These emails from Our Lady of the Rosary Library come to me often and I hope you do not mind if I pass them to you with my own small reflection once in a while. I rarely send out things like this unless it truly is a matter that warrants so. This is one of them.
We cannot stress the importance of confession in this day and age when the word "sin" is looked upon as a sin to be mentioned lest it offend the sinner who hears it. I always admire those who preach on sin and call people to repentance because they demonstrate the true goal of our faith--one of saving souls, not tickling the ears.
The assault on this wonderful sacrament is so great that the world and Satan would like to erase it from the Church. They would like to use confession to gather incriminating evidence or turn it into a psychology session. It can never be that. It is a supernatural means of conversion and a repository of grace that cannot be given except through the lips of the priest. Only excersized in this way can it bear good fruit.
In the Church's view, it also holds sacred music in high regard. It also is highly misunderstood and under a great assault from the world and the Devil. It also cannot be about tickling the ears but must reach deep into the soul and raise man above his mundane existence on earth and give testimony to a greater kingdom, one that often we do not appreciate or understand.
Know that I continue to pray that God blesses your ministry to the people who so much need it here in Wyoming. I beg the same from you.
Most Sincerely In JMJ
Francis Koerber
Dir. of Music
Our Lady of the Mountains
J.M.J.
Confession:
"Confess your sins one to another."-St. James 5;16. Confession is a
great remedy for the soul. It purifies it through the words of
absolution, enlightens it through the good counsel received,
strengthens it by the great graces received, humbles it by
acknowledging to another man that we are sinners and gives peace to
the soul being reconciled to God. We didn't care to commit the sin,
but now we are ashamed to confess it. "God resists the proud but
giveth grace to the humble."
Confession has been in the Church from the beginning. The second
Sunday after Easter Our Lord appeared to the Apostles and gave them
His mission to carry on. "As the Father hath sent me, so I send you."
St. John 20;21. Then He gave them the power of the Holy Ghost, He
breathed on them, and said to them, "Receive ye the Holy Ghost," vs
22.Then with the power of the Holy Ghost within them, He gives them
the power to forgive or retain sin, "Whose sins you shall forgive,
they are forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are
retained." vs 23. Tangible evidence of this doctrine was brought
forth in Rome when, in 1911, archaeologists unearthed a stone slab
which read: "Here lies Blessed Peter, who absolved us, the elect,
from sins confessed."
A beautiful story --
St Francis and the sinful woman:
St. Francis de Sales was hearing confessions in his church at Annecy.
Among other penitents who went to him was a woman who had led a very
bad life, but who, touched by God's grace, made a good and sincere
confession of all the evil she had done. St. Francis blessed God for
her conversion and felt his soul full of happiness in giving her
absolution. When she received it she said to him: "My father, what do
you think of me now since you have heard of all the crimes I have been
guilty of?" "My child," he answered, "I now look upon you as a saint;
let people say and think what they like, they may judge you as the
Pharisee judged Mary Magdalen after her conversion, but you know what
Jesus Christ thought of her and how he judged her. Your past life now
has no longer any existence. I weep tears of joy because of your
resurrection from the grave of sin to a life of grace. The penitent
was not only consoled by these words of St. Francis, but when the
devil came to try to make her fall into despair by thinking of her
past iniquities, they enabled her to drive the temptation away.-His
Life: Jan.29, Stories from the Catechist.
O Jesus, meek and humble of heart, make our hearts like unto Thine
From: http://motherofgodlibrary.com/
--
Sincerely in Christ,
Our Lady of the Rosary Library
"Pray and work for souls"
http://olrl.org
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