As some of you may have already learned, Catholic 
writer and blogger Michael Dubriel, and husband 
of popular Catholic Author and blogger Amy 
Welborn, died unexpectedly the other day.  Amy 
shared his last column on her blog:

<http://amywelborn.wordpress.com/2009/02/04/the-last-column/#comment-11912>http://amywelborn.wordpress.com/2009/02/04/the-last-column/#comment-11912
 
(Amy's Blog)

<http://annunciations.wordpress.com/>http://annunciations.wordpress.com/ 
(Michael's blog)

It is highly recommended reading for everyone.

Esther
<*}}}>< <*}}}><
While in Washington, D.C. several weeks ago, I 
ran into an old friend, Father Benedict 
Groeschel, CFR, with whom I have collaborated on 
several books. We met after a Mass for pro-life 
leaders at Trinity College. It was exactly five 
years and 10 days from that night in Orlando, FL 
when Father Benedict nearly lost his life in a 
tragic accident, and almost four years to the day 
that I spent a week with him in New York, 
assisting him in putting the finishing touches on 
a book that he co-authored with Bishop Baker.

Working with a very frail Father Benedict at the 
time, I was reminded of an interview that he had 
given some years earlier at EWTN with Doug Keck 
on Booknotes. During that interview, when Father 
Benedict’s book Arise From Darkness was first 
published, Doug asked Father Benedict to 
elaborate on something that Father had called the 
“big lie” in his book. The “big lie,” Father 
Benedict said, (and I’m paraphrasing him at this 
point), is to think that if we say all the right 
prayers and live  correctly, then nothing bad 
will ever happen to us. Sadly, there are many 
good people who have lost their faith by 
believing such a lie, and that makes it a big one indeed!

One only has to think of Jesus Christ, the 
sinless Son of God, and how much He suffered on 
the cross, to correct one’s view on this matter. 
In our own day, there are many whom we know have 
lived saintly lives, many who have prayed much, and yet have suffered too.

This brings me to another incident that I learned 
from Father Benedict while working with him four 
years ago in New York. I was waiting for him to 
make some corrections on a text when I noticed 
what looked like a wedding program. I asked him 
if it was for a relative or a couple he had 
married. He replied that it was neither, but told 
me the story of the person behind it.

Diana was a young Puerto Rican woman who grew up 
in a very faith filled home. Even though they 
were poor, her mother taught her at an early age 
to trust God above everything. By the time she 
was old enough to go to college, Diana found a 
way to pursue her education - again something 
that she credited to her strong faith - and 
became the first member of her large family to 
graduate from college. She then married and was 
hired by a large investment firm in New York.

Even though her job kept her busy, she found time 
to attend Mass everyday. When her friends threw 
parties, Diana made up goodie bags for them that 
included candy and make-up, but also a prayer 
book and holy water. When a member of her family 
couldn’t pay their bills, Diana secretly paid 
them. When someone in the family got into trouble she bailed them out of jail.

One night Diana had a strange dream. In the dream 
Jesus appeared to her, dressed in a white robe, 
standing on a cloud of smoke. He was beckoning 
her to come to him, telling her not to worry, 
that he was going to take her with him. Then it 
seemed to her that the whole world disappeared 
from beneath her and she awoke. She told her 
husband about the dream the next morning, but he 
didn’t want to hear about it—it scared him.

The next few nights, the dream repeated itself. 
She told her mother, who wondered what it could mean.

A month later on September 11, 2001, Diana was at 
work at her investment firm in the World Trade 
Center on one of the top floors. She phoned her 
husband and mother on her cell phone after the 
second plane struck the tower below her. She 
reminded them of the dream, just before the tower crumbled.

What is the opposite of the “big lie”? Trust.

When questioned by an English journalist about 
the future of the Religious Order that he 
co-founded, Father Benedict gave a simple reply, 
“We have no plans, except to be led by God.”

None of us knows what the future holds, but 
hopefully we can embrace what is inscribed in our coinage, “In God we Trust.”


[]


Breathe in me O Holy Spirit that my thoughts may all be holy;
Act in me O Holy Spirit that my work, too, may be holy;
Strengthen me O Holy Spirit to defend all that is holy;
Guard me then O Holy Spirit that I always may be holy.
...St. Augustine
<http://hicatholicmom.blogspot.com/>A Catholic Mom in Hawaii Blog




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AllPosters today <*}}}><<*}}}>< 
<http://astore.amazon.com/halthekin-20>Catholic on Amazon <*}}}><
+
<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the 
<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Kingdom!<*}}}><

+ "The fruit of abortion is nuclear war" - Bl. Mother Teresa +

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