Immaculate Heart of Mary, Ora pro nobis.

This blog is dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Mary and in reparation for all the sins committed against Her Most Pure Heart. May Her Immaculate Heart draw us closer to Her Divine Son, Our Most Precious Lord.
Showing posts with label devil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label devil. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Begone, Satan!

   
 Here we are, quickly approaching an end to our Lenten Season, anticipating the Holiest time of the year, Our Lords Resurrection.  I am ready for it to end, not because I want to gorge on chocolates and eat regular meals again, but because I am spiritually exhausted.  Usually, Lent in our house is mostly peaceful and relaxing.  Lots of Monopoly, less bickering, quiet conversations after dinner, more prayer, more time for spiritual reading.  But this year has been different.  See, I was actually tempted by the devil.....and he almost won....
     When I was an evangelical Protestant, we were taught to see the devil everywhere.  Got car trouble?  It's probably the devil.  Took a wrong turn?  Again, probably the devil.  The devil is talked about so much that it almost becomes paralyzing and one fears you can't really escape him.  Ironically, when I became a Catholic, the devil was talked about fairly infrequently.  So little, in fact, that one gets the impression that perhaps the devil doesn't really exist at all.  But it has only been in the last few years really, that I have come to understand the devil and how he works.  I owe that, honestly, to the instructions of a very good priest and traditional Catholicism.  I am really grateful for this because I am not sure I would have had the graces to resist the devil just recently.  Truthfully, I don't think I would have even realized I was being tempted at all.  See this is how the devil works, actually.  He is pretty wily.  The less you recognize his temptations, the more freely you will succumb.  
      A few weeks ago, the devil was really working on me.  Unfortunately, I didn't really recognize it.  I just thought our family was having a financial crisis and that we would someone work through it.  But it was more than that.  It was temptation knocking and I almost opened the door.  Let me explain a bit.
     It is incredibly difficult to be a traditional Catholic in modern society.  Everyone is modern.  4 out of 10 households have a mother who is the sole or primary breadwinner.  And 75% of women with children work outside the home.  I have no idea how this translates to Catholic women, but among the Novus Ordo women my age or younger, I knew very few who stayed home and/or had large families.  It seemed to me, then, that our family was out of place in our local parish, especially when we had our 6th (and later 7th) child.  Later on, when we decided to homeschool, we had friends who actually questioned our sanity.  But once we found our way to traditional Catholicism, we found our  SILK (single income lots of kids) way of life was pretty normal.  Almost everyone we know in our traditional Catholic circles homeschools.  And for the last 4 years we have been getting along pretty well.  But then things changed....
     For the last decade, my mother has been living with our family.  Its been sort of a symbiotic relationship really.  She was disabled and needed care, which we gave willingly, and she contributed financially with groceries, homeschool supplies, holidays, birthdays, and college.  But in December, just before our son graduated from college, my mother had a massive stroke.  It almost claimed her life.  Instead, she is now living in the nursing home under constant nursing care.  I am truly grateful to the Lord for her life and the wonderful nurses in charge of her care, but in addition to the loss of her financial assistance, I have to contribute a small portion the cost of her care.  It has been a stressful time just dealing with her health issues, but also making the necessary adjustments in our personal life as well.  And this is when the devil hit me....
   Day after day, he planted in my mind the idea that I needed to go back to work.  This would help, he said.  You only need  a few hundred dollars each month, he said.  Your working is the simplest solution, he said. Don't cut your grocery budget, he said, just go back to work.  Oh, yea, and put your kids back in school. It will be alright.  They will adjust, make friends.  And the voices around me, my own grown children who are fully modern, kept saying the exact same things.  I was ready, really ready to give in.  Until I saw the robins dancing in the yard....
   In the midst of my anxiety, I realized that I hadn't prayed in over a week.  I had been so focused on money and finances and worrying about making ends meet and buying groceries that I hadn't bothered to ask Christ for help or direction.  I hadn't prayed a rosary.  I hadn't sought the intercession of a single saint. I had just given into to despair and depression.  But one morning last week, in anticipation of spring, I saw two robins dancing with each other outside my kitchen window.  It was a reminder that this long, hard winter was drawing to a close and that spring was coming.  And some how I heard these words:  "All these things I will give thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me."  It settled in my heart, I heard it, and I heard the twisted, lying voice who said it.  
     Through my fast, through my preparations, the devil had tempted me.  I wasn't prepared.  I almost caved.  I was willing to put our children in public school, to risk their loss of morals and purity and innocence, their loss of faith, for a few dollars and a few groceries.  I was willing to take myself, the mother, the heart of the home, away from the home, for a new car.  I was willing to put myself into the workforce with all its sexual temptations, for a vacation. The devil had convinced me that evil was good, and I was willing to compromise my values and just do it!
     The devil has one goal---to keep us from heaven.  He searches and waits and plots and plans his attack.  He creeps up on you and whispers things in your ear.  He doesn't come to us in ugly forms because we would recognize him easily.  Rather he comes to us in pleasing ways, in compromises, in practicalities.  Once upon a time, the Catholic Church spoke out against evils and the whole world listened.  In 1930, Pope Pius XI, in Casti Connubii, warned about the dangers of women working outside the home.  He called the so-called emancipation of women a crime.  He warned that it would lead to the loss of dignity of motherhood, the debasing of women, and a danger to the husband and children who would lose a wife and mother.  How prophetic!  Strange how the New Church, led by Wojtyla and Ratzinger, have encouraged women to work outside the home and pursue their interests and have given them prominent roles in the New Church!  What the Church once called evil, it now calls good.  Is this even possible??
       Fortunately for me, I have been given graces immeasurable these days.  I have come through this temptation.  But I am exhausted, both physically and spiritually.  In the kitchen that morning I cried out loud and clear, "Begone, Satan!  for it is written, The Lord thy God shalt thou worship and Him alone shalt thou serve."  I've survived this temptation.  Our family will weather this storm, this financial crisis.  And we will continue to put our faith and trust in the Lord.
   Pray many rosaries!  Ask for intercession in these dark times!  Never doubt that Our Lord will provide for us!  And never forget the devil lurks like a serpent waiting for just the right moment, in your hunger, in your weakness, in your loneliness.  He will tell you all sorts of things, convince you of anything, speak to you through your family and friends.  So be prepared always!  So stay true to your Faith.  Know it.  Study it. Cling to it!  For without the Faith, we have nothing, and we certainly can't resist the temptations of the devil.

Immaculate Heart of Mary, ora pro nobis!

St. Joseph, Protector of the Church, ora pro nobis!

Above image:  Satan Tried to Tempt Christ:  James Tissot, 1895


Monday, August 8, 2011

August 8: St. John Mary Vianney—Patron of Priests


The Cure d'Ars was born at Dardilly, near Lyons, France in 1786. The sanctity of St. John Vianney gives to the obscure village of Ars a universal fame. As parish priest he converted sinners and directed souls, not only those of his own flock, but people of all nations and conditions who came to consult this spiritual director. He died on August 4, 1859 and was canonized in 1925.

The following blog post about St. John Vianney is recorded from a book report that our 4th grader wrote this year about the beloved St. Jean Marie Baptiste Vianney.

    A priest with a kind heart can help people who have lost their faith return to God. In the 1800s just after the French Revolution, the people of France had lost their faith in God. A young priest named Jean-Marie Vianney helped to bring the people of the town of Ars back to the Church. In The Cure of Ars: The Priest Who Out-Talked the Devil, by Milton Lomask, St. Jean Vianney showed his love for the priesthood and kindness to everyone he knew.

    Many times in his life, Jean Vianney showed his love for the priesthood. When he was eight years old, priests came to his house in secret and fear. He helped his mother care for them and he talked to them. He wanted to become a priest. Because Jean Vianney was a slow learner, it was very hard for him to become a priest. It took him two tries to pass his test. When he finally became a priest, he only wanted to serve God as best he could. Once he stayed in the confessional for 12 hours so that everyone in the town could receive the Sacrament.

    Once he became a priest, St. Jean Vianney showed his kindness to everyone he knew. The other priests in the town were jealous of Jean Vianney and they wrote cruel letters to him, especially about hearing everyone's confessions. Instead of getting angry, he replied to each letter with kindness. He tried to think of others first before his own needs. When he learned about the orphans in Ars, he used his inheritance to build an orphanage and a school.

    St. Jean Vianney changed the hearts of the people in Ars. His love for the priesthood and his kindness brought many people back to God. Jean Vianney helped the people understand how much they needed the Sacraments. He also showed them how much God loved and cared for them. Because he was such a good, humble, and kind priest, the Church made St. Jean Vianney the Patron saint of priests.

I would like to add some comments of my own.

    St. John Vianney was not ordained a priest until he was aged 30. He was thought by his superiors to be completely incompetent. However, God bestowed him with a great many spiritual gifts, including the gift of healing and the ability to read the hearts of his penitents. It was for this latter reason that his reputation spread as the most gracious of all confessors. Men, women, and children came from all over France to his confessional. Many times his fellow priests chastised St. John Vianney for overstepping his bounds. Each time he humbly admitted his fault, but he continued to hear the confessions of all who approached him.

    His life was spent in great suffering every day. Each night St. John Vianney was allowed only two hours of sleep, as he was tormented by the devil. The devil assaulted him with deafening noises, insults, and physical abuse. Occasionally, the members of the parish witnessed such events but St. John merely brushed them off as sufferings he must endure for Our Lord. He often joked that he could "out-talk" the devil.

    On August 4, 1859, St. John Vianney died peacefully in his sleep. Pending his beatification in 1904, St. John Vianney's body was exhumed and found to be completely incorrupt except for the normal blackening of the skin. His body lies on display above the main altar in the Basilica in Ars, France.

    In 1925, the priest with learning difficulties and who was considered incompetent was declared Patron saint of parish priests.

    Currently, the modern Catholic Church is facing a crisis in the priesthood. Parishes are closing down and consolidating because there are very few priests compared to parishioners. Over half the priests in the priesthood in the United States are over 70 and approaching retirement age. Sadly, many of the priests we do have, have brought great scandal to the Church because of their abuses on children or other corruptions. I could include a long list of priests who have committed suicide, looted the coffers of their parishes, spent months in alcohol or drug treatment programs, or worse. I hope, later, to continue this blog on the priesthood—what it is and how it has changed in the Church since Vatican II.  

St. John Vianney, pray for our priests, that when they are tormented by the devil, they have the will to endure the suffering.

St. John Vianney, pray for us, that we may always have a penitent heart and a good confessor.