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- IT IS A CONSOLATION FOR ME TO BREATHE THE SAME AIR, TO OFFER THE HOLY SACRIFICE ON THE SAME ALTARS, TO BE ABLE TO PRAY AT HIS TOMB
- THERE IS NOT A CORNER OF ROME WHICH IS NOT A MONUMENT OF FAITH OR PIETY
- THE ROMAN MARTYRS ARE STILL THE OBJECT OF VENERATION OF PEOPLES
- THE CITY OF ROME AS THE COMPENDIUM OF CHRISTIANITY
- THANKS TO THE DAWDLING OF THE MONSEIGNEUR, I HAVE NOT YET SEEN ANYONE
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- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on FAITH-FOCUSED INVESTMENT GROUPS: A PRESENCE WHERE DECISIONS AFFECTING THE FUTURE OF THE POOR ARE BEING MADE (Rule 9a)
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on VIVAT: A PRESENCE WHERE DECISIONS AFFECTING THE FUTURE OF THE POOR ARE BEING MADE (Rule 9a)
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on WE SHOW A VERY HUMAN FACE OF JESUS TO THE WORLD, ONE FULL OF COMPASSION AND SOLIDARITY (Rule 9a)
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on JUSTICE, PEACE AND THE INTEGRITY OF CREATION AS AN INTEGRAL PART OF EVANGELIZATION (Rule 9a)
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on WALKING THE LINE BETWEEN PROPHETIC VISION AND SPIRITUAL SUSTENANCE (CONSTITUTION 9)
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I remember some years ago taking part in a fundraising effort at our church because the building needed significant work to be done if we were going to be able to keep using it. The total amount to be raised seemed in my mind to be impossibly high, still I decided to take part in the effort because it was necessary – not just for myself but for our parish community if we were going to continue as a family. The parish hired a fundraiser who was knowledgeable in that area and I along with others volunteered to go out and ask parishioners to pledge whatever they could, giving a monthly amount until their donation was realised.
Not so different than what Eugene was suggesting above. And I saw firsthand the generosity of people: those who could afford to write a cheque and those who offered to take part in the fundraising effort because they could not afford to give anything but themselves. I witnessed the goodness of people giving and doing what they could, and I was unable to stop from loving them and praying for them.
I look around at those who have made so many wonderful things possible for me. Their love and generosity are the reason that I am who I am today. To not give thanks would be unthinkable. Gautama Buddha talks about wise people appreciating and being grateful. I would change one word from wise to loving, to heart-filled people. And I would add the word “oblation” into this mix. When we make our oblation we offer ourselves as gift – not just to the “Church” or our community, but to all. We give thanks to God for them, and we pray for them not so much because of any greatness or wisdom of our own, but because this is what happens with love – it becomes about something so much greater than ourselves.