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

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   Message 29,350 of 30,222   
   Weedy to All   
   Avoid Pride and Grasp Wisdom   
   14 Dec 20 23:20:26   
   
   From: richarra@gmail.com   
      
   Avoid Pride and Grasp Wisdom   
      
   "After hearing that they should be humble, some persons do not wish to   
   learn anything.   
      
   They think they will be proud if they have anything. It has been made   
   clear to us where God wishes us to be in the depths and where he   
   wishes us to be in the heights. He wishes us to be humble to avoid   
   pride, and he wishes us to be on high to grasp wisdom."   
   --St. Augustine--Commentary on Psalm 130, 12   
      
   Prayer: While I move and bear this body I pray that I may be pure,   
   generous, just, and prudent. May I be a perfect lover and knower of   
   your Wisdom.   
   --St. Augustine--Soliloquies 1, 6   
      
   <<>><<>><<>>   
   December 15th - St. Mary De Rosa, Virgin   
      
   (1813-1855)   
   The lives of saints often fall into a pattern, or at least seem to.   
   This is especially true of saintly women who have founded religious   
   orders. One gets to think that if you know one you know them all.   
      
   This is not true, however. Each such saint, while moving in the same   
   direction, was nevertheless a unique individual who struggled for   
   virtue against unique odds. So, when we read the lives of saints, we   
   must look past their resemblance to other saints and search out the   
   particular message that their lives convey.   
      
   St. Mary di Rosa is a good example of what I mean.   
      
   Mary (baptized Paula) was the sixth of the nine children of a   
   well-to-do couple of Brescia in northern Italy. Unfortunately, her   
   mother died when Paula was 11, and she had to leave school at 17 to   
   become housekeeper for her family. Her father, Clement di Rosa, soon   
   began to look around for a suitable husband for Paula, but Paula   
   gently informed him that she had decided not to marry. Most Italian   
   fathers in those days would have ignored their children’s wishes in   
   this matter. Fortunately, Clement went along with her chosen celibacy,   
   and even cooperated with her in the good works she now began to   
   undertake.   
      
   Her first effort was to look after the spiritual welfare of the girls   
   who worked at one of her father’s mills. Then she duplicated this work   
   in another village. Then, with the cooperation of the parish priest,   
   she established a women’s guild and arranged for retreats and   
   missions. The movement proved very successful. Next, when a terrible   
   epidemic of cholera hit Brescia in 1836, she asked her father’s   
   permission to work among the plague-stricken in the hospital. He   
   consented, although the idea naturally worried him.   
      
   After that, Paula was invited to supervise a house of industry for   
   impoverished and abandoned girls. Though only 24, she discharged this   
   difficult task well for two years. Then she herself established a   
   small lodging house for girls and worked in a school for girls with   
   hearing problems. Meanwhile, Paula kept studying and reading,   
   educating herself very capably, especially in theology.   
      
   Thus far, Paula di Rosa had worked as a devoted Christian laywoman. By   
   1840 she and a companion, the widow Bornati, began to consider the   
   foundation of a religious order to take care of the sick in hospitals,   
   not just as nurses but as totally dedicated service-people. The   
   congregation they founded was called “The Handmaids of Charity.” It   
   faced many initial difficulties, but it also won acclaim from those   
   who really appreciated what its members were doing.   
      
   In 1848, revolution hit northern Italy. Paula staffed St. Luke’s   
   military hospital, and in 1849, her sisters anticipated Florence   
   Nightingale by nursing the wounded both in hospitals and on the   
   battlefield. One day, when some disorderly troops broke into the   
   hospital, Paula met them carrying a large crucifix and flanked by two   
   other nuns bearing candles. The soldiers slunk away sheepishly.   
      
   Pope Pius IX finally gave papal approbation to her religious order in   
   1850, and in 1852 Paula made her vows as Sister Maria. She did not   
   live long thereafter, however. Always physically frail, she died on   
   December 15, 1855, aged only 42.   
      
   What special lesson does the life of Sr. Mary di Rosa teach? Listen to   
   her. Once she told one of her sisters: “I can’t go to bed with a quiet   
   conscience if during the day I’ve missed any chance, however slight,   
   of preventing wrongdoing or of helping to bring about some good.”   
   There you have a truly wonderful lesson in the practical fulfillment   
   of loving our neighbors as ourselves.   
      
      
   Saint Quote   
   Hold your eyes on God and leave the doing to him. That is all the   
   doing you have to worry about.   
   --Saint Jeanne de Chantal   
      
   Bible Quote:   
   O God, when thou didst go forth in the sight of thy people, when thou   
   didst pass through the desert: 9 The earth was moved, and the heavens   
   dropped at the presence of the God of Sina, at the presence of the God   
   of Israel.  (Psalm 67:8-9)   
      
      
   <><><><>   
   A Morning Prayer to the Sacred Heart of Christ   
      
   Dear Lord, I adore Your Sacred Heart, which I desire to enter with acts of   
   love, praise, adoration and thanksgiving. I offer You my own heart as I sigh   
   to You from its very depths, asking that You will work through me in all   
   that I do this day; thus may I draw You closer to me each day. I offer You   
   all the crosses and sufferings of the world, in union with Your life on   
   earth, in expiation for sins. Please join my every action and heartbeat to   
   the pulsations of Your Heart. I unite all my works of this day to those   
   labors You performed while You were on earth, bathing them in Your precious   
   Blood, and I offer them to the Heavenly Father so that many souls may be   
   saved. - Amen.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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