Sempermom

The friendship of mothers is best realize as we pray for each other in the vocation we share. We are daughters of the New Eve. It is Mary who waits for us, journeys with us, cries with us, laughs with us, teaches us, and prays with us. As we retire in the evenings, may we find joy in knowing that, we may be someone's mother by day, but by night, we sleep in peace as her daughters, first.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

The Eight Beatitudes
M.A.P.S #4

Luke 6:17, 20-26
Jesus came down with the Twelve and stood on a stretch of level ground with a great crowd of his disciples and a large number of the people
from all Judea and Jerusalem and the coastal region of Tyre and Sidon. And raising his eyes toward his disciples he said;
"Blessed are you who are poor, for the kingdom of God is yours. Blessed are you who are now hungry, for your will be satisfied.
Blessed are you who are now weeping, for you will laugh. Blessed are you when people hate you and when they exclude and insult you, and denounce your name as evil on account of the Son of Man. Rejoice and leap for joy on that day! Behold, your reward will be great in heaven. For their ancestors treated the prophets in the same way. But woe to you who are rich, for you have received your consolation. Woe to you who are filled now, for you will be hungry. Woe to you who laugh now, for you will grieve and weep. Woe to you when all speak well of you, for their ancestors treated the false prophets in this way."


'The Eight Beatitudes'

taught by Servant of God, Father John A. Hardon, S.J.

Reflection on the 'Eight Generosities of Motherhood'

As a Mother...

Sharon Willoughby

The First Beatitude

Blessed are the poor in spirit; theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

"The poor in spirit are those who voluntarily become poor to follow Christ more closely; those who are detached in spirit from the material goods of this life; those who maintain a low opinion of themselves while others esteem them; and those who are satisfied with what they have and accept it without impatience. The kingdom of God promised to the poor in spirit is the state of grace by which God now lives in us and the Beatific Vision in the world to come. In the First Beatitude, Christ advocates poverty, while the world despises the poor and canonizes the rich.

Humility is the moral virtue that keeps a person from reaching beyond himself. It is the virtue that restrains the unruly desire for personal greatness and leads people to an orderly love of themselves based on a true appreciation of their position with respect to God and their neighbors. Religious humility recognizes one's total dependence on God; moral humility recognizes one's creaturely equality with others. Yet humility is not only opposed to pride; it is also opposed to immoderate self-abjection, which would fail to recognize God's gifts and use them accordingly to His will."

As a mother, I visit this beatitude with all the surprises, disappointments, failures, shortcomings and blessings, that may form my days in the life of my children. If I were to arrive before the Lord at days end, rich in my own successes, what would the Lord multiply for me? This kingdom promised is a near as the next Sacrament we encounter together as a family. His promise of the kingdom of heaven provides the difference in life on this side of grace.

The Second Beatitude

Blessed the gentle; they shall have the earth for their heritage.”

"Gentleness is love when faced with provocation. It is acting toward others with charity and humility, without sharpness, without contempt and without ever becoming impatient with their shortcomings. The heritage promised to the gentle is the land of their own hearts of which they have control, the land of the hearts of others which they have conquered by their goodness, and the land of Heaven. In the Second Beatitude, Christ praises gentleness while the world belittles meekness and praises those who succeed by crushing anyone who stands in the way. Meekness is the virtue that moderates anger and its disorderly effects. It is a form of temperance that controls every inordinate movement of resentment at another person's character or behavior."

As a mother, provocation may be the essence of engaging with children at times when formation is taking place. I bring all of these encounters with my own children to this beatitude with every motive to conquer with goodness all that is entrusted to my care. In 1998, we were living in Puerto Rico with five children when Hurricane Georges devastated the island with months of recovery to follow. The home we were in was built as a cement bunker on Ramey Base in Aguadilla. For days, we anticipated, prepared, prayed and lived in anxiety, not knowing what to expect. The violent sounding winds and intensity of weather that passed over our house were terrifying. When the eye of the hurricane finally passed over us, the sounds of silence and calm compelled us to run outside to express our relief and joy. This is the gentleness in the eye of motherhood that I strive to realize in the storms of child-rearing.

The Third Beatitude

“Blessed those who mourn; they shall be comforted.”

"Christ especially praises the mourning of repentance for one’s own sins and of reparation for the sins of others and the mourning of sorrow over the loss-by death or separation-of someone who is loved. His promise to those who mourn is the spiritual strength they need to remain firm in their hardships and, in fact, to grow in God’s friendship because of their trial. Christ mainly encourages sorrow for sin,while the world enjoys living in pleasure and the noise of empty laughter."

As a mother, I express to my children sorrow for those times when I did not hear them with my heart, but only with random acts of attentiveness. Each day brings new ways to listen and respond in love. In a family, we teach our children that when we hurt each other, we forgive by expressing our sorrow. I was blessed this Saturday to make it to Confession. My six-year-old daughter asked me why I needed to go to Confession. I explained that even when I lose my patience at home and say I'm sorry to them, I still have to go to Jesus and tell Him I am sorry, because He loves them even more than I do.What a witness we are to our children when we partake of the Sacramental life with the zeal of our own regular conversions.

The Fourth Beatitude

Happy those who hunger and thirst for what is right; they shall be satisfied.”

"Those that hunger and thirst for what is right are those who desire what they should. They want what God wants and their desires are always satisfied. Those who hunger and thirst for what is right are satisfied because their desires are in agreement with God’s will. And God always gives a deep spiritual joy to those who do His will in spite of trial and difficulty. Indeed, there is no true happiness even in this life except in conformity with the divine will. In the Fourth Beatitude, Christ promises joy only to those who seek justice and holiness while the world offers satisfaction in the enjoyment of sin."

As a mother, my day begins and end by providing for the physical needs of my children. As they grow, asking the Lord to give them a hunger and thirst for what is right in His plan for them, gives me a renewal in blessing and hope in this beatitude. It seems unnatural to pray for my children to be hungry and thirsty, but if they are satisfied without the Lord, what is left to fill them? Make them hunger and thirst Lord, for all of You!

The Fifth Beatitude
“Happy the merciful; they shall have mercy shown them.”

"The merciful are those who forgive injuries and pardon those who offend them. Mercy is love shown to the unlovable and charity to those who have been unjust and ungrateful. The reward is to obtain mercy from God. In the Fifth Beatitude, Christ commands us to forgive and show mercy to those who have offended us, while the world seeks vengeance and its law courts are filled with demands for retribution. Mercy is the disposition to be kind and forgiving. It is the ready willingness to help anyone in need, especially in need of pardon or reconciliation."

As a mother, my children are always watching how I react in adult situations, whether it be with extended family, politics, religion or even my own beloved spouse. I bring to this beatitude all those temptations to self-preservation in prideful realities that may occur in view of my own children. We describe forgiveness as not making someone continue to 'pay' for having inflicted injury. One strives to be sorry for offending, while the other strives to forgive the offense in family life. Sometimes it is the child that will not forgive that receives most of my attention. Who could forget the picture of Pope John Paul II in an attentive embrace in the cell of the man who attempted to assassinate him? I bring to this beatitude, prayer for self-knowledge of the attachments that may prevent God's graces upon my family. The desire to pray for His mercy over us all completes my time with this beatitude.

The Sixth Beatitude

“Happy the pure in heart; they shall see God.”

"The pure in heart are those who observe chastity according to their state of life. They are all whose hearts are free from sinful attachment to creatures. Their reward is a clear faith in the divine mysteries in this life and the promise of the vision of God in the life to come. In the Sixth Beatitude, Christ blesses those who are pure of heart while the world scoffs at chastity and makes an idol of creatures. Purity is freedom from anything that weakens or impairs or changes the nature of a being or its activity. Purity of faith means the absence of error or what is contrary to the revealed truth; purity of intention is the exclusion of self-will in the desire to perform the will of God; purity of conscience is the absence of any sense of guilt in the performance of a moral action."

As a mother, it is this beatitude that strengthens me in the sacrifices that are necessary to provide the teachings of our faith and the life of moral living together as a family. This blessing that the pure of heart shall see God provides me every comfort, especially in times of trials and tribulations, challenges and misunderstandings in our passion for the culture of life.


The Seventh Beatitude

Happy the peacemakers; they shall be called the sons of God.”

"Peacemakers are those who love peace and labor to establish peace all around them; they try to heal discord between people and especially to seek to reconcile sinners who are estranged from God. The rewards promised to peacemakers are the grace now of being specially loved by God as His dearest children and the attainment of heavenly glory as part of God’s family in eternity."

As a mother I bring to this beatitude the petition to be attentive to the movements of peace in each of the traits of my children. How may I best anticipate peaceful co-existences at meal time, at play time, at school and work time? To labor for peace in the family so that we all remain close begins with the proper sleep, rest, nutrition and exercise, for us all. The time we spend in prayer, especially with the family recitation of the Rosary, brings about a tolerance and acceptance that show glimpses to the blessings in this beatitude.


The Eighth Beatitude

“Happy those who are persecuted in the cause of right; theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

"All those are persecuted in the cause of right who are opposed and criticized for their loyalty to Christ and His Church and who persevere in doing God’s will in spite of not being accepted or even being rejected by others. Christ teaches the humanly impossible doctrine of accepting persecution with patience and resignation to God’s will while the world dreads nothing more than criticism and rejection. Human respect, which means acceptance by society, is the world’s moral norm. The reward for suffering persecution on earth is the possession of the kingdom of God in Heaven."

The silent persecution that occurs when others express disdain for the large family, is truly a small sacrifice of praise for the generosity the Lord has shown to us. It is the silent suffering of being open to life and not conceiving or losing life after conception that only God can see and understand, yet common in the life of a mother. Seeing my own children grow into righteous persecutions with their own peers creates a motherly sorrow that only this beatitude may console.

Father Hardon reminds us that the joy that Christ promises is true happiness twice over. True because the joy we experience on earth is a foretaste of the perfect happiness in store for all eternity'. By practicing these virtues, we are assured of a life of blessedness that will never end, as we account for the hope that is within us.

Reverend Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

Servant of God

Founder

Marian Catechist Apostolate

www.mariancatechist.com



Marianna in Oklahoma City at the abortuary.



Eye has not seen...

Ear has not heard...

What God has ready for those who love Him.



1 Comments:

  • At 1:38 PM, Blogger Morning Star said…

    This is one of my favorite posts you've done, Sharon ... I think we have threads crossed in our prayer lives! :)

    Thanks for posting this - it's like a ((hug)) to my heart of support!

     

Post a Comment

<< Home