Death is unavoidable…
Many people in this world do not want to think of death. My sons, keep in mind that whether we think of it or not, death is unavoidable.
–Saint John Bosco (1815-1888)
Many people in this world do not want to think of death. My sons, keep in mind that whether we think of it or not, death is unavoidable.
–Saint John Bosco (1815-1888)
Curtness in words or actions only hardens hearts and depresses them, whereas gentleness encourages them and makes them
–Saint Jane Frances de Chantal (1572-1641)
Do not suppose that you will have to offer God no more than you have planned; you will have to give Him much more. He rewards good works by sending us an opportunity for greater ones.
–Teresa of Avila (1515-1582)
In a general way, it can be said that when it is for the honor of God or the good of our neighbor, we ought to speak. When it concerns only ourselves, it is almost always more perfect to keep silence, in imitation of our Lord in His Passion.
–Luis M. Martinez (1881-1956)
As an audience maintains silence to hear better the voice of an orator, as music lovers keep silence during a symphony to admire its artistic beauty, so the silence of contemplation is nothing other than the indispensable condition for hearing the voice of God and addressing to Him our heartfelt words.
–Luis M. Martinez (1881-1956)
If we want to attain silence in the interior of our hearts, we ought to begin by investigating the causes of the clamor within us. Ordinarily there are two causes of interior noise: the imagination and the heart. How often it happens that we enter the presence of Jesus to converse sweetly with Him, and then the imagination begins to skip around, carrying us hither and thither… At other times, the source of the din is in the heart. Except in cases of abnormal agitation, the imagination never produces the clamor that the heart produces. When we are under the stress of some particular emotion, such as love, fear, desire, or anger, we cannot compose our spirit; our soul seems like a city full of noise.
–Luis M. Martinez (1881-1956)