Maria Goretti
| July 6, a non-binding commemoration | |
| Death: | 1902 |
| Patron: | children and youth |
Attributes: |
lilies, sometimes 14, palm tree; rosary |
Maria Goretti
| July 6, a non-binding commemoration | |
| Death: | 1902 |
| Patron: | children and youth |
Attributes: |
lilies, sometimes 14, palm tree; rosary |
If Christ had led only this veto of today’s evanjelio, he would certainly have learned today. Which of us doesn’t bother and feel overwhelmed? And who wouldn’t want to get divine reinforcement in a moment of exhaustion? But Kristov’s words don’t end here. The Lord continues and talks about the bremen and jarme, which he wants for us, which he doesn’t have to worry about anymore. How can it be pleasant even in some spring? And how could we even rest in it?
Nie is a bremen as well as a bremen. We know it, for example, in sports. You can run in the morning, you will return completely exhausted and.. you are ready to start a nice day. It is written similarly in one psalm: „Stupajú a sil im still pribuda.“ And now the duke follows this unusual phenomenon: lebo „na Sione uvidia Boha najvyššie.“
Every matter is enlightened by the number he watches. We cannot fully understand the actions of some person whom we do not know what he is thinking about. We don’t even know the deep truth about life, we don’t understand a pokial. So what is the key of our life? Bliss. God’s vision. However, the environment for its achievement is also an issue. The catechism talks about it: „ So that the believers in Christ can possess and see God, um ⁇ they create their lusts and with God the mercifulness of the viťazio over the seductions of pleasure and power.“
The Christian life can privilege us to this noble ciel (videnium and the possession of Boha), because it presupposes a seed of glory in us. A grain cannot become an oak tree, a pokialion is a wood of an equal species and does not have an essentially equal life or an adult tree. Diet could not become a mature person, because he no longer has human naturalness, hoci and only in „unfinished“ status. Equally, a Christian could not become one of the blessed in heaven, a pokiah would not have received divine life before.
If he wants to understand the essence of the seed thoroughly, he must necessarily examine his life in the state of the mature tree. If we want to understand the essence of the life of grace in us, we must perceive it as an embryonic form of eternal life. Ide in principle for an equal divine life with two divisions. Here on earth we can know God even vaguely through the environment of the viera and not in the prima mite of the light of the nazerania. Due to the greater volatility of our free-spirited will, we can lose our supernatural life, which is no longer possible in heaven.
Similar to our physical ( sports ) practice, the Lord’s spring is difficult in its claims, but in its effects Christ’s bremen are human, because they change our hearts. We see it in the life of people who thought it seriously with God and became holy. By God’s kindness and by carrying his bremen. Leave this knowledge to us as a rest and reinforcement.
And vice versa: We don’t have to see everything we believe. For example, I believe that Radio Lumen plays the radio program in this skeleton. I don’t see or count anything, but I’m sure that the radio waves responsible are present in the entire city. We don’t have to see everything we believe. I believe that the church is not so empty as to how it will fade away. I believe that God’s present angels are. And I believe that these angels protected us better than the human beings in the world. Come on, we don’t have to see everything we believe. And that brings us to the most important words of Jesus in today’s evanjelio, to his words addressed to the disciple Thomas: „Blessed are they who did not see and believed.“ Really important and permanent things in the life of a patria medzi tie, which it is impossible to see, but which can be believed. And of these things, the first thing is the fact that our Lord Jesus Christ lives and is present with us.
His words relate to this fact: „Blessed are they who have not seen and believed.“ The apostle Thomas, to whom this term referred, is often referred to as the „neveriaci Tomáš“. I always find it a little too long, because I think it’s a bad thing to do with it. Tomáš was a vigilant, persistent and attentive student of Ježišov. Odmietol don’t let your eyes get excited. He wanted to stand firmly on the ground. Doubtful nie is neveriation. viera and self-doubt patria as well as two sides of the coin. doubts su as well as twin viera!
Those who believe never stop asking and squealing, fighting like everyone else all their lives to find a response. Doubts keep the viera alive! Tomáš can’t attend the big celebration. The miracle of Jesus’ zm ⁇ tvychvstania is too big and unimaginable for him! „The nie doubter is neveriaci. Many doubts su ďaleko from nevera.“ Cardinal Newman said: Those who harbor doubts show that the viera is important to them. He went all week. The earliest week of Tomáš’s life. What seems quite remarkable to me is that Tomáš takes a long time with the other teachings, even if he can’t believe it – Jesus got up from m ⁇ tvych!
Because he lives his doubts and undeniably theirs, he receives the gift of real stretnutium. Thomas is blessed, rewarded: Jesus sp ⁇ nje his jellies due to his infinite mercy. It is a gift intended for each of us. Doubtful Thomas falls at Jesus’ feet, falls into his arms and confesses: „Lord of the sea and God of the sea.“ In the whole Bible, there is hardly a deafness and a more primitive confession! Thomas confesses the Deity of Jesus. Tomáš Pochybovač showed great service to viere and to all the team that wrestled with her, the team, that he asked his questions. If Jesus takes Tomáš’s critical and skeptical questions seriously, we should probably do it with the questions of our participants.
Critical questions, a series of doubts, and a primitive confrontation with the doubters of the su sojú in the polievke viera has not stopped, so that it does not become an individual kasha, whose taste is dull and no longer motivates anyone to do anything. „ Those who want to believe don’t have to use their thoughts. May I open my doubts and Lord im odpovie.“, wrote Helmut Thielicke. Let’s change as the apostle Thomas At the interview of St. Thomas, the apostle, let’s ask for mercy, confess Jesus: Lord of the sea and God of the sea!
The visit to Elizabeth was sealed with the singing of the Magnificat, a hymn that spans all Christian centuries, a hymn that unites the minds of Christ’s disciples, and that apart from all the historical frictions that we strive to overcome in the interest of full communion. In the current ecumenical climate, it is nice to remember that Martin Luther devoted, as he himself put it, a very famous commentary to this holy song of the blessed Mother of God. In it, he emphasized that everyone should learn this song of praise, because in “the Magnificat, Mary teaches us how to love and praise God”.
In the moment when God, full of love, looked at Mary, she became a sign of hope for the multitudes of the poor and the least on earth, who will be the first in the kingdom of heaven. It faithfully follows the decision of Christ, who repeats to all the oppressed throughout history: “Come to me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will strengthen you” (Mt 11:28). Taking the winding paths of history, the Church follows Mary so that the huge processions of poor and hungry, oppressed and afflicted women and men (cf. Lk 1, 52-53) rise again and find their dignity. It is the star of the third millennium, just as at the beginning of the Christian era it was the morning dawn with which Jesus shone on the horizon of history. She—thinking chronologically—was born before Christ, gave him to the world, and incorporated him into human destinies. We ask Mary to lead us to Christ and the Father in the future—even in the dark night of evil and in times of confusion and crises, silence, and suffering.
Let us sing to Mary the hymn that the Eastern Church loves above all else. The Baathist lyrically glorifies Mary. In the section devoted to Mary’s visit to Elizabeth, he celebrates Mary as a branch of the never-drying trunk, as the life force of the immortal fruit, as the one who nourished the one who nourishes us.
However, today’s Gospel escapes these ideas because its content is Jesus’ prayer and the advice he imparts to the apostles and, therefore, to us. Jesus’ prayer reflects his view of those willing to follow him, from whom he chose his closest collaborators. He did not go to consult the famous teacher and rabbi Gamaliel, nor Nicodemus, nor even to the Pharisees and scribes, whom to choose, but he chose fishermen, shepherds, farmers, and a tax collector, and chose them as his closest collaborators. From them, he raised future evangelists, the first pope and bishops, who were full of faith, love, courage, and wisdom.
The Church also acted similarly in the future, choosing not only the rich and educated but also the simple, poor, and uneducated. Let us remember the “poor man,” Francis of Assisi, and his revival of the Church, and Catherine of Siena, a girl without an education who wrote letters to popes and kings. We venerate her as a teacher of the Church, or John Vianney, the patron saint of parish priests and confessors, who did not gain wisdom in schools but in prayer. We have many examples of little ones who became great in the eyes of God, as well as in the eyes of believing and even unbelieving people. This story teaches us a great lesson that God does great things through little ones. That is why Jesus said: I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to little ones.
The second lesson from today’s Gospel is contained in the sentence: Only the Father knows the Son, and only the Son—and anyone to whom the Son wills to reveal him—knows the Father. This sentence can be expressed in two words: the gift of faith. The Catechism of the Catholic Church, point 1814, says: Faith is the divine virtue that helps us to believe in God and in everything that he has told us and revealed to us and that the Holy Church proposes to us to believe, because he is the Truth itself. Through faith, man freely gives himself to God. The believer therefore strives to know and fulfill God’s will… The lesson for us is to nourish this undeserved gift of faith we have received and pass it on to all who desire it.
The third lesson is contained in the sentence: Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart. In a world that has known roaring dictators, in a world in which we have experienced a system of class struggle and hatred, silence and humility are considered weakness or even cowardice. A quiet and humble person is considered a zero, who can do nothing, is silent, agrees with everything, fights for nothing, and therefore achieves nothing. So when Jesus calls us to learn meekness and humility from him, should we consider him a zero or insignificant? However, if we read the Gospels carefully, we will notice that he was able to swim against the current; he dared to seek the company of sinners to show them the way to conversion and salvation; he did not allow himself to be influenced by the angry crowd, and therefore he forgave the woman – a sinner, he was able to deal decisively with the hypocritical Pharisees and scribes and say to them: Woe! He took a whip and drove the merchants and buyers out of the temple. He presented an innocent child as a model for those who want to achieve salvation. He accepted a shameful sentence, the cross and crucifixion. To insults and mockery, he had only one response: Father, forgive them…
Jesus shows us that in silence and humility, there is strength and courage to know the truth, to proclaim it, to defend it, and to speak it. This is also confirmed by the recent past, when things might not have come this far if the Christians of the fifties and seventies of the last century had had more courage to profess their faith, attend church, and send their children to religious instruction. Then it was too late to cry over spilled milk, over the fact that children and grandchildren were unbaptized and unbelieving.
At a time when it was fashionable among the intelligentsia to deny the existence of God, the brilliant scientist Louis Pasteur publicly declared: Since I have known God’s revelation, I have the faith of a Breton peasant. And if I knew the word of God even better and more thoroughly, I would have the faith of a Breton peasant woman. Humility knows how to admit mistakes, does not flatter the rich who hold power, but rather serves the weak and the poor, and stands up for the truth. Humility does not take revenge, does not hold grudges, and knows how to forgive. Let us remember today’s message from Jesus: pray, ask for the gift of faith, and learn humility to find rest for your souls!