Miserimissa’ comment reminded me of St Therese. St. Therese of Lisuex, can point the way, of where the smallest things we do can be done with great love.
catholicnewsagency.com/news/st-therese-devotees-to-launch-little-way-social-media-campaign/
cardinalsblog.adw.org/2013/10/the-little-way/
Miserissima, that’s beautiful.
Thanks guys. I think I will also ask my spiritual director. It is hard for me to contemplate, to simply BE in God’s presence. Maybe that will take years. Until then, I think I am going to work on including more vocal prayers in everything, because that can be a starting point!
Do you go to Eucharistic adoration??
It may help to make a connection of how we act before the Blessed Sacrament, to when we are* away* from the hidden Christ from the local parish, in our moments of prayer everywhere else.
As for Praying always, a simple way is to give thanks!
As for God’s presence and walking with him, it reminds me of when I was traveling and praying.
There was a quote from Pope Benedict the XVI, then Cardinal Ratzinger, that was used by some dissidents to mislead some into suggesting Pope Benedict disparaging the power of the Eucharist in his book…
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger,
Being Christian:
“Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament or the silent visit to a church cannot be, in its full sense, ** a simple conversation with God conceived as locally circumscribed. Expressions such as ‘God lives here’ and the idea of holding a conversation with a God who is localized are an expression of the Christological mystery and the mystery of God, that inevitably shocks the thinking man who knows that God is omnipresent.** When one tries to justify “going to church” by the notion that one has to visit God and he dwells only in that place, one’s justification is meaningless and is rightly rejected by modern man. Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is connected with our Lord who, by his historic life and passion, has become our ‘bread’; that is to say, who, by his incarnation and death, has become the one whose arms are open to receive us. Such adoration is directed, then**, to the historic mystery of Jesus Christ, to the history of God with man, a history which approaches us in the Blessed Sacrament. And it is related to the mystery of the Church: being related to the history of God with man, it is related also to the whole ‘body of Christ, to the community of the faithful, through whom and in whom God comes to us”** (P.80).
At the time I read it I was unable to reconcile this quote in answering the insinuations against the holy father’s book. . .*But *when I was traveling a long distance and decided to use the time sitting idly to devote some time for prayer and contemplation of God, and in silence I realized I could do the same as I do when genuflecting, and just be aware of God in his omnipresence instead of his physical presence in the Tabernacle…
His quote is apt in the overall context of the Mystery of the Trinity, and how where one is so are the other two. The connection of the Eucharist, of God’s tangible physical presence in the Tabernacle, goes hand in hand with how we worship God the father…
So the everywhere we are, if we can adore the Lord in the second person with easier focus, and a more purposeful will in awe of that gift of thanksgiving –
We then can apply that same yearning for accompanying Jesus, by adoring the Father in his omnipresence, yet still aware of the relationship with the three persons of the Trinity with us as creatures.
If we show, our recognition of the Lord
before the Blessed Sacrament, in honoring the Son we please the Father, moved by the Holy Spirit to show that outwar
d physical accompaniment and outward reverence…
If when we leave the parish, knowing how we adore Christ in the Tabernacle??
We can show that same reverence towards the Father, and we please the Son, moved by by the Holy Spirit, in our
Interior, mental awareness of God the Father, just as we are aware of the physical presence of the Son in every Church.