There are some who desire knowledge merely for its own sake; and that is shameful curiosity. And there are others who desire to know, in order that they may themselves be known; and that is vanity, disgraceful too. Others again desire knowledge in order to acquire money or preferment by it; that too is a discreditable quest. But there are also some who desire knowledge, that they may build up the souls of others with it; and that is charity. Others, again, desire it that they may themselves be built up thereby; and that is prudence. Of all these types, only the last two put knowledge to the right use.
--St. Bernard of Clairvaux, Sermon on the Canticle of Canticles
Catholic quotations from the Church Doctors, Church Fathers and all the great Catholic minds.
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Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Monday, April 29, 2013
QUOTATION: St. Dominic and St. Francis
It is an old story that, while we may need somebody like Dominic to convert the heathen to Christianity, we are in even greater need of somebody like Francis, to convert the Christians to Christianity.
--G.K. Chesterton, The Dumb Ox
--G.K. Chesterton, The Dumb Ox
Sunday, April 28, 2013
QUOTATION: Accepting God's Will
When you accept God’s will in every aspect of your life you will find God providing with strength, courage, and a dignity that resounds to the heavens. It resounds to the heavens because it doesn’t have far to go. Heaven, you see, is suddenly in your heart.
--Mother Angelica, Mother Angelica’s Answers Not Promises
--Mother Angelica, Mother Angelica’s Answers Not Promises
Saturday, April 27, 2013
QUOTATION: Divine Generation
It must be known that different things have different modes of generation. The generation of God is different from that of other things. Hence, we cannot arrive at a notion of divine generation except through the generation of that created thing which more closely approaches to a likeness to God. We have seen that nothing approaches in likeness to God more than the human soul. The manner of generation in the soul is effected in the thinking process in the soul of man, which is called a conceiving of the intellect. This conception takes its rise in the soul as from a father, and its effect is called the word of the intellect or of man. In brief, the soul by its act of thinking begets the word. So also the Son of God is the Word of God, not like a word that is uttered exteriorly (for this is transitory), but as a word is interiorly conceived; and this Word of God is of the one nature as God and equal to God.
--St. Thomas Aquinas, The Catechetical Instruction of St. Thomas Aquinas
--St. Thomas Aquinas, The Catechetical Instruction of St. Thomas Aquinas
Friday, April 26, 2013
QUOTATION: Fundraising

--Henri Nouwen, A Spirituality of Fundraising
QUOTATION: Praying Without Ceasing
By habitually thinking of the presence of God, we succeed in praying twenty-four hours a day.
--St. Paul of the Cross
--St. Paul of the Cross
Thursday, April 25, 2013
QUOTATION: Faith
Our Faith is not only centred on a book, but on a history of salvation, and above all on a person, Jesus Christ, the Word of God made flesh.
--Pope Francis
--Pope Francis
QUOTATION: Suffering
QUOTATION: Evidence of Justification

--Louis de Granda, The Sinner's Guide
QUOTATION: Be the Elect

--St. Anselm
QUOTATION: The Christian Soul
QUOTATION: Spiritual Dryness
QUOTATION: Knowing What Sin Is
There is always hope for the man who knows that he is doing wrong; but there is no hope for the man who is doing wrong and calls the wrong right. The Catholic gets off the road like anyone else, but he never throws away the map.
--Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, Wartime Prayer Book
--Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, Wartime Prayer Book
QUOTATION: God's Pardon

--St. Augustine
QUOTATION: Zeal

--St. John Eudes, The Four Foundations of Sanctity
QUOTATION: Martyrdom in the Early Church
The suffering itself of Martyrdom was in some respects peculiar. It was a death, cruel in itself, publicly inflicted: and heightened by the fierce exultation of a malevolent populace. When we are in pain, we can lie in peace by ourselves. We receive the sympathy and kind services of those about us; and if we like it, we can retire altogether from the sight of others, and suffer without a witness to interrupt us. But the sufferings of martyrdom were for the most part public, attended with every circumstance of ignominy and popular triumph, as well as with torture. Criminals indeed are put to death without kindly thoughts from bystanders; still, for the most part, even criminals receive commiseration and a sort of respect. But the early Christians had to endure "the shame" after their Master's pattern. They had to die in the midst of enemies who reviled them, and in mockery, bid them (as in Christ's case) come down from the cross. They were supported on no easy couch, soothed by no attentive friends; and considering how much the depressing power of pain depends on the imagination, this circumstance alone at once separates their sufferings widely from all instances of pain in disease. The unseen God alone was their Comforter, and this invests the scene of their suffering with supernatural majesty, and awes us when we think of them.
--Blessed John Henry Newman, "Martyrdom", Parochial and Plain Sermons. Vol. 2
--Blessed John Henry Newman, "Martyrdom", Parochial and Plain Sermons. Vol. 2
QUOTATION: Unconditional Love
We often confuse unconditional love with unconditional approval. God loves us without conditions but does not approve of every human behavior.
--Fr. Henri Nouwen
--Fr. Henri Nouwen
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
QUOTATION: The Blessed Mother
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St. Louis de Montfort |
--St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin, 28
QUOTATION: Begging
QUOTATION: Scruples

--St. John of Avila, Letters, XIV
QUOTATION: Charity is a Foretaste of Heaven
In Heaven, faith and hope will exist no more for the mist which obscures our reason will be dispelled...But love; oh we shall be inebriated with it! We shall be drowned, lost in that ocean of divine love, annihilated in that immense charity of the Heart of Jesus! So that charity is a foretaste of Heaven.
--St. Jean Vianney, the Cure of Ars
--St. Jean Vianney, the Cure of Ars
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
QUOTATION: Angels
Angels are sentinels standing at the crossroads where life meets death. They work especially at moments of crisis, at the brink of disaster—for bodies, for souls, and for nations.
--Peter Kreeft, Angels (and Demons): What Do We Really About Them?, 2004
--Peter Kreeft, Angels (and Demons): What Do We Really About Them?, 2004
Monday, April 22, 2013
QUOTATION: Repentance
QUOTATION: The First Martyrs

--Blessed John Henry Newman, "Martyrdom", Parochial and Plain Sermons, Vol. 2
QUOTATION: Accepting God's Providence
QUOTATION: Hope
QUOTATION: Our Sins Crucified Christ

--Louis de Granada, The Sinner's Guide
QUOTATION: Pride's Blindness
The heart of the proud man easily sees the vices which others have, because they are all outside him; but his own vices, often very numerous, he sees not, because they are within him; just as the eye does not behold what is within, but only what is without.
--St. Robert Bellarmine, Eternal Happiness of the Saints
--St. Robert Bellarmine, Eternal Happiness of the Saints
Sunday, April 21, 2013
QUOTATION: Christ's Body
Christ has no body now but mine. He prays in me, works in me, looks through my eyes, speaks through my words, works through my hands, walks with my feet and loves with my heart.
--St. Teresa of Avila
--St. Teresa of Avila
Saturday, April 20, 2013
QUOTATION: Modernism

--G.K. Chesterton, Illustrated London News, 1930
QUOTATION: Isolation
QUOTATION: Jesus Delights in You

--St. John Eudes, The Four Foundations of Sanctity
QUOTATION: Disbelief in Hell
The basic reason why moderns disbelieve in hell is because they really disbelieve in freedom and responsibility. To believe in hell is to assert that the consequences of good and bad acts are not indifferent.
--Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, Preface to Religion
--Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, Preface to Religion
QUOTATION: Conversion
Most cradle Catholics have gone through, or need to go through, a second conversion which binds them with a more mature love and obedience to the Church.
--Dorothy Day
--Dorothy Day
Friday, April 19, 2013
QUOTATION: Opposition to the Catholic Faith
Thursday, April 18, 2013
QUOTATION: Six Maxims of Perfection:

2. Direct all things, thoughts as well as actions, to the increase, the service and the glory of Holy Church.
3. Recognize that I have been set here by God, and therefore remain perfectly serene about all that happens, not only as regards myself but also with regard to the Church, continuing to work and suffer with Christ, for her good.
4. Entrust myself at all times to Divine Providence.
5. Always acknowledge my own nothingness.
6. Always arrange my day in an intelligent and orderly manner.
--Pope John XXIII
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
QUOTATION: Suffering
QUOTATION: Charity Begins with Oneself
QUOTATION: Delight
QUOTATION: Prayer

--St. Jean Vianney, the Cure of Ars.
QUOTATION: Union of God and Man

Thus was our peace established.
--Louis de Granada, The Sinner's Guide
QUOTATION: Trials
QUOTATION: Teaching About Final Judgement

-St. John Chrysostom, Homilies on 2 Thessalonians, Homily 2.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
QUOTATION: Sadness
QUOTATION: Moderns

--G.K. Chesterton, Illustrated London News, 1930
QUOTATION: Consolation

--St. John Eudes, The Four Foundations of Sanctity
QUOTATION: There Are Only Two Philosophies in Life

--Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, Seven Words of Jesus and Mary: Lessons from Cana and Calvary