Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Mary TV Daily Reflection 3/28/2012

praying at the statue on apparition hill
(c)Mary TV 2011



March 28, 2012

 

Dear Family of Mary!

 

"Dear children! Also today, with joy, I desire to give you my motherly blessing and to call you to prayer. May prayer become a need for you to grow more in holiness every day. Work more on your conversion because you are far away, little children. Thank you for having responded to my call." (March 25, 2012)

 

In this message Our Lady urges us to prayer, to the need for holiness, to the constant necessity to work on our conversion "because you are far away, little children."Shocking! We are far away! I must admit I am a bit uncomfortable with this revelation. But knowing how loving and honest and kind Our Lady is, I can't dismiss her comment. She sees things much more objectively than we do. After all, she looks down from heaven!

 

Only two days after Mother Mary gave us this message, I read a very good explanation as to how we could find ourselves "far away". It is a short meditation written by Blessed John Henry Newman from the March 2012 edition of the Magnificat (on page 389). Blessed Newman gives a very clear description of how we, who think we are close to God, can find ourselves far way:

 

We must consider the force of habit. Conscience at first warns us against sin; but if we disregard it, it soon ceases to upbraid us; and thus sins, once known, in time become secret sins. It seems then (and it is a starling reflection), that the more guilty we are, the less we know it; for the oftener we sin, the less we are distressed at it. I think many of us may, on reflection, recollect instances, in our experience of ourselves, of our gradually forgetting things to be wrong which once shocked us. Such is the force of habit. By it (for instance) men contrive to allow themselves in various kinds of dishonesty. They bring themselves to affirm what is untrue, or what they are not sure is true, in the course of business. They overreach and cheat; and still more are they likely to fall into low and selfish ways without their observing it, and all the while to continue careful in their attendance on the Christian ordinances, and bear about them a form of religion. Or, again, they will live in self-indulgent habits; eat and drink more than is right; display a needless pomp and splendor in their domestic arrangements, without any misgiving; much less do they think of simplicity of manners and abstinence as Christian duties. Now we cannot suppose they always thought their present mode of living to be justifiable, for others are still struck with its impropriety; and what others now feel, doubtless they once felt themselves. But such is the force of habit. So again, to take as a third instance, the duty of stated private prayer; at first it is omitted with compunction, but soon with indifference. But it is not the less a sin because we do not feel it to be such. Habit has made it a secret sin.

 

To think of these things, and to be alarmed, is the first step towards acceptable obedience; to be at ease, is to be unsafe. We must know what the evil of sin is hereafter, if we do not learn it here. God give us all grace to choose the pain of present repentance before the wrath to come! (Blessed John Henry Newman. From Parochial and Plain Sermons. © 1997, Ignatius Press. www.ignatius.com)

 

Let's ask Blessed John Henry Newman to pray for us, that we can turn our alarm at Our Lady's words into deeds of repentance. We have one week of Lent left in which to exert ourselves. Prayer is the answer. We need prayer. We need to grow in holiness.

 

In Jesus, Mary and Joseph!

Cathy Nolan

© Mary TV 2012

 

Posted via email from deaconjohn's posterous

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