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|    alt.religion.clergy    |    Tiered system of religious servitude    |    48,662 messages    |
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|    Message 48,184 of 48,662    |
|    Rich to All    |
|    Would you follow Christ?    |
|    10 Jul 20 00:14:54    |
      From: richarra@gmail.com              Would you follow Christ?               Let me warn anyone bent on following Christ to listen to Saint Paul:        One who claims to abide in Christ ought to walk as he walked. Would       you follow Christ? Then be humble as he was humble; do not scorn his       lowliness if you want to reach his exaltation. Human sin made the road       rough but Christ's resurrection leveled it; by passing over it himself       he transformed the narrowest of tracks into a royal highway.        Two feet are needed to run along this highway; they are humility       and charity. Everyone wants to get to the top--well, the first step to       take is humility. Why take strides that are too big for you--do you       want to fall instead of going up? Begin with the first step, humility,       and you will already be climbing.       -- St. Caesarius of Arles              =============       July 10th - Martyrs of Damascus       (d. 1860)              During the past several years, the Mideast has made the headlines as a       maelstrom of religious, social and political violence. It may help us       to know that this is nothing new in those parts! The case of the       Blessed Martyrs of Damascus is a good illustration.              In 1856, Turkey, the Muslim country that had controlled most of the       Mideast for years, was defeated in the Crimean War. In the peace       treaty, the Turkish sultan had to sign a decree forbidding future       discrimination against non-Muslims in taxes and in access to civil       office.              The sultan may well have signed such a law, but dyed-in-the-wool       Turkish Muslims considered it an insult and not acceptable. They had       never granted equal rights to Christians, and, so help them Allah,       they never would. A fanatical sect called the Druses (who have also       figured in more recent conflicts) was determined to put down the       Christians, especially those who lived in Lebanon.              In 1860, the Druses began a systematic massacre of Christians. The       Turkish officials persuaded the Christians to give up their arms in       the interest of maintaining peace. That just made things easier for       the Druses. From May 30 to June 26, 1860, they pillaged and burned       every defenseless Maronite village in main and southern Lebanon,       killing, mutilating or otherwise degrading 6,000 Christians. Some of       these victims were members of religious orders like the five Jesuit       missionaries of Zahleh and the 21 Maronite monks of Dair al-Kadar. The       only bright spot in the episode was the protection given by the       Algerian Muslim leader, Abd-al-Kadar, who boldly sheltered 1500       Christians, Europeans and Oriental.              The slaughter reached Damascus on July 9, 1860, and 3,000 men were       slain. European Franciscans had a convent there. When the attackers       neared, the father superior gathered all his flock together, including       the school children, to pray in the chapel. They might have escaped       the mob, had not a man whom the friars had befriended turned traitor       and shown the killers an unguarded back entrance.              The Muslim group killed eleven of these persons clearly out of hatred       of the Christian faith. The superior, Blessed Emmanual Ruiz, was a       Spaniard. When they demanded that he give up the faith, he replied, “I       am a Christian and I will die a Christian.†So they split open his       head with their axes. Bl. Engelbert Kolland, an Austrian Franciscan,       was also killed for refusing to deny the faith. Bl. Carmen Volta lay       dying for an hour. Two Muslim friends found him and said they would       hide him in their house if he apostatized. He refused, so they killed       him. Much the same thing happened to Bl. Nicanor Ascanio, Bl. Peter       Soler and Bl. Nicholas Alberca. The two other Franciscans executed       were lay brothers, Bl. Francis Pinazo and Bl. John James Fernandez.       Most of the lay people in the house escaped or were spared, but three       lay Maronites, all blood-brothers, shared the fate of the friars: Bls.       Francis, Abdul-Muti, and Raphael Masabki. Francis was aged about 70.       All three had refused the demands of the rioters that they embrace       Islam.              Pope Pius XI beatified these 11 modern martyrs on October 10, 1926.       Their story was another chapter in the tempestuous history of the Near       East, where savage violence, largely religious in its motivation, has       so long been visited on those who were swept into its whirlpool.       Sometimes the victims were locals, Christian or non-Christian, or       sometimes innocent bystanders from the West.              We would do well to call upon these blessed martyrs of Damascus to       intercede for peace among the still embattled peoples of the Middle       East. May Muslims and Christians, both children of the one God,       remember that God is love.              --Father Robert                     Saint Quote:       "What are all the gains, all the fortunes, all the offices and       careers, even all the kingdoms of the world, compared to an offence       against God, to a sin which is the greatest evil in the world? There       is no work greater or more noble either in heaven or on earth than       this: to prevent offences [sins] against God."       --St. Joseph Cafasso (Confessor, 1811-1860)--"The Priest The Man Of       God. His Dignity and Duties              Bible Quote:       Let no man therefore despise him: but conduct ye him on his way in       peace, that he may come to me. For I look for him with the brethren.       And touching our brother Apollo, I give you to understand that I much       entreated him to come unto you with the brethren: and indeed it was       not his will at all to come at this time. But he will come when he       shall have leisure. [1Co 16:11-12]              <><><><>       Prayer:       "Lord Jesus, inflame my heart with your love that I may always pursue       what matters most--love of you, my Lord and my God, and love of my       fellow neighbor whom you have made in your own image and likeness.       Free my heart from selfish evil desires that I may only have room for       kindness, mercy, and goodness toward every person I know and meet."              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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