Showing posts with label Ten Commandments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ten Commandments. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2011

Know the Lord

What is the reason that we are all Christians? What are we trying to do? How are we trying to do it? As Christians we are all asked to love and serve the Lord. We are given the Ten Commandments and asked to obey them. We are given the Beatitudes. We are given one additional request to love our neighbors as we love ourselves. We are asked to praise and give thanks to God. We are encouraged to pray to God. What is the real purpose for all of this activity? What will happen to each of us if we do it with love in our hearts, kindness in our souls, honor and holiness in our minds? Our entire being as Christians is a preparation for our eternal life with God. Each moment of each day we are asked to work for our salvation. Each moment of each day we are asked to be compassionate, humble, merciful. Each moment of each day we are asked to work to please God. Our daily lives give us opportunities to serve God. We must work to establish, nurture, and protect a relationship with God. The most important relationship for a Christian is his/her relationship with God. Wanting salvation by itself is meaningless, completely worthless unless we want to know the Lord. Prayer is essential to this. We must learn how to pray. We must make time for prayer in our lives. Prayer filled with kindness, truth, goodness, love, holiness and hope can lead us to closer relationships to God. As Christians we must take time to listen for God's voice, God's gentle call. We are all living, breathing, articulating, gesticulating members of God's ministry. We must understand this with the entirety of our being and then use our lives to share the Good News with everyone with whom we interact. Our actions as Christians are often more important than our words. Each generation searches for something new, something improved. Each generation listens to the campaign promises. Christians have been given a better covenant with better promises. We simply have to believe. We simply have to remember our baptismal promises and try to live a better, more loving life of charity, humility, and obedience. Our purpose here is not to purchase the biggest house, wear the trendiest clothes. Our purpose is to love and serve God. Our purpose is to prepare ourselves for eternal life, to prepare ourselves for salvation.

Monday, December 27, 2010

he saw and believed - December 27, 2010

Waking up can be a little difficult this time of year for many unknown reasons. This is also a time for remembrance and reverence for all holy people who have believed, lived, and taught the Gospel of Jesus Christ. This season asks each Christian to take a minute and count each blessing, each gift from God and to give thanks. The lessons within each reading point toward the universality of God's love. The message within each Mass presents the breadth of God's love for all of humanity. People on the right road will experience a little longing for Christ after hearing each Gospel reading. People on the right road will work to model their whole lives with a universal love, compassion, and sense of social justice. Each moment in their lives will bring more understanding, more wisdom. With effort each word of the Gospel can be understood. For the greatest gift of the season is developing the courage to be good, kind, and holy in the presence of both man and God.

Waking up can be a little difficult this time of year because everyone has something to complain about. This is not the time for heated discussions about God, the Eucharist, Jesus Christ, the Ten Commandments. This is a time for Love. This is a time for humility. This is a time to listen, not to be drawn into a paradox of excited opinion. This is a time for goodness, kindness, holiness. Each action of Christian, hopefully, will be pleasing to God. Rhetoric and grand speeches will not get a man or woman into heaven. Rhetoric and grand speeches will not make a man or woman holy. Rhetoric and grand speeches will fill the ears of the listeners with hollow sounds and unasked questions. There is always a need for penance, a need for Reconciliation with God. For some this time of year is a moment of extreme vanity when the spotlight shines on them, the parties they attend, the gifts they give, the gifts they receive. Although it might be difficult, please remember that this is a time to love and serve God. The true message of Christmas reminds each Christian of the necessity of patience and encourages each Christian to keep their gaze heavenward, to allow each step to lead them to the heavenly kingdom.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Sacrifice and Knowledge

The LORD, therefore, became angry with Solomon, because his heart was turned away from the LORD, the God of Israel, who had appeared to him twice


Each Christian should live with one leading goal which is to honor God by living a life of virtue and goodness. God is to be respected, honored. Our religion offers justice and salvation to believers who are asked to show reverence to God, to be his humble servants, to be in awe of the God’s power. Christians must understand and accept the implicit requirement of sacrifice; every choice that it is made to do God’s work, every moment spent in prayer, every time kindness is done by a Christian with earnestly, lovingly then each act can be described as a sacrifice.

Christians must accept that their neighbors will have different ideas and opinions about religion and God. Christians may listen to a spoken treatise upon religion; listen patiently, listen respectfully, listen simply; do not be deceived by any rhetorical or elocution tricks; focus only on the central theme and how the speaker feels about the theme. It is not always necessary to respond to these monologues. If the speaker is sincere and truly interested in learning about God and God’s glory and mercy, then respond politely with great discipline of thought. If the speaker is not interested in learning about God, then avoid saying too much for the purpose of the discourse is to ridicule God.

Christians should surround yourselves with virtuous people interested in goodness and social justice according to the teaching’s of Christ. Remember always the Ten Commandments, apply them to your daily decision making process. Remember them as your conscience is examined.

Christians should live their lives in accordance with how God wants his children to live. Since the society compromises many faiths and those without faith, a Christian should be respectful first, ask questions later. Always acknowledge and accept the reality that you are a sinner and fallible. Do not accept the label of hypocrite if your life is progressing from being sinful to being virtuous. Remember that our neighbors can not see the beauty, the love, the devotion that is within our hearts and souls. Remember our neighbors often only want to see what they have decided to see. A Christian’s reality depends upon each sacrifice, each prayer, every moment lovingly, humbly, earnestly spent doing God’s work. These may not always be noticed by neighbors. Always remember to honor God in all your activities, allow that to give you confidence.

Each day life provides additional knowledge for us; always use it wisely to do service for the Lord. Strive for goodness and holiness. Avoid thinking that knowledge provides superiority. Always remind yourself that there is always something new to be learned, something new in Scripture to be reflected upon. Each life experience should provide the confidence to love your neighbor and God more easily and more completely.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Advent

I sometimes like to describe the world in which I live as a boisterous donnybrook filled with double entendres, dark horses and other delusions. Everyone enjoys talking decadence and hiding behind diplomatic immunity. We create conflicts and explanations; we destroy peace and hope.

If only our sins were naturally deciduous like leaves on many autumn trees, then our natural goodness and love could flourish.

Advent provides an opportunity for each one of us to examine ourselves, our hearts, our minds, and our souls as we prepare for the arrival of our Lord. The Church encourages us to examine our lives and to put things in the right spot as we move toward Christmas.

I like to think of faith as a covalent bond. Some people like to imagine faith as a coup de théâtre. Some need to look at any belief in God in the broadest, most extreme and exaggerated terms. Humility, charity, dignity, mercy, and love are seen as weaknesses. Nihilism is easy for some adults to accept as magazines, television, and other instruments of the media create a complacent world of ever changing adultery, ever accepting idolatry. Faith in God allows us to desire peaceful coexistence. Faith in God is the one efficient renewable resource.

We live in a world concerned with saturated fatty acids and sacred cows. We allow ourselves to be selfish, to live lives with minimal compassion, mercy, sacrifice. Life is a satire and we all know one or two satyrs.

As Christians we need to develop the skills to examine our lives and make adjustments to correct our lives, to move toward goodness and holiness. As Christians we must remember to love all mankind, to believe and promote social justice for everyone. As Christians we must acknowledge that our lives contain many unexpected tangent moments.

Everyone knows about the Ten Commandments; we have to follow them. We must find ways to incorporate the Beatitudes in our daily lives. As Christians we are called to be evangelistic about and for our faith and our God.

We are all called to be more, to do more, to pray more, to learn more, to hope more, and to help more.

Our faith needs to be an active and assertive part of our lives. A life of holiness encourages hope and joy.