Wednesday, November 27, 2013
The writing on the wall
I have always been fascinated as to how the
language in the Bible has influenced the English language. I avidly read David Crystal’s Begat: The King
James Bible and the English Language when it was published in 2010 to
celebrate the 500th anniversary of that translation. The book describes how people often use
expressions from the Bible not only to recall a particular Bible message or to set
a spiritual tone, but also when they don’t even know the phrase came from the
Bible, for the phrase has just become one more thread in the rich tapestry of
English.
Abraham Lincoln was a tone-setter extraordinaire
and his speeches were generally filled with biblical allusions. I was reminded of this a week or so ago as we
were remembering the Gettysburg Address.
Surely, he could have said, “Eighty-seven years ago…” Instead, he said, “Four score and seven years
ago…,” alluding to Psalm 90 where our life span is described as “three score years
and ten” (Ps 90:10 KJV) When Lincoln used these allusions, he meant for his
listeners to know – and virtually all of them would have “gotten” the allusion –
that the purpose of the Civil War, and of the very founding of our country, was
not simply political, but more importantly, spiritual.
On the other hand, this morning, we read from
the fifth chapter of Daniel the origin of the term “the writing on the wall.” Even among people who do not know its
biblical origins, this expression has become a common idiom. Of course, when we use this term today, we
are usually not referring to graffiti, but rather to some figurative “writing,”
and we’re generally not intending to cite Scripture, though, like in Daniel, we
usually intend to warn our audience about a dire situation at hand.
Thinking like Lincoln, what are the spiritual
writings on the wall that we should heed today?
As in the time of King Belshazzar, the writings can seem quite ominous.
·
In the United
States, one family in seven lives in poverty, and the income disparity between
the wealthiest and the poorest has reached an all-time high.
·
Approximately
20-25% of all pregnancies in the United States end in abortion.
·
Suicide rates
are increasing, to the point that in 2010, the latest year comprehensive
statistics are available, more people in the United States committed suicide
than those who died in automobile accidents.
·
In 2011, 41%
of the live births in the United States were to unmarried women
·
Less than
one-third of the Catholics in the United States attend Mass weekly and in a
Gallup poll, the percent of Americans describing themselves as having “no
religion” has doubled in the past twenty years.
These are not just ominous signs for our own
country – similar signs can be seen in many countries around the world. How are we to respond to such global and
pervasive issues? Do we even have the
power to correct these issues?
Our answer lies in a new writing, but this
one not simply figurative. It is not written
on a wall, but it is words that are meant to be written on our hearts. It is not intended to inspire despair or fear,
but it is filled with hope and joy. This
week, Pope Francis released Evangelii
Gaudium – the Joy of the Gospel. In this exhortation, the Pope states that all
Christians have access to a power which can overcome the greatest dangers that
face us today. That power is grounded in
the unconditional love of God. When we
encounter this love in the person of Jesus, our lives are transformed into ones
of great joy, which in turn, transforms the entire world.
Here are some of the opening lines of this
amazing exhortation:
“I invite all Christians, everywhere, at this
very moment, to a renewed personal encounter with Jesus Christ, or at least an
openness to letting him encounter them; I ask all of you to do this unfailingly
each day. No one should think that this invitation is not meant for him or
her…How good it feels to come back to him whenever we are lost! Let me say this
once more: God never tires of forgiving us; we are the ones who tire of seeking
his mercy. Christ, who told us to forgive one another “seventy times seven” (Mt
18:22) has given us his example: he has forgiven us seventy times seven. Time
and time again he bears us on his shoulders. No one can strip us of the dignity
bestowed upon us by this boundless and unfailing love. With a tenderness which
never disappoints, but is always capable of restoring our joy, he makes it
possible for us to lift up our heads and to start anew.” Evangelii Gaudium 3
At this very moment, people are gathering
from far and wide and will soon sit down with friends and family to give thanks
for the gifts they have received.
Thus, the Pope’s message is extremely timely,
for gratitude is a door through which we encounter the unconditional love of
God. May this encounter transform us
into lights of joy that we, and the world around us, might lift up our heads
and start anew.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
The Living Word
As
we near the end of the liturgical year, our gospel readings seem a bit scary…fire
and brimstone stuff – wars and insurrections, famines and plagues, temples
being destroyed, and Christians being persecuted, spurned by their families and
friends, and ultimately put to death. Where’s
the love?
Often
I prefer to set these readings aside, to compartmentalize them as written in a
far distant time to a much different set of people in a much different culture. I read them as apt descriptions of what was
going on in first century Palestine, but of much less relevance to me living in
twenty-first century America. But this “historical”
look at Scripture is a spiritually dangerous path to tread, for Scripture is
the living word of God, as relevant to our salvation today as it was to the
apostles living and eating with Jesus.
Today,
we hear the disciples marveling at the magnificence of the Jerusalem Temple,
but Jesus admonishes them that, in time, there will not be one stone atop
another. (Lk 21:5-6) Most scholars agree that Luke wrote this
gospel about 85 or 90 AD, when the memory of the Roman destruction of the
Temple in 70 AD was still fresh in many people’s minds. Thus, it was likely that these words of Jesus
were remembered as an accurate prediction of this tragedy. Temple destroyed, prophecy fulfilled, end of
story.
But
it’s not the end. Jesus was saying much
more. Jesus warns his first disicples –
and us – that whenever we place our faith in anything on earth, a material
thing or a purely human institution, that faith must crumble, as all things on
earth ultimately do. It may take some time,
but all earthly things must come to an end.
Their journey must end in death.
Jesus
goes on to say how his followers will be called before the governors and kings,
forced to witness to their faith, and some will die for his name. (Lk 21:12-19)
Again, I recall the early martyrs of the church, many of whom, like Paul
and Ignatius of Antioch, were called before Caesar himself to testify and to die. That was then, but certainly not so in our
more enlightened time.
Yet,
it seems that more and more often, right here in America, we are being called
up before governors and, if not kings, congressmen and Presidents, called up to
testify to the faith that we share, the values we hold and the principles by which
we live. Respecting the rights of others
to not believe what we believe, to not hold our same values or live by our same
principles, even accepting that these beliefs and values and principles may put
us in a distinct minority, we must, as the early martyrs did, persevere in
asserting our right – and even more importantly, our duty – to hold firm to our
faith, to live our values, and to be guided by our principles.
We
persevere in our living witness even if we find it hard to come up with the
words for our defense, for Jesus himself stands with us today and the Spirit will
give us the words we need.
And
Jesus ends by promising that by persevering we will secure our lives. By persevering, we will live forever and
ever, with Him and all the saints in the kingdom of God.
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Thank God
In her book, Love
Through Me, Natalie Ryan tells of working for a small non-profit and
receiving a call from a man named Dennis seeking a $100 donation for his work
with orphans in Africa. She felt the man
was sincere and verbally promised she would have her organization fund his
request. You’re probably thinking like I
am: “Right, man from Africa wants money.
It’s got to be a scam.” Natalie’s
boss was probably thinking that, because try as she might – and she worked to
get independent verification that Dennis’s work was legitimate – she could not
convince her boss to send the $100.
In trying to
figure out who was going to help this poor man, she heard God say, “You.” She quit her job and decided to answer God’s
call, forming her own missionary charity, “Hearts in Action.” In a throw-away line that struck me hard,
she wrote that her first order of business was “raising the $100” that she had
promised to Dennis, the man from Africa.
What struck me
was the realization that I could never remember a time in my adult life when it
was necessary for me to “raise $100.” If
I needed $100 cash and it wasn’t already in my pocket, it was certainly as
close as the nearest ATM. My second
thought is that I had never directly thanked God for this particular blessing
in my life. Perhaps I just attributed it
to my hard work, or my prudent financial management, or just good luck, but
apparently I had never attributed it to God.
And not
realizing that this was simply a small manifestation of God’s infinite,
unconditional and eternal love for me, I was never felt particularly happy or
satisfied with this blessing. Of course,
I could always find $100 if I needed it, but what if I needed $1000 or
$10000? Not so easy. I’d just have to work a little harder, save a
little more. But even if I got that, I
would always see that there was something more, something better, or something
newer that would be the icing on my cake.
I constantly
sought out the new and improved, but once I got it, it quickly became the old
and the ordinary. I thought that more was always better – more
possessions, more pleasure, more power, more beauty, more friends, etc. – yet always
found that more may be better for a while, but more is never enough.
Mary Jo Leddy,
in her book, Radical Gratitude, refers to this state as
perpetual dissatisfaction. It is ugly, but it is the lifeblood of our
money-based economy. Without our constant yearning for the newer car, the
bigger house, the latest fashions; without our obsession for the new and
improved; without our mantra of “more is always better,” we spend less, the
economy falters, jobs are lost, and our material wealth and our self-worth
shrinks. We no longer live for God, but only for ourselves.
Jesus praises
the grateful leper (Lk 17:11-19) for he has broken this cycle of
dissatisfaction. The man has recognized the source of his life, the
source of all that he is, the source of all that he has, and it is
enough. His sight is no longer focused on what he lacks, but on what he
has already been given, the unconditional, infinite, eternal love of God.
When we come
together to celebrate the Eucharist – the root word for Eucharist is the same
word that Luke uses to describe the man’s thanks and praise to God – we
recognize that God has given us our very lives as a gift, that God loves us
with a love that knows no bounds, that He gave us his only Son to die for us
that we might have eternal life with Him. Our gratitude does not change
God, it changes us. When we live with this radical, at-our-very-core
gratitude, we, like the leper, appreciate and honor what we have, not obsess
over and crave for what we are missing. We can see ourselves for who we
are – loved children of God – rather that constantly trying to be who other
people want us to be.
Most
importantly, we recognize that we cannot wait to be happy to be grateful – we
must be grateful to be happy.
Thank God.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
The doorstep of heaven
The
Sadducees attempt to discredit Jesus by showing that his belief in an afterlife
in heaven implies ludicrous results (Lk 20:27-38). They assume that heaven must be pretty much like
earth. On earth, we have the laws of
Moses to follow, so we must have those laws to follow in heaven, too. If the laws don’t make sense in heaven, then
heaven must not be real. However, as
we’ll see, Jesus points out that their argument is flawed because their premise
is false.
Like
the Sadducees, I have spent most of my life laboring under a false premise. No, I’ve always believed in heaven and
hell. But like the Sadducees, I had a
false idea of what heaven was like. I assumed
that heaven was the end reward for following the rules and being a good
boy. If I tried to obey all the rules,
go to church every Sunday, be nice to other people, avoid lying, cheating,
stealing, swearing, etc. etc., I would earn credits for heaven. On the other hand, of course, God would
always be watching for those times when I wasn’t living up to the rules. In the end, St. Peter would have this book,
and on the one side would be all the nice I had done, and on the other the
naughty. My hope, of course, is that the
nice would outweigh the naughty and into heaven I would go. Does this sound familiar? Essentially, I figured that the afterlife was
essentially the ultimate Christmas – the final reckoning of who was naughty and
who was nice.
However,
I came to realize that this was a quite sterile and empty view of my
salvation. No matter how hard I tried, I
knew that I would always be doing things that were not on the “nice” list. Okay, so there we have this reconciliation
thing, but what good is that if I continue to sin? And if this is my faith, why would God have to
send his only Son to humble himself, “take the form of a slave,” and die an
excruciating death on the cross just so that I could take my shot in the naughty
and nice contest? My premise, like that
of the Sadducees, must be false.
Slowly,
I began to understand what Jesus tells the Sadducees. Heaven is not about following rules; it is
about our relationship with our infinite, eternal and all-loving God. And when we have left this earth and accepted
this relationship for all time, that’s all we will ever need. We will have no physical or emotional needs,
no physical limitations; we will simply be one with our Creator, the source of
all happiness.
I
knew that I could be with God after I had died – all I had to do was follow the
rules and I’d be with God after death.
But if heaven is about our relationship with God, wasn’t I missing the
fact that God has already called me into relationship with him from the moment
I was conceived? I was following rules,
but not living in relationship. For
Christian faith is not a list of rules to follow; it is a relationship to live,
a relationship with the One who is my creator, who created me out of love to be
with him and for him for all eternity, who is the my only source of true happiness,
who calls me to live in him every day of my life.
From
the very beginning, God reveals this truth to us in Scripture. He creates us in his image and likeness,
giving us life by bestowing his very Spirit on us. He interacts with us as a loving parent acts
with its loved child, so radically different from the master-slave relationship
that most every other culture believed was the relationship between the gods
and humanity. He calls Abraham to be his
intimate friend, promising that his descendants will be his chosen people
forever. He “so loved the world, he gave
us his only Son.” His Son gives us his
very body and blood as a sign of God’s everlasting love and real presence in
our lives.
On my good days, when I get
this relationship, it changes my life and changes my relationships with
others. I see my marriage not just as a human
contract between Mary and me, but as a permanent and divine vocation, a model
of the everlasting, unifying love of the Trinity.
I begin to see my fatherhood
not as simply as a temporary responsibility to prepare and launch my children
into adulthood, but as a permanent vocation, a model of the unconditional,
life-giving love of Christ.
I begin to see life not as a
struggle to be number one, but as an imperative to be one: one with my family;
one with my neighbor; one with my enemy; one with the poor; one with the
oppressed; one with the persecuted; one with Jesus Christ.
Furthermore, I understand
that if I ignore this relationship with God while I live on earth, then I will
not value this relationship when I have left earth. I will have damned myself to an eternity
without God – that’s what we call hell.
But when I can let go of my
pride, let go of my need to earn what cannot be earned – the unconditional love
of God – when I can lose myself in a relationship with the all-loving God, then
I am living on the doorstep of heaven.
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Temples
When the Romans destroyed
the Temple in 70 A.D, they expected the Jewish religion to just fade away, but
they failed to reckon with the faithfulness of God to his people. Today, we celebrate the dedication of St.
John Lateran, the mother church of our faith.
It is our only archbasilica! Yet,
if some disaster destroyed St. John Lateran, would anyone think the Catholic
faith would crumble?
But it made sense for the
Romans to think as they did, for it is almost impossible for us to comprehend
how important and vital the temple was to the Jewish people of Jesus’ time.
It was the heart and soul
of the faith. It housed the holy of
holies, the Ark of the Covenant, and was where Yahweh chose to dwell with his
people. It was the only place where a
Jew could offer sacrifice to Yahweh and properly atone for his sins. Tens of thousands of Jews descended on
Jerusalem on each of the major feast days to worship and sacrifice at the
temple.
Ezekiel, writing during the
Babylonian exile with the first temple destroyed, envisions the new temple with
streams flowing from it, making the salt water fresh, and giving life to all
creatures. The vision evokes for us
Genesis 2, and the streams flowing from the Garden of Eden. The temple, in Ezekiel’s vision restores the
peace and original justice of the Garden itself.
With Herod’s extensive renovation
of the temple, it had surpassed the magnificence of Solomon’s original. Outside of Rome, it was perhaps the most
impressive and imposing building in the Mediterranean world. Thus, it was also a point of pride for the
Jewish people, who were, at best, only bit players on the world stage.
The Jewish prophets often
proclaimed the Messiah would restore and perfect the purity of the Temple. Jesus’ prophetic cleansing of the Temple
that we read about this morning, echoing Jeremiah’s denunciations of the desecration
of the Temple in his day, would have addressed this particular mission. But Jesus knows that the Jerusalem Temple, as
all things on earth, could not last. It
was just stones on stones that, one day, would crumble. Rather, the temple on which his followers will
depend is the temple of his body, which even death itself cannot destroy, which
he gives to us anew at each and every celebration of the Mass.
St. Paul extends this
metaphor to make us aware that, by virtue of our baptisms, God dwells in each
of us, and each of our own bodies is now a temple of the Holy Spirit. Considering my own meager body, that’s a
pretty staggering thought!
How can this poor body of
mine possibly house the glory of God?
How can I hold this temple of the Holy Spirit – and the temples of all
those around me – with the same reverence and awe as the Jewish people had for
the temple in Jerusalem. What can or
should I do to make my body and my life holy enough to justify such an honor? Well, that’s a really long, long talk. It’s our call to holiness – be perfect as
your heavenly father is perfect. Spiritual
masters have written thousands of books, billions of words, on this pursuit of
holiness.
But this time of year, I
think of one insight that many of these masters have in common. One wise man said it like this, “God dwells
in two places – in heaven and in a grateful heart.”
Do I see everything about
me as gift, the fruits of God’s unconditional and infinite love?
Or do I jealously cling to
all those things I claim as “mine,” the well-earned fruits of my hard work, my
pious acts, or even my goodness?
St. Ignatius understood
that we all find ourselves in this trap.
He saw that gratitude was an important early step on the road to
holiness. The first stage of the daily
examen was to thank God for all that He had done that day, perhaps even
reaching back and thanking God for all those times he directed and prodded me,
provided for and protected me. You don’t
move forward in the examen until you’ve truly expressed your thanks to God for
his unconditional and infinite love and providence.
Each November, before
Thanksgiving, or whenever I lapse and believe that I am grateful enough, I
re-read Radical Gratitude, by Mary Jo Leddy. It’s a small book, easy to read and re-read
often. It reminds of the
transformational gratitude that should always gild the temple in my heart. It also reminds me that being happy will not lead
to gratitude. Gratitude makes me happy.
From the temple of a
grateful heart, warmed by the appreciation of God’s infinite, unconditional and
eternal love and providence, streams of love, streams of compassion, streams of
generosity, peace and mercy flow out to the world. And like streams flowing from the temple in
Ezekiel’s vision, like the streams flowing from Jesus’ side on the cross, these
streams bring life to the world.
Thank God.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Zacchaeus
I
suppose that I am like many people – when I know that I’ve done something
wrong, I don’t want anyone else to know about it. I’m afraid that people will think less of me
if they know my mistakes. I try to hide
them. Maybe nobody will notice.
Of
course, I become ensnared by my desire to hide my mistake, inevitably creating
more mistakes along the way, forcing me into more hiding and more
disguising. I can tangle webs with the
best of them. It is a vicious cycle and,
to make matters worse, someone ultimately finds out and I end up looking even
worse than if my original mistake had been known. And yet, I find it hard to apologize for my
mistake, to repent for my sin. Most
times, my only true sorrow is that I failed to keep it hidden.
Yet
in Wisdom today, we hear that we need not care if our sins are known, for God
overlooks people’s sins that they might repent. (Wis 11:23) That sounds a bit illogical. God certainly
knows that I’ve sinned, for he sees and knows all things, but he overlooks my
sins. He doesn’t think any worse of me
at all. And he does this precisely so I
might repent for my sins. That makes no
sense at all. If God overlooks my sins,
why should I repent for them? I don’t
get it. Zacchaeus did.
Zacchaeus
was a tax collector who lived in the very wealthy city of Jericho. We presume that he gained his great wealth by
extorting large sums from his fellow Jews.
They would have considered a traitor to his people and his faith, the
very incarnation of sin and evil.
Despite
Zacchaeus great sins, Jesus surprises Zacchaeus with an amazing gift. Jesus overlooks his sins and declares that he
will honor Zacchaeus by spending that day at Zacchaeus’ house. For perhaps the first time in his adult life,
Zacchaeus experiences unconditional love.
He is filled with the great joy that recurs throughout Luke’s
Gospel. The infant in Elizabeth’s womb
“leaps for joy” when the pregnant Mary arrives.
The angels have “tidings of great joy” when Jesus is born. Zacchaeus’ joy reflects the joy of the
shepherd who found his lost sheep, the woman who found her lost coin, the
father who found his lost son, and, most aptly, the angels who rejoice greatly at
the return of one sinner.
This
joy transforms Zacchaeus. He declares
his intent to put right anything he has done wrong. He goes far beyond the mere law in giving
half of his wealth to the poor. No
piddling tithing for him! He returns
four times whatever he may have wrongly taken, twice as much as the law would
have him do…all because Jesus overlooked his sins and showed him God’s great
unconditional love.
Jesus
knows, as the author of Wisdom knew, that unconditional love is the only sure antidote
to sin and evil. As we hear in today’s
passage from Wisdom: “you love all things that are and loathe nothing that you
have made; for what you hated, you would not have fashioned.” (Wis 11:24)
We
are loved not for what we do, but for who we are – creatures of a God who loves
all that he has created; creatures of a God that overlooks our greatest sins,
seeing beyond those sins to the person whom He loves. And when we recognize this truth in our
hearts, when we accept the truth that we can never be worthy of this love, yet
we are still graced by it, this truth breaks the chains of our sins, setting us
free from our enslaving sins and transforming us as it transformed Zacchaeus. We repent and become the loving, joyful,
generous people whom God created us to be.
Transformed
by the unconditional love of God, we will hear Jesus say to us, as he said to
Zacchaeus, “today, salvation has come to this house.” (Lk 19:9)
Friday, November 1, 2013
All Saints
Since the very earliest days
of the Church, Christians have venerated those people who showed heroic
devotion to the faith, to the truth, and to the life and the way that Jesus
taught and embodied. Perhaps our very
first hagiography, or saint-story, is told in chapters six and seven of the
Acts of the Apostles where we read about Stephen, one of the first deacons and
first martyrs for the faith.
Remembering and venerating
the saints is an important part of the Catholic and Orthodox traditions and an
important part of our spiritual growth.
The saints’ lives are edifying—they show us how different people in
different places and different times, sinners just like us, followed Christ and
found themselves with Christ in everlasting glory.
Some people have argued that
a cult of saints is unnecessary, perhaps even sacrilegious. For these people, the only model is Jesus
himself. WWJD is their watchword. Simply consider “what would Jesus do”, act
accordingly, and all will be right in the world. Of course, Jesus is the perfect model, and
WWJD can certainly be a useful discipline.
But if we ignore the saints, or pretend that they are irrelevant, are we
then to suppose that nobody, in the two thousand years since Christ walked this
earth, has ever followed His way? Would
it not be the ultimate hubris to believe that we will be the first successful
disciples, simply because we’ve adopted WWJD as our way of life?
We are mere mortals. We discourage easily. The saints offer us hope that even when we
fail, even when we sin, the Spirit is stronger than us. The Holy Spirit has worked through uncounted
millions of people just like us, helping to bring God’s kingdom to light. These people are part of the Church to this
very day, part of the “communion of saints” that we proclaim our belief in
every Sunday. And the Church has
officially recognized some of these people as “big S” saints. To ignore their stories, to ignore their
friendship, is to walk Jesus’ way with legs shackled, arms tied to our side,
and dark glasses clouding our sight. I
guess it’s possible, but I’d rather not.
There are thousands of saints
that the Church recognizes by name. Of
course, the Church doesn’t “make” saints – only God can do that. However, for the past thousand years or so,
the Church has “canonized” certain people who were believed to have led holy
and virtuous lives. Before then, saints
were declared by acclamation, generally by those people around whom the saint
lived out his or her life here on earth.
Of course, these named saints are only a tiny fraction of those whom we
presume are in heaven.
The fascinating thing about
saints is that they come from all walks of life and from all parts of the
world. There are saints from privileged
backgrounds like St. Thomas More, chancellor to King Henry VIII or England and
St. Katherine Drexel. There are saints
from very humble backgrounds like St. Isidore the Farmer and many of Jesus’
first disciples, poor fishermen from the dusty backwater of Galilee. There are saints from Africa like St. Charles
Lwanga and our diocese’s own patron, St. Augustine of Hippo, saints from North
America like St. Kateri Tekakwitha and St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, and saints from
Japan like St. Paul Miki.
The thousands of saints all
have their unique stories and there is bound to be a saint who experiences may
match quite closely with your own. And
this leads us to a second benefit we gain from our veneration of the
saints. The saints not only model
Christian living for us, but also become prayer partners with us in our times
of need. Again, some have claimed that
Catholics, in praying to saints, are blaspheming God. But we don’t pray to the saints in the sense
that they are replacements or surrogates for God, we pray with the saints just
as we pray with our friends and our neighbors at Mass. We pray with the saints just as St. Paul
prayed with his disciples, just as he asked them to pray with and for him.
Some saints are patrons of
certain causes, perhaps due to some characteristic in their own lives, the
manner in which they died, some trouble they may have endured, or some feat
they may have accomplished. That patron
saint may be a particularly apt prayer partner when faced with particular
situations or challenges.
For example, St. Anthony of
Padua was once teaching about the Psalms at a monastery. Now, Anthony had a hand-copied psalter that he
used in his teaching. Anthony lived in
the early twelfth century, long before the printing press, so books like this
were very scarce and almost impossible to replace. One of the monks in the monastery recognized
the value in this book and stole it and ran off. There was much consternation but Anthony
seemed rather sanguine about the affair.
He simply prayed for the monk.
Soon after, the monk came to his senses and returned to the monastery,
restoring Anthony’s precious book to him and seeking his forgiveness. Today, we call on St. Anthony to pray with us
that we might find some lost object as dear to us as Anthony’s psalter was to
him.
Study the saints, pray with
the saints, for each of us by our baptisms are called to holiness, called to be
saints in this life and in the next.
What better way to learn what we are called to do than to know the
stories of those who have already done it.
What better friends can we have to help us on the way than those who
have tread the path ahead of us?
All holy men and women, pray
for us.
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