“Happy is the man who keeps the hour of death always in mind, and daily prepares for it.”
~Thomas À Kempis
For Reflection:
At first glance, this quote seems to be a contradiction. How can one be happy if he is always keeping his death in mind? How can the reality of death lead us to true happiness of life? What part does preparation for death play in our happiness?
(See tomorrow’s Grace Line for one saint’s admonition that also implies a happy life.)
Divine Mercy in My Soul: Diary of St Faustina
St. Faustina Kowalska Pb 730 pgs
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PREFACE ORIGINAL PREFACE TO THE POLISH EDITION, 1981
I would like to mention here my meeting with a well-known contemporary mystic, Sister Speranza, who in Collevalenza, not far from Todi [Italy], founded the sanctuary of “The Most Merciful Love,” the site of numerous pilgrimages. I asked Sister Speranza whether she had heard of the writings of Sister Faustina and what she thought of them. She answered me with simplicity: “The writings contain a wonderful teaching, but reading them one must remember that God speaks to philosophers in the language of the philosophers and to simple souls in the language of the simple ones, and only to these last does He reveal truths hidden from the wise and prudent of this world.”