Message of 12-14-12

Published: Fri, 12/14/12

A Daily Spiritual Seed
Friday: December 14, 2012



Our natural will is to have God, and the good will of God is to have us, and we may never cease willing or longing for God until we have him in the fullness of joy. Christ will never have his full bliss in  us until we have our full bliss in him."
- Blessed Julian of Norwich -

(God's desire for you: let this awareness awaken in you a deeper
willingness to belong to God completely.)



Is 48:17-19;    Ps 1:1-4, 6;   Mt 11:16-19

R. Those who follow you, Lord, will have the light of life.

Blessed the man who follows not
the counsel of the wicked
Nor walks in the way of sinners,
nor sits in the company of the insolent,
But delights in the law of the LORD
and meditates on his law day and night.

He is like a tree
planted near running water,
That yields its fruit in due season,
and whose leaves never fade.
Whatever he does, prospers.

Not so the wicked, not so;
they are like chaff which the wind drives away.
For the LORD watches over the way of the just,
but the way of the wicked vanishes.




God says through Isaiah, "I, the Lord, your God, teach you what is for your good...." Do I really believe that God loves me, that he knows what is best for me, and that he wants what is best for me? Is he trying to kill my joy or is he trying to show me the path that leads to my own happiness? When God says, keep my commandments for your good, do we think back to our parents who said, "Here, take this medicine. It's good for you"? God says, "I...lead you on the way you should go." Why is it the way I should go? Because it makes me unhappy and God just loves seeing me miserable? There is the stereotypical librarian who does nothing but go around saying "Shhhh. Quiet please. You're having too much fun in my library." God is like that librarian to us. How did we get such an unbiblical view of God? The God of Isaiah says that our prosperity is directly tied to hearkening to his commandments but just the thought of "having" to "obey" commandments grates on us. This comes about when the commandments are divorced from a relationship with the living God. When was the last time you heard someone proclaim, using the words of the psalmist, that they delight in the law of the Lord? In the Protestant church of my youth, we used to sing a song with the refrain, "O how love I Thy law." We sang the song but our hearts were far from the law. Isn't the Bible a love letter from God, we opined? Then let's dispense with all the legalities.

God has rescued us from darkness. He has brought us into his marvelous light. He wants what is best for us and leads us in the path that will bring us prosperity and joy. His commandments are for our good. They tell us what is required to have a relationship with the one who loves and saves us. Keep the commandments for selfish reasons: they will lead to our good. Or, keep them because we love the one who gave them to us. Either way, they lead to eternal life.

- by George Butterfield





On Cleaving to God,
by St. Albert the Great

Indeed, for loving God alone (above all else). . .  we do not require external work or physical strength, but rather physical solitude, the labour of the heart, and peace of mind so that, as it were, by labour of the heart and the disposition of the inmost mind, one may rise up, casting off from oneself lower and physical things, and so soar up, ascending to things heavenly and divine.  

- Chapter 14. How self-distrust can be produced in a person, and how this can be beneficial if properly understood.




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