"Little Martyrdom"

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I read this post written almost a year ago on another forum; I thought it was pretty good, so I thought I’d share it with you.

I’ve been looking into joining the Secular (lay) Franciscans, and last year we had a friar talk to us about martyrdom. He explained that sometimes the bloodless martyrdoms are the hardest–those little sufferings we have to go through every day, and endure for years on end. At first I wasn’t too interested in that (I guess a variation of the Little Flower’s Little Way) since I’ve always been a lover of the great martyrs, especially those of last century.
But lately, with the increase of secular humanism and false liberalism across the globe, especially here in the West, I began to see the merit in these “little martyrdoms.” They are so harsh, they can sometimes be even more successful at detering us from the Faith than the bloody ones.
Hitler was quoted as saying, when talking about how to destroy the Church by executing its faithful, “Oh, don’t worry, we won’t make them into martyrs, we’ll humiliate and kill them as common criminals.” His idea was to mock the Church and to pretend to kill the saints for reasons OTHER than Faith, so as to suppress devotion entirely.
Now, in the next century, it seems to me that this idea of mocking and dubious “freedom of worship” found in the West can be more awful than the execution squads, or even the animal hunts in the Colesium, etc. The reason why the “little” ones tend to be so terrible is that the Church is mocked latently and others can’t even see the evil in the Church’s oppression.
Take current-day US, for instance. Here, we are told we have freedom of religion and we are taught that “all religions are deserving of respect.” However, how often are we mocked for our Faith, how often is the Church dragged through the mud, how often are we spit upon literally and figuratively, simply for adherring to the doctrines? We are so latently hated, we are even afraid to speak the Truth in fear that we will lose our friends and be called “zealots.”
If we disagree with contraception, we are laughed at and humiliated, accused of being stupid.
If we speak out against abortion we are called haters of women.
If we defend the Pope out of loyalty, we are called rigid and narrowminded.
If we question another’s agenda, political or religious, we are stomped on and quieted by the same people who claim to be so “tolerant” of diversity.
 
Dear friend

A beautiful post, thank you.

This is what St Paul speaks of when he says to his brothers and sisters to be living sacrifices.

This daily martyrdom will become the norm. We are to be a living prayer in Christ Jesus before the Father, by the Power of the Holy Spirit.

God Bless you and much love and peace to you

Teresa
 
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springbreeze:
Dear friend

A beautiful post, thank you.

This is what St Paul speaks of when he says to his brothers and sisters to be living sacrifices.

This daily martyrdom will become the norm. We are to be a living prayer in Christ Jesus before the Father, by the Power of the Holy Spirit.

God Bless you and much love and peace to you

Teresa
And God bless you as well!

Another thought that comes to mind is that we all will have these crosses to bear (whether they be large or small), but depending on how we handle them will determine whether they will be meritorious for our souls, or whether they will be harmful. (Think of the difference between the two thieves that hung beside Christ on Calvary.)
 
E.E.N.S.:
And God bless you as well!

Another thought that comes to mind is that we all will have these crosses to bear (whether they be large or small), but depending on how we handle them will determine whether they will be meritorious for our souls, or whether they will be harmful. (Think of the difference between the two thieves that hung beside Christ on Calvary.)
Yes you are right, the Good Theifs cross at the moment he turned to Jesus upon it was intimately united to the Cross of Christ Jesus and became salvific for him and for whomever and whatever God willed to use this Good Thiefs sacrifice for.

We as sinners and must all be like the Good Thief and turn to our Lord with every single tiny joy and sufferance and offer it to Him thanking Him for all things as all things are blessings, this is living prayer, this is praying unceasingly. In this all things are made Holy in Him.

We are holy holocausts, bloodless daily sacrifices, martyrs of Love. This is the Eucharistic life, this is who we are in Christ Jesus.

Those who do this are next to the Lord upon the Cross as the Good Thief was.

God Bless you and much love and peace to you

Teresa
 
Taken from The Imitation of Christ

The cross, therefore, is always ready; it awaits you everywhere. No matter where you may go, you cannot escape it, for wherever you go you take yourself with you and shall always find yourself. Turn where you will—above, below, without, or within—you will find a cross in everything, and everywhere you must have patience if you would have peace within and merit an eternal crown.

If you carry the cross willingly, it will carry and lead you to the desired goal where indeed there shall be no more suffering, but here there shall be. If you carry it unwillingly, you create a burden for yourself and increase the load, though still you have to bear it. If you cast away one cross, you will find another and perhaps a heavier one. Do you expect to escape what no mortal man can ever avoid? Which of the saints was without a cross or trial on this earth? Not even Jesus Christ, our Lord, Whose every hour on earth knew the pain of His passion. “It behooveth Christ to suffer, and to rise again from the dead, . . . and so enter into his glory.” How is it that you look for another way than this, the royal way of the holy cross?
 
Dear friend

Thank you for posting this, very beautiful.

All this world sees is hatred for the Cross and rejects suffering as something abohrrent, it cannot see Love that bears the Cross, it cannot see what great merit lies therein.

The world cries in suffering ‘God save us’ and when He allows them the trial of the cross they say that God does not love them, they shout to heaven ‘why?’ when infact it is because He loves them they are blessed with the cross. They mock the cross, ‘you fool why do you endure this, why do you stand for it?’ they see the cross as weakness when it is the only eternal strength, the only strength that will endure forever.

They only speak to God when they are in trial and neglect Him all other times, His silence during the bearing of the cross is because He loves them and it is in His silence that He draws them to love Him for Himself, not for what He can do for them. This surely is love, to love God purely for Himself and not what we can obtain from Him, this surely is love of others, to love people for who they are not for what we can obtain from them.

To love when their is no earthly reason to love, to love for Love’s own sake, Christ Jesus. This is to embrace the cross, this is living prayer.

God Bless you and much love and peace to you

Teresa
 
Amen!

I only wish more people would see the love, merit and beauty in suffering.

“If you wish to enter eternal life, then pick up your cross and follow after me…”
 
E.E.N.S.:
Amen!

I only wish more people would see the love, merit and beauty in suffering.

“If you wish to enter eternal life, then pick up your cross and follow after me…”
Dear friend

To not see it , is to not see our Lord crucified, nor the full meaning of His Passion or of His resurrection.

By the way I like your signature at the end of your posts. It’s beautiful.

God Bless you and much love and peace to you

Teresa
 
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springbreeze:
Dear friend

To not see it , is to not see our Lord crucified, nor the full meaning of His Passion or of His resurrection.

By the way I like your signature at the end of your posts. It’s beautiful.

God Bless you and much love and peace to you

Teresa
And I like your signature as well!

And may God bless you and give you peace as well!
 
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springbreeze:
Dear friend

Thank you for posting this, very beautiful.

All this world sees is hatred for the Cross and rejects suffering as something abohrrent, it cannot see Love that bears the Cross, it cannot see what great merit lies therein.

The world cries in suffering ‘God save us’ and when He allows them the trial of the cross they say that God does not love them, they shout to heaven ‘why?’ when infact it is because He loves them they are blessed with the cross. They mock the cross, ‘you fool why do you endure this, why do you stand for it?’ they see the cross as weakness when it is the only eternal strength, the only strength that will endure forever.

They only speak to God when they are in trial and neglect Him all other times, His silence during the bearing of the cross is because He loves them and it is in His silence that He draws them to love Him for Himself, not for what He can do for them. This surely is love, to love God purely for Himself and not what we can obtain from Him, this surely is love of others, to love people for who they are not for what we can obtain from them.

To love when their is no earthly reason to love, to love for Love’s own sake, Christ Jesus. This is to embrace the cross, this is living prayer.

God Bless you and much love and peace to you

Teresa
 
A quote from St. Louis de Montfort:

Friends of Jesus Christ, drink of his bitter cup and your friendship with him will increase. Suffer with him and you will be glorified with him. Suffer patiently and your momentary suffering will be changed into an eternity of happiness. Make no mistake about it; since incarnate Wisdom had to enter heaven by the Cross, you also must enter by the same way. No matter which way you turn, says the Imitation of Christ, you will always find the Cross. Like the elect you may take it up rightly, with patience and cheerfulness out of love for God; or else like the reprobate you may carry it impatiently and unwillingly as those doubly unfortunate ones who are constrained to repeat perpetually in hell, “We have laboured and suffered in the world and after it all, here we are with the damned.” (Wis 5.7) True wisdom is not to be found in the things of this world nor in the souls of those who live in comfort. He has fixed his abode in the Cross so firmly that you will not find him anywhere in this world save in the Cross. He has so truly incorporated and united himself with the Cross that in all truth we can say: Wisdom is the Cross, and the Cross is Wisdom.
 
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