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|    talk.religion.misc    |    Religious, ethical, & moral implications    |    30,222 messages    |
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|    Message 29,656 of 30,222    |
|    Weedy to All    |
|    What kind of harvest does the Lord want     |
|    06 Jan 22 23:47:04    |
      From: richarra@gmail.com              What kind of harvest does the Lord want us to reap today              What kind of harvest does the Lord want us to reap today for his       kingdom? When Jesus commissioned seventy of his disciples to go on       mission, he gave them a vision of a vast field that is ready to be       harvested for the kingdom of God. Jesus frequently used the image of a       harvest to convey the coming of God's reign on earth. The harvest is       the fruition of much labor and growth--beginning with the sowing of       seeds, then growth to maturity, and finally the reaping of fruit for       the harvest.              <<>><<>><<>>       January 7th - St. Aldric, Bishop of Le Mans       (Also known as Aldericus, Audry)              THIS saint was born of a noble family, partly of Saxon and partly       Bavarian extraction, about the year 800. At 12 years of age he was       sent by his father to the court of Charlemagne where, in the household       of Louis the Pious, he gained the esteem of the whole court. About the       year 821 he retired from Aix-la-Chapelle to Metz, where he entered the       bishop’s school and received clerical tonsure. After his ordination       the Emperor Louis called him again to court, and made him his chaplain       and confessor. In 832 St. Aldric was chosen bishop of Le Mans. He       employed his patrimony and his whole interest in relieving the poor,       providing public services, establishing churches and monasteries, and       promoting religion. In the civil wars which divided the empire his       fidelity to Louis and to his successor, Charles the Bald, was       inviolable. For almost a year he was expelled by a faction from his       see, Aldric having antagonized the monks of Saint-Calais by claiming       that they were under his jurisdiction. The claim was not upheld,       though supported by forged documents, for which the bishop himself is       not known to have been personally responsible.              Some fragments have reached us of the regulations which Aldric made       for his cathedral, in which he orders ten wax candles and 90 lamps to       be lighted on all great festivals. We have three testaments of this       holy prelate extant. The last is an edifying monument of his piety: in       the first two, he bequeaths lands and possessions to many churches of       his diocese, adding prudent advice and regulations for maintaining       good order and a spirit of charity. The last two years of St. Aldric’s       life he was paralysed and confined to bed, during which time he       redoubled his fervour and assiduity in prayer. He died January 7, 856,       and was buried in the church of St. Vincent, of which, and of the       monastery to which it belonged, he had been a great benefactor.              The medieval Latin life of St. Aldric has been re-edited by Charles       and Froger, Gesta domini Aldrici (1890). No scholar now regards it as       fully reliable, but the first 44 chapters seem to be older and more       trustworthy than the rest. Some attempts have been made to connect St.       Aldric with the compilation of the Forged Decretals, but this idea has       not found much favour, though Paul Fournier has shown good reason for       believing that they first took shape in the neighbourhood of Le Mans       during his episcopate. On the other hand, Julien Havet has argued that       the first 44 chapters of the Gesta were written as a piece of       autobiography by Aidric himself. In any case Havet seems to have       proved that in contrast to the chapters in the later portion of the       Gesta and those in the Actus pontificum Cenomannis...the 19 documents       incorporated in the first 44 chapters are all authentic.                     Saint Quote:       We need not fear to be puffed with the knowledge of what God has done       for us, if we keep well before us the truth that whatever good there       may be in us, is not of us. Though a mule is laden with the precious       treasures of a prince, is it not still a clumsy, filthy beast?       -- Saint Francis de Sales              Bible Quotes:       "I say to you that even so there shall be joy in heaven upon one       sinner that doth penance, more than upon ninety-nine just who need not       penance" (Luke 15:7)                     <><><><>       Sursum Corda: Lift Up Your Hearts               “Lift up your hearts!” This is the exhortation of the Church to her       children in the Preface of the Mass. Lift up your hearts by means of       meditation and prayer in the midst of the allurements and       entanglements of the world, in order that you may so pass through       things temporal as not to lose the things that are eternal.              Lift up your hearts in your work. “All whatsoever you do in word or in       work, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, giving thanks to       God and the Father by Him” (Col. Iii.17). “Therefore, whether you eat       or drink or whatsoever else you do, do all to the glory of God” (1       Cor.x.31). Lift up your hearts in daily supplication that you may live       and die in the love and grace of God.              “By two wings,” says the Imitation, “is many lifted above earthly       things”; namely, by simplicity of intention and by purity of       affection; hence the watchword:              For God Alone! And My God and My All!              “Aspire to God,” says St. Francis de Sales, “with short but frequent       outpourings              of the heart.” And St. Philip Neri encourages us likewise, saying: “It       is an old custom with the servant of God always to have some little       prayers ready, and to be darting them up to heaven frequently during       the day, lifting their minds to God from out of the filth of this       world. He who adopts this plan will derive great fruit with little       pains.”               Lift up your hearts to Mount Olivet, where Jesus is writhing in His       awful agony,              Up to Mount Calvary, where Jesus is dying on the cross; up to heaven,       where Jesus is enthroned in His glory. If with mortal eyes you are not       able to behold the full glory of this abode of the blessed, and if you       cannot draw near to Him, the Eternal One, because He dwells “in the       light inaccessible,” do not be discouraged, lift up your hearts! For       in the light of the bright ray which God will cause to shine upon you,       you will be able to form at least some faint conception of the glories       of the celestial city.              Lift up your hearts to heaven! There alone is an object truly worthy       of your love!       – Father Lasance -1926              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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