N
nuntym
Guest
I bought a few weeks ago from our local St. this pocket-sized paperback entitled My Daily Bread. It was written by a Jesuit, Anthony J. Paone, S.J., and first published by the Confraternity of the Precious Blood in 1954. It is small enough to be carried in my back or left pant pocket, and I rarely leave home without it, for when I feel quite alone, needed to stand up to temptations, or just wanted to pass the time while there’re no patients around in the ER
I just take it out and read it, and it never fails to comfort me and give me strength.
I would recommend it to anyone who wants to grow with his relationship in the Lord
One of the greatest helps the book has given me is its insistence on meditating on the “Four Last Things”: Death, Judgment, Heaven, and Hell. Especially 1) Death can come anytime, 2) when I die, the time of God’s Mercy is over, and rather, I have to face Divine Justice, and 3) if my love of God is not yet strong enough to resist temptation, then my fear of hell should keep me from sinning.
The result of these meditations is that every time I’m tempted, I remember how my medical practice has opened my eyes to the fact that I can really die any moment, no matter how healthy or safe I seem to be at the moment, and that if I fear the wrath or judgment of just my fiance or boss, who holds my “heart” and financial/professional success respectively, then how terrible it must be to face the One who I owe EVERYTHING and explain to Him why I did what He and I know to be wrong!
And this “fear of hell” is very powerful! It has kept me numerous times from falling to my particular weakness of will. And in fact, I can see how it has made me work harder to improve myself and to do my work with more care and empathy.
Yet this focusing on the Four Last Things has been missing in most of the post-Vatican II spiritual books that I’ve read. What gives?! Meditating on these Things can be a life-saver! Why oh why are these Last Things missing in today’s spiritual books! They should be returned!
I think for most Catholics the Last Four Things, thought they know about it and at least intellectually know their importance, are things that have been placed at the back of their minds, probably due to the busy-ness of our lives today, but also because there has been much less emphasis on these Things in spiritual writings and in Mass sermons. If I had been exposed to these kinds of meditations earlier I would have avoided so many troubles!
The emphasis on the Four Last Things should be returned to Catholic consciousness! :knight1: :knight2:
I would recommend it to anyone who wants to grow with his relationship in the Lord
One of the greatest helps the book has given me is its insistence on meditating on the “Four Last Things”: Death, Judgment, Heaven, and Hell. Especially 1) Death can come anytime, 2) when I die, the time of God’s Mercy is over, and rather, I have to face Divine Justice, and 3) if my love of God is not yet strong enough to resist temptation, then my fear of hell should keep me from sinning.
The result of these meditations is that every time I’m tempted, I remember how my medical practice has opened my eyes to the fact that I can really die any moment, no matter how healthy or safe I seem to be at the moment, and that if I fear the wrath or judgment of just my fiance or boss, who holds my “heart” and financial/professional success respectively, then how terrible it must be to face the One who I owe EVERYTHING and explain to Him why I did what He and I know to be wrong!
And this “fear of hell” is very powerful! It has kept me numerous times from falling to my particular weakness of will. And in fact, I can see how it has made me work harder to improve myself and to do my work with more care and empathy.
Yet this focusing on the Four Last Things has been missing in most of the post-Vatican II spiritual books that I’ve read. What gives?! Meditating on these Things can be a life-saver! Why oh why are these Last Things missing in today’s spiritual books! They should be returned!
The emphasis on the Four Last Things should be returned to Catholic consciousness! :knight1: :knight2: