Saturday, First Week of Lent

tavolozza_architetto_fra_01

“A spirit of penance keeps us from becoming too attached to the vast imaginative blueprints we have made for our future projects, where we have already foreseen our master strokes and brilliant successes. What joy we give to God when we are happy to lay aside our third‑rate painting efforts and let him put in the features and colors of his choice!”             ~St. Josemaria Escriva (Friends of God, #138)

Friday, 1st Week of Lent

sheen

“Lenten practices of giving up pleasures are good reminders that the purpose of life is not pleasure. The purpose of life is to attain to perfect life, all truth and undying ecstatic love – which is the definition of God. In pursuing that goal we find happiness. Pleasure is not the purpose of anything; pleasure is a by-product resulting from doing something that is good. One of the best ways to get happiness and pleasure out of life is to ask ourselves, ‘How can I please God?’ and, ‘Why am I not better?’ It is the pleasure-seeker who is bored, for all pleasures diminish with repetition.” ~ Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen

Be Not Afraid

“Dear friends, may no adversity paralyze you. Be afraid neither of the world, nor of the future, nor of your weakness. The Lord has allowed you to live in this moment of history so that, by your faith, his name will continue to resound throughout the world.” ~Pope Benedict XVI, Prayer Vigil With Young People, Madrid 2011

The Power of Intercessory Prayer

An essay from a friend of Little Portion Hermitage.

The Power of Intercessory Prayer

“Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?” 

Jesus replied, “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ All the Law and the prophets hang on these two commandments.” (Matthew 22:36-40)

Love the Lord your God, and love your neighbor as yourself. How often have we heard this said – from friends and neighbors, family members and priests, in church and elsewhere? Many of us can recall this passage in Scripture by heart, if prompted. Yet, seldom do we deeply reflect on what this means. What, truly, is Our Lord commanding us to do here?

Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength. Yes, this we fervently strive to do all the days of our lives. But listen closely to Christ’s words: “And the second is like it.” The second commandment—to love your neighbor as yourself—is “like it.” Jesus correlates love for God with love for neighbor.

Maybe this reminds us of another passage of Scripture? “Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to Me.” (Matthew 25: 40) You did it to me. Mother Teresa used to repeat this phrase, pointing at her fingers one by one as she recited each word. You did it to Me. Just as Mother Teresa served and adored the presence of Jesus in the “distressing disguise of the poor,” so too are we called to serve Jesus in and through one another. These words—“you did it to Me”—are powerful, not just because they convey a need to put faith into living action, but also because they teach us that when we serve others, we are serving Jesus Himself.

Thus, it naturally follows that our love for God is measured in our love for others. In fact, Christ’s words heighten the intensity of this statement: our love for God is measured in our love for the least of these. Who are the “least of these?” As Christ says, these are the hungry, the thirsty, the stranger, the naked, the sick, and the prisoner—but love goes beyond mere physical needs. Maybe the “least of these” is a searching soul, hungry for Truth. Or a divorced couple, whose trials and tribulations have left them with an insatiable thirst for authentic love. It is a friend, estranged after a conflict, in need of forgiveness and reconciliation. It is the young woman, left naked and vulnerable from the culture’s objectification, who needs to be clothed with dignity. It is an elderly man, sick and living alone, desperate for a joyful presence. It is the downhearted and discouraged, imprisoned within their own minds, who need to be shown the Light of Christ. The hungry, the thirsty, the stranger, the naked, the sick, the prisoner—we see them everywhere, don’t we?

Aside from corporal works of mercy, there is a distinctly concrete way that we can love our neighbor as ourselves and serve the least of these. Prayer. It sounds so simple, and yet, intercessory prayer is one of the greatest gifts that we can give another. In our prayer, we seek personal transformation, giving ourselves over wholly to God, entrusting to Him the entirety of our lives; in prayer, we can also seek the transformation of the whole world, offering up the sufferings and needs of God’s people, entrusting everything to Him for the work of salvation.

Our pilgrimage to Heaven is not one that we partake on our own; rather, we are called to journey as the Church, as the Body of Christ, one in community. We build one another up in the Faith, walking alongside each other on this pilgrimage, carrying one another, caring for one another, supporting and sustaining one another. We can begin to do this through prayer.

We know that “the prayer of a righteous man has great power in its effects” (James 5:16); by entrusting our petitions and the petitions of others into the hands of Christ—the most righteous of all men, mediator between humanity and God—we are assured that our cries will not fall upon deaf ears.

When we pray for one another, we draw closer to the unity that God envisioned for His Church. In selfless love, we take the burden of other’s suffering upon ourselves and lift it up to Our Lord for relief and healing. Likewise, when we share our needs and desires with others for prayer, we allow ourselves to become vulnerable in humility and experience God’s love through the care and concern of another.

Prayer sustains us, supports us, gives us the strength to continue this pilgrimage together to Eternal Life—difficult and strenuous, though, at times it might be. When we permit others to pray for our needs, and when we in turn pray for theirs, we tighten our bond as community. Our sight moves from an inward, self-seeking glance concerned solely with personal sanctification to a gaze of love into the eyes of the other—and through that person, into the eyes of Christ.

Let us pray—for the needs, intentions, and hopes of the world—by first looking around ourselves. Who are the least of these in my life? For whom can I pray? Who can I surround with love and build up in prayer so that they, too, may continue on this spiritual journey to Heaven with strength and grace?

Yes, Christ taught us well; for if we love the Lord our God with all our heart, mind, and soul, we cannot help but love our neighbor—love the least of these—in equal proportion. 

===

Please prayerfully consider how you can support the mission and ministry of Little Portion Hermitage, which relies solely upon Divine Providence coming through the spiritual, material and financial contributions of the People of God for its continued existence.

Tuesday of Lent 1

st_therese

“At last I have found my calling!

My calling is love!”

~St. Therese of Lisieux

Monday of Lent 1

Gerald_G_Boy_Driving_Car_Cartoon
“God made us, invented us as a man invents an engine. A car is made to run on gasoline, and it would not run properly on anything else. Now God designed the human machine to run on Himself. He Himself is the fuel our spirits were designed to burn, or the food our spirits were designed to feed on. There is no other. That is why it is just no good asking God to make us happy in our own way without bothering about religion. God cannot give us a happiness and peace part from Himself, because it is not there. There is no such thing.” ~C.S. Lewis

 

Christ Has Redeemed The Whole World

sanfrancisco

“We adore you, Christ, here and in all your churches

throughout the whole world, and we bless you because by

your holy cross you have redeemed the world.”

~St. Francis of Assisi

REPENT

GUWG-Repent

“Christianity tells people to repent and promises them forgiveness. It therefore has nothing (so far as I know) to say to people who do not know they have done anything to repent of and who do not feel that they need any forgiveness. It is after you have realized that there is a real Moral Law, and a Power behind the Law, and that you have broken that law and put yourself wrong with that power—it is after all this, and not a moment sooner, that Christianity begins to talk.” ~C. S. Lewis

Seek The Cross

st-john-of-the-cross1

Whoever does not seek the cross of Christ doesn’t seek the glory of Christ.

~St. John of the Cross

Ash Wednesday

“In essence, Lent is a journey into solitude;
into having nothing, into nakedness and
poverty of spirit . . . with the hope that we
might be given the space and freedom and the
undirected homeliness of everyday life . . . to
discover for ourselves that wilderness where
Christ in his poverty and nakedness and need
learned how to pray to his Father ….
 
The point of our lives is not in the theories
we entertain or the saints we admire or the
opinions that we have honed to razor sharpness,
but rather in the living itself, in the strange process of
being drawn through an unspectacular, homely life into
an inner solitude, a wilderness and poverty where
Christ has been waiting for us all along.”