Worry is a spiritual hangover…
We may not think of worry as a “spiritual hangover” but it is. Worry is the result of a lack of trust in God’s care and providence.
–Mother Angelica (1923-2016)
We may not think of worry as a “spiritual hangover” but it is. Worry is the result of a lack of trust in God’s care and providence.
–Mother Angelica (1923-2016)
Dryness leads us gently from vocal prayer, where we learn to speak to God; to Meditation, where we think of God; to Contemplation, where our heart merely gazes upon Him with a love too deep for words.
–Mother Angelica (1923-2016)
When we desire to commune with God to strengthen our souls for combat in the battles of life, we can close our eyes. When we have done that, we have closed the “doors” of our senses. We have for a few moments closed out the world around us. Now..it is dark, and if we are quiet and become aware of this silence in our souls, we suddenly realize He is there.
–Mother Angelica (1923-2016)
Our minds, like broken records, repeat, rehearse, rehash, and relive the hurts, the angry moments, and the disappointments. If this attitude continues for days, and days turn into years, we can be sure we are indulging in a bad attitude. The luxury of harboring a resentment has cost us dearly, for we are experiencing a “spiritual hangover.” We are allowing something that upset our souls to hang over for months or years and destroy us.
–Mother Angelica (1923-2016)
The Church is heir to a long tradition which, passed down from generation to generation, is further enriched by the experience of each individual. Your personal history has a place within the greater history of the Church.
–Pope Francis (1936-
The music of the young should be listened to with the heart and not with the ears.
–Saint John Bosco (1815-1888)