Saint Alphonsus Liguori

GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS:

Such is our life, we whose existence is so transitory. Such is the game we play on earth. We do not exist, and we are born, and being born, we disintegrate and disappear. We are a fleeting dream, an apparition without substance, the flight of a bird that passes, a ship that leaves no trace on the sea. We are dust, a vapor, the morning dew, a flower growing but a moment and withering in a moment. “A person’s days are as grass. As the flower of the field, so shall he flourish,” beautifully, as described by holy David in meditating on our weakness. And again in these words: “Declare to me the fewness of my days.” And he defines the days of people as the measure of a span. What would you say to Jeremiah, who, complaining about his birth, even blames his mother, and that, too, for the failings of others. I have seen all things, says the Preacher, I have reviewed in thought all human things, wealth, pleasure, power, unstable glory, wisdom that evades us rather than is won; then pleasure again, wisdom again, often revolving the same objects, the pleasures of appetite, orchards, numbers of slaves, store of wealth, serving men and serving maids, singing men and singing women, arms, spearmen, subject nations, collected tributes, the pride of kings, all the necessaries and superfluities of life, in which I surpassed all the kings that were before me. And what does he say after all these things? Vanity of vanities. read more

Saint Ignatius of Loyola

THEODORET OF CYR:

And blessed Daniel the prophet, the divine Ezekiel (who was both prophet and priest) and many other priests in addition to them shared in these misfortunes. For God provided for those profane exiles and sent along also prophets that could be pedagogues and teachers so that the exiles might not incline entirely to godlessness.

JEROME:

We should not think that the glorious throne of God is only the throne of the temple, which was repeatedly destroyed, but that it is also every saint who is cast down and destroyed when he offends God by his multitude of sins, according to what is written: “You have cast his throne to the ground.” Nevertheless, the one who perishes from his own guilt is sustained by the clemency of the Lord, whereby the severity of the sentence is altered, lest the Lord invalidate his covenant in which he promised to be our coming salvation. read more

Saturday of the Sixteenth Week in Ordinary Time

The parable about the wheat and the chaff or weeds is a good reminder about how the Gospel of Christ requires us to trust more in the work of God than in our own judgment.  The weeds and the wheat do not correspond to different individuals as much as they refer to the mixed nature of our inner life.  In the soul of any man or woman you will find both weeds and wheat – both what is obviously good and what is obviously bad.  There is a temptation by the disciples of Christ, by those in a position to work the field, to get rid of the weeds.  Obviously weeds are the bad thoughts, actions, words, etc., that are discernable at any given time.  The question is not whether or not they need to be gotten rid of, but when they need to be gotten rid of.  There are some faults – even moral faults – that we may find in ourselves or in others which actually play a role in preventing something worse.  These weeds end up protecting the wheat.  A great example of this is any humiliating sin.  God may indeed allow a humiliating sin so that the wheat of humility will not be removed.  Pride is a worse sin than anything we could do that would humiliate us. read more