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

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   Message 29,398 of 30,222   
   Weedy to All   
   =?UTF-8?Q?How_we_should_not_Believe_all_   
   22 Feb 21 23:30:20   
   
   From: richarra@gmail.com   
      
   How we should not Believe all we Hear  [III]   
      
   How wise was the holy soul (Saint Agatha) who said,'My mind is firmly   
   established and grounded in Christ.' Were this true of myself, I   
   should never fear any man and no bitter words could disturb me. We   
   cannot foresee the future or provide against evils to come and if   
   things that we expect often harm us, how can unexpected events do   
   otherwise than seriously harm us? Why have I not made better provision   
   for my unfortunate self and why have I trusted so readily in others?   
   For we are but mortal men and nothing if not weak, even if many people   
   imagine and say that we are angels. There is none in whom I can trust,   
   Lord, save Yourself, who are the Truth and who neither deceives nor   
   can be deceived. But every man is deceitful, (Rom.3:4) weak, unstable   
   and fallible, especially in what he says so that we should not at once   
   believe even what at first appears to be true.   
   --Thomas à Kempis --Imitation of Christ Bk 3 Ch 45   
      
   <<>><<>><<>>   
   February 23rd - St. Boisil, Abbot, Prophet   
   (Also known as Boswell)   
      
   Died c. 664.   
    Saint Boisil was the prior of the famous abbey of Melrose   
   (Mailross), situated on the Tweed River in a great forest in   
   Northumberland, while Saint Eata was abbot. Both were English youths   
   trained in monasticism by Saint Aidan.   
      
   Saint Bede says that Boisil was a man of sublime virtues, imbued with   
   a prophetic spirit. His eminent sanctity drew Saint Cuthbert to   
   Melrose rather than to Lindisfarne in his youth. It was from Boisil   
   that Cuthbert learned the sacred scriptures and virtue.   
      
   Saint Boisil had the holy names of the adorable Trinity ever on his   
   lips. He repeated the name Jesus Christ with a wonderful sentiment of   
   devotion, and often with such an abundance of tears that others would   
   weep with him. With tender affection he would frequently say, "How   
   good a Jesus we have!" At the first sight of Saint Cuthbert, Boisil   
   said to bystanders, "Behold a servant of God!"   
      
   Bede produces the testimony of Saint Cuthbert, who declared that   
   Boisil foretold to him the chief things that afterwards happened to   
   him. Three years beforehand he foretold of the great pestilence of   
   664, and that he himself should die of it, but that Eata the abbot   
   should survive.   
      
   In addition to continually instructing his brothers in religion,   
   Boisil made frequent excursions into the villages to preach to the   
   poor and to bring straying souls on to the paths of truth and life. He   
   was also known for his aid to the poor.   
      
   Again, Boisil told Cuthbert, recovering from the plague, "You see,   
   brother, that God has delivered you from this disease, nor shall you   
   ever feel it again, nor die at this time; but my death being at hand,   
   neglect not to learn something from me so long as I shall be able to   
   teach you, which will be no more than seven days." So Cuthbert asked,   
   "And what will be best for me to read which may be finished in seven   
   days." To which Boisil replied, "The Gospel of Saint John, which we   
   may in that time read over, and confer upon as much as shall be   
   necessary."   
      
   Having accomplished the reading in seven days, the man of God, Boisil,   
   became ill and died in extraordinary jubilation of soul, out of his   
   earnest desire to be with Christ.   
      
   During his life he repeatedly instructed his brothers, "That they   
   would never cease giving thanks to God for the gift of their religious   
   vocation; that they would always watch over themselves against   
   self-love and all attachment to their own will and private judgment,   
   as against their capital enemy; that they would converse assiduously   
   with God by interior prayer, and labor continually to attain to the   
   most perfect purity of heart, this being the true and short road to   
   the perfection of Christian virtue."   
      
   Bede relates that Saint Boisil continued after his death to interest   
   himself particularly in obtaining divine mercy and grace for his   
   country and his friends. He appeared twice to one of his disciples,   
   giving him a charge to assure Saint Egbert, who had been hindered from   
   preaching the Gospel in Germany, that God commanded him to repair the   
   monasteries of Saint Columba on Iona and in the Orkneys, and to   
   instruct them in the right manner of celebrating Easter.   
      
   The relics of Boisil were translated to Durham, and deposited near   
   those of his disciple, Saint Cuthbert, in 1030 (Benedictines, Delaney,   
   Husenbeth).   
      
      
   Saint Quote:   
   Let us then cast ourselves at the feet of this good Mother, and   
   embracing them let us not depart until she blesses us, and accepts us   
   for her children.   
   --Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, Father and Doctor of the Church   
      
   Bible Quote:   
   "When pride comes, then comes shame; But with the humble is wisdom."   
   (Proverbs 11:2)   
      
      
   <><><><>   
   Patience   
      
   Patience is a virtue of the Lord:   
   He awaits the return of His children.   
   Forgive my trespasses Oh Lord Jesus,   
   For many times have I tested You.   
   I deserved the wrath of Your hand,   
   But You saw greater things for me:   
   Your patience has been enormous!   
   Grant me a droplet of such endurance,   
   That I may abolish my impious impatience,   
   Refraining from using unpleasant words,   
   And always reflecting Your serenity.   
   Great is the Lord Jesus in His ways!   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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