M
MariaChristi
Guest
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Today is the first day of July – a month traditionally dedicated to the “Precious Blood of Christ”. I doubt many people can remember that devotion, but being of a generation (many of whom have gone) I do remember many of those "small ‘t’ traditions. They were a help to me in my childhood and younger years, and so I still remember them. However, I am grateful for both old and new devotions. Certainly Devotion to the Sacred Heart and “True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin” came before the Divine Mercy Devotion and Fatima Devotion, yet “all in God’s perfect timing”.
We continue today pondering Chap.13 from St. Louis De Montfort’s book, “The Love of Eternal Wisdom” – specifically on His Sufferings:
Today is the first day of July – a month traditionally dedicated to the “Precious Blood of Christ”. I doubt many people can remember that devotion, but being of a generation (many of whom have gone) I do remember many of those "small ‘t’ traditions. They were a help to me in my childhood and younger years, and so I still remember them. However, I am grateful for both old and new devotions. Certainly Devotion to the Sacred Heart and “True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin” came before the Divine Mercy Devotion and Fatima Devotion, yet “all in God’s perfect timing”.
We continue today pondering Chap.13 from St. Louis De Montfort’s book, “The Love of Eternal Wisdom” – specifically on His Sufferings:
I wanted to add something to this post, but all I could think of was silence, and the words of the hymn which begins “Let all mortal flesh keep silence, and with fear and trembling stand…ponder nothing earthly minded…for with blessing in His Hand…”
- Moreover, our dear Saviour suffered in every member of His body. His head was pierced with a crown of thorns. His hair and beard were torn out; His cheeks were buffeted; His face covered with spittle; His neck and arms bound with cords; His shoulders weighed down and bruised by the weight of the cross. His hands and feet were pierced by the nails, His side and heart opened by a lance; His whole body lacerated by more then five thousand strokes of the scourge, so that His almost fleshless bones became visible. All His senses were almost immersed in a sea of sufferings. He suffered in His sight as he beheld the mocking faces of His enemies and the tears of grief of His friends. He suffered in His hearing as He listened to insulting words, false testimonies, calumnious statements and horrible blasphemies which evil tongues vomited against Him. He suffered in His sense of smell by the foulness of the filth they spat into his face. He suffered in His sense of taste by a feverish thirst in which He was only given gall and vinegar to drink. He suffered in His sense of touch by the excruciating pain of the lashes, thorns and nails.
- His most holy soul was grievously tormented because every sin committed by man was an outrage against His Father whom He loved infinitely; because sin was the cause of the damnation of so many souls who would be lost despite His passion and death; and because He had compassion not only for all men in general but for each one in particular, as He knew them all individually. All these torments were much increased by the length of time they lasted, that is, from the first instance of his conception to the moment of His death, because all the sufferings He was to endure were, in the timeless view of His wisdom, always distinctly present to His mind. To all these torments we must add the most cruel and the most fearful one, namely His abandonment upon the cross which caused him to cry out, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
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