Maxims and Sayings of St. Philip Neri: Difference between revisions

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maxim[12][15] = "Certain little voluntary attachments of self-love must be cut through, and then we must dig round them, and then remove the earth, till we get down deep enough to find the place where they are rooted and interlaced together.";
maxim[12][15] = "Certain little voluntary attachments of self-love must be cut through, and then we must dig round them, and then remove the earth, till we get down deep enough to find the place where they are rooted and interlaced together.";
maxim[12][16] = "A man must be ready to endure when he is mortified by others who are acting with a virtuous motive, and even when God permits him to be in such bad odor with others that he is regarded and driven away as an infected sheep.";
maxim[12][16] = "A man must be ready to endure when he is mortified by others who are acting with a virtuous motive, and even when God permits him to be in such bad odor with others that he is regarded and driven away as an infected sheep.";
maxim[12][17] = "Our enemy the devil, who fights with us in order to vanquish us, seeks to disunite us in our houses, and to breed quarrels, dislikes, contests, and rivalries, because while we are fighting with each other, he comes and conquers us, and makes us more securely his own.";
maxim[12][17] = "Our enemy the devil, who fights with us in order to vanquish us, seeks to disunite us in our houses and to breed quarrels, dislikes, contests, and rivalries, because while we are fighting with each other, he comes and conquers us, and makes us more securely his own.";
maxim[12][18] = "He who does not think on the benefits he receives from God in this life and on those greater ones his mercy has prepared in that other life of bliss does not nourish love for God, but chills and freezes it.";
maxim[12][18] = "He who does not think on the benefits he receives from God in this life and on those greater ones his mercy has prepared in that other life of bliss does not nourish love for God, but chills and freezes it.";
maxim[12][19] = "If a soul could altogether abstain from venial sins, the greatest pain it could have would be to be detained in this life, so great would its desire be of union with God.";
maxim[12][19] = "If a soul could altogether abstain from venial sins, the greatest pain it could have would be to be detained in this life, so great would its desire be of union with God.";

Revision as of 15:40, 17 December 2013


Virgin Mary, Mother of God

Maxims from September 7 and 8
To obtain the protection of our Blessed Lady in our most urgent wants, it is very useful to say sixty-three times, after the fashion of a Rosary, “Virgin Mary, Mother of God, pray to Jesus for me.”
When we make this prayer to our Blessed Lady, we give her every possible praise in the least possible compass, because we call her by her name of MARY, and give her those two great titles of Virgin, and Mother of God, and then name JESUS, the fruit of her most pure womb.