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|    talk.religion.misc    |    Religious, ethical, & moral implications    |    30,222 messages    |
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|    Message 28,498 of 30,222    |
|    Weedy to All    |
|    How Sorrows are to be Borne Patiently: [    |
|    21 May 18 10:33:58    |
      From: richarra@gmail.com              How Sorrows are to be Borne Patiently: [II]              THE DISCIPLE.        Lord, because You were patient in Your life, in this respect       especially fulfilling the command of Your Father, it is fitting that       I, a wretched sinner, should bear myself patiently in accordance with       Your will, and that, for the salvation of my soul, I should bear the       burden of this corruptible life so long as You shall will. For though       this present life is hard, yet by Your grace it is made full of merit;       and by Your example and the lives of Your Saints it is rendered easier       and happier for the weak. Its consolations are richer than under the       old Law, when the gates of Heaven were shut, and the way thither dark,       so that few cared to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. And even those who       in former days were righteous and to be saved could not enter the       Kingdom of Heaven until Your Passion and the Atonement of Your sacred       Death.       --Thomas à Kempis --Imitation of Christ Bk 3 Ch 18                     <<>><<>><<>>       May 21st – St. Serapion the Sindonite              Born in Egypt; died c. 356. Serapion's moniker, the Sindonite, comes       from the garment of coarse linen which he always wore. Like other       desert monks, he led a life of extreme austerity. Though he traveled       into several countries, he always lived in the same poverty,       mortification, and recollection. In one town, recognizing the       spiritual blindness of comedian, he sold himself to the idolater for a       small sum. His only sustenance in this servitude was bread and water.       He accomplished every duty belonging to his servitude with the utmost       diligence and fidelity, joining with his labor prayer. Having       converted his master and the whole family to the faith, and induced       him to quit the stage, Serapion was freed. His former master tried to       return the sum he had paid, but Serapion refused it, even to       distribute to the poor.              Soon after this Serapion sold himself a second time, to relieve a       distressed widow. Having spent some time with his new master, in       recompense of signal spiritual services, he was given his liberty, a       cloak, a tunic, and a book of the Gospels.              He was scarcely out the door when he met a poor man to whom he gave       his cloak. Shortly thereafter he gave his tunic to a man shivering in       the cold. Thus he was again reduced to his single linen garment. A       stranger asked who had stripped him and left him naked. Showing the       man his book of the Gospels, he said: "This it is that hath stripped       me." Not long after, he sold the book itself to relieve someone in       extreme distress.              When an old acquaintance asked what had happened to the book, Serapion       replied: "Could you believe it? This gospel seemed continually to cry       to me: 'Go, sell all thou hast, and give it to the poor.' Wherefore I       have also sold it and given the price to the indigent members of       Christ." Having nothing left but his own person, he sold himself again       on several other occasions, when the corporal or spiritual necessities       of his neighbor called for relief. Once he became slave to a certain       Manichee at Lacedaemon whom he served for two years. Again he brought       the man and his whole family over to the true faith.              Saint Serapion went from Lacedaemon to Rome to study the most perfect       models of virtue, but returned to Egypt where he died before Palladius       visited in 388. Upon reading the story of Serapion, Saint John the       Almsgiver called for his steward, and, weeping, said: "Can we flatter       ourselves that we do anything great because we give our estates to the       poor? Here is a man who could find means to give himself to them, and       so many times over" (Benedictines, Husenbeth)                     Saint Quotes:       "Lose yourself wholly; and the more you lose, the more you will find."       --St. Catherine of Siena, Doctor of the Church              Charity is the sweet and holy bond which links the soul with its       Creator: it binds God with man and man with God.       -- Saint Catherine of Siena              <><><><>       St Augustine, the Holy Trinity, the Child and the Sea Shell              The great Doctor of the Church St. Augustine of Hippo spent over 30       years working on his treatise De Trinitate [about the Holy Trinity],       endeavouring to conceive an intelligible explanation for the mystery       of the Trinity.       He was walking by the seashore one day contemplating and trying to       understand the mystery of the Holy Trinity when he saw a small boy       running back and forth from the water to a spot on the seashore. The       boy was using a sea shell to carry the water from the ocean and place       it into a small hole in the sand.       The Bishop of Hippo approached him and asked, “My boy, what are doing?”       “I am trying to bring all the sea into this hole,” the boy replied       with a sweet smile.       “But that is impossible, my dear child, the hole cannot contain all       that water” said Augustine.       The boy paused in his work, stood up, looked into the eyes of the       Saint, and replied, “It is no more impossible than what you are trying       to do – comprehend the immensity of the mystery of the Holy Trinity       with your small intelligence.”       The Saint was absorbed by such a keen response from that child, and       turned his eyes from him for a short while. When he glanced down to       ask him something else, the boy had vanished.              Some say that it was an Angel sent by God to teach Augustine a lesson       on pride in learning. Others affirm it was the Christ Child Himself       who appeared to the Saint to remind him of the limits of human       understanding before the great mysteries of our Faith.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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