Sunday, March 18, 2012

In the desert

I was so encouraged by Fr.Alfonse's blog today (just like every other day, lol)...but this time I really felt called to share :)

http://fralfonse.blogspot.com/2012/03/john-314-21-god-loves-us.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+DailyMeditationsWithFrAlfonse+%28Daily+Meditations+with+Fr.+Alfonse%29

I remember as I began preparing for Lent, looking into my interior life at all my attachments, "harmless" addictions, habits I can do without, struggles and wanting to pretty much change everything about me. It's so easy to notice areas of weakness and seek a sudden and complete transformation. But God helped me understand that some things take time, and that I need to let Him take the lead. And each day so far has been a gentle and rewarding reminder of that.

During Lent sometimes, it seems so natural to keep simply counting down the days and "wait it out", but God is always calling us to be active where we are at - here and now. To be fully committed to loving and serving Him in every way that we can. If we merely look forward to what comes after Lent, we will forget what our journey in the desert with Christ truly means.

God desires to use this time to transfigure us a little more in His image as we meditate on Christ - His temptation, passion, suffering, and death.

Our 40 days are about just that as well. Fighting temptation with the help of our Lord, dying to ourselves daily, and uniting ourselves to the suffering of Christ. The more I empty myself, the more God is able to fill me.

I'm realizing throughout the season the need to be a little kinder to my neighbor, a little more patient with those around me, a little more giving with my time, a little more reliant on God, a little less selfish and a little more selfless.

We've come so far on our Lenten journeys, but it's more important than ever to press on..to keep fighting the fight. And often the barriers like sin we're fighting comes in so many different disguises that we fail to recognize them. They can include neglecting the needs of others, hoarding God-given gifts of time and talent, and failing to pray. But St.Paul urges us to finish the race and persevere through God's grace and provision.

Praying for you as you seek Him.
If we try to escape sadness by seeking our consolation in sleep,we will fail to find what we are seeking, for we will lose in sleep the consolation we might have recieved from God if we had stayed awake and prayed.

-- St. Thomas More

He is such a smart man.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

"I am sensible of my natural corruption, which renders me incapable of all supernatural good and prone to all evil: but I cast myself on the mercies of a God who can bring much out of little, as He produced all things out of nothing; since it is not sufficient for me to know my own nothingness, and that I ought to glory in nothing, save only in my infirmities; I should also (for this is most important) be guided by a humble diffidence in myself, and a firm confidence in God, to whom nothing is impossible. When I find no consolation in man, then it is I feed indeed the happy necessity of having recourse to God, and of depending upon Him: happy that, all being wanting to me without Thee, O Lord, I should find my all in Thee!" - St.Louis de Montefort