I’m going to do my very best at targeting Wednesdays as one of my regular feature posts.
Wednesdays for Saint Maria Faustina KoWalska (why else,) with a brief reflection on the
Divine Mercy of God.
So ya’ better Get ready to…
Sharpen your pencils! Grab a high-lighter!
Find a notebook! And load up on those sticky notes! (Because there will be a test!)
As I wrote in a previous post, Inner Silence, in the year 1937 Saint Faustina (Helen KoWalska) wrote a particular “examen” to aide her in being united with the merciful Christ. Through prayer she was guided to create what she titled The Conscience; and which became for her a chart of an “internal control of the soul.” Each month she used an examen to pray and meditate upon. Faustina took these practices so seriously that she recorded the Victories & Falls she experienced while attempting to adhere to each practice!
In 2014, inspired by this great act of love & my own desire to live united with Christ, I dedicated myself to memorize each (monthly) examen. My hope was that, through the memorization & monthly meditation upon the prescribed practice, I could give mybest attempt at living out the practice in my own daily life. This year I have added the commitment to record (for myself) my own Victories & Falls, just as Faustina did. Although, I am certain my Victories will be far fewer and the Falls far greater than hers!
Seriously, don’t ask how it is going!
I was never a star-student in school academically. (Even though I graduated with honors.) My good grades came with true-grit-northern effort. And test-prep was often a nightmare for me! It wasn’t until the discovery of high-lighters and sticky notes, which aided my ability to organize my scattered fluff-sense, that testing became more successful. I like things nice & orderly. Tidier thoughts evolved into better grades. And I think this is why I have been so drawn to Saint Faustina’s monthly examens. They’re so tidy!
Not only are the examens drawing me closer to God; but by keeping tally of the Victories & Falls I have experienced while practicing the examen, it has given me a personal calculation where God is calling me to grow!
In these three short months of keeping record God has revealed my weaknesses, (the yucky part of testing oneself.) But because of His great grace He has also revealed just how much stronger I have become too! NOT due in part to my own efforts but in how much more drawn to Him I have become through utilizing this practice of: internal control of my soul. As Saint Faustina reveals, a soul turned over to God learns to direct itself toward HIM in its weakness.
And as a result, a beautiful observance of inner silence develops…ssshhhhhhh.
Saint Maria Faustina Kowalska’s Diary- Divine Mercy in My Soul
I am leaving with you-who-too may be reading, a gift! (No, not a new high-lighter.) Something much better! The outline for Saint Maria Faustina’s monthly examen. May you find the same merciful Christ that I have; should your soul-be-inspired to unite with Him. (Now, THAT isa high-light!)
The Conscience
Exclamatory Prayers:
January- But Jesus remained silent.
February- Jesus, I trust in You.
March- Jesus, enkindle my heart with love.
April- With God, I can do all things.
May- In His Name is my strength.
June- All for Jesus.
July- Jesus, rest in my heart.
August- Jesus, You know.
September- Jesus, hide me in Your Heart.
October- Mary, unite me with Jesus.
November- O my Jesus, have mercy!
December- Hail, living Host!
One final gift: a prayer entry from Saint Faustina’s Diary and a heart-felt wish for your success as you study these examens. And always remember thefinal testis at the end….
I want to be completely transformed into Your mercy and to be Your living reflection, O Lord. May the greatest of all divine attributes, that of Your unfathomable mercy, pass through my heart and soul to my neighbor. (163)
hugs n’ blessings to all those studying for the final test!
I haven’t had much time to be tippity-tap typing at my cyber-say-I spot as of late. I knew I missed it…but evidently not as much as my adult children! Turns out they’re actually following-me. Literally & physically taking pauses in their day to check and see if I’ve blogged a little ditty.
“Hmmmm,” says my motherly thoughts. “When did that happen?” When did they stop running away from me and u-turn to try to find me instead.
#3 wants to know if, “I’m feeling alright.”
#2 shares she misses my blog, “voice.”
And #1 indignantly shouts, “I never know what you’re doing!” (In his very best Will Farrel voice, I might add.)
I shyly smile as thumpty-thump-thump goes my heart!
“Ma! The Meatloaf!”
Geez, “What have I been doing??” I then ask myself. (Not making meatloaf that’s for sure!) I guess pretty much the same thing as always…
Spending my days with the best dog in the Universe while praying. Visiting our Methuselah Ministry friends, the hospital and our church & praying. The cooking…with prayer, the cleaning…plus more prayer, the laundry routine, (lots of prayer there.) I’m still moving things ‘here & there’ in our new home, accompanied by prayer. And oh yes, it’s the lenten season right now so….I pray some more. It seems I spend most of my days…in prayer.
And that’s when I really smile as I make a head-heart connection. For in that moment I’m in the u-turn looking back over where I have been.
Many mooing moons ago I was exposed to a book, (which now has become worn and dog-earred over these past 25+ years.)
The Practice of the Presence of God is a collection of documented conversations and letters written by a seventeenth-century French monk, Brother Lawerence.
“In Thy Presence is fulness of joy!”
The book reveals how Brother Lawrence learned to practice the Presence of Godat all times. And through the heart of this humble man we too learn. “The time of business does not with me differ from the time of prayer, and in the noise and clatter of my kitchen…I possess God in as great tranquility as if I were upon my knees at the blessed sacrament,” he writes. Throughout this beautiful collection he develops one great theme, best expressed by the psalmist, In Thy Presence is fulness of joy.
As a young bride & mother I ached to find a purpose in what I did each day. Not working outside the home I felt a societal pressure to explain the importance of my work, work which my husband supported and valued as much as I. I jokingly claimed my chosen career as being: a Domestic Engineer. This read well on all necessary paper-work and the perplexed looks, usually involving a fuRRowed eyebrow, always made me giggle internally as people would silently try to determine, “Is there really an engineering degree for that?!” Through Brother Lawrence’s Spiritual Maxims I was able to define the very purpose for my great work of becoming a Domestic Engineer.
My husband always cautions others (especially our children,) “Don’t talk to your mother while she’s doing that; she has a hard time concentrating.” Or I will often hear him patiently wait near me for what he thinks is just the right timeto ask me something because, as he affectionately likes to point out in these situations, “I know you have a hard time doing two things at once.”
A total surrender of ourselves, in every action we make, to Him.
And now it Dawns on me why! Over the course of practicing what it has meant to me to be a Domestic Engineer I have stopped doing anything that does not involve prayer with it! Giggles! They don’t know I have a constant prayer which is running through my head in every action I make!
A random selection of: Hail Mary, Glory Be, Our Father, a Hail Holy Queen. DIvine Mercy. Memorae. St. Michael’s prayer.
Brother Lawerence taught me “not to be weary of doing little things for the love of God, who regards not the greatness of the work, but the love with which it is performed.” That “we should gain a habit, which will naturally produce its acts in us, without our care, and to our exceeding great delight.” “…by the practice of which we become united to the will of God. That the end we ought to propose to ourselves is to become, in this life, the most perfect worshipers of God we can possibly be, as we hope to be through all eternity.”
A kitchen monk whose days were filled with buckets of water for the washing of floors and a sink full of dishes he was found worshipping as much in his kitchen as in his cathedral. His greatest desire was to walk, with every thing he did throughout the day, as if he were walking in His presence. He showed us how, at any moment and in any circumstance, the soul that seeks God may find Him, and so too practice the Presence of God.
“Lord of all pots and pans and things…
Make me a saint by getting meals
And washing up the plates!”
-Brother Lawrence
Ting-tingly, as I come out of my u-turn, I am grateful for this habit I’ve developed of not being able to concentrate…or juggle more than one thing at a time…because I know what prevents it is the mantra of my mental prayer. A praying that is so beautifully automatic I don’t even recognize is playing most times.
Perfectly? No.
But they’re there. A constant ticker-tape-tick of prayers.
Which leads me to decide…it’s time to make a meatloaf.