Fr. Marinko
(c)Tony Zubac/ Mary TV
August 9, 2018
St. Theresa Benedicta of the Cross
Dear Family of Mary!
Our Lady once said to us:
St. Theresa Benedicta of the Cross
Dear Family of Mary!
Our Lady once said to us:
"Dear children! Today again I am calling you to pray with your whole heart and day by day to change your life...."(11/13/1986)
On Day 5 of the Youth Festival, Fr. Marinko, the Pastor of St. James Parish, gave a wonderful talk on prayer. He spoke about our human problem with attention, and how being inattentive can hinder our prayer. Here is the first portion of his talk:
Just for a little while we will take a theme. And the theme is attention. Attention. How to be attentive.
The
Holy Mass started and some (whether it refers to us or others, I do not
know) but some people already in their thoughts wander away to a
different place. With their bodies they are present and with their
spirits they are absent. Their thoughts take them to the past, to the
future. Running around they go to certain paths, to nature, to the work
that they do.
And very
often it happens that during the time of Holy Mass, there are negative
feelings that occur, like anger, anger towards a person who has hurt
them. They fall into anxiety, they start being worried, and all of the
time during Holy Mass they think about what could happen to them. They
listen to the Word of God, and after Holy Mass they are not able to
remember even a single detail from the Gospel that was read. They
receive Jesus, and at the same time they think about something
completely different. Indeed, they came to Holy Mass with their own
will, and when Holy Mass finishes they are as if they never came at all.
Who do we talk about here? Do you recognize yourself here? Can you
recognize yourself. Have you had such experiences? If you do not have
these experiences, we won't talk about it. A Ha, Dobro.
Why
do we not feel joy during the time of Holy Mass? The reason can be
because we are not awake. Because prayer is not an encounter with God to
us. Jesus is with us. Jesus is with us in prayer. But we are not with
Him, we are not joyful. Because we are not awake. Because our thoughts
have been directed only to those problems we have or the worries we have
in our lives. To be awake it means to be vigilant, to be attentive.
Remember Jesus who said, "Be awake and pray." Remember St. Paul, who
invites us, "It is already the time for us to be awake."
Distraction
is the problem of each and every faithful. For Ponski (not sure of this
name) distraction, and how to be recollected is so important that he
says, "If you want true prayer, then you will have to find how to be
recollected." There is nothing more important for prayer than being
recollected. Do whatever you can to get it.
How
to be so attentive? Who to be recollected in prayer? Every minute,
every second we have millions of thoughts. How to be attentive...Someone
said that we have the thoughts the emotions we have. It is like when
you are dealing with birds. You cannot prevent birds to fly over our
heads, but we can prevent that they make a nest on our head. Birds are
above us. This we cannot prevent. But that the birds make a nest on our
heads, we can prevent.
Attention
is not the same thing as to be concentrated. To be concentrated means
to be directed to only one thing and to exclude the other. With such an
attitude inner peace can be easily lost. There are many good things that
we can lose. Attention on the other hand does not exclude anything. Not
even food, not feelings, not sounds. There is not struggle, but the
spirit is awake, completely aware of the moment.
So
now we want to meet one young person. Her name was Simone Weil. She was
Jewish. She was a philosopher. She wasn't the slave of the
Christianity. She was completely Jesus. She got to know Jesus. She died
very young. She was not very old when she died. She said that the point
of prayer was not being attentive. What does attention mean? Let's see
what her experience was like.
This is what she says:
"Last summer when I was working, trying to learn the Greek language with a certain man whose name starts with the letter T. Word by word, I was able to learn the 'Our Father' in the Greek language. So we promised each other that we would learn it by heart. And I believe that he did not do it. I did not do it either. But a few days afterwards, as I was reading the Holy Gospel, I said to myself that this is what I need to do. Since it is something that I promised and it is a good thing to do. That is exactly what I did.
"Last summer when I was working, trying to learn the Greek language with a certain man whose name starts with the letter T. Word by word, I was able to learn the 'Our Father' in the Greek language. So we promised each other that we would learn it by heart. And I believe that he did not do it. I did not do it either. But a few days afterwards, as I was reading the Holy Gospel, I said to myself that this is what I need to do. Since it is something that I promised and it is a good thing to do. That is exactly what I did.
It
was so sweet, that Greek text. And this Greek text completely took me
over and I was not able to resist. I was reading it constantly and
reciting it over the next few days. A week afterwards, I went for the
grape harvest, to harvest grapes. And each day, before I would start
working, I would recite the prayer of the 'Our Father' in the Greek
language. And very often I was repeating that prayer in the vineyard.
Ever since then, from that time on I was obliged every morning to say
that prayer of the 'Our Father' with full attention, being completely
concentrated. I thought it was going to be my only religious duty. If I
would fall asleep, I would start again.
Up
to that point, during vocal prayer, my attention would be distracted
for a little bit, or I would start to fall asleep. I would start over
again until I would become completely, completely attentive. Sometimes
it would happen that I would start again. And I would start out of the
purest pleasure. I would do that only when I felt a profound inner need
to do so.
The strength of
this exercise is extraordinary. It surprises me each time, because even
though I experience it each day, each day it surpasses my expectations.
Dear
young friends, this is a beautiful example for each one of us. This is a
good exercise for each one of us. So right now, let us try to do that.
Let's give it a try. We will say the Our Father in our language because
we do not know Greek. Let's try to say the prayer, completely collected.
With full attention. Perhaps you can open your hands. Make a gesture.
But try now in silence. With complete attention. Full attention. Every
single word of the prayer of the Our Father. Say it now...long
silence....
If you are just like Simone Weil, you can
say to yourself every day "at least I will say one Our Father each day,
with full attention, being fully concentrated. One Our Father each day
that I try to say with all of my heart. Every single word. To be very
attentive when I say it.
To Simone Weil, prayer is being directed
toward God with all of our attention. The attention that the soul is
capable of. The whole attention is being completely collected in a soul,
being directed towards God. So I wonder and I ask myself, does that
mean that Jesus said, "Love God with all of your heart, with all of your
soul, with all of your mind, with all of your strength." I wonder is
this what Jesus thought. Full attention of the soul towards God. For
Simone Veil, learning how to pay attention, how to pay full attention,
that is what is most important purpose of study in the church. (14:10)
(Fr. Marinko's Talk, 8/5/18 Youth Festival) (https://marytv.tv/youth-festival-2018/ )
Thank you, Fr. Mariko, for your good teaching, helpful teaching
that brings us closer to Jesus and Mary! We want to learn to pray with
our whole heart, as Our Lady asks us. We can ask our saint for today,
St. Theresa Benedicta of the Cross, to help us. She went from being
purely intellectual to a life of deep, attentive, contemplative prayer.
She gave her entire attention to Jesus, very much like Simone Weil. Let
us ask them both to pray for us!
In Jesus, Mary and Joseph!
Cathy Nolan
©Mary TV 2018
In Jesus, Mary and Joseph!
Cathy Nolan
©Mary TV 2018
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