10/15/2024

Quid est veritas

 This article lays out succinctly how we came to this highly anti-Ratzingerian moment in the history of the Church. What we need is a restored ecclesiology.

10/10/2024

The Pretend Church

Oh, what a fisking!

The penitential service “is intended to direct the work of the Synod towards the beginning of a new way of being Church.”

It seems to have forgotten about an older way of being Church, even from just twenty-five years ago. 

I would add: Not forgotten- deliberately eschewed. 

10/07/2024

Spot on

 Those adolescent liberal boomers strike again: 

https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2024/10/05/the-liberal-and-flawed-roots-of-tiresome-synodal-grievances/

9/17/2024

Senseless

Chaput rhymes with 'slap-you' for good reason, as expressed so masterfully here:

We are called Christians because we believe Jesus Christ is God, the second person of the Trinity. From the beginning of our faith, followers of Christ were unique among world religions because they accepted as true Christ’s extraordinary claim that he is God—in part because of his miracles, in part because of his preaching, but ultimately because of his death and bodily resurrection. Christians have also always believed that this reality makes Christianity categorically distinct from all other religions, and in turn requires a total commitment of our lives. (For the Church’s Christology, see: the New Testament, the Council of Nicaea, the Council of Ephesus, the Council of Chalcedon, the Council of Trent, the Second Vatican Council, The Catechism of the Catholic Church, the Vatican’s document Dominus Jesus, which all, among many others, teach clearly the divinity of Christ and his unique role in salvation history.)

Well that's the tricky bit, isn't it? Dominus Iesus is precisely the kind of magisterial teaching from his predecessors that our current pontiff (and an entire generation of liberal dissent) has been slowly trying to undermine, having foamed at the mouth when Ratzinger first published it.

Interesting that Chaput's article showed up alongside this one:

In particular, it states: “The magisterium also judges with authority whether opinions which are present among the people of God, and which may seem to be the sensus fidelium, actually correspond to the truth of the Tradition received from the Apostles” (§77).

At the same time, the document acknowledges that there are historical examples where the sensus fidei—even specifically manifested in the laity—helped the magisterium in the formulation of doctrine (see Chapter One, part 2 and §72). It states: “Sometimes the people of God, and in particular the laity, intuitively felt in which direction the development of doctrine would go, even when theologians and bishops were divided on the issue” (§72). Such historical examples give warrant to the document’s insistence that “the magisterium has to be attentive to the sensus fidelium” (§74), properly understood, of course.

What is important for the purposes of this article is the centrality of the word faith or faithful in the terms sense of the faith or sense of the faithful. Faith is a supernatural virtue by which we believe that which has been revealed by God because it has been revealed by God. Nothing can be a part of a proper and authentic sensus fidei that is contrary to the deposit of faith. Anyone advocating the rejection of dogma or any other infallible teaching on faith and morals is not exhibiting a true sense of the faith. Unfortunately, despite this fact, there are Catholics who appeal to the term sensus fidei or sensus fidelium to do precisely that. They equate their sentiments and desires—which not coincidentally happen to correspond to debased elements of our society—with the working of the Holy Spirit to fundamentally change the Church into their image.

Having been raised among liberal dissent, I am only too familiar with this false image of the sensus fidei that pervades their entire ethos and its misapplication of Vatican II.

Chaput was generous when he observed:

The bishop of Rome is the spiritual and institutional head of the Catholic Church worldwide. This means, among other things, that he has the duty to teach the faith clearly and preach it evangelically. Loose comments can only confuse. Yet, too often, confusion infects and undermines the good will of this pontificate.

Not only do we have a pope who seems not to know what is a pope, he seems not to know what even is a Christian.

Christians hold that Jesus alone is the path to God. To suggest, imply, or allow others to infer otherwise is a failure to love because genuine love always wills the good of the other, and the good of all people is to know and love Jesus Christ, and through him the Father who created us.

Had he ever read his predecessor's writings with an open heart, he may have understood this. But the opponents of Benedict XVI never read his theology; they simply mortally opposed it and made a cariacature of it. I mean, Pope Francis only had to read the opening paragraph:

Charity in truth, to which Jesus Christ bore witness by his earthly life and especially by his death and resurrection, is the principal driving force behind the authentic development of every person and of all humanity. Love — caritas — is an extraordinary force which leads people to opt for courageous and generous engagement in the field of justice and peace. It is a force that has its origin in God, Eternal Love and Absolute Truth. Each person finds his good by adherence to God's plan for him, in order to realize it fully: in this plan, he finds his truth, and through adherence to this truth he becomes free (cf. Jn 8:32). To defend the truth, to articulate it with humility and conviction, and to bear witness to it in life are therefore exacting and indispensable forms of charity. Charity, in fact, “rejoices in the truth” (1 Cor 13:6). All people feel the interior impulse to love authentically: love and truth never abandon them completely, because these are the vocation planted by God in the heart and mind of every human person. The search for love and truth is purified and liberated by Jesus Christ from the impoverishment that our humanity brings to it, and he reveals to us in all its fullness the initiative of love and the plan for true life that God has prepared for us. In Christ, charity in truth becomes the Face of his Person, a vocation for us to love our brothers and sisters in the truth of his plan. Indeed, he himself is the Truth (cf. Jn 14:6).

Larry Chapp is more charitable than I: 

https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2024/09/16/the-many-and-sometimes-puzzling-paths-of-pope-francis/

Pearls again!!

First in the account of Juan Diego, this time from St. Faustina:

Today I saw the Crucified Lord Jesus. Precious pearls and diamonds were pouring forth from the wound in His Heart. I saw how a multitude of souls was gathering these gifts, but there was one soul who was closest to His Heart and she, knowing the greatness of these gifts, was gathering them with liberality, not only for herself, but for others as well. The Savior said to me, "Behold, the treasures of grace that flow down upon souls, but not all souls know how to take advantage of My generosity" (Diary, 1687).

9/09/2024

Joy in Suffering

excellent reflection on Death as a mysterious alchemy of love and pain, from Katherine Bennett at Catholic Herald:

With life reduced to the material, and purpose replaced with comfort, one conclusion is to avoid the subject altogether. If there can be no value in suffering, or meaning in death, why would anyone want to talk about it, let alone see it? 

Why would anyone choose to give their life for a stranger as St Maximillian Kolbe did, choose to give birth to a disabled child, or to stay alive following a fatal diagnosis? The culture of death is the inevitable consequence of a society absent from Christ.

But as Catholics we know that life is not the result of blind chance, a bunch of cells hanging around waiting to return to the oblivion whence they arose.

We also know that death is an aberration, the result of the Fall; it was not meant to be this way. It is our recognition that God sent His Son into our brokenness – “by His wounds we are healed.” This means we can hold two things to be true at the same time. We experience the sadness of suffering and loss, but we do so with the joy of knowing that the battle has been won.

“O death, where is thy victory? O grave, where is thy sting?” (1 Cor 15:55-56). Christ’s death and resurrection gives  sense to the senselessness, brings hope in despair, joy in pain and life that will never end. Only Christians can truly understand that there is value in suffering and meaning in death, such that we can – in my best Dolly Parton – “laugh through the tears”.

“I do not wish you suffering” Peter Kreeft writes in a letter to his children – before adding an important caveat. “I wish you joy. But I wish you also the strange and beautiful sweetness of joy in suffering. It can come only from a suffering that comes from love and trust, a suffering that you know is God’s will for you and that you therefore accept in the simple trust that (1) He loves you and therefore wishes only your deepest joy, (2) that He knows exactly what He is doing and exactly what you need, and (3) that He is in control of every atom in the universe He created.

“When you know this, and when you turn to what you know, instead of ignoring it, God will sometimes give you the grace of a supernatural joy, a joy that seems to be irrational, a joy without a cause, an utterly unexpected and unexplainable gift.”

...

In his apostolic letter Salvifici Doloris (1984) Pope St John Paul II explores the Christian meaning of human suffering. In it he writes:

“As a result of Christ’s salvific work, man exists on earth with the hope of eternal life and holiness. And even though the victory over sin and death achieved by Christ in His Cross and Resurrection does not abolish temporal suffering from human life, nor free from suffering the whole historical dimension of human existence, it nevertheless throws a new light upon this dimension and upon every suffering: the light of salvation.

“Man ‘perishes’ when he loses ‘eternal life’. The opposite of salvation is not, therefore, only temporal suffering, any kind of suffering, but the definitive suffering: the loss of eternal life, being rejected by God, damnation.

“The only-begotten Son was given to humanity primarily to protect man against this definitive evil and against definitive suffering. In His salvific mission, the Son must therefore strike evil right at its transcendental roots from which it develops in human history.

“These transcendental roots of evil are grounded in sin and death: for they are at the basis of the loss of eternal life.”

8/30/2024

The role of a husband

https://life-craft.org/a-husbands-place-forging-peace-in-the-home/

Speaking of the order we must all put in our own lives—in which order the love of God is first and the root of all else—Augustine emphasizes how for a married man there is this immediate implication: “He ought to make this endeavor in behalf of his wife, his children, his household, all within his reach…” He proceeds to hammer this home: “Primarily, therefore, his own household are his care, for the law of nature and of society gives him readier access to them and greater opportunity of serving them.”

The word ‘serving’ here is important, as it contextualizes Augustine’s use of the word ‘ruling’ for how the husband and father seeks to put right order into life in the home.

While this topic calls for extensive and careful consideration, here two things especially strike me. First, a husband’s care and so also ruling of others begins in his putting right order into his own affections and actions, starting in his relationship with God. Indeed, Augustine strikingly says ‘this endeavor’ is ‘in behalf’ of his loved ones. A man’s effort in his relationship with the Lord is the foundation of his relating well to his wife and children.

Second, by nature a married man’s first focus is how he can take care of his household. This implies that there is much that demands his ‘ordering.’ Seemingly countless disparate things must be woven together. Household life is like a garden; it is fundamentally a matter of arranging, prioritizing, and also weeding. Constantly.

St. Margaret, pray for us!

 A ribald hagiography from The Pillar for one of today's saints:

In line with English legal practice at the time, Margaret was laid atop sharp stones under a wooden platform, upon which weights were piled until she pled either guilty or not guilty, or she was crushed to death. She chose death.

Of course, had she pled “not guilty” I wouldn’t have fancied her chances for mounting a successful defense — she could hardly deny being Catholic, and they had found the priest holes in her house. And a guilty plea would have meant (equally) certain execution.

But by refusing to plead one way or another, she couldn’t be convicted, so the family home and assets couldn’t be seized, and her children and husband were spared (potentially self-incriminating) interrogation under oath during her trial.

I cannot say for sure if I admire most her witness of faith, her maternal concern for her family, or her faultless command of procedural law — but the combination of all three is surely saintly.

Her story is also, by the way, historically instructive. The absurd myth of the Spanish Inquisition as a bloodsoaked torture fest, with dank dungeons full of prelates with red hot pokers, is and always has been an Elizabethan invention and naked exercise in projection by Bloody Bess’s royal court.

St. Margaret’s treatment under English law was neither especially uncommon nor illegal; no such conduct existed in the canonical system. 

Some people would argue, in fact, that the Spanish Inquisition was more enlightened than any other European legal system of its time — and more than most for several centuries to come

How’s that for unexpected?

7/27/2024

for Healing and Repentance

One of the most celebrated parts of the Eucharistic Congress was this Litany:

Breathe in the Holy Spirit...Come, Holy Spirit
Breathe out negativity
Breathe in the Holy Spirit...Come, Holy Spirit
Breathe out all that is not of Him
Notice your heartbeat
Each heartbeat is a gift
God wants you
He made you.
He knit you together with love, with His own hands in your mother’s womb
You are a masterpiece of His loving creativity
He has chosen you
He sees you
He gazes on you with love
He delights in you

Jesus, I believe in you.
Jesus, I believe in your Real Presence in the Eucharist.
Jesus, I believe you are here with me.
Jesus, I believe you are in my heart.
Jesus, I believe in your love for me.
Jesus, I believe your love is greater than every sin.
Jesus, I believe your love is greater than all evil.
Jesus, I believe your love can free me from my sin.

Let’s practice the response several times: Jesus, heal my heart with Your love
For the times I’ve felt abandoned...
For the times I’ve been betrayed...
For the times I’ve been rejected...
For the times I’ve been forgotten...
For the times I’ve been disappointed...
For the times I’ve been let down by the Church...
For the times I’ve been lonely...
For the times I’ve been desperate...
For the times I’ve been lost...
For the times I’ve been dejected...
For the times I’ve been used...
For the times I’ve been neglected...
For the times I’ve been starved for love...
For the times I’ve been deprived of affirmation...
For the times I’ve lost my my way...
For the times I’ve gone astray...
For the times I’ve made the wrong choice...

Let’s practice the response several times: Jesus, come close to me.
Whenever I feel unseen...
Whenever I feel ignored...
Whenever I feel unimportant...
Whenever I feel useless...
Whenever I feel alone...
Whenever I feel abandoned...
Whenever I feel like it would be better if I didn’t exist...
Whenever I feel misunderstood...
Whenever I feel used...
Whenever I feel forgotten...
Whenever I feel angry...
Whenever I feel anxious...
Whenever I feel depressed...
Whenever I feel envious...
Whenever I feel lustful...
Whenever I feel afraid...

Let’s practice the response several times: Please forgive me, Jesus
For the times I’ve used others...
For the times I’ve failed to see...
For the times I’ve hardened my heart to a person in need...
For the times I’ve failed to do the right thing...
For the times I’ve given in to peer pressure...
For the times I’ve lied when someone needed me to tell the truth...
For the times I’ve looked away when someone needed my help...
For the times I’ve closed my ears to the cries of the helpless...
For the times I’ve chosen comfort over courage...
For the times I’ve turned my back on someone who was hurting...
For the times I’ve ignored my feelings...
For the times I’ve silenced the cry of my heart...
For the times I haven’t been God’s mercy for others...
For the times I’ve invalidated my own feelings...
For the times I’ve believed the lies of others...
For the times I’ve repeated the lies of others...
For the times I’ve suppressed righteous anger...
For the times I’ve given up in despair...
For the times I’ve failed to share You with someone who needed Him...
For the times I’ve wrongly hid my faith from others...
For the times I’ve misrepresented You in my words and actions...
For the times I’ve caused scandal by my words or actions...
For the times I’ve brought hatred instead of love...
For the times I’ve brought division instead of peace...
For the times I’ve brought gossip instead of charity...
For the times I’ve torn down when I could have built up...

Let’s practice the response several times: Jesus, help me to believe
When I doubt the power of God’s love...
When I doubt God’s love for me...
When I struggle to trust...
When I doubt that I am worthy of love...
When I doubt that I have a place in anyone’s heart...
When I wonder if I am enough...
When I doubt I have what it takes...
When I feel helpless...
When I feel useless...
When I doubt that I have anything to offer...
When I doubt that I can make a change...
When I doubt that my efforts matter...
When I feel hopeless...
When I want to give up on my neighbor...
When I want to give up on my enemy...
When I want to give up on the Church...
When I want to give up on myself...
When I want to give up on God...

Jesus I need you.
Jesus I trust in you.
Jesus I love you.
Jesus, meek and humble of heart,
Make my heart like unto yours.

Let us pray.
Lord Jesus Christ, You are the Good Shepherd who rescues the lost. You are the Divine
Physician who heals the sick. You are the Savior Who washes away our sin in your Blood. You
are the Beloved Son who shares your sonship with us along with the love of the Father. We
know that even if we do not feel it, you will continue this work of healing in our hearts. We trust
that you love us and desire our wholeness and flourishing. Fill each of our hearts as we worship
you and receive You in all your love in this Holy Eucharist. We make this prayer in your Name,
Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.

7/24/2024

Pearls!

And then Juan Diego climbed the little hill, and when he reached the top, he marveled at how many flowers were spread out there, their blossoms were open, flowers of every kind, lovely and beautiful, like those of Castille, when it was not yet their season because it was when the frost was worst. The flowers were giving off an extremely soft fragrance, like precious pearls, as if filled with the night’s dew. Right away he began to cut them, gathered them all and put them in the hollow of his tilma. The top of the little hill was certainly not a place in which any flowers grew, because it was rocky, there were burs, thorny plants, prickly pear, and an abundance of mesquite bushes. And though some small grasses might grow, it was then the month of December, in which the ice eats everything up and destroys it. (Nican Mopohua, no. 127-133)

My daughters are both named from margarita, which means "pearl" and I never noticed that detail in the appartition account until now. How sweet!

Well, if it's just a cymbal

Amy Welborn highlights a quote that speaks of the Land of Grief:

Also – we always focus on the “to hell with it” part, but to me, the last part of O’Connor’s telling is just as powerful.

….this is all I will ever be able to say about it, outside a story…

Rereading that letter just now, I was struck hard by the succinct truth of another sentence, her description of another encounter, a phrasing that encapsulates not only the worldview of so many of her characters – before they are struck by grace, that is – and, well, us, right?

Most of them live in a world God never made.

You could take that in different ways: In their view, the existence of the world has nothing to do with God…or the life they lead – their priorities, the structures of their lives – are human, skewed creations, glittering and entertaining Towers of Babel?

It reinforces for me a sentiment that dogs me tirelessly, that I no longer want to live in this world, and to some degree, I never really have. It holds no more lustre. 

7/18/2024

St. Louis the Widower

from The Register

After the death of his wife, Louis lived on to raise his daughters, moving them to Lisieux to be near relatives. He found refuge in the joys of his family life, while remembering the hours he spent holding his dying, suffering wife in his arms.

“Everything which I have seen is grand, but it is still the beauty of the earth, and one’s heart remains unsatisfied until it beholds the joy of the infinite beauty that is God. We shall soon have the joy of being together again. It is the beauty of family life that comes nearest to Heaven.” (Rev. Fr. Stéphane-Joseph Piat, O.F.M., Story of a Family, p. 315)

As a widower, Louis spent much of his day in prayer and reading in his room in the attic that overlooked the garden which he tended himself. He kept up his habit of daily Mass and frequent Communion, and loved his afternoon walk with Thérèse. In the evening, he would read aloud and discuss from spiritual works other writings with his daughters.

from the Irish Carmelites:

Death of Zélie

In December 1876, when Thérèse was three, Zélie Martin discovered that the ‘fibrous tumour’ in her breast was inoperable. Marie, Pauline and Léonie accompanied their ill mother to Lourdes the following June and Zélie died on August 28th 1877, at the age of 46. Having consulted his older daughters, Louis decided in November 1877 to move the family to Lisieux, in Normandy, in order to be near his brother-in-law, Isidore Guerin, who ran a pharmacy there. Thérèse became very attached to her father after her mother’s death, and it was through him that she first became aware of the Carmelites: “Each afternoon I went with him for a walk and made a visit to the Blessed Sacrament in one or other of the churches. It was in this way that I first saw the chapel of our Carmel: ‘Look, little Queen,’ my father said, ‘behind that grating there are holy nuns who are praying to Almighty God’ … those were supremely happy days when my dear ‘King’, as I called him, went fishing and took me with him. Sometimes I tried my hand with a small rod, but more often I preferred to sit on the grass at some little distance. My reflections would then become really deep and without knowing what meditation meant, my soul was absorbed in prayer … earth seemed a land of exile and I dreamed of heaven.”

Illness and Death of Louis

Thérèse entered the Carmel in Lisieux on April 9th 1888, at the age of 15. Her sister Marie made her final profession in that Carmel about six weeks later, on May 22nd and, about a month later, their father, Louis, went missing and was only found four days later in Le Havre, suffering from amnesia because of a cerebral arteriosclerosis. As her father’s mental health declined, Thérèse completed her postulancy, taking the same Carmelite habit as her elder sisters, Marie and Pauline, on January 10th 1889. A month after attending the first profession of Thérèse, Louis Martin, at the age of 65, was committed to the Bon-Sauveur private mental asylum in Caen, where he was to remain for over three years. When Louis left the asylum in Caen in May 1892, the lease on Les Buissonnets had expired and he went to live on the estate of his in-laws, the Guérins, at La Musse, near Evreux. He was paralyzed and had difficulty speaking and he died two years later, on July 29th 1894, at the age of 71.

_________________________________
When a catastrophe shakes our lives and our surroundings, everything may seem disproportionate and unfair.  But whatever happens, let us remain in the just judgment, the right state of soul. Always have an attitude of listening to the other. Let us keep intact our ability to give, to offer, even if God seems to take back what God seemed to give in a mysterious relationship of the heart. The offering of ourselves should be our ideal for life, supported by Charity, the great theological virtue. Louis and Zelie Martin gave everything. They offered everything without reservation, and sowed in the hope of reaping their harvest in the heavenly kingdom. Are we able to sow and harvest, to wait with patience and with humility? Agree to remain as a little child in the hand of the Father. Are you not already accepting His blessing? https://www.louisandzeliemartin.org/novena-to-martin-spouses-3

Let us not be tempted to escape, to retreat, to become bitter in a struggle against what appears to be unfair. Our pain should be shared with others, offered up at any time, but it is really beyond our earthly comprehension. For beyond all suffering emerges acceptance of grace, of recognizing ourselves as children of God in Jesus Christ, and, therefore, to be recognized as sons and daughters of God. If we cannot remember,  let the tears come, because they are always nourishing and are the fruit of the Spirit. Any form of desire without suffering can be understood as an illusion of love. The suffering experienced and accepted by the great Saints is a school for everyone, but we never consider suffering as an end in itself. If our weakness is our strength, compassion at the foot of the cross no longer appears as a weakness, but as an expectation, a silent hope.https://www.louisandzeliemartin.org/novena-to-martin-spouses-5

https://www.louisandzeliemartin.org/a-novena-to-blessed-louis-and-zelie-martin

7/12/2024

St. Louis the Widower

I am discovering several sweet parallels between the story of Louis & Zelie and my own story of being in love with Amy. 

For example, they fell in love on a bridge, and Amy and I had our first kiss on a bridge:

These two craftsmen, the clock-maker and the lace-maker, lived in different parishes, and their families were not acquainted. The two did not know one another. They waited. How they met one fine day on St. Leonard’s bridge, like Joachim and Anne at the Golden Gate; how he made way for her, and she passed him; how they looked at one another; how Zélie recognized unerringly that this was the companion intended for her by God: all this is a secret that Heaven has kept well.We only know that there was mutual understanding and delight, that the families met, and that the two were married.  https://catholicexchange.com/sts-louis-zelie-martin-holiness-marriage-endurance/

Amy and I taught the importance of trustful surrender in our marriage preps for engaged couples, and the Martins abided fully in that teaching: 

Louis and his wife surrendered so well that in the face of great suffering, they uttered in union Mary’s Fiat. In the space of three years, Louis would bury four of his children... In the face of great sorrow, Louis, instead of curling up in isolation, stepped forward in courage to be the pillar of support to his wife and his family. Providing the comfort, strength and assurance they needed to tide through the rough waves. He always directed them to God and assured them that God was with them through their sorrows and had a glorious plan for them.https://virtueofwisdom-com.medium.com/the-extraordinary-in-the-ordinary-st-louis-martin-78ccc4963009

In their home on the Rue Saint-Blaise, he would put aside his career to support her work, and in Alpena, I became stay-at-home dad so that Amy could be the breadwinner. 

After becoming a widower, Louis continued to husband in their domestic church: 

Yet his feminine side was well developed. When he was left a single parent, he became both father and mother to his daughters, who said “our father’s affectionate heart was enriched with a truly maternal love for us.” Many days he escorted the girls to and from school, listening patiently to the accounts of their days. Every evening he joined them after supper in their little salon, making toys for them, singing to them, telling them stories, reciting poems, and playing games before family prayers.  " I am the Bobillon [that is, tender and kindly] with my children," he would say. https://www.louisandzeliemartin.org/blessed-louis-and-zelie-martin-blog/2009/6/20/blessed-louis-martin-the-incomparable-father-of-st-therese-o.html

Louis, also a third child, had at first discerned a vocation to the religious life of a monk, as did I, and had to become "resigned to disappointment," a feeling very familiar to me when trying to discern God's path for my life. I certainly didn't expect to be raising four children on my own. How can I hope to live as holy a life as he did? Detachment:

Louis firmly believed that everything in his life was a product of God’s grace. He knew that God, far from being a detached, angry and distant party, was a God who watched over him and his family with love. Together with his wife, he acknowledged that it was God’s hand in the great graces of their lives: Their success in work and family. Whenever a serious decision proved to be providentially judicious, they thanked God, knowing that He had been inspiring and guiding them. God was too close to not be interested in them.

However, following his successes, he knew full well of the allure of idolatry that worldly success could bring. Thus, in the spirit of asceticism, to be more perfectly in union with Christ, he chose simple, discreet but firm asceticism as a means of detachment.

He restricted himself from smoking, drinking between meals, and moving closer to the fire unless necessary. In his travels, he always chose third class and ate poor quality bread that was generally meant for the poor. These simple sacrifices, although are not the ends in themselves, provided St Louis with a detachment from material things.

Amy and I were only married 15 years, and we had been best friends for 8 years prior. Our time united in this life was short, and Amy passed in her early 40s, as did Zelie. I will be praying the Novena in honor of St. Louis Martin, my heroic example of being a holy widower:

At age 45, Zelie developed breast cancer. She continued to trust in God as she suffered, despite feeling reluctant to leave her family behind. She eventually died from the disease, when she and Louis had been married for nineteen years. Louis continued on alone in the task of raising his children to be holy, staying faithful himself and remaining thankful that God had given him nineteen years of joy with Zelie.Saints Louis and Zelie Martin’s Feast Day: July 12

Read more at: https://www.praymorenovenas.com/saints-louis-and-zelie-martin-novena

“If the Good Lord wants to heal me, I will be very happy, because deep down, I want to live; it costs me to leave my husband and my children. But on the other hand, I say to myself: if I do not get well, it is because it will perhaps be more useful for them to go away ”-ZELIE MARTIN

https://www.therese-de-lisieux.catholique.fr/en/lhistoire/histoire-louis-zelie/



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