Men’s Winter Breakfast with Abbot Austin Murphy

MAYSLAKE MINISTRIES PRESENTS:

A Men’s Winter Breakfast with Abbot Austin Murphy

 

Men of all ages are invited to enjoy a bountiful breakfast and an

inspiring talk presented by the newly elected Abbot Austin Murphy,

from St. Procopius Abbey on Saturday, February 26th at the

Doubletree Hotel, 2111 Butterfield Road, Downers Grove

from 9:00am-11:00 am.  Cost is $30 per person and includes

a plated breakfast of bacon, eggs, breakfast breads, coffee, juice and tea.

Register online at www.mayslakeministries.org or call 630-268-9000.

Master Card and Visa accepted.

Part 2: Reflection on Pride …

Part 2 . . . great reflection on the 1st deadly sin I found while on the web.

If every believer had a spiritual day planner complete with a “to do” list, we might find one common denominator—the challenge to overcome pride is at the top.  Perhaps no other spiritual obstacle is quite like this one.  A simple reason exists for its Goliath proportions: pride is Satan’s specialty.

Pride is the characteristic that most aptly describes him.  It is the issue that had him expelled from heaven.  It is still one of Satan’s most successful tools in discouraging people from accepting the gospel of Jesus Christ.  Let’s not fool ourselves into thinking that pride is a problem only for the lost.  The most effective means the enemy has to keep believers from being full of the Spirit is to keep us full of ourselves.  No wonder the Bible states and restates that God hates pride.  It is the enemy of genuine ministry.  It is the end of many homes.

Scripture exhorts believers, “Humble yourselves, therefore, under God’s mighty hand” (1 Peter 5:6).  God’s Word also makes that very unsettling statement in Daniel 4:37: “Those who walk in pride he is able to humble.” I believe the sum total of those two verses is that we can humble ourselves, or God can humble us.  God won’t put up with pride in His own children very long without dealing with it.  He’s much too faithful—and far too much is at stake.  I know from personal experience that humbling ourselves is far less painful than inviting God to humble us.  He tends to make sure His lessons “take.”  I am absolutely convinced that the most painful season God has taken me through to date was primarily to shatter my yoke of pride.  A yoke, incidentally, I didn’t even recognize I had.  Believe me, I’m on the lookout for it now every single day.

In some ways, Christians have to be more alert to pride than anyone.  If we don’t presently have an issue that is actively humbling us, we veer with disturbing velocity toward arrogance and self-righteousness.  We are wise to remember that Christ never resisted the repentant sinner.  He resisted the religious proud and Pharisaic.  Remember, pride wears many masks.  I once spoke on pride only to have someone remark afterward that she had far too little self-esteem to have pride.  Pride is not the opposite of low self-esteem, but rather the opposite of humility.  We can have a serious pride problem that masquerades as low self-esteem.  Pride is self-absorption whether we’re absorbed with how miserable we are or how wonderful we are.  We are wise to be on the constant lookout for pride in our lives.  I believe we can safely say that if we’re not deliberately taking measures to combat pride, it’s probably doing something to combat humility.

Pride is the welcome mat in every figurative prison cell.  All we have to do to remain bound in any area is to refuse to take responsibility for our strongholds and repent of the sin involved.  Pride is a monumental boulder in the path toward breaking free.

Adapted from Praying God’s Word, by Beth Moore, pages 57-60. Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2000.

Part 1: “My name is pride. I am a cheater.”

My name is Pride.  I am a cheater.
I cheat you of your God-given destiny…because
you demand your own way.
I cheat you of contentment…because you
deserve better than this.”

I cheat you of knowledge…because you already
know it all.

I cheat you of healing…because you’re
too full of me to forgive.

I cheat you of holiness…because you refuse to
admit when you’re wrong.

I cheat you of vision…because you’d rather look
in the mirror than out a window.

I cheat you of a genuine friendship…because
nobody’s going to know the real you.

I cheat you of love…because real romance
demands sacrifice.

I cheat you of greatness in heaven…because you
refuse to wash another’s feet on earth.

I cheat you of God’s glory…because I convince
you to seek your own.

My name is Pride.  I am a cheater.

You like me because you think I’m always looking out for you. 
Untrue.
I’m looking to make a fool of you.
God has so much for you, I admit, but don’t worry…
If you stick with me
You’ll never know.

Adapted from Praying God’s Word by Beth Moore, Nashville: Broadman and Holman, 2000.

Patriotism . . . . .

Please view:

Sergeant First Class John C. Beale, June 11, 2009, Peachtree City, GA.

Litany of Humility – Rafael Cardinal Merry del Val (1865-1930)

O Jesus! meek and humble of heart, Hear me.
From the desire of being esteemed,

Deliver me, Jesus.

From the desire of being loved…
From the desire of being extolled …
From the desire of being honored …
From the desire of being praised …
From the desire of being preferred to others…
From the desire of being consulted …
From the desire of being approved …
From the fear of being humiliated …
From the fear of being despised…
From the fear of suffering rebukes …
From the fear of being calumniated …
From the fear of being forgotten …
From the fear of being ridiculed …
From the fear of being wronged …
From the fear of being suspected …

That others may be loved more than I,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.

That others may be esteemed more than I …
That, in the opinion of the world,
others may increase and I may decrease …
That others may be chosen and I set aside …
That others may be praised and I unnoticed …
That others may be preferred to me in everything…
That others may become holier than I,
provided that I may become as holy as I should…

- Rafael Cardinal Merry del Val (1865-1930), Secretary of State for Pope St. Pius X

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