#followingjesus

Quote of the day, 10 May: Pope Leo XIV

This reflection is drawn from a homily delivered by Pope Leo XIV while serving as Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Callao, Peru. Preached on the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time, 17 January 2021, he invites the faithful to renew their relationship with Jesus.

The readings we have heard at this Mass for the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time invite us to return to the beginning of our life of faith, to take a look at how we are living our relationship with Jesus.

In the Gospel, Jesus begins a dialogue with a question. He says to the disciples of John the Baptist—who will later become His own followers—“What are you looking for?” (Jn 1:38).

What are you looking for? What am I looking for? These are the first words of Jesus in this Gospel passage. We can say that the encounter with Jesus begins with a question: What are we looking for in life? What are we looking for in Jesus? The response of the two disciples is: “Rabbi, where are you staying?” As if to say, Where can we find you?

This question is very important for our lives—perhaps more than ever in these times—when we must seek the Lord and live our faith in new ways.

This question—Where can we find you? Where are you staying?—expresses a desire present in the hearts of all of us, of every human being—at least of those who seek something beyond the surface. Those who want to understand the true meaning of life and want to encounter God because they feel that need, that restlessness, that desire to live in union with the Lord.

When Jesus responds to the disciples’ question—“Where are you staying?”—He answers: “Come and see” (Jn 1:39).

The Lord calls us to follow Him, and if we follow, we will truly see wonders—even in the midst of suffering and pain and so many difficulties.

The Lord invites us to stay with Him, just as He did with the disciples of John. These disciples discover in Jesus the Lamb of God, the fullness of truth. That’s why Andrew, the brother of Simon Peter, when he realizes he has found the Messiah, goes and finds his brother and says, “We have found the Messiah” (Jn 1:41). And then Peter too comes to know Jesus.

We want to live with Christ, to follow His example—He came to serve, not to be served. To live our faith especially through this experience of encountering Christ, through His Word—reading the Word of God, asking the Lord to enlighten us, to give us the capacity to hear His voice—through the Word and through other people who accompany us on the journey.

May the Lord help us to fulfill it, to be faithful, to live out this commitment He has asked of us. May we be faithful Christians, bearing witness with our lives—because we have already encountered Jesus. And now He wants to call us once again to accept that invitation: “Where are you staying?”

“Come and see.”

Pope Leo XIV (Robert Francis Prevost, O.S.A.)

Prevost, R.F. 2021, Homily for the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time, Diocese of Callao, 17 January. Available at: https://www.diocesisdelcallao.org/noticias/mons-robert-prevost-escuchando-la-palabra-de-dios-descubriremos-nuestra-vocacion

Translation from the Spanish text is the blogger’s own work product and may not be reproduced without permission.

Featured image: Pope Leo XIV (Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, O.S.A.) greets the faithful from the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica following his election as Supreme Pontiff on 8 May 2025. Image credit: © Mazur/cbcew.org.uk (Some rights reserved).

⬦ Reflection Question ⬦
Have I made space to hear Jesus’ voice in Scripture and respond to His invitation to “come and see”?
Join the conversation in the comments.

#disciples #followingJesus #JesusChrist #PopeLeoXIV #service #unionWithGod #vocation #witness

Quote of the day, 8 March: St. Teresa of the Andes

My goal is to love and serve God. For if I love God, I’ll fulfill His divine will.

What is His Will? That I follow Him and be perfect.

How can I most easily attain perfection? By means of the evangelical counsels: obedience, chastity and poverty.

I must follow Jesus Christ wherever He calls me, since that is my salvation.

Saint Teresa of the Andes

Resolutions, Retreat of 1918

Griffin, M D & Teresa of the Andes, S 2021, God, The Joy of My Life: A Biography of Saint Teresa of the Andes With the Saint’s Spiritual Diary, ICS Publications, Washington DC.

Featured image: The Calling of Saint Matthew, Caravaggio (Italian 1571–1610), oil on canvas, ca. 1599–1600, Contarelli Chapel, Church of San Luigi dei Francesi, Rome. Image credit: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

#Call #DivineWill #evangelicalCounsels #followingJesus #goal #love #perfection #salvation #StTeresaOfTheAndes

Greg Johnsonpteranodo
2024-11-08

James Russel Miller, Pennsylvanian Presybterian pastor and publisher, on 2 Co 8. He says a grasping, covetous, miserly Christian is a misnomer, not the kind of follower that Christ is looking for. In the same passage he quotes a priest who says he never had anyone come to confession admitting to covetousness.

Would anyone have any admonition about covetousness today?

How can you help those in famine?

"A miserly Christian is a misnomer. One who is greedy, grasping, covetous, is not the kind of follower Christ wants."

It isn’t easy to follow Jesus, but it isn’t impossible. It is possible when we follow him not as the result of our own effort, but as a gift we receive from above.

We become disciples of Jesus when we turn our gaze to him and humbly allow his love to enlighten us, comfort us, and strengthen us. His words are unforgettable: “You did not choose me, but I chose you” (Jn 15:16); “apart from me you can do nothing” (Jn 15:5).

Silvio José Báez, o.c.d.

Auxiliary Bishop of Managua
Homily, 23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time (excerpt)
4 September 2022

Translation from the Spanish text is the blogger’s own work product and may not be reproduced without permission.

Featured image: Australian photographer Nicole Avagliano captured this scenic view of a lake at sunset in August 2019. Image credit: Nicole Avagliano / pexels.com (Stock photo)

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/10/12/baez-followme/

#BishopSilvioJoséBáez #decision #followingJesus #gaze #gift #HolySpirit #Jesus #love #WordOfGod

As this path on the high mount of perfection is narrow and steep, it demands travelers who are neither weighed down by the lower part of their nature nor burdened in the higher part. This is a venture in which God alone is sought and gained; thus only God ought to be sought and gained.

Obviously, one’s journey must not merely exclude the hindrance of creatures but also embody a dispossession and annihilation in the spiritual part of one’s nature.

Our Lord, for our instruction and guidance along this road, imparted that wonderful teaching—I think it is possible to affirm that the more necessary the doctrine the less it is practiced by spiritual persons—that I will quote fully and explain it in its genuine and spiritual sense because of its importance and relevance to our subject.

He states in the eighth chapter of St. Mark: Si quis vult me sequi, deneget semetipsum et tollat crucem suam et sequatur me. Qui enim voluerit animam suam salvam facere, perdet eam; qui autem perdiderit animam suam propter me … salvam faciet eam (If anyone wishes to follow my way, let him deny himself, take up his cross and follow me. For whoever would save his soul will lose it, but whoever loses it for me will gain it) [Mk. 8:34–35].

“I think it is possible to affirm that the more necessary the doctrine the less it is practiced by spiritual persons.”

Oh, who can make this counsel of our Savior on self-denial understandable, and practicable, and attractive, that spiritual persons might become aware of the difference between the method many of them think is good and the one that ought to be used in traveling this road! They are of the opinion that any kind of withdrawal from the world, or reformation of life, suffices.

Some are content with a certain degree of virtue, perseverance in prayer, and mortification, but never achieve the nakedness, poverty, selflessness, or spiritual purity (which are all the same) about which the Lord counsels us here. For they still feed and clothe their natural selves with spiritual feelings and consolations instead of divesting and denying themselves of these for God’s sake. They think denial of self in worldly matters is sufficient without annihilation and purification in the spiritual domain.

It happens that, when some of this solid, perfect food (the annihilation of all sweetness in God—the pure spiritual cross and nakedness of Christ’s poverty of spirit) is offered them in dryness, distaste, and trial, they run from it as from death and wander about in search only of sweetness and delightful communications from God. Such an attitude is not the hallmark of self-denial and nakedness of spirit but the indication of a spiritual sweet tooth. Through this kind of conduct they become, spiritually speaking, enemies of the cross of Christ [Phil. 3:18].

A genuine spirit seeks rather the distasteful in God than the delectable, leans more toward suffering than toward consolation, more toward going without everything for God than toward possession, and toward dryness and affliction than toward sweet consolation.

“The inclination to choose for love of Christ all that is most distasteful whether in God or in the world… this is what loving God means.”

It knows that this is the significance of following Christ and denying self, that the other method is perhaps a seeking of self in God—something entirely contrary to love. Seeking oneself in God is the same as looking for the caresses and consolations of God. Seeking God in oneself entails not only the desire to do without these consolations for God’s sake, but also the inclination to choose for love of Christ all that is most distasteful whether in God or in the world; and this is what loving God means.

His Majesty taught this to those two disciples who came to ask him for places at his right and left. Without responding to their request for glory, he offered them the chalice he was about to drink as something safer and more precious on this earth than enjoyment [Mt. 20:22].

This chalice means death to one’s natural self through denudation and annihilation. By this means one is able to walk along the narrow path in the sensitive part of the soul, as we said, and in the spiritual part (as we will now say), in one’s understanding, joy, and feeling. Accordingly, a person can attain to dispossession in both parts of the soul.

Not only this, but even in the spirit one will be unhindered in one’s journey on the narrow road. For on this road there is room only for self-denial (as our Savior asserts) and the cross. The cross is a supporting staff and greatly lightens and eases the journey.

Our Lord proclaimed through St. Matthew: My yoke is sweet and my burden light [Mt. 11:30], the burden being the cross. If individuals resolutely submit to the carrying of the cross, if they decidedly want to find and endure trial in all things for God, they will discover in all of them great relief and sweetness. This will be so because they will be traveling the road denuded of all and with no desire for anything.

“If individuals resolutely submit to the carrying of the cross, if they decidedly want to find and endure trial in all things for God, they will discover in all of them great relief and sweetness.”

If they aim after the possession of something, from God or elsewhere, their journey will not be one of nakedness and detachment from all things, and consequently there will be no room for them on this narrow path nor will they be able to climb it.

I should like to persuade spiritual persons that the road leading to God does not entail a multiplicity of considerations, methods, manners, and experiences—though in their own way these may be a requirement for beginners—but demands only the one thing necessary: true self-denial, exterior and interior, through surrender of self both to suffering for Christ and to annihilation in all things.

In the exercise of this self-denial everything else, and even more, is discovered and accomplished. If one fails in this exercise, the root and sum total of all the virtues, the other methods would amount to no more than going around in circles without getting anywhere, even were one to enjoy considerations and communications as lofty as those of the angels.

“I would not consider any spirituality worthwhile that wants to walk in sweetness and ease and run from the imitation of Christ.”

A person makes progress only by imitating Christ, who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one goes to the Father but through him, as he states himself in St. John [Jn. 14:6]. Elsewhere he says: I am the door; anyone who enters by me shall be saved [Jn. 10:9].

Accordingly, I would not consider any spirituality worthwhile that wants to walk in sweetness and ease and run from the imitation of Christ.

Saint John of the Cross

The Ascent of Mount Carmel, Book II, chap. 7, nos. 4–8

John of the Cross, St. 1991, The Collected Works of St. John of the Cross, Revised Edition, translated from the Spanish by Kavanaugh, K and Rodriguez, O with revisions and introductions by Kavanaugh, K, ICS Publications, Washington DC.

Featured image: This detail of Christ carrying his Cross by the Italian painter Giampetrino (1495–1549) comes from the collections of the National Gallery, London. It was executed in oil on poplar, probably about 1510–1530. Image credit: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/09/14/juan-imitation/

#cross #followingJesus #imitationOfChrist #inspiration #selfDenial #spiritualDirection #spirituality #StJohnOfTheCross

Christ looks back over his right shoulder at the viewer as he carries his cross to Golgotha

Do you want to get to heaven? Embrace the baseness of poverty and it will be yours….

It is the love of the poor that establishes kings. Blessed are those who do not chase after those goods for which their possession is tiresome, whose love is defiling, and whose loss is torture…

The kingdom of God is given rather than promised to the poor… All those of good will… leaving all for Christ as He left all for them, follow Him wherever He goes.

Blessed John Soreth

Cited by François de Sainte-Marie, OCD
L’Esprit de la Règle du Carmel
Ephemerides Carmeliticae 02 (1948/1) 205-244

Translation from the French text is the blogger’s own work product and may not be reproduced without permission.

Featured image: This detail of a photo by Lili Almog shows a Discalced Carmelite nun revealing her profession cross. The photo was taken during Almog’s work on the Perfect Intimacy project, which highlighted the life of three Discalced Carmelite monasteries: Haifa, Bethlehem, and Port Tobacco (USA). Image credit: Discalced Carmelites

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/07/27/soreth-heaven/

#BlessedJohnSoreth #CarmeliteRule #followingJesus #FrançoisDeSainteMarie #heaven #JesusChrist #KingdomOfGod #love #poverty #religiousLife #renunciation

2024-05-24

Confused about salvation? Is it just avoiding punishment? ‍♀️ Discover the amazing gift of grace and how it unlocks a life transformed by Christ! #SalvationSimplified #GraceGift #ChristianLiving #FreeFromSin #FollowingJesus #JesusLife #TransformedLife #ChristianBlog #BibleStudy #FaithJourney #faith #christianity

livingforthechrist.com/the-gif

2023-01-30

The problem with the Christian faith is that, historically, we tend to create a Jesus that looks just like us:

•hating the same people we hate
•loving the same people we love
•interpreting scripture the same way we interpret scripture
•blessing us (& not “them”)

#wcm #WeirdChristianMastodon #wct #WeirdChristianTwitter #FollowingJesus #Christianity #religion

2023-01-06

I pledge allegiance to Lord Jesus—the Slaughtered & Risen Lamb—& no other.

I may live as a foreigner in another kingdom, but I belong to His Kingdom.

& we’re spreading this Kingdom—even here!—by a love formed through denying ourselves, picking up our crosses, & following Him.

#January6 #wct #WeirdChristianTwitter #FollowingJesus #Anabaptist

2022-12-21

May we keep the Christ in Christians as we celebrate His Christmas!
#wct #WeirdChristianTwitter #Advent #Christmas #christianity #FollowingJesus

Benjamin Young Savage (ᐱᓐᒋᐱᓐ)benjancewicz
2019-08-25

I really hope the congregation of @LutherPlace@twitter.com heard the message.

Because their journey will be a long one.

Benjamin Young Savage (ᐱᓐᒋᐱᓐ)benjancewicz
2019-08-25

We should remember, however, that even beautiful churches are often harbours cruelty and ugliness.

And such is the case with @LutherPlace@twitter.com.

And since in their bulletin they invite people to tag and tweet during their sermons, I shall.

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