Mission Statement
The mission of this website is to borrow a spark from that Uncreated
Love that is the Blessed Trinity in order to rekindle the faintly
glowing ashes of Christian charity into a blazing inferno
of love for Love.
The emotion man so indiscriminately refers to as love is the
gift of Divinity, for Divinity. It is not of itself an emotion
given
to man
for man; it is a powerful propellant to be used discriminately
and judiciously by the intellect primarily for the adoration
of the Creator,
and only secondly for fellow creatures. All that we are and own
is on loan. As Our Lord told St. Catherine of Siena: "I am everything,
and you, my daughter are nothing." All human love pales in
comparison to its true Source. The ideal love of a man for a woman
or a woman
for a man, parents for their children and children for their parents
is only a shadow of this first love or it is not love at all. The
intense passion of lovers in its first bloom must stand in awe
of that spiritual
heat that fuelled the love of the saints and martyrs for Christ.
It is a love that cannot even be rightly explained in human terms,
for
it crosses earthly boundaries and lives on the very edges of Heaven
itself. It is an intense flame that consumes the entire being of
the lover until it gradually spills over its mortal banks into
the depths
of that merciful conflagration that is the Sacred Heart itself.
St. Paul himself faltered when trying to explain the joys and beauty
of Heaven, and neither can the true lover give voice to his bursting
heart
or love-seared soul. It is a sacrificial immolation; an ecstasy
of
indissoluble union and this is the closest human words can come
to describing the Divine.
Yet where are the keepers of the flame? Where are the Catholics
who stand at the foot of Christ's Cross and keep Him company in
this, the Church's darkest hour on earth? His Apostles, the
saints and martyrs gave their all for Him, evangelizing the heathens,
tortured in the Coliseum, burned at the stake, hung, drawn and quartered,
preaching up to the moment of their execution, urging others to join
them, forgiving those who persecuted and murdered them. This was the
proof of their love, their gift returned to the Savior whose teachings
they treasured and defended: love laid on the altar of sacrifice to
eternal Love. Lovers who experience this deep, abiding emotion spare
no effort, overcome every obstacle, pay any price, walk over shattered
glass or burning coals, scale incredible heights ñ all in
the name of love. For what sacrifices will not be gladly made for
the beloved?
Yet turn this emotion to the service of God and humans behave as
though they are unsure what to do. They can risk their lives for
their fellow
man or in defense of their nation, but not for the love of God.
St. Therese, barely out of her teens, shamed us all. She knew
she was "little" and
could do little. But her little was far more than most today
see fit to give. We have all become spoiled children, satiated
with the distractions
and allurements of the world. We can scarcely be bothered
to say our daily prayers and a novena now and again far less
attempt anything
more. We have busy schedules, pressing problems, and "issues." Yet
the crumbs tossed from our tables will not satisfy the Creator
who filled our storehouses with the bread of love. If we
have not set at
least some small part of our lives aside for Him and only
Him, we have lived an empty existence; any love we pretend
to give to others is
stolen from Him and can be only a counterfeit. Yet we have
free will, and love is an act of the will. We can will ourselves
to love God,
to fuel our emotions in order to honor and serve Him. We
can resolve to reform our lives and begin anew, even if only
little by little,
as St. Therese began. Resolve, then to begin today; for inspiration
you need only look to the Cross and learn its lessons. We
cannot pay our debt to God by an easy existence on this earth.
As Pope Pius XII
stated, the motto of Catholic Action is "Thy kingdom
come on earth." Who will fight to establish His kingdom?
For as the Little
Flower taught: "Love is repaid by love alone."