Showing posts with label charity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charity. Show all posts

Monday, 13 July 2015

Charity

Love  

This morning as I was glancing through the writing of Fulton J. Sheen on Charity, I was fascinated by the way he presented about Love. Here I will like to share with you the abstract of the Address delivered on February 4, 1945. Hope you too enjoy and gain some insight by it.  

“If, then, you bear a hatred toward anyone, overcome it by doing that person a favour. You can begin to like classical music only by listening to it, and you can make friends out of your enemies only by practising charity. The reason you love someone else is because that person supplies your lack or fills up your void. You find in the other something you do not have: beauty, wealth, virtue, kindliness, etc.  

But God does not love you because you supply His lack. He finds you lovable not because, of and by yourself, you are lovable, but because He puts some of His love in you. As a mother loves her child because her nature is in and his coloured pattern is in it, so God loves you because His Power or His nature or His Love is in some way in you.  

If, then, God’s love for you makes you lovable, why not put some of your love in other people and make them lovable. Where you do not find love, put it there. Love therefore all things, and all persons in God.  

So long as there are poor, I am poor:
So long as there are prisons, I am a prisoner:
So long as there are sick, I am weak:
So long as there is ignorance, I must learn:
So long as there is hate, I must love.”  

Thank You

Sunday, 28 June 2015

Saint Margaret of Scotland

Saint Margaret of Scotland

St. Margaret was born in 1045 in Hungary. Her parents were Edward Atheling, heir to the English throne and Princess Agatha of Hungary. She was the English princess. Norman conquered England in 1066 so the family left for the Kingdom of Scotland. In 1070, at the age of 25, Margaret married the king of Scotland, Malcolm Canmore. She was a pious woman, and she established many charity centres. Three of her sons became kings of Scotland and a daughter became a queen of England.

She influenced her husband Malcolm by reading him stories from the Bible. She was concerned about the worship of the church. Her husband and children – especially her youngest son, later David I – also to became just and holy rulers. Queen Margaret was a strong, pure, noble character, who had very great influence over her husband, and through him over Scottish history, especially in ecclesiastical aspects.

She attended to charitable works, serving orphans and the poor every day and washing the feet of the poor in imitation of Christ. She rose at midnight every night to attend church services. She spent much of her time in prayer, devotional reading, and ecclesiastical embroidery.

Her husband, Malcolm III and her eldest son, Edward died in the battle of Alnwick on November 1093. After three days, she too died and was buried in Dunfermline Anney. She was canonized in 1250 by Pope Innocent IV and named patron of Scotland in 1673.

Today she stands as the shinning model for all Christians especially for the mothers.

St. Margaret of Scotland, Pray for us!