Wisdom in an Obit

So I was reading the obituaries in the local paper. Don’t laugh too hard if you are in your twenties or so and reading this. You will reach that point too. So I run across an obituary of a lady who just died. She was 101 years old! Born in Richmond of Italian parents, she was known to repeat her mother’s wisdom:

Dio e buono. Dio non ti manda piu di quanto si puo sopportare. So non brontolare!” Or, “God is good. He doesn’t send you more than you can stand. So don’t complain!

There will be a Mass of Christian Burial for this 101-year-old lady. God bless her.

From the Letters of St. Kolbe

“The burning zeal for God’s glory that motivates you fills my heart with joy. It is sad for us to see in our own time that indifferentism in its many forms is spreading like an epidemic not only among the laity but also among religious. But God is worthy of glory beyond measure, and therefore it is of absolute and supreme importance to seek that glory with all the power of our feeble resources. Since we are mere creatures we can never return to him all that is his due…

God, who is all-knowing and all-wise, knows best what we should do to increase his glory. Through his representatives on earth he continually reveals his will to us; thus it is obedience and obedience alone that is the sure sign to us of the divine will. A superior may, it is true, make a mistake; but it is impossible for us to be mistaken in obeying a superior’s command. The only exception to this rule is the case of a superior commanding something that in even the slightest way would contravene God’s law. Such a superior would not be conveying God’s will.

God alone is infinitely wise, holy, merciful, our Lord, Creator, and Father; he is beginning and end, wisdom and power and love; he is all. Everything other than God has value to the degree that it is referred to him, the maker of all and our own redeemer, the final end of all things. It is he who, declaring his adorable will to us through his representatives on earth, draws us to himself and whose plan is to draw others to himself through us and to join us all to himself in an ever deepening love.

Look, then, at the high dignity that by God’s mercy belongs to our state in life. Obedience raises us beyond the limits of our littleness and puts us in harmony with God’s will. In boundless wisdom and care, his will guides us to act rightly. Holding fast to that will, which no creature can thwart, we are filled with unsurpassable strength.

Obedience is the one and the only way of wisdom and prudence for us to offer glory to God. If there were another, Christ would certainly have shown it to us by word and example. Scripture, however, summed up his entire life at Nazareth in the words: He was subject to them; Scripture set obedience as the theme of the rest of his life, repeatedly declaring that he came into the world to do his Father’s will.”

From the Letters of Saint Maximilian Mary Kolbe, priest and martyr
(Scritti del P. Massimiliano M. Kolbe, Italian translation, vol. I, pt. 1 [Padua, 1971], 75-77; 166), in today’s Morning Prayer in the Liturgy of the Hours.

God is wonderful in his saints!

Read more about Saint Maximilian Kolbe.

FrMaximilian_Kolbe_1939

Photo of St. Maximilian Kolbe in the Public Domain, from Wikipedia.

Deacon at Easter Vigil – UPDATED

Deacon at Easter Vigil

This is the feast day of Saint Lawrence, deacon. Deacons are another one of the many treasures that I found happily when I came into the Catholic Church. In this photo, Deacon Mahefky stands by during the Easter Vigil of 2012. The only light here is from the light of the new fire that has been lit. Soon the Easter Candle will be lit from the fire and the Deacon will bring it into the Church, singing “Lumen Christi!”

Saint Lawrence was known for his fearlessness and good humor in the face of Roman persecution. Here are some resources to read more about this wonderful deacon. Happy feast day to all of you deacons!

http://www.patheos.com/blogs/kathyschiffer/2013/08/turn-me-over-im-done-on-this-side/

Some beautiful stained glass photographed by Dominican Paul Lew, and an interesting homily of his for the day: http://www.flickr.com/photos/paullew/7751958534/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/paullew/2624273034/

http://lawrenceop.tumblr.com/post/29122860886/homily-for-st-lawrence-of-rome-2-cor-9-6-10-ps

UPDATE: See this post at Vultus Christi, with wonderful paintings of Saint Lawrence by Blessed Fra Angelico.