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The conversion.
Two phrases are essential to us as Christians – or rather, the attitudes they express:
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Christ is present in the Eucharist wholly and ultimately.
Body and Soul. How could we receive Him if not in the same way?
The Body with the Body, the Soul with the Soul, the whole Christ with the entire self? To be holy in mind, this we still understand. But to be blessed with the body, we must first receive it, realize it, digest it, and begin learning it. But with the flesh first, it will work. But along with the body will go everything that belongs to it, from food to money and
property to work.
***
Two things the Devil leads us away from Conversion; and Communion, an everyday living of faith, an expected growth in faith.
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Christianity is imparted by a life that can be joined to – not by an activity that can be participated in or even just by a word that can be
heard.
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To live in Christ in the Holy Spirit is to be more silent instead of silent and to perceive without judging, without comparing, without thinking, without consideration, in the open and joyful curiosity of a child of God on a journey with God. But only he can do this who is before himself the least possible, so that he no longer fears, has nothing to fear, and therefore no longer worries about anything. He is accessible and wholly himself.
***
The interior must penetrate the surface. Our Christianity must become incarnate. Otherwise, it will not is real. It has to be incarnated in our body, speech, behavior, and actions. It must be incarnated in our homes, our possessions, our jobs. But still more than that, it must be incarnated in the community of the Church in our parish and our little community. So that not only are we part of the body of the Church, but the Church, the community, is equally part of our body, part of us, so that we are, quite naturally, our Christianity, our life in God, and with God and our work for the Kingdom so that we live all of this quite naturally and do it in the body of communion, which is our body, and we are part of its body.
***
To be a Christian is to be already here on earth, a human resurrected – just as Christ was resurrected here on earth. In the hope that one day we too will be ascended as he is already today: Ascended, our Head, Christ. As we share in his life today, we may share in His eternity.
***
A sign that we have truly been converted and thus changed our thinking is that two counsels of Scripture are beginning to take place in our minds. The first: continually pray, and the second: be wholly and completely occupied with the will of God. This is a sign of your Christianity and salvation, and you’re going to Heaven. We’re getting deadly serious. This is the point of hesychasm: To fill and focus our minds entirely on God in this way.
***
The Eucharist comes to transform the Body of Christ and make us flesh and each other. Therefore, the disposition to receive the Eucharist consists precisely of this I desire with all my heart to renounce myself and to be Christ, his Body, and he our Head and, at the same time, desire with all our hearts to be with all the other brothers and sisters in the church, the one actual body.
***
To be a Christian is to be the Body of Christ. And even though by Him in a particular sense we are also alone, in fullness, we are that Body only as gathered. Therefore, the assembly is our strength. When are we supposed in Christ’s name, then we are entirely His Body, and then in us and through us His Power is most fully at work.
***
It is so easy to slip and replace God with our idea, and Christianity with your ideas and not even notice it! Humility, silence, kenosis, abandonment of self and will… What else can we do to not succumb to it?
***
Do you want to go to Heaven? Nothing simpler! Just renounce yourself so that you can become Christ, and in Christ, God. That’s all. And if you find that difficult… Well, I’ll comfort you! What if I were to tell you that I don’t even have to give up anything because you are nothing and you have nothing?
***
Knowing yourself and your wretchedness leads to compassion. Knowing God leads to hope.
***
The consciousness of wretchedness manifests in considering ourselves to be only God’s guides and not vice versa. It is not God from whom we expect help in our works. We are not helping God as merely accompanying Him, and most, if anything, in ourselves as some of God’s “bacillus bearers.”we carry where we go – and then we “let it work.”
***
The signs and wonders accompanying the proclamation are similar to advertising items that representatives of a company hand out. They hope that through them, to get your attention. Still, at the same time, they expect you won’t just stay but become interested in their company – and there, you won’t be convinced of the promotional items, but the company itself, its products, the quality, and the offer. Even when proclaiming Christ and the Gospel, miracles attract attention. But who stays only with them (a frequent temptation of charismatics, mainly Protestant) is doing a colossal stupidity. For what is interesting is the company itself – God acting in the Body of the Church – and it convinces no longer by the “shenanigans” of miracles but by its quality: by the fact that there is a God in it, that there pulsates the eternal life of God, that it is genuinely the first fruit of the Kingdom on earth.
***
Love manifests itself by focusing on the one we love. Focused
attention to the loving Beloved is what in prayer
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When do we truly love each other? We know from our concrete relationships.
Some psychologists divide people into four, others into eight groups, and there are other divisions. No two people in the world are the same. Jesus did not bypass this fact in his teaching. He says how He, the God-man, sees it and what He asks of us in today’s Gospel, which begins with the words, “When your brother sins” (Matt. 18:15).
When a brother trespasses, the first thing to do is to formulate a complaint against the other. If we put the complaint into words, we often see how petty, and without foundation it is. The second step is to have a personal conversation with the offending brother. Please don’t settle the matter by letter or telephone if possible. Instead, the living word straightens out the differences which the written word deepens. If a private and personal meeting does not help, a prudent, wise man, or more people as witnesses, should be brought in to help. If this does not help, we must go with personal difficulties to the Christian fellowship. It is assumed that the community does not judge things by human rules alone but primarily in the light of love.
Jesus speaks even of the most challenging thing if everything that has already been done has failed: “Let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector” (Mt 18:17). It would seem, but this is only the first motive, that everything is hopeless, but we know that Jesus also came to die for the tax collectors and the Gentiles, He also redeemed them. Love can work miracles. Especially love that is persistent, long-term, resourceful, not selfish… (cf. 1 Cor. 13:1-13). Not to leave a brother in despair. Prayer is especially needed, as Jesus says, “If two of you on earth ask anything with one accord, you will receive it from my Father who is in heaven” (Mt 18:19).
Jesus calls the brother who has sinned “brother.” This is an example for us to follow in a particular case in making amends. Love is to prevail. And it always does in every situation. Remember that we are the brother who has sinned against someone in this context. We need to avoid any collateral, mainly evil intentions. Even if we act more kindly towards someone, let us accept the brother’s efforts with the sincere effort that he means well for us and that he is doing everything with the best of his knowledge and conscience. In such a situation, may we be encouraged to accept the brother’s warning that he is doing it in the name of the Church. Jesus warns us to get the brother’s admonition in humility, even if it is a wrong attitude, and not to blame the fault on another, not to make excuses.
In humility, let us realize that offense and sin threatens us in particular and the community. To delay accepting correction until later can backfire, and even when we presumptuously delay repentance, God can withdraw His grace. The nine alien sins touch on this very point. These are 1. To give counsel to sin. 2. To provoke others to sin. 3. To cause others to sin. 4. To cause others to sin. 5. To give aid to the sin of others. 6. To be silent in the sin of others. 7. To intercede for the sins of others. 8. Do not punish the sins of others. 9. Praise the sins of others.
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Recollection before the Eucharist.
People learn religion by experience and through relationships.
As a rule, no catechesis, no sermons, and no teaching make any difference is going to make any difference, especially in our Catholic environment, where education is limited to the Sunday sermon. The only way to transform a parish is through tiny communities where God’s life is experienced, where God’s relationships are, and where there is also actual systematic teaching.
***
Your Divinity is too blinding for me. That is why You come to me through my humanity so that I may come to Your Divinity through Your humanity.
***
The resolution for today at the end of the meditation has its meaning. But not so much when it reads, “Today I will prove to at least one person that and this,” but rather a resolution to live this given day in attitudes and perspectives that contemplation and adoration have opened up for us. In this form, it is a crucial instrument for learning, internalizing, and over time, getting used to living what we
we have received from the Lord in contemplation and adoration.
***
Nowhere are we more Christian and never more Church than when we celebrate the Eucharist. There we are drawn into the heart of Christ’s Mystery, into the Heart of the Bridegroom. Only in Heaven will we be more – and the Eucharist is the beginning of Heaven on Earth.
***
Fasting doesn’t mean: denying yourself food. Fasting means: I build
a new me! It’s creating, building, not losing!
***
“For whoever would save his life shall lose it, but whoever loses his life for shall save it.” (Luke 9:24)
“So neither can any of you, unless he gives up all that he has, be my disciple.” (Lk 14:33)
These are the laws of Heaven, of heavenly life: Love God as He loves
us and give ourselves to Him entirely and whole, without rest. And to trust Him so completely that we leave ourselves no “plan B,” no “back door,” no insurance, and no other security except Him. This is how the Trinity lives within itself. This is how the Communion of Saints lives in the Trinity.
***
God’s gifts can only be received in one way – our giving of ourselves: ‘Give and they will give to you: a measure good, stretched, a measure shaken, they shall give you a measure in your bosom. With what measure ye mete, so shall it be measured to you.” (Lk 6:38)
***
The primary fruit of adoration is not new knowledge but new attitudes, a new being, and a new creation. What matters is becoming a new person, a man of God, not a theologian.
***
To die and be born again… It’s like the music of Paradise! To be able to put off the older man with all the burden and weight that he carries on and with him and to rise again as a newborn – who else but God can give such a tremendous Gift?
***
Without the faithful living Christ, without the true Life of God, without the Gift Holy Spirit, any attempt at any “depth” in Christianity ends in the awkward melodrama and empty philosophizing that he warns against already Scripture, “Beware lest any man deceive you with philosophy and empty deceit!” (Col 2:8)
***
“The darkness is passing away, and the true light is already shining.
9 He who says he is in the light and hates his brother is still in darkness.
10 He who loves his brother remains is in the light, and is not a reproach to him.” (1 Jn 2:8-10) How important it is to understand and constantly keep in mind that it is not: If I love my brother, then I am in the light, but: if I am in the morning, then it will be manifested, inevitable its effect and consequence, self-evident and natural, that I love my brother. And if I do not, then it is an indication that no matter what I think or say, I am still in darkness, for “he that hateth his brother is in darkness, and walketh in darkness, and knows not whither he goeth, because the darkness hath blinded his eyes.” (1 Jn 2:11)
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Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Luke 1,39-56
Dear brothers and sisters! Ten wild ducks were swimming in one lake. Suddenly, the carcass of a large fish floated toward them. The ducks were so hungry that they were happy even with the corpse and started munching on it. They kept pushing one duck away from each other. She was starving. Then she remembered that she also had wings. She was afraid to fly above the surface, into the unknown. But hunger forced her, and she flew above the lake’s surface. A large horizon appeared before her. From above, she saw small fish swimming under the surface. She flew lower, caught small fresh fish, and flew over the lake again. She noticed beautiful strawberries on the shore; she also spotted juicy cherries. After eating her fill, she returned to the lake to the nine ducks. They were still enjoying the dead fish and were surprised that this one was somehow not fit to eat. They started to offer her, but she didn’t want it. She just wondered and said to herself, how can they eat it? It’s too bad they didn’t fly off into the unknown with me, she thought, to find better food. How can they taste this?’
And this is what God wants from us, so we are not afraid to soar into the unknown. It is courage that is built on faith in God. And God puts a courageous person of faith at our disposal, the Virgin Mary.
It was also tricky for her to take a step, as it were, into the unknown when she answered the angel: “Let it be done to me according to your word,” when she received Jesus in the form of the fruit of her life. She goes to Elizabeth in faith but does not know what awaits her there. But it goes. The Virgin Mary discovered a spiritual dimension in herself. This dimension gave her, as it were, wings, and she was able to soar in faith into the unknown, and we witnessed the fruits of her faith. It is not only the Savior in the form of Jesus but also the very fact with her body that is taken from earth to heaven.
It is also thanks to the fact that Mária discovered wings in herself and became, as it were, an angel going into the unknown. He teaches those who do not want to be slaves to their own lives. He teaches those who do not want to bite a dead fish based on tradition. Mary teaches us faith so that we discover the wings of an angel in ourselves and are not afraid to fly with her into the unknown. Because a person is not just a bunch of psychological phenomena but is mainly a spiritual being, about which the holy writer says: “Man is only a little smaller than the angels.” Therefore, let’s try to discover an angel with wings in ourselves.
I read a lovely story about a little girl who was small and pale. Mom used to take him for a walk. The people they met looked at the little girl strangely. Once, the little girl asked her mother: “Why are those people looking at me like that?” “Because you have nice clothes,” answered the mother. But Mom died. After a year, the father married another, more beautiful woman. She didn’t take the little girl for walks. “Why?” a little girl once asked a new mother. “Look at you,” says her stepmother, “what would people think if they saw me with you, such a hunchback. Humpbacked children should sit at home.” When she left, the little girl moved her chair under the mirror and noticed her big hump. “What does the hump hide? What is in it?” it asked. When winter came, the little girl died. An angel came to her grave, knocked on it like a door, and a little girl ran out of it. The angel tells him: “Come with me to my mother. The little girl replied: “Can even hunchbacked children go to heaven?” The angel stroked his hump; it fell off like a shell and beautiful wings appeared in its place. And the little girl flew straight to heaven with the angel.
Nice story. Let’s try to make it accurate. Let’s discover the angel in ourselves and try to fly with Maria into the unknown so that, like the duck, we can find something more beautiful than a dead fish.
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What does it mean for us to be children of God?
We can be a child even when we are adults. Today’s saint – John Berchmans – convinces us of this.
When the spiritual-spiritual leader of the youth in a Jesuit college asked his students to write John’s faults, not a single note was found from the hundred boys that contained any flaw or imperfection of John. John had a pure soul. With his life, John was able to fulfill the words of the Lord Jesus from today’s Gospel:
“Let the little children and do not prevent them from coming to me, for to such belongs the kingdom of heaven” (Mt 19:14-15).
We know that Jesus loved children very much. He was God and saw the innocence and purity of the children’s hearts. The heart of Jesus was always the heart of a child. He was still God and the Son of God the Father. We know that Jesus was like us in all things; by the body, man’s duties, and growth, but never by sin. He set an example for us to follow. The words: “Be holy” belong to us too! (Exodus 19:6). These words echo in many forms both in the Old and New Testaments. We hear them as the prophets interpret them and by Jesus himself.
It is an open challenge, an appeal for each of us. How we deal with it, accept it, and bring it to life is up to us. It will be for our glory or our shame. To cheer ourselves up for the positive, let’s take note of today’s saints. We would be very mistaken if any of us thought that John or Maximilian fell from heaven as saints.
John Berchmans, on the day of his vows in the Society of Jesus, wrote the words to his father: – Father, today your son died. I no longer live for the world. I have united myself with Christ by three vows, and I never want to lose this sweet bond. Never! Serve three holy masses for me at my intention at the place of pilgrimage. – John’s father, after the death of his wife and after taking care of John, also joined the Society of Jesus and became a priest. Ján had to work on himself. After all, he was human even after taking the vows. In the same way, he had to fight for his purity, mortification of his senses, and always emphasized love for his neighbor. That it was not easy for him, that he was not a finished saint, is also proven by his confession on his deathbed: – My most extraordinary repentance was communal life. – And yet we know how he died as a 22-year-old, still a novice. He kneels to his brothers, newcomers, and priests by his bed and asks for a blessing. Even then, Ján did not succumb to pride; on the contrary.
Maximilán Kolbe also shows us a similar example of a child.
He was a child of God not only in the courtyard of the Oswiecim death camp, whereas prisoner 16,670; instead of a fellow prisoner-father whose children are waiting at home, he also goes to the hunger bunker, that is, to death by starvation. As a person, boy, priest, and expert, he often reminds himself that he wants to be faithful to God and the Mother of God. Years of work on yourself and your sanctification are hidden from the world. No one but God can see into a person’s heart. A person brings graces into the treasury of the soul. When the soul is complete, it can draw from it appropriately. And Maximilian, when he goes to the hunger bunker instead of František Gajowniczko, prisoner 5,659, draws everything to get a reward from Jesus – eternal life. After 14 days, a carbolic injection ended his life, dying of hunger on August 14, 1941, at 12:50 p.m. His body was cremated so that no memory would remain of him. They destroyed the body, but the soul lives on.
God is eternal. Pure souls oppose God. God loves each of us with the pure heart of a child.
What a wonderful feeling it is to have a pure soul. To be a friend of the Lord Jesus. His brother or sister. To wait that he will take us in his arms, not just for a moment like the children of today’s Gospel, but that a state without end will open for us at the hour of death, a condition when we will be with Jesus forever when we see our God face to face. This thought is not a dream. That is the teaching of Christ. This is an encouragement and reassurance to a select group and to each of us. Jesus turns to each of us today with the question of whether we want to be his children, brothers, and sisters. What an incredible feeling of happiness it is when we can say “yes” in the purity of our hearts. This brings us even more to Jesus. This becomes something for us that cannot be compared to anything or anyone.
What do our closest people say about us? Are we their role model and example? And what can God say about us? What if this is our last chance, moment, and opportunity to prove to God that I want to be his son or daughter?! Amen.
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Trust in God. Why trust God? How?
I overheard a conversation about children with children’s power speeches not long ago. Little Janko remarked: “If I had the strength like daddy, I could do it too, but when I grow up, I can do it too!” Why do I mention this thought? We are often adults like children. We have solid words and often say: “..if, if…” The boy grows up, but what about the adults? The boy gains strength.
We, believers, can and should also talk about power, which is also the main idea of the gospel. The apostles asked the Lord Jesus: “Why couldn’t we cast him out?” (Mt 17:19). They did not know how to heal the sleeping boy. And then the Lord Jesus said to them: “Because of your little faith… If you have faith like a mustard seed …” (Mt 17:20). The apostles could not heal the boy because they did not have strong enough faith. The evangelist Matthew points out how much emphasis the Lord Jesus places on our faith. What should it be like so that it can affect things impossible for human reason – such as healing an incurably ill person or moving a mountain to another place? Disciples are to have at least as much faith as a mustard seed. This means a faith that is small on the outside but firm on the inside, that develops in greater trust in God and leans more and more on him. Such set faith is not some initial agreement of reason and conviction that the Lord God is correct. Still, faith has proven itself in trials, suffering, and illness when it was underappreciated, unrecognized, and persecuted. Whoever proves himself in such situations can place everything in God’s hands. He has faith that he can do more than move mountains.
Why is our faith so ineffective in life? Why can he do so little? That’s because we didn’t develop it, we didn’t make it strong in the heat of trials and obstacles, and we didn’t make it a kind of control lever – a steering wheel in our life. We can often be compared to a driver – a beginner who convulsively holds the steering wheel in his hand. He is inexperienced. In our case, we have to realize that someone with more experience is the best expert, and that is our God. So let’s leave our worries to him and sit beside him as a passenger. The primary duty of a Christian is to develop faith. And not only in moments when we feel good but always and under all circumstances to learn to trust God. With God as our guide, counselor, and teacher, we can pass even the most challenging part of our life. Let’s trust in God! Let’s not say: if it were a different time, circumstances, or things. The Lord wants us here, at this time, under these circumstances. Here and now, we must improve and strengthen our faith.
A child can grow up and become empowered. He will be strong like his father and no longer say: “…if, if…” Let us also learn to trust God always and everywhere.
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Sunday A on the 19th. Walking with Jesus (Mt 14:22-33)
Those who live with Jesus have no fear.
Who and what are we afraid of? Children of darkness and evil people. Adults bad people and their mistakes. Students of exams or disappointments in love. In addition, we fear illness, failure, job loss, old age, and death. Many fear for their lives, savings, and property.
I remember a woman, a mother, who was lying for six months with a high-risk pregnancy. She was apprehensive about her child, although she already had four children at home.
I know a father who calls at least briefly every night to see how his family is doing when he is away from his family.
In the religious program Prameň (STV, 22 November 1992), there was an interview with international students about faith in God. Daniel Dalohoun, a student from Africa who came to us to study medicine, confessed: “When we were leaving, our parents told us: You can forget everything but Jesus!” There is no fear like fear. The history of fear goes back to the event of Adam’s Sin and Eve. They hid from the Lord God in paradise. The genesis of corruption at the end speaks of the justification of fear.
When the disciples saw Jesus walking on the sea, they excitedly said: “Myth!” And they cried out in fear. But Jesus immediately told them, “Get up. It’s me, don’t be afraid” (Mt 14:26-27).
Jesus urged the disciples to leave as soon as possible the place where the miraculous feeding of the crowd with five loaves and two fish took place. And he knew why. The group quickly realized their idle satiety and wanted to make Jesus king, which would suit them best (cf. Jn 6:14). Jesus is worried about the disciples, that under the influence of the miracle and thoughts about the earthly Messiah, they could get into a lousy enthusiasm. Jesus is known to go into the silence of prayer so that at the end of the day, he would meet the Father in prayer.
Jesus prepares the disciples for a new experience of faith. Man often finds himself in a situation where Jesus is invisible. It is a lesson in trusting the invisible God. Jesus is invisible, yet close. Although most of the apostles are fishermen, the situation in which they find themselves weighs more. In the middle of the sea alone, at night, in a storm, in the wind, with big waves. Isn’t it supposed to evoke fear and awareness of danger?
Isn’t the life of Christians similar to this situation? Anxiety, fear, and restlessness creep into hearts. The Christian is not freed from worries and mortal concerns about the world. When a Christian finds himself in any difficulties, trials, or threats, although he believes God knows about everything, he must do everything in his power. God can send help, give help, provide salvation, and nurture hope. However, a Christian must never claim a painless course of his earthly life. That is why even a Christian suffers, fears, and fears the actual values of body and spirit.
The disciples were tough men, they were fishermen, they did everything to save themselves. How could people become convinced that Jesus is far from them. Often only later, even after tragic events, do we realize that God has the right to remain silent in man’s need. A person proves himself even in situations where everything is at stake. An accident, even if a person loses his life, is not the greatest tragedy. Behavior is appropriate to the inside of a person. It is also subject to the pressure of the environment, the state of the situation, but the spirit can win over the body. You can talk about fear in everyone, but there is a difference between fear and fear. The life of a Christian is a life of faith. Faith manifests itself in different ways. In faith, the experience with Christ in need and distress manifests itself in a different way. Faith and fear have gradation and decay. The proverb says: “When the need is greatest, God’s help is closest”. Even those who do not believe in God are aware of this. They pray, beg, promise. Where all else has failed, rescue often comes. When a person cries out in fear: “Matoha!”, the answer comes: “Get up! It’s me, don’t be afraid” (Mt 14:27)! Nothing can stand against the power of God, only man with his “Non serviam!” “I will not serve!” God’s ways are incomprehensible to man. God stands by man even in the most difficult trials, even in dying. Heaven and earth will pass away, but the word of God will not pass away. God created man to live forever. A person should think about his soul. We cannot condemn anyone who, in difficult situations and in death, calls out to God, begs God, reconciles with God. It is a gift when a person sees God in need. Nothing can stand against the power of God, only man with his “Non serviam!” “I will not serve!” God’s ways are incomprehensible to man. God stands by man even in the most difficult trials, even in dying. Heaven and earth will pass away, but the word of God will not pass away. God created man to live forever. A person should think about his soul. We cannot condemn anyone who, in difficult situations and in death, calls out to God, begs God, reconciles with God. It is a gift when a person sees God in need. Nothing can stand against the power of God, only man with his “Non serviam!” “I will not serve!” God’s ways are incomprehensible to man. God stands by man even in the most difficult trials, even in dying. Heaven and earth will pass away, but the word of God will not pass away. God created man to live forever. A person should think about his soul. We cannot condemn anyone who, in difficult situations and in death, calls out to God, begs God, reconciles with God. It is a gift when a person sees God in need. reconciles with God. It is a gift when a person sees God in need. reconciles with God. It is a gift when a person sees God in need.
Situations of danger open the eyes of the body to realize the value of the world, but they also open the eyes of the soul. Conversions after life-threatening, near-death experiences are proof. “Lord, if it is you, command me to come to you on the water” (Mt 14:28). Faith means going to Christ. Faith is a risk. Faith is not a leap into the dark, a risk of uncertainty. Peter does not go into uncertainty. He goes to Jesus, after all. Jesus calls him. The darkness is breaking. Jesus rightly asks to detach himself from his boat, the way of life, people, attitudes, opinions, and relationships he has lived until now. Faith always means detachment. God becomes the only certainty. Every other assurance must give way. Jesus’ “Come” (Mt 14:29) is not yet a victory. The return to the old life, and its values, is solid; it seduces and questions the conversion. It is not surprising that after a while, even a short time, the ground under one’s feet is lost again, the state of health deteriorates, they leave their strength, and Peter’s cry remains: “Lord, save me” (Mt 14:30)! The love of God is incomparable to human sin. God helps. Even if the righteous God must say: “You of little faith, why did you doubt” (Mt 14:31)? Apparent silence, well-being, return of health, success know how to do their thing, make a mistake. Silence can do many evils when the conversion to God is not decisive, true, apparent peace.
However, God has power over little things, human hearts, and living and non-living nature. God’s love will not leave as long as there is a grain of love for God in a person’s heart. Everyone does not have to experience the struggle for the bare existence of life. The words will always apply: “Blessed are those who have not seen and have believed” (John 20:29).
Friendly, encouraging thought! Belief in God has an essential place in a person’s life. That’s why we also have to ask ourselves: What place does God have in our lives? Do we believe in God in all circumstances, or only if it costs nothing?
R. Wurmbrand, in his book Believe, but Why, quotes the words of master Eckhardt: “If you are looking for something for yourself, you will never find God, because you make God a candle with which you look for something.” When you find it, you throw away the candle. Some desire to love God as a man loves a cow… for the milk, the cheese, and the benefit he gets from it.
” Christians do not love God for what they can get from him, but they love him because he is. Those who left him never knew him.
We must always know what place God has in our lives. It is faith in God, which we need not only on Sundays and holidays but also in our daily worries. True Christians are always faithful to God, even if he seemingly forgets them… The Old Testament sufferer Job says that even if God kills him, he will still believe in him: “I am convinced that my Defender lives… My eyes will see him …” (Job 19, 25; 27). Jesus also addresses the question of a healed blind man: “Do you believe in the Son of Man” (Jn 9, 35)? Our answer should be the same as his: “I believe, Lord” (Jn 9, 38).
The world will always be just as full of fear. Like the apostles on a stormy sea, the devil is always ready to fill hearts with fear. Jesus is willing to help us, to save us. We are not to be overcome by the hopelessness of fear. With him, we will be invincible. Without Jesus, we are nothing!
The French writer Francois Mauriac said: “At the end of my life, I feel no remorse… I have never stopped trusting in Christ; I have never been ashamed of Jesus and my faith.” Thank God!”
This example of a person who was and is considered a personality is also a challenge for us: not to sit back when we have to build our faith. Work on your relationship with God even when you are comfortable, and don’t put it off until tomorrow. Tomorrow, we don’t know, there may be a storm, a wave, a gale, or rain, and we may be alone at night. A life of faith is not a life of fear. It is suitable to build your life on the fear of God. Let God have an honorable and first place in our hearts, duties, and anxiety.
A martial arts student sat over a cup of tea with his teacher. He said, “I have mastered all that you have taught me. I would like you to teach me one more thing. To understand God’s ways.” The teacher didn’t say a word. He took the teapot and began pouring tea into his student’s cup. The cup was quickly full, but the teacher did not stop running. The tea spilled out of the cup, spilled over the table, and flowed onto the floor. The student said, “Enough! Enough! The tea is spilling! The cup won’t fit anymore!” The teacher looked at him and said, “You look like this cup. You are full of yourself, so there is no room for God in you. You cannot understand God’s intentions until you learn how to make room for God in yourself.”
A woman is also an opposite example and role model of a believer:
At first glance, there lived a pretty ordinary woman in one district town. But she had one exceptional ability. She could subtly enter other people’s lives and change them for the better. He always seemed to be there to help. She knew how to say the right words to those who couldn’t decide. She subtly encouraged the children when disappointment made them lose their courage. She was able to recognize the valid reasons for tension in the family, at the workplace… and find a cure for them. And at the same time, she remained inconspicuous, quite ordinary. At the end of the year, when the local newspaper announced a poll for the «Woman of the Year in their city,» her daughter decided to nominate her. When this woman heard about it, she was very touched. But she said to her daughter: “Thank you. I appreciate it. But I don’t think I would be the right candidate. I’m not doing anything special. I only do
What about our testimony of faith in God in moments of fear? Therefore, Let us be encouraged by the words that the parents said to this African student: “You can forget everything but God.” Let these words be an excellent lesson for us. Then, at the end of our life, our conscience will be clear and without reproaches. Parents are right to fear for their children. But when they give them God, they entrust them to God; they strengthen them with the gifts that God gave us, such as prayer, the sacraments, and an example of life, and they don’t have to be overly afraid.
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