Martha and Mary in Luke 10:38 - 42

 


It might take time to find the right balance between prayerful interiour 

life where we listen to the voice of Our Saviour Jesus Christ by reading the 

daily readings and gospel and let ourselves be impregnated by His Word 

( 1.st Joyful Mystery of the Holy Rosary) on our road to sanctification. 

 

To share in His Divine Life in us, made possible by Him becoming one 

of us.

It takes determination and focus.

 

It is so easy to get diverted by other people in the church community, 

and to unconsciously "follow" (imitate) them, instead of Jesus, making 

the unconscious assumption that the ones we imitate are correct in all that 

they say and do, because they appear more righteous and holy, and also 

that they might appear to have more knowledge.

 

Very often we are wrong in those  assumptions, it is a matter of awareness, 

if we loose awareness that we are ALL sinners; me, you and all the others, 

we become vulnerable to going astray.

 

In the church community there are people who are there because they are 

in need of an activity, being busy, and as it is the church there might be an 

assumption that the personal sanctification is implicit, that it will happen 

automatically. 

This is no more the case today than it was at the time of Jesus.

 

Jesus explained in this visit to Martha and Mary's house the importance 

of sitting still with the Lord.   

 

Saint Pope John Paul II kept reminding us that the Church is not a charity 

organization or an association for making friends, ( even though those are 

normally the result), they are not the fundamental reason for her existence. 

Today we have His Eminence Cardinal Robert Sarah,  the special envoy 

of our Pope Leo XIV to the shrine of Sainte-Anne-d'Auray in Brittany, 

France, in the recent celebration  of the 400th anniversary of Sainte Anne's 

apparitions there.

 

On this occasion, Cardinal Sarah reminded us again, that the fundamental 

objective of the Catholic Church, is our personal sanctification, not for our 

personal glory but only for the glory of God

He reminded us that the church, despite being the organization that has done 

more humanitarian work than any other organization in the world, is not by 

design a mere charity organizational structure, but rather, through her 

Sacraments gives us the means to become holy and partakers of Divine Life. 

 

Personal sanctification is the principal and fundamental ethos of 

The Legion of Mary; one of the pillars of the Catholic Church. 

It's members are obliged to do work, but the work at hand is spiritual; 

spreading information and helping others to pray; the glory and gain is 

for God and His Holy Catholic Church.

 

Charity, a theological virtue, is considered, together with Faith and Hope, 

to be gifts from God. 

Given that we are commanded to love everyone to the same extent that 

we love ourselves, for the love of God, and to see Our Lord in each person,

because what we do to others, we do it to the Lord, 

since He dwells at the core of every being, (whether we know it or not), 

to fully forgive those who hurts us, because He forgives 

us if we repent and ask forgiveness (confession), 

charity flows from the true practice of the religion itself, it is 

efficient when it is rooted in the spiritual practices and 

doctrine of the Church and finding it's source in the silence with the Lord 

through private prayers, not only the communal ones. 

 

It is a known fact that some people can not tolerate silence, nor being alone, 

it is something they avoid at all cost, and they make sure to fill in all the 

gaps of every day to avoid it. Even the moments when they might find 

themselves alone, they make sure to put on the radio or the television to 

have some noise, to hear people talking.

 

What is behind the urgency, or obsession, to constantly be doing, doing, 

doing, even if it is in the service of others, helping everybody, night and 

day, for no apparent personal gain?   

Could it be that the true motivation is the "benefit" of not having the 

time to deepen and develop the personal relationship and to advance in 

understanding of the Faith, meaning that it is a form of defensive mechanism, 

a system set in place, to avoid looking closer at one self and our personal 

areas that needs to be improved, to gain more true confidence in God in 

order to surrender to Him. 

 

It can sometimes be the case that what appears as selfless acts of sacrificial 

love helps the person to be busy, busy, busy, in an defensive mode of "protection".  

 

Regarding what comes through on the telly, without necessarily realizing to 

what extent people are themselves taking on board what they hear, assuming 

unconsciously that everything they hear there are objective "facts", and not 

somebody's version and narrative; it becomes their "truth", they very often 

do not even question it, because "it was said on the telly". 

 

People's minds are being programmed as to what is true, what to think in 

regard to any subject, and indeed even what to concern themselves with.

 

Anything at all has an almost unlimited possible versions and narratives, 

anything can be looked at from an almost unlimited amount of angles 

which reflects differently on the subject or object at hand. 

 

Jesus told us to not follow the world, that His Kingdom is not of this world,  

that even though we are for the time being in the world, our focus should 

always be the world beyond, above, underneath, inside, at all sides, 

which permeates every living thing that we can see; 

God made every single thing, from scratch. 

He made us, and not only that, He made us in His Image.

  

We must ignore as much as possible the subjective delusions and 

tricks of the mind, our own and those of others. 

We must develop contact with the superior divine dimension which 

made this very world we find ourselves in, and to have our bags packed, 

our boarding card and passport ready, in order to be ready to leave and 

pass to the next world, for nobody knows the day nor the hour of their 

time of death, it can come like a thief in the night. 

Only one thing is sure; it will come to each and every one of us. 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Invincible ignorance

 

In the Catholic Church today, the term 

"invincible ignorance" is usually passed 

off as referring to people that have never heard 

of Christ, due to isolation, e.g. pagan tribes, etc.

 

The reality, however, is that this term applies

to everybody who grow up in the western world

who has (maybe) a rudimentary school subject 

introduction to Christianity, but no morality and 

code of conduct instruction.

 

Those who grow up in post-christian, 

secular countries, the frames of reference regarding

what is desirable and fulfilling comes through the 

media and popular culture. And, in addition, those 

who do not get any guidance from parents 

regarding moral norms and correct conduct, and who 

themselves maybe are bad role models to their 

children, these people grow up in invincible ignorance, 

just as much as "the man in the jungle", and maybe even 

more so, as Christianity are constantly pulled down by 

the media.

 

When a genuine persistent search for truth leads people 

to the Authentic Catholic Faith, they might find in the 

church community a disdain and a judgment from 

those who have had the good fortune of being raised

in the true Catholic doctrine, and never strayed.

 

THIS is what Jesus was talking about when He said not

to judge. When He invited the crowd to throw the first 

stone. 

 

We can judge, and indeed we must judge, when something

untoward is going on, we must have the courage to stand 

up and tell the truth; that is NOT "judging".

 

But judging a person on his or her past, after they have 

confessed their sins, received absolution from the Church 

and amended their life, THAT is judging.

 

I had the good fortune to visit the grotto where according 

to the Tradition of the Church Mary Magdalen lived out the

rest of her life. 

Remember that Mary Magdalen was a known sinner, but 

today she is a Saint.

   

This is the whole aim of the Church; to make sinners Saints.

It is possible, it takes a firm decision and persistence, but it

is possible. 

The Catholic Church has been a veritable saint factory in the 

past, and with the Church's explosive growth in Asia and Africa, 

and hopefully her restoration in the West, she will continue to 

produce Saints.

 

As carrying crosses is a fundamental part of living out 

the faith, suffering the judgemental attitude from these scribes 

and pharisees in the Church who elevates themselves over others,

this will help them on the road to sanctification. 

 

Luke 18:10-14

"Two men went up into the temple to pray; the one a Pharisee, and 

the other a publican. The pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself;

"God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, 

adulterers, or even as this publican. I fast twice in the week, I give tithes 

of all that I possess". And the publican, standing afar off, would not lift up

so much as his eyes unto heaven, but smote upon his breast, saying, 

"God, be merciful to me a sinner". I tell you, this man went down to his 

house justified rather than the other;for every one that exalts himself 

shall be abased; and he that humbles himself shall be exalted." 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

Our Faith is Embodied

 


The Catholic Faith is based upon the Crucifix, the Cross with Our Lord nailed to it.

We are called to pick up our crosses on a daily basis, be present 

with them, and we all have many, we should make use of them, 

and not waste any, because they are fundamental and necessary 

for our hope of salvation. 

 

I remember a married couple of extreme modernists 

(supposedly Catholics, but protestants in all but the technicalities), 

when we spoke about crosses, 

the man said, almost regrettably  that he had never really had any, 

his wife then said; yes you did, remember that time when you were 

young and your mother said/did something that hurt you....

His wife was the bullish domineering type, and he was so spiritually 

(and emotionally!) asleep, that he couldn't even see that he was 

married to a cross...

 

We are not just talking about big tragedies and illness, 

our daily life are full of crosses; anything difficult, unfair, painful, 

testing, annoying, boring, sadness, loneliness, being forgotten, 

feeling useless, monotony, mental fatigue; they are all crosses.

 

Being fully present, accepting the things the way they are, offering 

them up to God, is what we are meant to do.

Sometimes solutions emerges, but the principal thing is being present 

with it, not to revolt, resist or avoid. 

Because we are thus being purified and strengthened in those fires. 

 

Our faith is not one where there is separation between internal and 

external, between prayer life, observance of obligations, and the rest 

of our life.

The Catholic Faith, to prove that it is authentic and true, integrates 

everything in us, what we say is what we do.

 

It is not about ticking boxes, it is not even first and foremost about 

exterior acts of love, what comes first is our own sanctification, our 

focus has to be on ourselves, in order that we continually convert our 

sinful nature to the nature of God, who is ALL Holy. 

This is the object; to become holy. The external acts of love flows from

there. 

 

Self awareness: what am I thinking, what am I saying, what am 

I doing, what am I not doing that I ought to be doing...

 

Frequent Confession is necessary. it is not a pleasure,

but necessary.

 

Sometimes priests at Mass reminds the congregation just before 

Holy Communion, of the necessity of being in a state of grace in 

order to present ourselves for it, to receive worthily,

in other words, free from mortal sin. (Having confessed them)

 

Given that the 7 main mortal sins are  Pride, Envy, Anger, Greed,

Gluttony, Laziness and Lust, you would imagine that the queue for 

Confession would be the same length as the queue for Holy Communion, 

but this is sadly not the case.

 

Receiving Holy Communion unworthily is not only a waste of time, it 

contributes to, and reinforces the deception in those who receives in 

this manner, they "eat their own condemnation"; they mock God, it 

stagnates them in the spiritual journey.

 

Even if the requirements have been publicly announced by the priest, 

and respected at that particular Mass, they go ahead receiving at 

subsequent Masses if the priest does not make a clear announcement 

of it every time, which reveals a complete ignorance of not only the 

Mass, but of the faith in general. 

No, it is not about technicalities; external signs, they obtain nothing 

unless your heart, your mind and your willpower is involved and 

integrated. 

 

Some time back I made an acquaintance with a woman, a daily 

Mass goer, apparently very religious and involved in the parish. 

We went for a coffee together and she kept saying to me: 

"well there are some things that just cannot be forgiven!"

I felt that she really wanted to tell me something, so I made sure not 

to ask, but the irony of her praying the Our Father publicly at Mass 

every day, where we ask the Father to forgive us all our own sins, as 

we forgive all those who have sinned against us, because this is the way 

Our Father operates. 

If we hold grudges against anyone at all, no matter how well founded

and understandable they are, we are not free to be redeemed by Him.

And if we have as much as an ounce of hate in our hearts, we will not 

be allowed into heaven. 

 

The Catholic Faith is not just to be believed, it must be lived, integrated 

bodily and mentally, acted out in our lives, embodied. 

 

The protestants have an empty cross as their symbol, no Jesus, they claim 

that it is sufficient to just believe in order to be saved, and the communion 

at their religious service is purely symbolic.

 

Well, I ask you, who wants a symbolic God?

 

At Catholic Mass God is Really and Fully Present, Alive, 

in Holy Communion, it truly is the Body and Blood of 

Our Lord Jesus Christ. 

For anyone who truly seeks God, it shouldn't be difficult to 

choose.