Temptations and Trials

Aside

Temptations and Trials

“Our pilgrimage on earth cannot be exempt from trial. We progress by means of trial. No one knows himself except through trial, or receives a crown except after victory, or strives except against an enemy or temptations.”  St Augustine in his Commentary on the Psalms

“As the pilot of a vessel is tried in the storm; as the wrestler is tried in the ring, the soldier in the battle, and the hero in adversity: so is the Christian tried in temptation.” — St. Basil the Great

“The life of prayer calls for continuous battles. It is the most important and the longest effort in a life dedicated to God. …. We would much prefer a real battle, fierce and decisive. But God, as a rule, thinks otherwise. He would rather we were in a constant state of war.” — Dom Augustin Guillerand,

“I never found anyone so religious and devout as not to have sometimes a subtraction of grace, or feel a diminution of fervor. No saint was ever so highly rapt and illuminated as not to be tempted sooner or later. For he is not worthy of the high contemplation of God who has not, for God’s sake, been exercised with some tribulation.” — Thomas à Kempis

“Many of the saints tell us that these times of God-ordained ‘desolation’ or dryness are very important times of growth if we persevere through them by exercising a deeper faith, hope, and love. It is particularly important, they tell us, not to give up our spiritual practices but to remain faithful. God in His wisdom knows how long and how deeply we must be tried in order to come closer to Him, and we should patiently trust Him during the trial while persevering in our practices.”  –  Ralph Martin

“It (disappointment) occurs when the boy who has been enchanted by Stories from the Odyssey buckles down to really learning Greek. It comes when lovers have got married and begin the real task of learning to live together. In every department of life it marks the transition from dreaming aspiration to laborious doing.”  C.S. Lewis , “Screwtape Letters”

The way the Christian follows is that of imitating Christ. We can follow Him only if we help Him bear His cross. We all have experience of suffering, and suffering leads to unhappiness unless it is accepted  with a Christian outlook. The Cross is not a tragedy: it is God’s way of teaching us that through sin we can be sanctified, becoming one with Christ and winning Heaven as a reward. This is why it is so Christian to love pain: “Let us bless pain. Love pain. Sanctify pain….Glorify pain!” ([Blessed] J. Escriva, “The Way”, 208).

All of us desire to avoid any and all of life’s difficulties, whether they be family problems, financial issues, or employment challenges. Yet throughout life, problems, issues, and challenges will thrust themselves into one’s world. Generally they will be very unwelcome and , occasionally, will create deep seated anxiety or fear.  These occasions will occur for every one of us. How they are handled will determine one’s success in life.  – JTE

 

The Resurrection of the Body

Aside

The Resurrection of the Body

While our children were playing together, my wife and I glanced at each other with a smile in our eyes, expressing with one look our joy in the fabulous, joyful individuals we had brought into the world. Without the love we showered on each other, the children would not exist. We had created wonderful new human beings, who now experienced the wonders of life on their own. Without us, these stimulating vibrant individuals would not be enjoying and enhancing the world.

Similarly, just as our children were totally depended on the love between my wife and me for their existence, so also all Christians are depended on Christ’s love for them; a love exhibited during his life and death on earth and on his Resurrection. Christ’s resurrection is the basis for belief in man’s own resurrection. As been said many times by many different people, “The Christian faith stands or falls with the truth of the testimony that Christ is risen from the dead.” The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the foundation for the Christian belief in the resurrection of Christian bodies. All Christians are emphatically tied to the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. As demonstrated in his twelve appearances after his resurrection, Jesus possessed a new, transformed body, unencumbered by time or space; a body type man will assume when man enters heaven, signifying a new relationship between God and man….a heavenly minded relationship.

Man was created by God with both a body and a soul, any resurrection of the body must include both the body and the soul in order to return man to the original state in which God created the first man and woman, Adam and Eve, prior to their Original Sin. The undivided unity of man – body and soul- is a fundamental statement of the fate of man. The salvation of man is viewed as possessing both the body and soul – unseparated man. The Resurrection of dead as expressed in the Apostles’ Creed speaks of the one creation “man’; the person. It is the Christ, as lover of all mankind, whose own resurrection sets the example for man’s resurrection. “All love wants eternity; and God’s love not only wants it but effects it and is it.” (Ratzinger, Introduction to Christianity, pg.350)  The beginning of the resurrected life actually begins when we form a relationship with Christ on earth; a relationship that outlasts death. There is continuity with Christ from an earthly life through death and into heaven.

The issue confronting man is man’s willingness to form a loving, lasting relationship with Jesus Christ. Will man choose Jesus and the gift of an everlasting, loving life or will he choose only himself and face an eternal existence of sorrow and rejection?  This is the fundamental decision facing each person. Choose well!

The subject of the Resurrection of Jesus is so critical to Christian beliefs that it is demands some review and study. There are numerous books and articles which discuss both the Resurrection of Jesus and man’s resurrection. Listed below is a small sample of these writings.

The life of Christ” by Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, Kindle edition, Chapter 62

Handbook of Christian Apologetics” by Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli, Kindle edition, Chapter 8. The chapter examines in some detail the arguments for and against the Resurrection of Jesus and man’s resurrection.

Jesus of Nazareth, From the Entrance to Jerusalem to the Resurrection”, by Pope Benedict XVI, published by Ignatius Press, Chapter Nine.

Credo”, by Hans Urs Von Balthasar, published by Ignatius Press, Chapter XI.

Introduction to Christianity”, by Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, published by Ignatius Press, Part Two, Section C, part 3.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church”, Part One, Article Eleven, “I Believe in the Resurrection of the Body”