Quotes from St. Bernard of Clairvaux

Nothing is more reasonable; nothing is more rewarding. (than loving God)

This is so true, is it not? Nothing is more reasonable than loving God, because He is the most beautiful and wonderful Person in the universe. He created us and gave us our lives! He meets all our needs throughout our lives, giving us the air we breathe, the food we eat, our jobs, our families, a sense of purpose, a hope and a future. He even went so far as to give us His only Son! (Jn. 3:16; Ro. 8:32) How could we not love Him?

And nothing is more rewarding than loving God, because to know Him is to love Him, and to have relationship with Him is the greatest joy of life. He Himself is our “exceeding great reward” (Gen. 15:1). Loving God is what we were made for!

If you get a chance, you might want to go to this link and read all of St. Bernard’s treatise, “On Loving God.” It’s really quite profound and beautiful.

www.catholicspiritualdirection.org/onlovinggod.pdf

Spiritual Formation

I’m taking a course on Spiritual Formation, and reading some great books. One is called The Kingdom Life. It’s edited by Alan Andrews, but each chapter is written by a leader from a group called TACT (Theological And Cultural Thinkers). I want to pass on to you some great quotes from this book as I go through it. Check them out below… Continue reading “Spiritual Formation”

More great quotes from Fueling Freedom

“Affordable electricity has improved human welfare in the twentieth and twenty first centuries more than any other technology. Yet, as Matt Ridley reminds us, two billion people in the world have never seen an electric switch. Policies now asserted by the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the U.S. government limit or prohibit financing for affordable fossil-fuel-fired electric generation in developing countries. This elite green perspective cruelly denies the world’s poorest families basic light, heat, and cooling, on which health and well-being depend. The greatest environmental killers in the world are cook stove smoke, contaminated water, and uncontrolled sewage. The elimination of indoor pollution, the provision of clean water, and the safe disposal of waste require treatment systems running on… electric power.” (223)

Global warming alarmists and politicized agencies tell us that the weather is becoming more extreme, as President Obama did in his 2013 State of the Union address: ‘Heat waves, droughts, wildfires, floods – all are now more frequent and more intense. We can choose to believe that Superstorm Sandy, and the most severe droughts in decades, and the worst wildfires some states have ever seen were all just a freak coincidence. Or we can choose to believe in the overwhelming judgment of science – and act before it’s too late.’ By repeating this nonsense, the president is contradicting the conclusions of the official climate science, which he insists we must accept. The IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report concludes that there is no meaningful evidence that hurricanes, tropical storms, drought, floods, or tornados are more extreme or frequent than in the past. Judith Curry, the former head of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Georgia Tech, likewise told Congress that ‘most types of weather extremes were worse in the 1930s and even in the 1950s than in the current climate, while the weather was overall more benign in the 1970s. This sense that extreme weather events are now more frequent and intense is symptomatic of ‘weather amnesia’ prior to 1970. Yet some developing countries are demanding ‘climate reparations’ and ‘climate justice’ from developed countries like the United States, to pay for the extreme weather damage they have incurred, allegedly from our country’s carbon dioxide emissions.” (224)

The conflict of the ages

“Today we are in a showdown between the God of the Bible and the god of this world, and when we face off with Muslims, the confrontation is much like the one between Elijah and the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel. It centers on the question of the ages: Who is the true God?
Everyone who grasps the right answer will end up in heaven. Everyone else won’t. The stakes are that high.”
Dreams and Visions, Tom Doyle