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|    alt.religion.clergy    |    Tiered system of religious servitude    |    48,662 messages    |
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|    Message 48,360 of 48,662    |
|    Rich to All    |
|    On Offering Ourselves wholly to God [V]    |
|    01 Sep 21 00:03:05    |
      From: richarra@gmail.com              On Offering Ourselves wholly to God [V]              I offer Thee also all the holy aspirations of devout persons; the       needs of my parents, friends, brothers, sisters, and all who are dear       to me; and the needs of all who have desired or asked me to pray and       offer the Eucharist for them and theirs, whether living or departed. I       pray that all these may enjoy the assistance of Thy grace, the aid of       Thy comfort, protection from dangers, and deliverance from pains to       come; and that, freed from all evils, they may offer glad praise and       thanks to Thee.       --Thomas à Kempis--Imitation of Christ Book 4 Ch.9              <<>><<>><<>>       1 September – Saint Lupus of Sens               (Died 623)        Bishop of Sens, Priest, Monk at Lérins – where he undertook whatever       was required, doing the lowliest duties with great love, Confessor and       Missionary – born near Orleans, Gaul (in modern France) and died in       623 in Brienon-sur-Armançon, Yonne, France of natural causes. He was       renowned for his love of music and his generosity to the poor.       Patronages – against epilepsy, of epileptics. He is also known as St       Loup de Sens, Loup de Naud, Leu, Lowe, Lupo.              Lupus was the son of Betton, Count of Tonnerre, “Blessed Betto,” a       member of the royal house of the Kingdom of Burgundy. Early in his       childhood he displayed a great love of Christ and His Church. His two       saintly maternal uncles, Saint Austremius, Bishop of Orleans and Saint       Aunarius, Bishop of Auxerre, both arranged his education and eventual       Ordination.              St Lupus was so greatly loved and his holiness so highly esteemed that       in 609, when the Bishop of Sens died, the King, at the request of the       people, appointed the saintly Lupus to replace him. Tradition leaves       us this wonderful miracle of St Lupus – whilst celebrating Mass,       during the Consecration, a jewel descended from heaven into the       elevated chalice.              When Lupus hesitated to acknowledge Clotaire II as the rightful ruler       of Burgundy and insisted that the will of God exceeds the will of       rulers, Clotaire used the excuse of slander about Lupo and a woman to       exile him to Ansenne, a predominently pagan area. Lupus evangelised       the people of the area, converting many, including the region’s       governor. When Lupus’ replacement in Burgundy, the politically       ambitious Monk Monegisil, was killed during a riot, the people       demanded the return of their rightful Bishop. Clotaire recalled Lupus       and punished those who had spoken against him. He returned       triumphantly to Sens, stopping in Paris for the Council of 614.              He was buried in the Monastery of Sainte-Colombe-lès-Sens, which he       had founded in Sens. In 853 his relics were transferred to the new       Church dedicated to him. His cult was of special renown during the       Middle Ages.              Among the many Churches and Monasteries dedicated to him in France are       Saint-Leu-Saint-Gilles in Paris (1235), Saint-Loup of Naud (Provins),       and Saint-Loup of Esserent, near Senlis.              https://anastpaul.com/2020/09/01/                     Saint Quote:       Perfection does not consist in not seeing the World, but in not having       a taste or relish for it. In a word, the perfection of charity is the       perfection of life; for the life of our soul is charity. The primitive       Christians lived in the world in body but not in heart, and were       nevertheless very perfect.       -- St. Francis of Sales              Bible Quote:       Religion pure and undefiled before God the Father is this: to keep       oneself unspotted from this world. (James 1:27)                     <><><><>       Good Advice              A great preservative against angry and mutinous thoughts, and all       impatience and quarreling, is to have some great business and interest       in your mind, which, like a sponge shall suck up your attention and       keep you from brooding over what displeases you.       --Joseph Rickaby              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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