Weekend Edition - A Daily Spiritual Seed

Published: Fri, 01/23/15

A Daily Spiritual Seed
Weekend Edition: January 23-25, 2015
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Book of the Week

Walking With Purpose: Seven Priorities That Make Life Work, by Lisa Brenninkmeyer. The Dynamic Catholic Institute, 2013.

 As a mother of seven, Lisa knows what it means to become overly busy that there seems no time for God.  It is not the way she wants to live her days, but too often she becomes so entangled in the children’s activities and those of her husband, that she gives little time to quiet and prayer.

 To make this kind of change in her own life, she presents to her readers a pattern that may be of great use to herself and to her readers. “God wants us to daily experience the joy and contentment that comes from knowing we have given our all to what he considers most important. “

A purposeful life is just around the corner if her readers follow this pattern:
  1. Stop striving and rest in God’s unconditional love
  2. Experience new hope in your marriage
  3. Reach your child’s heart
  4. Create clarity in a cluttered home
  5. Find friendships that go below the surface and satisfy
  6. Discover your passion and purpose
Sometimes readers are tempted to say, “I’ll start exploring how God wants me to live the day things slow down and are a little more under control.”  Lisa urges us not to wait for that day. Today is the perfect day to begin walking with purpose.  “If a calm schedule is the prerequisite for purposeful peaceful living, we will never achieve it…….. Why not join me as together we begin to walk with purpose?”

The author begins her book with a word about why we are here on earth. The purpose is more than personal fulfillment, inner peace, and happiness. The reason we are here is because God wanted us to be here. “You are made by God and for God.” Because love is the great motivator, a close relationship with the God who loves us unconditionally will always be a better motivator than fear or guilt.

Lisa ends her book with this sentence: “As we seek to set a pace on our journey  toward eternity, consider what you are worth to him: Everything.”

- Thanks to Sr. Irene Hartman OP for this review.
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Saint of the Week

St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-74) January 28.

By universal consent, Thomas Aquinas is the preeminent spokesman of the Catholic tradition of reason and of divine revelation. He is one of the great teachers of the medieval Catholic Church, honored with the titles Doctor of the Church and Angelic Doctor.

At five he was given to the Benedictine monastery at Monte Cassino in his parents’ hopes that he would choose that way of life and eventually became abbot. In 1239 he was sent to Naples to complete his studies. It was here that he was first attracted to Aristotle’s philosophy.

By 1243, Thomas abandoned his family’s plans for him and joined the Dominicans, much to his mother’s dismay. On her order, Thomas was captured by his brother and kept at home for over a year.

Once free, he went to Paris and then to Cologne, where he finished his studies with Albert the Great. He held two professorships at Paris, lived at the court of Pope Urban IV, directed the Dominican schools at Rome and Viterbo, combated adversaries of the mendicants, as well as the Averroists, and argued with some Franciscans about Aristotelianism.

His greatest contribution to the Catholic Church is his writings. The unity, harmony and continuity of faith and reason, of revealed and natural human knowledge, pervades his writings. One might expect Thomas, as a man of the gospel, to be an ardent defender of revealed truth. But he was broad enough, deep enough, to see the whole natural order as coming from God the Creator, and to see reason as a divine gift to be highly cherished.

The Summa Theologiae, his last and, unfortunately, uncompleted work, deals with the whole of Catholic theology. He stopped work on it after celebrating Mass on December 6, 1273. When asked why he stopped writing, he replied, “I cannot go on.... All that I have written seems to me like so much straw compared to what I have seen and what has been revealed to me.” He died March 7, 1274.

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