The seven-spiritual-works-of-mercy

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The Seven Spiritual Works of Mercy Mr. Pablo Cuadra Religion Class

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The seven spiritual works of mercy

Transcript of The seven-spiritual-works-of-mercy

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The Seven Spiritual Works of Mercy

Mr. Pablo CuadraReligion Class

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The Works of Mercy• The works of Mercy are divided in two

main categories:

• Spiritual Works of Mercy• Corporal Works of Mercy

• According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church the works of Mercy are:

# 2447 “Charitable actions by which we come to the aid of our neighbor in his spiritual and bodily necessities.”

• This presentation will deal with the first category:

“The Spiritual Works of Mercy”

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Which are the Seven Spiritual Works of Mercy?• To instruct the ignorant• To counsel the doubtful• To admonish sinners • To bear wrongs patiently • To forgive offences

willingly • To comfort the afflicted • To pray for the living and

the dead.

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Instruct the Ignorant• Socrates (470 BC) a Greek philosopher

once said: “I neither know nor I think that I know” (Apology of Plato).

• True wisdom Socrates said is knowing that we know nothing.

• We all experience ignorance of some sort. Our Christian Faith challenges us to seek the truth; to come out of the shadows of ignorance. Jesus said: "And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." (John 8:32)

• Human ignorance can be experienced in three different levels

A. Intellectual ignoranceB. Moral IgnoranceC. Spiritual Ignorance

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Instruct the Ignorant• Intellectual ignorance: “things we don’t

know”.

• Our Christian faith calls us to be teachers, to share the knowledge we have acquired through life with others specially, those who have been deprived of the opportunities to learn and advance in our society.

• Saint Katherine Drexel (1858-1955) not only committed her life to teach but also donated all her inherited wealth $20 million dollars to open schools for African Americans and Native Americans at a time in America’s history of great discrimination and social injustice to minorities.

• She was the founder of Xavier University in New Orleans.

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Instruct the Ignorant• Do you know how to play the guitar or

maybe the piano? Do you know math or maybe algebra? Are you a good artist or writer? Do you know a second language? God calls us to share our knowledge, skills, talents with others.

• Practical tips:

Consider being a mentor at a non-profit organization or at your parish education or social program.

For example, Covenant House, a Catholic runaway crisis shelter for youth, is always in need for mentors and volunteers for its program. Below there is a link to the Covenant House’s website

http://www.covenanthouse.org/

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Instruct the Ignorant• Moral Ignorance: Ignorance of the moral

values, attitudes and dispositions of our faith.

• Our baptismal call challenges us to be a light to the world. We live in an age marked by secularism and moral relativism.

• Our society seems to be plagued by sexual scandals, corporate corruption, greed, political abuses, family disintegration and social apathy.

• In a world so obsess with materialistic and hedonistic tendencies, Catholic Christians are called to instruct and lead first and foremost by example.

• In his most recent encyclical Spe Salvi (saved by hope), Pope Benedict XVI says:

“If technical progress is not matched by corresponding progress in man's ethical formation, in man's inner growth (cf. Eph 3:16; 2 Cor 4:16), then it is not progress at all, but a threat for man and for the world.”

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Instruct the Ignorant• To combat moral ignorance, first and

foremost We Catholic Christians must take a stand. A commitment to learn more about our faith, to know why we believe what we believe.

• We, Catholics must commit ourselves to educate and form our consciences. Jesus said: "Can a blind man lead a blind man? Will they not both fall into a pit? Luke 6:39

• Christians are the conscience of the world. We are called by our baptismal call to announce and to denounce. To teach and to challenge. To plant and to uproot.

• We have a Christian and moral duty to denounce and reject the structures of injustice, sin, and social evil affecting the moral stratum our world and lives.

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Instruct the Ignorant• How to contend with moral ignorance?

practical tips:

A. Support the social issues and causes of our Catholic faith. Get to know what these issues are. The website of the U.S. Catholic bishops has plenty of information. Here is their link:

http://www.usccb.org/

B. Make a clear stand against the anti-values of our culture.

C. Have the courage to take stand for life, family values, social justice. Become involved in your church and society.

D. Become acquainted with the moral and social justice values our your Catholic faith. Share these values at home with your children, at work with your colleagues, and with the world at large.

E. Be an example, actions are more convincing than words. This means abandoning hypocritical attitudes and adopting Conversion-change of the heart. Conversion (metanoia) is a life long process.

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Instruct the ignorant• Spiritual ignorance: Ignorance of the core

tenets, practices, and devotions of our faith.

• St. Paul says: “faith comes from hearing the message, and the message is heard through the word of Christ” (Rom. 10:17).

• The day of our baptism our parents received a candle lit from the paschal candle blessed during the Easter Vigil. This candle represents the light of faith, that must be passed on, share and experienced in the domestic church we call the Family.

• As mature Catholics we have a responsibility to grow in the knowledge of our faith’s teachings but also to share this knowledge with the world at large.

• Jesus commanded his disciples: “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit” Matthew 28:19

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Instruct the Ignorant• Spiritual Indifference is the result of a faith

that was not nourished or mentored.

• John Paul II in his encyclical Familiaris Consortio highlights the fundamental role of parents and mentors and nurturers of faith.

• The pope says: “Christian marriage and the Christian family build up the Church: for in the family the human person is not only brought into being and progressively introduced by means of education into the human community, but by means of the rebirth of baptism and education in the faith the child is also introduced into God's family, which is the Church.”

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Instruct the ignorant• As practicing Catholics it is our duty to assist those

who are struggling with their spiritual lives and crisis of faith.

• Practical tips:

• A. Be a role model of faith

• B. Attend Church with your children on Sundays and Holy Days of Obligation, young people learn by example. Consistency is key the learning process.

• C. Learn more about your faith’s teachings. Each day make it a project to teach your children, a friend, stranger, or relative something new about your faith. Sharing is learning.

• D. Enroll your kids in a Catholic school. If this is not possible, enroll them in the CCD classes of your parish program. CCD stands for confraternity of Christian Doctrine.

• E. Pray as a family. A family that prays together remains together. Teach your kids about the word of God, and the customs of our Catholic faith.

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Counsel the Doubtful • We all experience confusions and

doubts in our human journey. We all know someone discerning a difficult choice.

• The Holy Spirit has filled us with his gifts to assist those in need of good advise.

• There are people who tell us what we like to hear and there are those who tell us what we need to hear.

• Giving Good advise is an act of charity and justice. Knowingly, giving bad advise is an offense against love and justice.

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Admonish The Sinner• "Be on your guard! If your brother sins, rebuke

him; and if he repents, forgive him.” Luke 17:3

• Maybe you have a son that is using illegal drugs or a friend that is cheating on his or her spouse or a co-worker that tends to drink and drive. As Christians we have the duty to announce good news but also to denounce sin, injustice and evil.

• Keeping silence lead us to the sin of omission. The things we could have done or the words we could have said but didn’t.

• We have the moral duty to offer fraternal correction to our brothers and sisters. “Silence gives consent”. Saying and Hearing the truth can be hurtful at times. However, We should not be afraid to speak the truth and correct others when they do wrong. By taking a stand we may save them from greater catastrophes.

• Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was not afraid of speaking the truth about social injustice at a time in American history when most Christians kept silence about racism and social inequality.

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Comfort the Sorrowful• Taking the time to listen, or maybe writing a

few words of encouragement, or just simply being present to someone in pain can make a big difference in the life of someone experiencing sorrow and grief.

• Christ our Lord is the perfect example of Compassion. “Seeing the people, He felt compassion for them, because they were distressed and dispirited like sheep without a shepherd.” Matthew 9:36

• Mother Teresa spent almost 40 years ministering to sick, lonely ,hungry and dying in the slums of Calcutta India. She insisted on small things done with great love produce big results. As Christians we are compelled to reach with compassion to those in our world who are hurting.

• Who are the poor among us? What is our response to them?

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Forgive Injuries• Gandhi once said: “an eye for an eye

make this world blind”.

• We all have made mistakes in the past. And we all have been hurt by someone in the past. Our faith challenges us to forgive and to seek forgiveness.

• Forgiveness is one of the most powerful liberating human experiences. Ironically, forgiveness is at the same time one of the most difficult acts to offer.

• As Christians we are called to forgive seventy times seven meaning, “always”. Matthew 18: 21-22

• In 1981 Pope John Paul II was shot four times by a Turkish national in St. Peter square. The Pope was badly injured by the bullets, undergoing a five hour, life threatening surgery, in Rome. Despite, this attempt on his life and despite the physical injuries resulted as a consequence of the attack, the Pope decided to forgive and meet his attacker.

• The pope forgave Mehmet Ali Agca and met him in his Italian prison cell in 1983.

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Bear Wrongs Patiently• Impatience, anger, negativity, revenge, are

all reactions deeply ingrained in human nature.

• We all have been tempted, time and time again, to react negatively to the wrongs and injustices inflicted upon us by others.

• Who hasn’t been cut off in traffic or discriminated against in one way or another? Who hasn’t dealt with a rude person or an annoying personality?

• Christ is our example of patience, he carried his cross, a symbol of injustice, death, hatred, and apathy with patience. Like Christ, we must also carry our cross patiently in a world that is often unfair, indifferent, violent and rude.

• Jesus said: Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called children of God.

• Nelson Mandela spent 27 years confined in a prison cell in Robben Island and Pollsmoor prison for fighting apartheid, racial discrimination in South Africa.

• Mandela was released on February 11, 1990. Soon after his release Mandela began advocating reconciliation and political dialogue with the political opposition.

• Nelson Mandela received the Nobel peace prize in 1993 and became the first black president of South Africa on May 10, 1994. In an act of good will and reconciliation Mandela invited the guards of his prison to the ceremony of inauguration.

Pray for those who discourage usPray for those who put us downPray for those who do us violencePray for those who are unfair to us.

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Pray for the Living and the dead• In the catacomb of Priscilla 5th century

there is this inscription by an early Christian: “I implore you, brothers to pray whenever you come here and invoke the Father and Son in all your prayers so that they might save Agape (the person in the tomb) forever"

• Catholics believe that we belong to one body that of Christ Rom 12:5. We also believe that we can pray for others in this life and in the life to come. Because the unity of the body of Christ is not fractured or separated by death.

• Praying for the living and the dead is part of our Judeo-Christian tradition. To this day devout Jews pray for the dead. Christianity inherited this practice from the people of the Old Covenant.

• Jesus prayed for his disciples, likewise we should also pray for others specially:

• The poor• The homeless• Those who find life difficult• Those who are trapped by hatred and

injustice• Those who are victims of hunger, war, and

social injustice• Those who have no one to pray for them.• Those souls in purgatory awaiting the

beatific vision.

Inscription in Christian catacomb, requestingPrayers for the dead. 5th century

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Serenity Prayer

God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; courage to change the things I can;and wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time; Enjoying one moment at a time;

Accepting hardships as the pathway to peace; Taking, as He did, this sinful world

as it is, not as I would have it; Trusting that He will make all things right

if I surrender to His Will;That I may be reasonably happy in this life

and supremely happy with HimForever in the next.

Amen.

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