<http://veniaminov.blogspot.com/2008/11/wisdom-from.html>Wisdom from...

ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM (347-407): Never Consider Hurting Your Enemy

When your enemy falls into your hands, do not consider how you can 
pay him back and let him feel the sharp edge of your tongue before 
sending him packing; consider rather how you can heal him and restore 
him to a better frame of mind. Continue to make every effort both by 
word and deed until your gentleness has overcome his aggressiveness. 
Nothing has more power than gentleness. As someone has said: A soft 
word will break bones. And what is harder than bone? Well then, even 
if someone is as hard and inflexible as that, he will be conquered if 
you treat him gently. There is another saying: A soft answer turns 
away wrath. It is obvious, therefore, that whether your enemy 
continues to rage or whether he is reconciled depends much more on 
you than on him. For it rests with us, not with those who are angry, 
either to destroy their anger or enflame it.
(De David et Saule, Hom. III, 6-7.)

John was the patriarch of Constantinople, spent a life of preaching 
and earned the title of "the golden-mouthed."

ST. AUGUSTINE: Every Moment You Are Passing On

 From the time that I started speaking until this moment, do you 
realize you have grown older? You cannot see your hair growing. Yet 
while you stand around, while you are here, while you do something, 
while you talk, your hair keeps growing -- but never so suddenly that 
you need a barber straightaway. In this way, your existence fades 
away. You are passing on.
-- Commentary on Psalm 38, 12
Prayer. My God, let me be thankful as I remember and acknowledge all 
your mercies.
-- Confessions 8, 1

ST. THOMAS AQUINAS: HOW HUMAN REASON IS RELATED TO THE TRUTH OF FAITH
[1] ... Sensible things, from which the human reason takes the origin 
of its knowledge, retain within themselves some sort of trace of a 
likeness to God. This is so imperfect, however, that it is absolutely 
inadequate to manifest the substance of God. For effects bear within 
themselves, in their own way, the likeness of their causes, since an 
agent produces its like [Habent enim effectus suarum causarum suo 
modo similitudinem, cum agens agat sibi simile]; yet an effect does 
not always reach to the full likeness of its cause [non tamen 
effectus ad perfectam agentis similitudinem semper pertingit.]. Now, 
the human reason is related to the knowledge of the truth of faith 
... in such a way that it can gather certain likenesses of it, which 
are yet not sufficient so that the truth of faith may be comprehended 
as being understood demonstratively or through itself. Yet it is 
useful for the human reason to exercise itself in such arguments, 
however weak they may be, provided only that there be present no 
presumption to comprehend or to demonstrate. For to be able to see 
something of the loftiest realities, however thin and weak the sight 
may be, is ... a cause of the greatest joy.
[2] The testimony of Hilary agrees with this. Speaking of this same 
truth, he writes as follows in his De Trinitate [II, 10, ii]: "Enter 
these truths by believing, press forward, persevere. And though I may 
know that you will not arrive at an end, yet I will congratulate you 
in your progress. For, though he who pursues the infinite with 
reverence will never finally reach the end, yet he will always 
progress by pressing onward. But do not intrude yourself into the 
divine secret, do not, presuming to comprehend the sum total of 
intelligence, plunge yourself into the mystery of the unending 
nativity; rather, understand that these things are incomprehensible."
(SCG I, 8)
ST. FRANCIS DE SALES:
We must consider our neighbor in relationship to God, Who wants us to 
love him ... and we are to be interested in him even when this is 
distasteful for us. The resistance of the inferior part of our soul 
will be overcome by the frequent performance of good acts. To this 
end, however, we must center our prayers and meditations of the love 
of our neighbor, having first implored the love of God. We must ask 
for the grace to love especially those we do not like very much.
(Letters 217; O. XIII, pp. 268-270)


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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your inspiration and continue 
with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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