Saturday, May 31, 2008

No Needy Among Them - Keith Brenton

No Needy Among Them

by Keith Brenton

"Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need. " ~ Acts 2:45"
There were no needy persons among them. For from time to time those who owned lands or houses sold them, brought the money from the sales and put it at the apostles' feet, and it was distributed to anyone as he had need." ~ Acts 4:34-35
These followers in the aborning church took Jesus seriously when He said:"Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for yourselves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will not be exhausted, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys." ~ Luke 12:33

The Artist Our Father Is


Friday, May 30, 2008

Dr. N.T. Wright: Spirit of Truth


Spirit of Truth
Acts 2.1–21; John 14.8–27
Dr N. T. Wright


Anoint and cheer our soilèd face
With the abundance of thy grace;
Keep far our foes, give peace at home;
Where thou art guide no ill can come.

I love to think of Bishop John Cosin writing, and praying, that translation of the ancient Veni Creator Spiritus, with all the turbulence of the mid-seventeenth century to give plenty of substance to the urgent petitions. Cosin is quite a presence in Auckland Castle, as he is about Palace Green if you know where to look, and stands as a salutary reminder of a rich, rugged but robust spirituality that somehow came through the middle of that terrible century and planted again the flag of emerging Anglicanism here in Durham. And we can read the confusion and danger, the sorrow and the turmoil, of those years, in those lines about comfort, life and fire of love, and especially in the clear recognition of the blinded sight, the soilèd face, the foes who are to be kept far off and the peace which we long for at home.
Cosin thus folds the troubles and dangers of his day, both civil and ecclesiastical, within the invocation of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit who comes to inspire and lighten, to anoint and to bless with the sevenfold gift. And we his successors have need, three and a half centuries or so later, to pray in the same way, beset as we are in church and state once more with many and great dangers. Pentecost is regularly thought of as a time of great joy and excitement, and rightly so. But any reading of Acts or John, two of the main places in the New Testament where the Spirit plays a large part, will show that Pentecost must also be a time of clear-eyed recognition of the challenges which God’s people face both in the world and in their own internal life, and of the urgent need for the inspiration, strengthening and guiding of the Holy Spirit without whom we are simply a bunch of ignorant armies clashing by night.
Take Acts for a start. The great Pentecost scene, with the wind and fire and the sudden rush of multilingual speech, has confused many in the last generations because it has been set within the wrong story. It has been held up as the archetype of a particular form of Christian experience, a filling and empowering which transforms sleepy or backsliding Christians into lively and zealous ones. Thank God that happens in many different ways, because the church always needs waking up and shaking up, and the day we forget that or resist it we might as well crawl away under a stone. But that isn’t the story which Luke is telling at this point. There is nothing wrong with the disciples before Pentecost; they are praying, worshipping, joyful followers of the risen and ascended Jesus, simply awaiting further instructions and the power to carry them out. And the story which Luke is telling doesn’t focus on them and their spiritual experience, though it includes that. Luke’s story is about God and God’s kingdom and about the sovereign lordship of the risen and ascended Jesus.
Because Pentecost, you see, goes very closely with the story of the Ascension. Many western Christians have been embarrassed about the Ascension over the years, because they have thought of heaven and earth in the wrong way. We have supposed that the first-century Christians thought of ‘heaven’ as a place up in the sky, within our space-time universe, and that they imagined Jesus as a kind of primitive space-traveller heading upwards to sit beside God somewhere a few miles away up in the sky. And we have told ourselves this story about the early Christians within an implicit modernist framework in which God and the world are in any case a long way away from one another, so that if Jesus has gone to be with God – whatever that means – we understand that he has left us behind, that he is now far away in another dimension altogether. And we have then thought that the point of this story is that we, too, will one day go off to this same place called ‘heaven’, leaving earth behind for good. But this way of understanding the Ascension is, quite simply, wrong on all counts. The early Christians, like their Jewish contemporaries, saw heaven and earth as the overlapping and interlocking spheres of God’s good creation, with the point being that heaven is the control room from which earth is run. To say that Jesus is now in heaven is to say three things. First, that he is present with his people everywhere, no longer confined to one space-time location within earth, but certainly not absent. Second, that he is now the managing director of this strange show called ‘earth’, though like many incoming chief executives he has quite a lot to do to sort it out and turn it around. Third, that he will one day bring heaven and earth together as one, becoming therefore personally present to us once more within God’s new creation. The Bible doesn’t say much about our going to heaven. It says a lot about heaven, and particularly heaven’s chief inhabitant, coming back to earth.
That is the story of the opening of Acts; and Pentecost, in Acts 2, means what it means within that story, not some other. Pentecost is therefore to be seen as the moment when the personal presence of Jesus with the disciples is translated into the personal power of Jesus in the disciples; because Pentecost signals the mode and means by which the chief executive is putting his new authority into operation. Our generation has backed off from the idea of Jesus, let alone the church, as actually running things in this world, because it sounds to us like triumphalism, like fundamentalism, like the attempt to establish a direct theocracy which is of course an affront to our wonderful western democratic ideals. But Pentecost, and the story of the early church which follows from it, shows clearly that this isn’t so. The disciples, filled with the Spirit, begin the work of Jesus’ sovereign and saving rule over the world, whose Lord he now is, by their shared common life, their works of healing, their proclamation of him as Lord and King, and their bold witness against the authorities who try to stop them. And that just about sums up the whole book, all the way to when Paul arrives in Rome and announces God as King and Jesus as Lord right under Caesar’s nose, openly and unhindered. So Pentecost is about the powerful presence of Jesus with his people; about the implementation of Jesus’ healing, saving rule through his people; and thirdly about the anticipation, in and through that work, of the final day when heaven and earth shall be one. It isn’t just that the Spirit is the ‘down payment’ of what is to come for us as his people; the Spirit is the advance sign of what God is going to do for the whole earth, the entire created order.
Because, you see, at the heart of Pentecost, in Acts and actually in John as well, the coming of the Spirit is all about the launching of the new Temple. In Judaism, heaven and earth overlapped in the Temple; but now, says Luke, Jesus is the one who has taken earth, in his own person, his own human body, right into heaven; and the Spirit is the corollary of this, the life of heaven becoming manifest and powerful here on earth. Heaven and earth are thus locked together in a firm and unbreakable Trinitarian embrace, as God the Father welcomes the human Son, the first-fruits of the new creation, into his rightful seat as Lord of the World, and pours out his own Spirit upon Jesus’ followers so that they can both be and accomplish new creation in themselves and in the world. This is the sold rock on which Christian mission is built, and in consequence also the solid rock on which the church must live in its own life of worship and mutual love. And this is why, on the day of Pentecost, Peter’s sermon isn’t about how people can have a new spiritual experience. It’s about the fact that God’s new day has dawned at last, the great and glorious day of the Lord spoken of by the prophets, and about the fact that the crucified Jesus has been exalted as King and Lord over Israel and the whole world. And the sevenfold gifts of the Spirit are given not just to comfort, inspire and enlighten us for our own private benefit, but to send us out as heralds of this new dawn, as messengers of this new King.
And as we find ourselves thus commissioned and equipped, we discover that, again to our embarrassment, we have to speak about truth; indeed, that we have to speak truth, to a generation for whom that claim is instantly suspect, automatically put through the shredder of deconstruction and irony. And I suspect that the embarrassment of truth goes quite closely with the embarrassment of the Ascension: because we still live within that implicit split-level world where we know that we are upon earth, where we can’t be certain of anything, and that claims to absolute truth are claims to a heavenly perspective upon the world, a God’s-eye view which can quickly be exposed as laughable arrogance. (I am reminded that in E. P. Sanders’ famous book, Paul and Palestinian Judaism, the index has an entry which says ‘Truth, ultimate’, with three page references, pages 30, 32 and 430; but when you turn to those pages you find that each one is blank. Sanders is both ironically declaring his epistemological humility and also cocking a snook at those interpreters who believe that we can ever know the ultimate truth.) But, unfortunately for our over-ironic age, we are offered and indeed given the Spirit of Truth, and we have no choice but to follow where this Spirit leads and to speak the truth to which we are thus led.
And John leaves us in no doubt where that will be. ‘Sanctify them in the truth,’ prays Jesus in the upper room, ‘your word is truth.’ But this, again, is not a private experience, such as the gnostic might wish for. It leads directly, as in Acts, to confrontation with those who presume that they own the truth, and back up their claim with violence. ‘My kingdom is not from this world,’ says Jesus to Pilate in chapter 18. ‘So, you are a king, are you?’ asks Pilate, eagerly latching on to the words which might have Jesus condemn himself out of his own mouth. ‘That word is your way of putting it,’ replies Jesus. ‘My way is like this: I was born, I came into the world to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.’ ‘Truth!’ answered Pilate. ‘What’s that?’ And John’s point, in the middle of the massive irony, and the direct clash of the non-violent kingdom of God with the violent and ignorant armies of Caesar, is crystal clear: truth is what happens when heaven and earth come together as they were always meant to. Truth is therefore what you find in Jesus, who is the point where that happens. And truth is therefore what happens when the Spirit comes to fill, to guide, to commission, to empower the followers of Jesus. ‘Teach us to know the Father, Son, and thee of both to be but one’; truth is what happens when we are caught up in the powerful, healing, transforming love of the Triune God, acted out on Calvary and at Easter, poured out at Pentecost, given so that we, the followers of Jesus, may be truth-tellers, truth-tasters here at the Eucharist, truth-livers as we confront the lies in our own hearts and lives and communities, truth-doers in our public and political life, in our ordering of our church at this turbulent time when like John Cosin we are faced with scepticism on the one hand and puritanism on the other.
All we can do in such a time is pray the Pentecost prayer, not as triumphalists trying to trump everyone else with our spiritual superiority but as humble hearts seeking after holiness and hope, and ready to find our minds and our manners remade by the truth, by the Truth Incarnate, by the Spirit of Truth whom he sends from the Father.

Come, Holy Ghost, our souls inspire,And lighten with celestial fire.
That through the ages all along
This may be our endless song:
Praise to thine Eternal Merit
Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Amen.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Why Christians Help People

By
John Alan Turner

Tragedy last week kept us from furthering our exploration of why Christians should help people.
See, we’d spent a few days talking about God and what he’s like. That was important because in our desire to imitate him we should find ourselves becoming more and more like him – especially in the way he relates to people.
But I also think it’s important for us to think about humans and what they’re like. Obviously, the main reason God has chosen to serve people (especially the way he did when he was on earth in the flesh) is because it is in his nature to be a servant.
Certainly, we are called to follow the example of Jesus and serve others. So, one reason we help others is from a sense of obedience.
Furthermore, serving others is actually beneficial to us. We become better people by serving and caring for the needs of others.
But is there something more? Is there anything resident within humans that makes them worthy of service?
I think there is.
Human beings are made in the image of God and possess certain inalienable qualities which set them apart from the rest of creation. Obviously, for those who believe the Bible (or pay attention to human nature, human history and current events), human beings are fallen, and the divine image has been defaced. But – this is important – while that divine imprint has been defaced it has not been destroyed (cf. Genesis 9:6; James 3:9).
This belief is why Christians have always considered human life sacred and why Christians engage in charitable work.
In other words, we don’t honor people simply because it is what Jesus would do. And we don’t honor people simply because it’s good for us.
We honor people because they are worthy of honor and respect and dignity.

Learning from Our 'Mistaks' by Mike Barres

Learning from Our 'Mistaks'
by Mike Barres

One night I was driving alone. It was late, and I was really getting tired. I tried all the usual things. I turned up the radio. I rolled down the window. I started singing. Then I tried my last resort, I started slapping myself. Nothing seemed to work.
I pulled off the interstate at an exit. I went in to the restroom. I washed my face with a paper towel, and then wet another one to take with me. I thought that it might help me stay awake. It wasn't until I was coming out of the bathroom, as I looked at the door, that I realized that I had gone in to the women's restroom. That could have been disastrous.
Now that you have heard my story, you can understand why I always check the door of a public restroom several times before I go in.
We can learn from our mistakes. Sometimes there is a fine line between conviction and condemnation. We feel so terrible when we make mistakes. The good news is that God still loves us. He wants us to learn from our mistakes, not just feel bad about them.
Some of my most valuable life lessons have come from making mistakes. It is painful at the time, but leaves an impression on you, that you won't forget.
God wants us to learn from our mistakes! I try to stop and greet people, even when I am in a hurry now. Why? One time I was going to visit someone in the Intensive Care Unit of a hospital. He had fallen off of a roof. I sped past a couple from our church who was in the waiting room. I hurried by them and said a brief hello. After I visited the gentleman in ICU, I quickly passed this same couple on my way out, and said, "Seeya."
I received a phone call later, from the wife who was very hurt. I didn't realize, nor did I slow down enough to find out, that her husband had had a suspected heart attack. I felt awful. Although that sick feeling stayed with me for a few days, the pain that I remember from that event helps me slow down enough to visit with and talk with folks even when I'm in a hurry.
Mistakes can be painful, but it's comforting to know that God doesn't condemn us and wants us to learn from our mistakes.
There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, who do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit. ... And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose (Romans 8:1;Romans 8:28).
But, we have to be willing to learn from them!

"Be still and know that I am God."Lord, Your words lead us to the calmness and greatness of your presence.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Grace And Shoulds

Grace and Shoulds
By
Mike Cope

WE SHOULD be as faithful as we can be in our reading and understanding of scripture, trying to conform our beliefs and practices to the Way of Christ.

WE SHOULD be as energetic as we can in seeking justice and in teaching the good news.

WE SHOULD seek to live holy lives, placing ourselves before God so that his Spirit can transform us into people full of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.

But all of these SHOULDS flow out of this truth: we are saved by grace. It is not of ourselves (not our expertise as Bible-readings, not our evangelistic zeal, not our holy lives), lest we should boast. We are God’s people because of the faithfulness of God’s Messiah.

And that salvation is much more than just protection from hell. It is the re-forming of a person (and a group) for God’s purposes in the world.

Thank God, it’s by grace.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Memorial Day


James McCabe Irvine Sr.

Standing on the brige of a German Sub captured by Commander Irvine's battle group.

Commander Irvine was awarded the Legion of Merit with the Combat V for his part in the destruction of another German Sub, U248, in January 1945

Memorial Day


Memorial Day


Memorial Day


Memorial Day


Memorial Day


Memorial Day


The Aroma of Christ By Tom Norvell

The Aroma of Christ
As we have moved through the spring season this year the Honeysuckle and Privet Hedge (I hope that is correct) has been in full bloom. (I suppose this happens every year, but it seems more noticeable this year. I'm not sure why.) As I have walked through the neighborhoods, stood on the tee box at the golf course, and even as I have stepped out onto the deck of our house the sweet aroma of these blooms have been almost overwhelming. It is not unusual to smell the aroma before the plants are spotted. The aroma causes you to stop and look around in wonder, "Where is that aroma coming from?" It has been one of the blessings of this spring season.
However, as delightful as the aroma is for me, I realize that for some it is a reminder of allergy season. Instead of being able to enjoy the sweet smell of spring, their eyes begin to itch, water, and swell. They begin to sneeze, they become congested, and they get headaches. They also look around and wonder, "What is it that is causing this reaction?" Instead of a blessing, they head for the medicine cabinet for some relief.
To some it is the sweet aroma of spring. To others it is smell of misery and agony.
Paul reminds us that we, the followers of Jesus, have a role similar to that of the plants as we live our lives in this world. "But thanks be to God, who always leads us in triumphal procession in Christ and through us spreads everywhere the fragrance of the knowledge of him. For we are to God the aroma of Christ among those who are being saved and those who are perishing. To the one we are the smell of death; to the other, the fragrance of life. (2 Corinthians 2:14-16, NIV)
The power of this passage is obviously in these words: "For we are to God the aroma of Christ among those who are being saved and those who are perishing. To the one we are the smell of death; to the other, the fragrance of life." To the one our life and our message is the smell of death; to the other, the fragrance of life. The bushes and flowers that bloom in spring are simply doing what they were created to do. Honeysuckle and roses grow and bloom. The aroma is a natural result. To some it is pleasant. To others it is not.
For the follower of Jesus, our task is to do what we have been created to do, "spread the knowledge of Him." Some will appreciate us. Some will not. Some will enjoy us. Some will despise us. Some will be drawn to us. Some will reject us. Some will want to be near us. Some will run from us. We cannot control the reaction. All we can do is live the life.
There is no need to complain or wish things were different. This is the plan of God. No good will come from moaning and groaning of how we wish people would get to know us and love us for who we really are. Our task is to live the life. If we choose to follow Christ we become the aroma of Christ. His fragrance is inevitably splashed upon us. As we live the life some will stop and ask, "Where is that sweet aroma coming from?" Others will stop and ask, "What is that awful smell?" There are no other options. To God, when we live the life, we are the aroma of Christ. That's what matters.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Jason Retherford: God, “where are you?”

If you are like me, I will pray for you…in all seriousness, we have wondered where God is. I have lately been feeling rather glum about my walk with the Lord. I have been struggling with some things, and dealing with some other issues, and of course there is junk from my past that resurfaces from time to time. But, lately in addition to this stuff, I have been feeling distant from God. I know that the Scripture teaches that God is always present. I get that. I just don’t feel it. I know I am not saved by how I feel. But, I still feel distant from God. But, I am aware this morning that even though my self-absorption God has been showing me in small ways that He is near, or closer than I think according to John Ortberg.
I have been reading Ortberg’s book, God is closer than you think and have been hit hard by the reality of God’s presence. Also re-reading the Chronicles of Narnia, I was moved to tears this morning in the recount of Lucy meeting Aslan again! Also, my oldest and middle daughters continue to teach me about the love of God and his constant presence in our lives. They were singing just yesterday, “Jesus Loves Me,” when Rachel makes her own verse and it went something like this…”Yes, Jesus loves my daddy, yes Jesus loves my daddy, yes Jesus loves my daddy, the Bible tells him so!” Even as I retype what she sang, my eyes are filling with tears. I have more in common with Susan in Prince Caspian than Lucy, I have listened to the fears of the world more than I have listened to still small whisper of God. I was beginning to wonder if I was deaf. My hard-heartedness is crippling, and yet I realize now that I have never been alone. I almost feel like Shasta, walking at night unaware, if you will of what is keeping my upright on the path. Jacob says it best, “God is in this place and I was unaware.”

God's Plan of Salvation

God's Plan of Salvation

Step 1: Hear the Gospel and Recognize Your Condition
You must hear the gospel and then understand and recognize that you are lost without Jesus Christ no matter who you are and no matter what your background is. The Bible tells us that “all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.” (Romans 3:23) Before you can be saved, you must understand that you are lost and that the only way to be saved is by obedience to the gospel of Jesus Christ. (2 Thessalonians 1:8) Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.” (John 14:6) “Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12)

Sunday, May 18, 2008

When Your Heart is Breaking By Tom Norvell

When Your Heart is Breaking
by
Tom Norvell
Question: "Can you die of a broken heart?"

Answer: "I don't know, but there are times when your heart is breaking that you wish you could die! It would be easier than enduring the pain."
Some hearts break because of unfulfilled love. Some hearts break due to unfulfilled dreams. Some hearts break because of the loss of a child, the loss of a parent, the loss of a friend, or the loss of a mate. Some hearts break when others are hurting and there is nothing that can be done to help them or to ease their pain. Jesus expressed this as described by Matthew, "When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd" (Matthew 9:36).
When your heart is breaking, you want help. You long for relief. You long for someone who can fix it. Ron Peltzman's little children's book, "Mr. Bell's Fix It Shop," is the story of Mr. Bell, a man who could fix just about anything, "Even a broken heart."
In Michael Card's song, "I Will Not Walk Away," these words speak the thoughts of a broken heart:
Don't read me pointless poems friend.
Don't diagnose. Don't condescend.
Though you may be right to disagree.
I need someone to weep with me.
When your heart is breaking, that is what we want, isn't it? We want to know that someone can fix this. When it cannot be fixed, we want to know that someone is there to weep with us. We don't always want explanations, even though we may ask for them. We don't need another book to read, or another famous quote, or another story that proves "You are not the only one who has ever had a broken heart." We need someone to weep with us. We need someone to comfort us.
He binds up the brokenhearted.Job had that from his three friends ... for awhile:
Then they sat on the ground with him for seven days and seven nights. No one said a word to him, because they saw how great his suffering was (Job 2:13).
Unfortunately, for Job, they started talking.
Your heart may be breaking today. You may have spent the night weeping. You may be longing for someone to come sit and weep with you. You may be crying out to the Lord for help because you feel like a sheep without a shepherd.
I do not promise a Mr. Bell who can fix anything. I cannot promise that well-intentioned friends won't share "pointless poems" and useless platitudes. But I do promise that you can cry out to the Lord and that when you cry out you will be heard. And, I promise that the One who hears is close and will provide you the comfort you need.
The righteous cry out, and the Lord hears them;he delivers them from all their troubles.The Lord is close to the brokenheartedand saves those who are crushed in spirit(Psalm 34:17-18 NIV).
Jesus said the following passage referred to Him:
The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is on me, because the Lord has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives and release from darkness for the prisoners, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor and the day of vengeance of our God, to comfort all who mourn, and provide for those who grieve in Zion — to bestow on them a crown of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of gladness instead of mourning, and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair. They will be called oaks of righteousness, a planting of the Lord for the display of his splendor (Isaiah 61:1-3 NIV).
When your heart is breaking, cry out to the One who hears and binds up the brokenhearted. If your heart is breaking, cry out to the One who is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.

Friday, May 16, 2008

A Jesus For Real Men

A Jesus for Real Men.
By
Mike Cope

I have to admit: I get weary of the modern “masculinity movement” in the church that wants people to rediscover the REAL Jesus — the Jesus who’d love to kick your butt.
It gets as silly as this. The parody is silly, but so is the interview it’s based on. (”The problem in the church today: it’s just a bunch of nice, soft, tender chickified churchboys. Sixty percent of Christians are chicks, and the forty percent that are dudes are still sort of chicks.” Ummm, speak for yourself, Pastor Driscoll.)
The best thing I’ve read on men and the church recently was this article in Christianity Today by Brandon O’Brien entitled: “A Jesus for Real Men: What the New Masculinity Movement Gets Right and Wrong.”
Listen to some of this brilliant, gospel-formed writing:
“The masculinity movement would have us emulate the glorified Jesus — the one who will return on horseback and brandish the sword of judgment. That is certainly the Jesus we worship. But it is not the Jesus we are commanded to imitate. The only times Jesus appears in Scripture as a warrior are in his pre-incarnate debuts in the Old Testament and post-resurrection glory. Our model of behavior, then, is the suffering Son, not the glorified one. Humanity in the image of Christ is not aggressive and combative; it is humble and poor (Phil. 2:5ff). We are most like Christ not when we win a fight, but when we suffer for righteousness’ sake (Eph. 5:1-2; 1 Thess. 1:6; 2:14).”

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Something to think and pray about this week

You remember that story of the siege of Toledo in the Spanish Civil war. The starving garrison inside the fortress was commanded by Colonel Moscardó. The besieging army telephoned the Colonel, ‘We have captured your son. We will shoot him unless you surrender'. Moscardó asked to speak to his son on the phone. When the boy came, his father spoke only two words, ‘Muere bien (Die well).' Of all we have to do in this life, here is the hardest task, to die well. The thousands of deaths we see on television do not prepare us to see it as a task at all. Death is often presented as the ultimate failure in dramas that flood our screens. But the most comforting memories of my years as a priest are of the people who showed me what it was to die well. In a New York hospital I was called to an old Irishman. He was worn out by a life of hard work on the docks, and he knew he was dying. Alone in the harsh city, he had drifted, rather than moved, away from the church. He was so overwhelmed by joy at finding an Irish priest, and receiving the last sacraments, that both of us were weeping. He could remember the Hail Mary, and as his strength ebbed away, he kept repeating with total contentment, ‘Pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death.' Many of his generation saw death in Ireland (‘bás in Éireann') as a blessing. He had the next best thing.
Dear Jesus, as I call on you today I realise that I often come asking for favours.Today I'd like just to be in your presence.Let my heart respond to Your Love.