Twentieth Sunday
after Pentecost
Thoughts for the Week - Fr. R. Taouk
11th October 2015
On Keeping Sunday
Holy by Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine
Consider, my
dear Christian, you serve your body the whole week, you
use all your powers for temporal business, to support
yourself and your family, and God blesses you, if you
work with a good intention. Now God chose one day in the
week, Sunday, and in the year several other holidays,
which you should devote to His service and the salvation
of your soul; is it not, therefore, the greatest
ingratitude to steal these days from God and your soul,
and employ them to gain a transient good, or to indulge
in vain, sinful pleasures? At certain times man gives
rest to irrational animals, and you give the powers of
your body and soul none of the rest they would and
should find in quiet devotion, in prayer and meditation,
in attending Divine Service, in receiving the Holy
Sacraments, etc. If you inquire whence come these
shameful violations of Sundays and holidays, you will
find that there is no other reason than love of gain and
avarice, sinful love of pleasure, and often complete
want of faith and confidence in God's providence. We
wish to become rich by all means, and we do not reflect
that this will not happen without the blessing of God,
and that wealth is a net, in which thousands entangle
themselves to their eternal perdition. We wish to live
merrily and enjoy ourselves, but we do not consider that
our life is only a time of penance, to attain that
eternally blissful rest, of which Sunday is an emblem.
We spend Sundays
and holydays in idleness, vain conversations, buying and
selling, servile work, or in still worse things, without
experiencing the slightest scruple. But God will cover
the violators of His Sacred days with confusion and
shame (Mal. 2:3), and permit many temporal evils
to come upon them, as proved by daily experience. The
blessing of God can never rest upon those who never care
for it, but rather make themselves unworthy to receive
it, by violating days consecrated to God. Let this be a
warning to you.
PRAYER: O
good Saviour! how manifest are meekness, and wisdom in
all Thy words and actions! O, grant, that we may
regulate all our actions in such a manner, that they may
be acceptable to Thee and tend to the edification of our
neighbour. Give us the grace to employ all the days,
consecrated to Thee, for Thy honour and our salvation,
that we may never raise ourselves above others, but
follow Thee in all humility.
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