Minute Meditations
Venerable Matt Talbot Matt can be considered the patron of men and women struggling with alcoholism. Most of his life Matt worked as a builder's laborer. He joined the Secular Franciscan Order and began a life of strict penance; he abstained from meat nine months a year. Matt spent hours every night avidly reading Scripture and the lives of the saints. He prayed the rosary conscientiously. Though his job did not make him rich, Matt contributed generously to the missions. After 1923 his health failed, and Matt was forced to quit work. He died on his way to church on Trinity Sunday. Fifty years later Pope Paul VI gave him the title venerable. Comment: In looking at the life of Matt Talbot, we may easily focus on the later years when he had stopped drinking for some time and was leading a penitential life. Only alcoholic men and women who have stopped drinking can fully appreciate how difficult the earliest years of sobriety were for Matt. He had to take one day at a time. So do the rest of us. Quote: On an otherwise blank page in one of Matt's books, the following is written: "God console thee and make thee a saint. To arrive at the perfection of humility four things are necessary: to despise the world, to despise no one, to despise self, to despise being despised by others." Patron Saint of: Alcoholics Sobriety Presence "Come to me all you who are burdened
Freedom Lord, may I never take the gift Consciousness I ask how I am within myself today? Am I particularly tired, stressed, or off-form? The Word of God Conversation Sometimes I wonder what I might say if I were to meet you in person Lord. I think I might say "Thank You Lord" for always being there for me. I know with certainty there were times when you carried me, Lord. When it was through your strength I got through the dark times in my life. Conclusion Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, Where is the Lord, the God of Elijah? (2 Kings 2:14) From Esau and Jacob to the prodigal son, stories about inheritance run throughout the Scriptures. In this passage, however, the focus is on a spiritual rather than a material inheritance. When Elisha asked Elijah for a double portion of his spirit, he was asking for the honor of being his spiritual son. And at the end of the passage, we find Elisha stepping into his new role. It seems simple, doesn't it? Just pick up the prophet's mantle, and miracles will flow. But that's not exactly how it happened. Elisha was able to do all he did because he had spent many days, months, and years with Elijah, learning from his mentor. He saw the man of God in action; he heard him preach; he prayed and fasted with him; he endured the same persecutions and challenges Elijah did. In the end, when he parted the Jordan River, it wasn't because he had Elijah's magical cloak. It was because he had taken on Elijah's heart. In a similar way, you share in Christ's inheritance. The Holy Spirit lives in you in all his fullness. But just as Elisha walked every day with Elijah and learned to be like him, you too need to walk with Jesus every day so that you can take on his heart. That's what releases the power of the Spirit in your life! Whether you realize it or not, you are probably already spending a lot of time with the Lord. Do you go to Mass? Pray for your friends and family? Read Scripture? Talk to the Lord at home or at work? Every second spent with him counts! That's because, as hard as you may be trying to please him, he is working so much more in you. He always takes the little we give him and multiplies it immensely—just as he multiplied five loaves and two fishes! Where is the Lord, the God of Elijah? He's in your heart! Try to follow Elijah's—and Elisha's—example and take a step of faith today. Encourage a downcast friend. Go out of your way to help a family member. If there is an opportunity to share your faith, take it. Then watch the Lord pour out his grace! "Thank you, Jesus, for paving the way for me to share in your inheritance." Psalm 31:20-21, 24; Matthew 6:1-6, 16-18 1. Your thumb is the nearest to you. So begin your prayer by praying for those closest to you. They are the easiest to remember. To pray for our loved ones is, as C. S. Lewis once said, a "sweet duty." 2. The next finger is the pointing finger. Pray for those who teach, instruct, and heal. This includes teachers, doctors, and ministers. They need support and wisdom in pointing others in the right direction. Keep them in your prayers. 3. The next finger is the tallest finger. It reminds us of our leaders. Pray for the president, leaders in industry and business, and administrators. These people shape our nation and guide public opinion. They need God's guidance. 4. The fourth finger is our ring finger. Surprising to many is the fact that this is our weakest finger; as any piano teacher will testify. It should remind us to pray for those who are weak, in trouble, or in pain. They need your prayers day and night. You cannot pray too much for them. 5. And lastly comes our little finger; the smallest finger of all. Which is where we should place ourselves in relation to God and others. As the Bible says, "the least shall be the greatest among you." Your pinky should remind you to pray for yourself. Notice everyone else comes first, not me. If others are first, God will soon be first and foremost if you are praying these things to Him. I read a quote today, ""I urge you, no matter what, to keep praying. If you abandon prayer, you are taking a great risk."-St. Teresa of Avila. Prayer is the air we breathe in our faith. Without it, we could die in the Spirit. Have you ever, though, felt so far from God that you didn't pray, or couldn't pray? I wrote a song about it. It sang "somebody help me, because I'm dying" and at the end the truth is revealed of who was going to die after prayer...the devil inside was dying. God must reign and everything else subdue before Him. When Elisha asks for the Spirit, it was given. This happens in our supplications, our prayers. Jesus tells us today He knows our hearts. Yesterday a deacon brother took me to get prison training to do ministry. We spoke on the way home, and we talked about how God knows what we are going to ask before we even ask. In my inner frustrations I've began to pray inside the heart "Lord, if you know what bad has gone in my heart, then right here I am going to ask you to hear my prayer" and then I add my prayer. Usually I pray for deliverance, or for someone in particular in a most solemn prayer...from the heart. Jesus didn't say "don't pray on the street corner for the unborn"(as we've done), He is saying "I know your heart, I am available there all the time", He is asking us to have a most inner deep relationship with Him where it most matters. It happens to me every day before I write to you. I ask for Him to possess me, no more of me, because throughout the day I am bound to fail. This is the beauty of confession, a prayer, a surrender. A song I wrote a few days ago says "let the Holy Spirit flow" and later says "throw your hands up in the air" and this to let me surrender to His Spirit. The nation is facing a moral crisis. There will not be an invasion from an enemy, it has already infiltrated and set up a detonation to implode the edifice, what has been built up on. It happened to Rome, it was never conquered but fell to pieces on its own. The latest gallup polls show birth control is at a 90% approval (acceptablility), Divorce at 69%, sex between unmarried man and woman 66%, having babies outside of marriage 58%, doctor assisted suicide 52%, and only 33% think pornography is unacceptable, and only 19% believe suicide is highly unacceptable, and only 7% believe an affair is highly unacceptable. "Record highs" states the gallup pole site. Forget the wars across the world, forget global warming, the deterioration of the family is what the Catholic Church has been battling for the last decades. Did it start with birth control? Did it start with pornography? Chances are, it started long ago, at the heart of man. This is a call to Holiness. The Heart is at the matter, and what matters most? Jesus said "...your FATHER who sees what is hidden will repay you". He gives Holiness and Grace, Mercy and Love, and what do we give? What do we pray....... | |||||||
Going4th,
No comments:
Post a Comment