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Showing posts from March, 2019

Setting the Record Straight - The Cloud Of Unknowing - 3/23/19

Another Lenten reading. This stunning treasure from an anonymous monk in the14th century has been wildly popular since it first appeared. When you read it, the terse and artless writing sounds new, as if it was written tomorrow. If you are a contemplative Catholic and have not known of it before you must encounter it now for this an essential work for contemplatives. “The Cloud of Unknowing” tells of a way to contemplate God, not only when we receive the Eucharist, or kneel in silence in the Adoration Chapel, but in each moment in our life’s stream of tiny moments.

Setting the Record Straight - More Lenten reflections from the Desert Fathers - 3/16/19

Listen to a few little stories and thoughts the Desert Fathers and Mothers. These early Catholic ascetics entered into solitude first of all to meet our Lord and to be with Him and Him alone. They discovered that only with a single-minded attention to Christ were they able to give up the victimizing compulsions of the world and face their own true natures. Sometimes they found humility.

Setting the Record Straight - Lenten Reflections from The Philokalia - 3/11/19

A treasure. Quiet reflections for Lent from The Philokalia. Next to the Bible itself The Philokalia is the most revered  literary source for spiritual guidance for the Eastern Catholics. Since much of it had its source in the early centuries when all Catholics were united under the Pope, It should be better known by all Catholics.

Setting the Record Straight - Chivalry - 3/11/19

Walk back with us into the Age of King Arthur.  Chivalry was one of the glorious effects of Christ’s principles conveyed through his Catholic church. In our jaded age we find it hard to understand how warriors could have been so noble. The Catholic knight embodied valor and gentleness in a way that  protected and empowered women and fully enacted Saint Augustine’s concept of Just War. The Catholic Knight was devout thus unlike the portrayals of him in modern media. His virtues were incredible courage, loyalty, and generosity. Nothing else in history is comparable. His duties included daily Mass and fasting. He swore fidelity to the Church, obedience, and chastity. He was a warrior who displayed courtesy, humility, and beneficence.

Setting the Record Straight - The Roots and Flowers of Chivalry - 3/2/19

Listen to the thoughts of the Desert Father and Mothers,  and you will find a prescription for a  truly Catholic life. These Desert Fathers and Mothers, who lived in the first centuries AD,  are the spiritual precursors, and, in a way, they are parents of the  contemplative aspects of the Chivalry Code of the Catholic Knights. These Monk-Knights also sought humility. They were ascetics  who fasted and avoided vain  possessions. Some took vows of silence. The magnificent Catholic knights were warriors as well as monks who  took to heart the words of James Epistle that faith without works is dead. They were true soldiers of Christ, not of any earthly kingdom or state.