Enjoy today's Pause+Pray 🙏 about enduring gratefulness!
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September 10, 2024

Dear John,

 

Not long before he died, Francis of Assisi said, "At all times and seasons, in every country and place, every day and all day, we must have a true and humble faith." I marvel at his unshakable faith, even when he was exhibiting signs of the stigmata, the wounds of Christ. In his September article, "The Stigmata of St. Francis: Embracing the Crucified Christ," author Greg Friedman, OFM, writes, "For us, we can trust that—in all our 'crosses'—our suffering, our weakness, and even in our sins, God will respond in love."

 

That is our mission at Franciscan Media: to find and celebrate light in an often dark world; to respond with love. And we cannot do this work without your help.

 

You are very much a part of our mission. Please join the friars and our faithful community in the work of evangelization through your gift to Franciscan Media. Donate today!

 

Peace and all good!

Christopher Heffron
Editorial Director 

SAINT OF THE DAY
saint-thomas-of-villanova

Saint of the Day for September 10: Thomas of Villanova

(1488 – September 8, 1555)

 

Listen to Saint Thomas of Villanova’s Story

Saint Thomas was from Castile in Spain and received his surname from the town where he was raised. He received a superior education at the University of Alcala and became a popular professor of philosophy there.

 

After joining the Augustinian friars at Salamanca, Thomas was ordained and resumed his teaching–despite a continuing absentmindedness and poor memory. He became prior and then provincial of the friars, sending the first Augustinians to the New World. He was nominated by the emperor to the archbishopric of Granada, but refused. When the see again became vacant he was pressured to accept. The money his cathedral chapter gave him to furnish his house was given to a hospital instead. His explanation to them was that “our Lord will be better served by your money being spent on the poor in the hospital. What does a poor friar like myself want with furniture?”

 

He wore the same habit that he had received in the novitiate, mending it himself. The canons and domestics were ashamed of him, but they could not convince him to change. Several hundred poor came to Thomas’s door each morning and received a meal, wine, and money. When criticized because he was at times being taken advantage of, he replied, “If there are people who refuse to work, that is for the governor and the police to deal with. My duty is to assist and relieve those who come to my door.” He took in orphans and paid his servants for every deserted child they brought to him. He encouraged the wealthy to imitate his example and be richer in mercy and charity than they were in earthly possessions.

 

Criticized because he refused to be harsh or swift in correcting sinners, Thomas said, “Let him (the complainer) inquire whether Saint Augustine and Saint John Chrysostom used anathemas and excommunication to stop the drunkenness and blasphemy which were so common among the people under their care.”

 

As he lay dying, Thomas commanded that all the money he possessed be distributed to the poor. His material goods were to be given to the rector of his college. Mass was being celebrated in his presence when after Communion he breathed his last, reciting the words: “Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.”

In his lifetime Thomas of Villanova was already called “the almsgiver” and “the father of the poor.” He was canonized in 1658. Thomas of Villanova’s liturgical feast is celebrated on September 22.

 

Reflection

The absent-minded professor is a stock comic figure. Thomas of Villanova earned even more derisive laughs with his determined shabbiness and his willingness to let the poor who flocked to his door take advantage of him. He embarrassed his peers, but Jesus was enormously pleased with him. We are often tempted to tend our image in others’ eyes without paying sufficient attention to how we look to Christ. Thomas still urges us to rethink our priorities.

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MINUTE MEDITATIONS
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Live in Love

 

If you still need to grow in love and increase your capacity to trust Love, God makes room for immense growth surrounding the death experience itself, which is probably what we mean by purgatory. (Time is a mental construct of humans. Why would growth be limited to this part of our lives? God and the soul live in an eternal now.)

If you are already at home in love, you will easily and quickly go to the home of love which is surely what we mean by heaven. There the growth never stops and the wonder never ceases. (If life is always change and growth, eternal life must be infinite possibility and growth!)

 

So by all means, every day, and in every way, we must choose to live in love—it is mostly a decision—and even be eager to learn the ever deeper ways of love—which is the unearned grace that flows from the decision.

 

—from the book Eager to Love: The Alternative Way of Francis of Assisi
by Richard Rohr

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PAUSE+PRAY
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Be Thankful for the Good and Bad

 

Reflect

Author Robert Emmons defines gratitude as “a feeling of reverence for what is given.” That attitude accepts good and bad as potential gift. Emmons characterizes this attitude as not a “superficial happiology,” but a perspective with transformative power.

 

Pray

Thank you, God,
for failure.
Our mistakes
bring us closer
to Christ
who suffered
and died
a brutal death.
They transform us
and deflate our egos.
Help us
to not fear
our flaws,
but to welcome them,
the hallmark
of being human.
Amen.

 

Act

Do a web search for the term gratefulness and read what you find there.

 

Today’s Pause+Pray was written by Kathy Coffey. Learn more here!

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