Saturday, December 22, 2007

Meditation for December 23, Mary Kept All in Her Heart

Mary kept all these things in her heart. What was the center toward which Mary's heart turned? The words of her Son and the divine revelations; other things did not concern her. Where her treasure was, there was her heart.

And I, what place do I give during the day to the thought of the Humanity of the Savior, His Holy Person, His public or hidden life, His Passion, or His Eucharistic existence? I do not lack sug­gestions, for I have my spiritual reading, prayer, conversations and good example.

Do I, like Mary, keep all these divine things in my heart? Or am I like a stranger in the midst of the supernatural realities which form the setting of my daily life?

Fenelon suggests: "Compare what does occupy you with God who could occupy you." What a distance, what an abyss....

The misfortune does not so much arise from what I fail to do, as for instance neglecting to exert myself in prayer, but rather from remaining on the surface of the realities that I meditate. Their vital significance escapes me. These truths must penetrate into my very soul; then they will become stimulating, gripping, caustic. The chief aim of my meditation should be to fix the sublime, invis­ible realities in my poor soul, only too often a prisoner of the visible form in which I live. I must convince myself that the invisible realities constitute the one thing necessary - all else is nothing.

I must delve deep during prayer.
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Adapted from Meditations for Religious
by Father Raoul Plus, S.J. (© 1939, Frederick Pustet Co.)

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