The title of this blog reflects our mission in life: heaven. It is a difficult journey that requires faith and stamina. Have you ever done a cardio workout on the stair-mill? It's like trying to go up the down escalator. It really takes a lot of effort to get to the top, but it's worth it. Your body is healthier for it. The same can be said as we make our way to the top of the stairwell to heaven. It's a long and arduous trek, but our soul is better for it.


Sunday, November 7, 2010

You Cannot Serve Two Masters

No, I did not compose the text below. I'm not sure my pea-brain is capable of such greatness. St. Catherine of Siena (+1380), Doctor of the Church, was a Dominican, stigmatist and papal counselor and is responsible for this gem. It's amazing. What was that about women being held down by our Church Fathers??

OK, more from the saints and less from the wannabe.

"I long to see your heart and affection stripped of the world and of yourself. There is no other way we can be clothed in Christ crucified, since the world has nothing in common with God. The world's disordered affection loves pride, and God loves humility. The world looks for honor, status, and greatness, and God spurned these things, embracing disgrace, scorn and insult, hunger, thirst, cold and heat, even to a shameful death on the cross. By this death of His He gave honor to the Father, and we were restored to grace. The world looks to please creatures, unconcerned about displeasing the Creator; Christ never looked to anything but to fulfill his eternal Father's command for the sake of our salvation. He embraced voluntary poverty and clothed Himself in it, while the world seeks great wealth. They are really different from one another. So if our heart is clothed in the world, it is necessarily stripped of God, and if it is stripped of the world, it is necessarily filled with God. This is what our Savior said: "No one can serve two masters. If you serve the one, you hold the other in contempt." We must, then, very conscientiously free our heart and affection from this tyrant, the world, and set it on God, completely free and sincere, letting nothing come between ourselves and Him. We must not be two-faced or love falsely, since He is our dear God, and He keeps His eyes on us, seeing our hidden and inmost heart."


Here is one more that I found comforting and slightly amusing.

1 Pt 5:10-11
May the God of all grace who called us to his eternal glory through Christ Jesus restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish us after we have suffered a little. Amen.
                                                                            . . . just a little? Good one.