On the Crucifix make the sign of the Cross.

2. On the First 3 beads after the crucifix pray one: Our Father, one Hail Mary and one Glory Be.

3. On the centerpiece pray the Memorare.

4. On the 5 white beads, pray the Hail Mary

5. On the Blue Rose Beads pray :-

Our Lady of the Snows, pray for us.

St Joseph, pray for us.
St Therese, The little flower, pray for us.
St Eugene the Mazenod, pray for us.

6. Finally on the centerpiece pray:

My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord;
my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour, for he has looked with favour on the lowliness of His servant. Surely, from now on all generations will call be blessed; for the Mighty one has done great things for me and Holy is His name.

 

Obtain it By Donation Here

CAFE Singapore

Posted: July 11, 2011 by CatholicJules in Upcoming Events


Sunday Bible Reflections with Dr. Scott Hahn

The Word’s Return

Readings:
Isaiah 55:10-11
Psalm 65:10-14
Romans 8:18-23
Matthew 13:1-23


Today’s readings, like last week’s, ask us to meditate on Israel’s response to God’s Word—and our own. Why do some hear the word of the kingdom, yet fail to accept it as a call to conversion and faith in Jesus? That question underlies today’s Gospel, especially.

Again we see, as we did last week, that the kingdom’s mysteries are unfolded to those who open their hearts, making of them a rich soil in the which the Word can grow and bear fruit.

As we sing in today’s Psalm, in Jesus, God’s Word has visited our land, to water the stony earth of our hearts with the living waters of the Spirit (see John 7:38; Revelation 22:1).

The firstfruit of the Word is the Spirit of love and adoption poured into our hearts in baptism, making us children of God, as Paul reminds us in today’s Epistle (see Romans 5:5; 8:15-16). In this, we are made a “new creation” (see 2 Corinthians 5:17), the firstfruits of a new heaven and a new earth (see 2 Peter 3:13).

Since the first humans rejected God’s Word, creation has been enslaved to futility (see Genesis 3:17-19; 5:29). But God’s Word does not go forth only to return to Him void, as we hear in today’s First Reading.

His Word awaits our response. We must show ourselves to be children of that Word. We must allow that Word to accomplish God’s will in our lives. As Jesus warns today, we must take care lest the devil steal it away or lest it be choked by worldly concerns.
In the Eucharist, the Word gives himself to us as bread to eat. He does so that we might be made fertile, yielding fruits of holiness.

And we await the crowning of the year, the great harvest of the Lord’s Day (see Mark 4:29; 2 Peter 3:10; Revelation 1:10)—when His Word will have achieved the end for which it was sent.

Prayer

Posted: July 6, 2011 by CatholicJules in Prayers

Lord,
Jesus bind us to you and to our neighbour with love. May our hearts not be turned away from you; May our souls not be deceived, nor our talents and minds enticed by the allurements of sin, so that we may never distance ourselves from your love. Thus may we love our neighbours as ourselves, with strength, wisdom and gentleness, with Your help. You who are blessed throughout all ages.
Amen.

ST Anthony


Question : I have recently had doubts about the Real Presence in the Eucharist. I went to Reconciliation and confessed that to the priest. But the more I thought about it, it was really a question that I couldn’t answer that caused those thoughts to pop into my head. The question was: If consuming Christ’s Body and Blood is not cannabalism, what is it then? Then that leads to me doubting what Christ said and questioning the Real Presence.

Should I receive the Eucharist even though I have these doubts?

Answer : The Eucharist is a miracle. In fact, according to St. Thomas Aquinas, it is His greatest miracle. We eat His body and drink His blood UNDER THE FORM OF BREAD AND WINE. Cannibals eat flesh and blood that has the appearance of flesh and blood.
When cannibals eat the body and blood of another human being, that person’s body becomes a part of the cannibal. But when eat the body and blood of Jesus, we become a part of HIM!

He is God, after all. In the Eucharist, His divine embrace permeates our bodies in a way that far exceeds the surface embrace that we experience with other people. You need to think outside of the human box. We are dealing here with a God that can create from nothing. You accept this, even though you don’t understand it. So with the Eucharist. It’s the same God. But most of all, to appreciate the Eucharist, we must have an appreciation of the Passion. If this reflection on His Passion moves you, then by all means, continue to receive the Eucharist.

Reflection on the Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ +

The agony in the garden was really the agony in His mind. He suffered the passion in His mind before He suffered it in His body—to the point of actually affecting the latter by sweating blood. But from then on, it was His bodily suffering that affected His mental suffering.

At the base of all His suffering was the one thing that human beings dread the most: rejection. He was betrayed by Judas, denied by Peter and abandoned by all the rest of His Apostles; those He had hand picked as His closest intimates. He was most rejected by those who put Him to death. They not only wanted Him dead, they wanted Him to suffer. They not only considered Him to be worth nothing, they considered Him to be worth minus nothing! This significance was not lost on Him. He felt fully the rejection as each physical agony reminded Him.

So we thank Him for joining us on our human journey and actually choosing to experience what we fear the most.

We thank Him for enduring the arrest and the cruelty of the guards and the Sanhedrin. We thank Him for enduring the cruelty of Pilate who allowed Him to be executed rather than risk his own political ruin—and for the cruelty of Herod who wanted to be entertained by having Him work a miracle. We thank Him for all the time He spent satisfying their preoccupation with themselves, just delaying His ultimate death. We thank Him for the anxiety of that night in a cell.

The next morning He was brutally scourged with such intensity and violence that He became as an aged man in a matter of minutes. His multiple wounds bloodied His entire body. The loss of so much blood not only severely weakened Him; it also caused a severe, throbbing headache that remained with Him for the duration.

We thank Him for this and for the mockery He received when they put a purple cloth on His shoulders and pushed a crown of thorns down into His head which intensified His headache. They blindfolded Him and slapped Him, insisting that He ‘prophesy’ who had hit Him. They spat on Him and beat Him.

He stood at the praetorium in utter disgrace according to the attitude of the crowd—while in reality, He stood in utter glory: almighty God, being present to every person who has ever suffered rejection, joining them in their moment of pain. It was there that He was sentenced to death by crucifixion. Physically, He was utterly miserable. He revealed to St. Bernard that carrying the cross was His most painful agony. He was so weak, He could hardly walk. Nauseous and thirsty, He found the weight of the cross on His shoulder almost unbearable. It most likely dislocated His shoulder. It is not surprising that He fell down on the stone streets that were filthy with animal dung—with the cross on top of Him. And He got up each time.

It was only with the help of Simon of Cyrene that He made it to the top of Calvary. There they drove the nails into the carpal tunnels of His hands, causing pain throughout His upper body. The nail in His feet registered great pain through all the sensitive nerves there. When the cross was righted, His up-stretched arms squeezed His lungs and He began to pant for lack of oxygen. So He had to push down on His crucified feet to push His body up in order to fill His lungs with air. This took great effort because He was so weak. Yet He managed to maintain such effort for three hours of agony which increased gradually as He became weaker moment by moment. By the end of the third hour, His agony was at its peak

He had come to the point where His lack of strength simply was no match for what is known as Sepsis, where the bloodstream is overwhelmed by bacteria, and in this eternal moment He died, giving us His life. Transcending time, this moment of divine love is present to us in the tabernacles of the world. Thank you, Lord. We adore you O Christ and we praise you. By your holy cross, you have redeemed the world.

Fr. Vincent Serpa, O.P.

ST Anthony says….

Posted: July 5, 2011 by CatholicJules in Life's Journeys

Sent from Julian’s Mobility Pad….

“In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.” James 2:17

Devotion To The Sacred Heart

Posted: July 2, 2011 by CatholicJules in Great Catholic Articles, Memory Book

The devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus has been instituted to light in the hearts of Christians that fire of divine love which unfortunately was being extinguished, leaving the human heart empty or at least making it forget the benefits of its Redeemer and the immense love of God for our souls.  To avoid such a great abuse, let us consider the Sacred Heart our Lord Jesus Christ as a model on which we should form and regulate our own.  We will learn from this divine Master how to seek in all things the glory of God, our own sanctification and perfection in the practice of all the virtues, and the good of our neighbours.  We will learn to make the exercise of prayer in a spirit of sacrifice, offering ourselves to God in union with our Lord Jesus Christ, never in any way receiving consolations that we have not earned, and persevering in this holy exercise despite all the obstacles of repugnance and of distractions.  Let there be a bonding with Jesus Christ so close that there is only one heart with him, to love whatever conforms to the attitudes of this Sacred Heart and to avoid whatever could renew the sorrow he felt when, because of our faults, he said, ” My soul is sorrowful even unto death” (Mt 26:38).

If we take this Sacred Heart for our model, we will not fail to comprehend that there are two virtues more than all the rest which we must practice since they are like the wellspring and the foundation of the rest of the virtues:” Learn of me, for I am humble and meek of heart” (Mt 11:29). By making ourselves acquire these two virtues, we can offer in this manner a worthy tribute of recognition and gratitude, and having thus achieved in our life attitudes conformed to the Sacred Heart, we will deserve to be united with him by an eternal love and joy.

 

Archbishop Jean-Baptiste Lamy (+ 1888)