A Saint is one that does something of heroic virtue - it is above and beyond what is expected of everyday people and what is necessary to get into Heaven. This is why they are a Canonized Saint.
Holding everyone up to these standards is presumptious and a matter of pride or just scupulous. Either way it is a problem that needs to be dealt with.
Saints are a good example for living but we should not look to martyr ourselves unless it is necessary.
Hello Joanofarc,
Sorry, I am just catching up on posts here. This one was from a while back and referred to St. Monica being an example for us. I don’t think that St. Monica “looked to martyr herself.” I believe that she found herself in a very difficult marriage and simply desired to honor her vows and imitate her Lord.
Those of us who are abandoned certainly did not or do not “look to martyr ourselves.” Remaining faithful to our vows and our spouses even when they do not remain faithful to us is not “looking to martyr ourselves.” It is simply recognizing, "Hey, my Lord, Jesus Christ, loves
me this way. He forgives me whenever I choose to repent. And when *I *repent and seek reconciliation with
Him,
He is always willing to welcome the prodigal
me into a loving embrace. I don’t believe that the spouse who chooses to imitate this love and forgiveness for her spouse is “looking to martyr herself.”
Rather, she is looking, like St. Monica did, to honor her vows and imitate her Lord, Jesus Christ. Sadly, the martyrdom that results is often times very painful. But, as St. Mother Teresa said, …
“In light of heaven, the worst suffering on earth, a life full of the most atrocious tortures on earth, will be seen to be no more serious than one night in an inconvenient hotel.”
Now, if you want to try to say, “Hey, that St. Monica, you know, God would have allowed her into Heaven even if she had told her husband to go take a leap off one of those Medjera mountains. Even if she had told her husband that she been mentally abused by him for too long and is not going to take it any more. Even if she had said that she was going to seek an annulment based on the fact that she was young and imature and she never really even
chose that husband anyway. She gave him 3 years and 3 months and 3 days and he never changed. That is all the time she needed to give him, that was more than enough.”
If you want to say that St. Monica could have said (felt in her heart and then acted on it) all that and ended up in Heaven then you are welcome to say it. I cannot prove otherwise. I can only tell you that she didn’t and is now in Heaven. This is what she told others…
*When her circle of friends asked her how she lived with such an excitable man and not be battered, Monica replied that there were two things necessary for domestic peace: firstly, she recalled the matrimonial contract which they agreed to; secondly, she counseled silence when the husband was in a bad mood. Augustine adds that those women who took her advice found peace and better treatment from their husbands. *
Interestingly, it was a “stinging rebuke” (reminds me of St. Peter at Pentecost) that “cut to the heart” of Monica causing her to see the need to repent of her own sin…
*Augustine gives only one incident from her youth, obviously relayed to him by Monica herself, of how she was in danger of becoming a wine bibber, but was corrected when her secret sips in the wine cellar were discovered and a maid, in a moment of anger, called her a “drunkard.” This stinging rebuke prompted her to change her behavior and develop perseverence. Perhaps this is why recovering alcoholics are among the many groups who intercede to Saint Monica. *
What if that maid would have bought into the “false charity” of today? No stinging rebuke, no repentance, perhaps no St. Monica, then likely no St. Augustine… whoa.
Those who are “putting away” their spouses in their hearts, claiming to no longer be married to them, civilly divorcing for reasons that are not morally licit (the vast majority of civil divorces) need a “stinging rebuke.” Sometimes it needs to come from the lowly housekeeper.
Bryan
LOVE SO AMAZING