Category Archives: Christianity

Why am I here?

When I was little, my mom taught me a little from the old Baltimore Catechism.

1. Who made us?

A. God made us.

2. Who is God?

A. God is the Supreme Being, infinitely perfect, who made all things and keeps them in existence.

3. Why did God make us?

A. God made us to show forth His goodness and to share with us His everlasting happiness in heaven.

4. What must we do to gain the happiness of heaven?

A. To gain the happiness of heaven we must know, love, and serve God in this world.

The newer Catholic Catechism gives a much wordier answer. But to be honest … I’m kinda sorry the RCC stopped using the old Baltimore Catechism.

There’s a lot to be said for memorizing simple things that have profound meaning.

I’m still chewing over those first four things 5 decades later and am still nowhere near to really understanding all the glory, joy and wonder in them.

As for choosing an over-arching guideline for my entire life, I’ve never found anything better than this:

LIFE graphic

Sources:

The Catechism of the Catholic Church

http://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/_INDEX.HTM

The Baltimore Catechism

http://www.catholicity.com/baltimore-catechism/

Comments Off on Why am I here?

Filed under Christianity

Eternal damnation is real

2013_11 Reid Obama laughing now

23 Minutes in Hell

If you find yourself feeling depressing or despairing about the bad men and women ruining our nation, I encourage you to read this man’s book.

23 Minutes In Hell: One Man’s Story About What He Saw, Heard, and Felt in that Place of Torment by Bill Wiese

And remember that Jesus said,

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your heavenly Father, for he makes his sun rise on the bad and the good, and causes rain to fall on the just and the unjust. For if you love those who love you, what recompense will you have? Do not the tax collectors do the same? And if you greet your brothers only, what is unusual about that? Do not the pagans do the same? So be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is perfect.” ~Matthew 5:43-48

Comments Off on Eternal damnation is real

Filed under Christianity

Jonestown: 35 years ago today

Yesterday, Dearest and I were watching a documentary – The Case for Christ – and I just had this huge eye-rolling moment at the number of people on the street saying, “Jesus, so what?”, to which I had to hit pause and spew,

“Good grief! This peasant in the worst backwater in the entire Roman Empire walks around his teensy little country for three years, yapping about this and that, gathering some followers and pissing off the local Powers That Be so much they manipulate the Roman Procurator to put him to death. Then, when His followers insist He was risen from the dead, the Powers That Be make their cult illegal and torture and kill them. … Yet two THOUSAND years later, the whole world still remembers Jesus! Our calendar, most of our major holidays and a good deal of our best art, architecture and music are all based on His life and hundreds of millions of people in every single nation on Earth worship Him and follow His teachings. I mean … think about it. Who today even remembers Jim Jones?”

So imagine my surprise when I logged on to the internet and saw that today is the 35th anniversary of the Jonestown mass suicide! Weird, huh? For the many who do not remember Jim Jones … he was an American who founded a (not Christian) church in the mid-1950s. In 1973, he moved everyone to a commune in Guyana where “total economic and racial and social equality” would be enjoyed by all.

He was such a charismatic leader that he convinced nearly 1,000 people to cut off all ties at home, sign over all assets to the commune, and move to the middle of a jungle in South America to live out his dream. Five years later, he ordered them all to kill themselves and more than 900 of them not only voluntarily drank cyanide mixed into kool-aid, but also fed it to their children.

1978 Jonestown

A 2006 documentary – American Experience: Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple – tries to answer how one man could persuade more than 900 people to drink cyanide.  I haven’t seen it … yet.  It’s next up in my Netflix queue.

Sources:

1 Comment

Filed under Christianity, Movies & Television

Virtue begets virtue. Vice begets vice.

Bail

We can’t stand still spiritually. We are always either growing closer or or more distant from God.

  • The habitual effort to practice a particular virtue blossoms into spontaneous right actions and growth in many virtues.
  • The opposite is true as well. Habitual practice of a single vice produces spontaneous wrong actions and multiple vices.

It doesn’t matter if you’re facing Him or facing away from Him. What matters is which direction you’re moving.

  • Those pious types who say “Lord, Lord” while practicing their vices in secret may be facing God, but they are walking backwards, getting further away from Him every day.

“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven.” Matthew 7:21

Comments Off on Virtue begets virtue. Vice begets vice.

Filed under Christianity

To whine or not to whine

Whenever we encounter trials, we have a choice.

We can either become bitter and hostile toward God.

Or we can respond in the way that allows Him to bring most benefit to us.

He’s all-powerful, so it’s easy to whine.

“How could a loving God allow this to happen to me? He must hate me! I’ll hate him right back!”

But he’s not a torturer any more than

the surgeon who slices you open to cut out disease or the teacher who piles on the homework to get you ready for your exams is a torturer.

He gave you free will, so yes, you can push Him away. And He’ll respect that decision.

It’ll cost you an eternity in Hell, but hey … it is your choice.

The only alternative is to embrace His will for your life, in which case He will see the job of making you perfect through to the end,

regardless of the suffering it may cost you … or Him.

When faced with a trial, instead of focusing on escape, we need to humble ourselves before the Almighty and let Him teach us.

Only then will we have any hope of arriving at that point where the Father can say without reservation that He is well pleased with us.

We can rejoice when we believe God is in control

Sources:

Comments Off on To whine or not to whine

Filed under Christianity

Egypt: Muslims demand protection $ from Christians

2013_09 12 Christians paying protection

6 Comments

by | November 6, 2013 · 12:22 am

What can a Christian accomplish through meditation?

2013_11 02 Pope Francis tweets - Prayer

Meditation can be an important aid to faith that strengthens and matures the human person.

In meditation, a Christian seeks silence so as to experience intimacy with God and to find peace in his presence.

Techniques of meditation that promise to bring about an experience of God, or even the soul’s union with God, are con jobs.

God cannot be compelled to show up by particular methods.

In meditation, a Christian hopes for the sensible experience of his presence, knowing this experience — if it happens — is an undeserved grace, a pure gift from God.

God is sovereign; He communicates himself to us when and how he chooses.

Catholic Catechism section (2720-2724) and other references:

http://www.catholiccrossreference.com/catechism/#!/search/2720-2724

Comments Off on What can a Christian accomplish through meditation?

Filed under Christianity, Pope Francis

He knows my name

“Happiness ultimately never depends on material possessions, or even on success in life. It stems from the inner knowledge that you are who God wants you to be, that you are doing what he wants you to do.”

Holy Hotlines

He knows my name by Maranatha Singers [3:26] < Beautifully restful and uplifting song.

Source for quote:

http://www.mostsacredheart.org/meditations_minute.html

Comments Off on He knows my name

Filed under Christianity

The soul of woman

The soul of woman must therefore be expansive and open to all human beings;

it must be quiet so that no small weak flame will be extinguished by stormy winds;

warm so as not to benumb fragile buds;

clear, so that no vermin will settle in dark corners and recesses;

self-contained, so that no invasions from without can imperil the inner life;

empty of self, in order that extraneous life may have room in it;

finally, mistress of itself and also of its body,

so that the entire person is readily at the disposal of every call.

~ Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross

Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross was born Edith Stein, a German Jew, on October 12, 1891. Her father died when she was very young and she later lost all faith in God. During World War I, she worked as a field nurse. In 1917, she was graduated with a doctorate degree in philosophy, summa cum laude.

Shortly after, she says, “my unbelief collapsed and Christ began to shine his light on me – Christ in the mystery of the Cross.” In 1922, she became a Catholic. She later wrote, “I had given up practising my Jewish religion when I was a 14-year-old girl and did not begin to feel Jewish again until I had returned to God.”

In 1934, she entered a Carmelite convent, making eternal profession in 1938. In 1942, the Nazis arrested and deported her with more than 900 other Jews. She was martyred at Auschwitz, probably on August 9.

St Teresa Benedicta

Teresia Benedicta McCarthy was born in Massachusetts on August 9, 1985. In 1987, after she had ingested 19 times the lethal dose of Tylenol for her age/weight, she was rushed to the ER, then transferred to Massachusetts General in Boston. Specialists there declared her liver had been hopelessly damaged. Without a transplant, she would die.

The family decided to pray to Blessed Teresia Benedicta, aka Edith Stein. On March 24, 1987, doctors in Boston recorded on Benedicta’s medical chart, “This child has made a remarkable recovery.”

The events were rigorously investigated by the Vatican. The Jewish head of pediatrics at Massachusetts General Hospital, one of several medical staff who agreed that they could in no way explain Benedicta’s recovery, testified to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.

With this miracle, the Roman Catholic Church declared there was sufficient proof that God wanted us to know and honor Edith Stein as a Saint. Pope John Paul II officially canonized her October 11, 1998. Benedicta McCarthy attended the ceremony.

Source:

Comments Off on The soul of woman

Filed under Christianity, History

Why praise God?

Pope Francis releases dove

1 Comment

Filed under Christianity