“As sailors are guided into port by the shining of a star, so Christians are guided to heaven by Mary” (Saint Thomas Aquinas)
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Recent Posts
- HOLY SATURDAY: WAITING IN FRONT OF THE ENTRANCE TO THE TOMB
- GOOD FRIDAY: THE CROSS OF JESUS CHRIST IS CENTRAL TO OUR MISSION
- HOLY THURSDAY: IN GRATITUDE FOR THE GREAT EUCHARISTIC GIFT
- WEDNESDAY OF HOLY WEEK: IN THE DAILY PRESSURES OF OUR ANXIETY AN INEXHAUSTIBLE TRUST IN GOD’S GOODNESS
- TUESDAY OF HOLY WEEK: ARE YOU READY TO MEET UP TO THE REQUIREMENTS OF DISCIPLESHIP?
Recent Comments
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on WEDNESDAY OF HOLY WEEK: IN THE DAILY PRESSURES OF OUR ANXIETY AN INEXHAUSTIBLE TRUST IN GOD’S GOODNESS
- Mildred March on A SUMMARY OF TEN YEARS OF OBLATE MINISTRY
- 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)
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“…whenever Eugene sent Oblates to the missions outside of France, he entrusted them to Mary Immaculate’s care.” How often do we read but not realise? How many times does it take for the words to enter not just our mind but to burrow in to the deepest parts of our hearts that yearn?
“…that part of our family which is separated from us by so great a distance, which we have always present and intimately united to us, following it as we do with all the affection of our heart. Accomplish faithfully for its good the ministry that has been entrusted to you.”
First we must have faith, we must believe that whether it is us being sent, or us witnessing and perhaps being the sender, we must believe that the accompanying message is neither empty nor futile.
I think of Mary’s faith, her belief and then her lived response of “let it be done unto me…”. Who better to be entrusted into the care of? Who better to intercede for us?
I think of the many challenges that those early Oblates were faced with, not excluding St. Eugene himself, who shared and continues to share with all of us and whose care they/we have been entrusted to. Do we not do the same thing with those we love and who are separated from us while still being ‘present and intimately” united to us.
In our love we offer the deepest part of ourselves – our being, our loving… We offer and share the best that we know, our own experience of God and those who God has sent to us.
This is what it is to be loved and then to love…