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   talk.religion.misc      Religious, ethical, & moral implications      30,222 messages   

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   Message 28,690 of 30,222   
   Weedy to All   
   =?UTF-8?Q?Out_of_sight=2C_out_of=C2=A0_m   
   22 Mar 19 22:43:18   
   
   From: richarra@gmail.com   
      
   Out of sight, out of  mind   
      
      Christ is gone away; he is not seen; we never saw him, we only read   
   and hear of him. It is an old saying, "Out of sight, out of mind." Be   
   sure, so it will be, so it must be with us, as regards our blessed   
   Savior, unless we make continual efforts all through the day to think   
   of him, his love, his precepts, his gifts, and his promises. We must   
   recall to mind what we read in the gospels and in holy books about   
   him; we must bring before us what we have heard in church; we must   
   pray God to enable us to do so, to bless the doing so, and to make us   
   do so in a simple-minded, sincere, and reverential spirit. In a word,   
   we must meditate, for all this is meditation; and this even the most   
   unlearned person can do, and will do, if he has a will to do it.   
   --Bl. John Henry Newman   
      
   <<>><<>><<>>   
   March 23rd – St. Joseph Oriol, Visionary   
   (Also known as José Orioli)   
      
   Born in Barcelona, Spain, on November 23, 1650; died there on March   
   23, 1702; beatified by Pope Pius VII on May 15, 1896; canonized in   
   1909. Father Joseph Oriol is remembered for the heroism of his   
   virtues, for the example he proposes to Christians, and for the   
   singular favors God accorded him.   
   Joseph is a saint among thousands of saints; but, for more than three   
   centuries, history and legend together have justified the cognomen his   
   parishioners gave him, even before he died: "wonder- worker of   
   Barcelona." A saint among thousands of saints; but, for about three   
   centuries, history and legend have emphasized the healings, the   
   prophecies, the miracles of all kinds of which Joseph Oriol was the   
   instrument.   
      
   Joseph Oriol was born of a poor family. His good conduct, his   
   particular devotion to the Blessed Sacrament persuaded his parish   
   priest to prepare him for the priesthood. He earned a doctorate in   
   theology. In 1675, he was ordained and soon Innocent XI granted him a   
   benefice at Santa Maria del Pino in his native city. In spite of his   
   attempts and temptations, Joseph Oriol never left his parish.   
      
   Although he hoped to evangelize the infidels, God showed him that he   
   had another vocation. On his way to Rome, Father Joseph fell ill and   
   experienced a vision that outlined his new mission: He was to   
   reinvigorate the faith of lukewarm hearts in Barcelona. Thus, Joseph   
   Oriol instructed children, evangelized soldiers, and prayed and urged   
   others to pray for the living and the dead.   
      
   He wore a hair-shirt, lived only on bread and water for 26 years, and   
   used the discipline on himself. Nevertheless, he is not remembered for   
   his austerity, but rather for his faith, hope, and love of God and   
   neighbor. He epitomized the exercise of these virtues to such a high   
   degree of perfection that the Devil was worried, persecuted him and   
   even left his imprint on his flesh. But only on the flesh. Joseph   
   Oriol remained firm on the path of justice and God manifested his   
   Power and favors through his servant with extraordinary gifts. Death   
   finally ended his life on the date he had announced.   
      
   Others would prefer, perhaps, that for the above conventional picture   
   we substitute the one of the wonder-worker, the image of a veritable   
   "medium," worthy heir of the charlatans of paganism, worthy rival of   
   the sorcerers of fetishism, a conjurer as well as a man contemptuous   
   of natural laws.   
      
   But that kind of picture does not deal with holiness. Holiness takes   
   hold of man and utilizes him. It takes hold of the conscious and the   
   unconscious, it takes hold of the miracle-man who, without holiness,   
   would be less than a man, the inverted reflection of a saint   
   (Attwater2, Benedictines, Encyclopedia).   
      
      
   Bible Quote:   
   19 Jesus answered, and said to them: Destroy this temple, and in three   
   days I will raise it up. 20 The Jews then said: Six and forty years   
   was this temple in building; and wilt thou raise it up in three days?   
    21 But he spoke of the temple of his body. 22 When therefore he was   
   risen again from the dead, his disciples remembered, that he had said   
   this, and they believed the scripture, and the word that Jesus had   
   said.  (John 2:19-22)   
      
      
   <><><><>   
   Whoever will come after Me, let him deny himself.  (Matthew 16:24)   
      
   "If we do not pay great attention to mortifying our own will, there   
   are many things that can take from us that holy liberty of spirit,   
   which we seek in order to be able to mount freely towards our Creator,   
   without being always weighed down with earth and lead. Besides, in a   
   soul that belongs to itself, and is attached to its own will, there   
   can never be solid virtue"   
   --St. Teresa   
      
    St. Mary Magdalen de’ Pazzi said one day that she asked nothing of   
   the Lord except that He would take her own will from her; for she knew   
   that through the vivacity of her disposition, she did not advance so   
   much as she desired in those virtues which render a soul most pleasing   
   to the Lord. After saying this, she raised her eyes to Heaven and fell   
   into an ecstasy, in which she was shown by God how much harm is done   
   to souls, especially those of religious, when they are guided by their   
   own will which they once consecrated to God by vow. In the course of   
   the ecstasy, she took her Superior by the hand and led her to the   
   oratory, where she knelt and prayed the Virgin to enlighten her   
   Superior also, that she might take pains to despoil her of her will;   
   and after prostrating herself three times upon the ground, she   
   recovered from her trance. She was so much in earnest in this matter   
   that she once said she did not remember ever to have tried, either   
   secretly or openly, to incline the will of her Superior to her own.   
      
   ("A Year with the Saints".  March - Mortification)   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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