Jun 6 Sat
What should come first, nature or man?
One of the most significant aspects of ‘Magnifica Humanitas’ lies not only in what it says, but also in what has ceased to occupy the center of the Pope’s discourse. After years in which ecological issues had become almost the overarching framework for interpreting social, economic, cultural, and even spiritual life, Leo XIV’s first encyclical shifts the focus to another, more fundamental concern: the crisis of humanity.
It is not that ecology is disappearing.
The encyclical retains that concern about technology that has become an autonomous power, about an economy detached from all moral limits, and about a globalization capable of homogenizing peoples, desires, and behaviors. But the symbolic focus has shifted.
The encyclical is centered on the care of the human person. And that change is no small matter.
The ultimate root of the problem no longer lies in humanity’s relationship with the environment, but in humanity’s understanding of itself. The ecological, economic, or technological crisis would be the consequence of a prior crisis: the obscuring of the truth about the human person.
That is where the real shift lies.
The encyclical does not begin by asking what humanity is doing to nature, but rather what humanity is doing to itself. It does not focus primarily on the damage caused to the planet, but on the danger of the human person being reduced to a piece of data, a function, an algorithm, an object of manipulation, or raw material available for technical redesign.
This explains the tone of the document. Instead of the ecological vocabulary that -sustainability, common home, climate debt, energy transition, biodiversity, environmental peripheries- Leo XIV returns to a language that is more directly anthropological and theological: human nature, truth, limits, inner freedom, Incarnation, Babel, grace, vulnerability, technocracy, transhumanism.
The difference is not merely stylistic. It is doctrinal and pastoral.
In recent years, Catholicism spoke of climate, sustainability, integral development, biodiversity, and ecological transition with such intensity that, at times, more distinctly Christian categories were pushed into the background.
Sin, grace, truth, human nature, redemption, and eternal life were frequently displaced by a moral framework far more recognizable to global elites than to the Church’s doctrinal tradition.
Magnifica Humanitas appears to correct this drift without needing to state it explicitly.
Leo XIV does not abandon concern for creation, but he ceases to make it the narrative axis of everything. The ecological issue is integrated into a broader reflection on man, technology, and civilization. Creation continues to have value, but the focus returns to the human creature, made in the image of God and called not to fabricate itself, but to receive, safeguard, and elevate its own nature.
In the face of that promise, the Pope’s response is not ecological, but Christological.
Christianity affirms that God himself has entered history by taking on the human condition, not by despising it.
The Church once again reminds us that there can be no true defense of creation unless we first defend humanity.
And there can be no true defense of humanity if we forget that its greatness does not stem from technology, but from the fact that it was created in the image of God and called to a life of grace.
Charles Belmonte Publications
Articles and podcasts in English
Friday, June 5, 2026
Jun 6 Sat - What should come first, nature or man?
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Jun 5 Fri - Can a person become a priest just for a couple of years?
Jun 5 Fri
Can a person become a priest just for a couple of years?
Christ, we read in the Epistle to the Hebrews, "holds his priesthood permanently, because He continues forever. Consequently, He is able for all time to save those who draw near to God, since He always lives to make intercession for them."
The priesthood of Christ is one and unique; it becomes present through the ministerial priesthood. Yet “Only Christ is the true priest; the others are his ministers.”
There are two ways of participating in the one priesthood of Christ:
- The common priesthood of the faithful, which is conferred through Baptism and Confirmation.
- The ministerial priesthood of the ordained minister, which is at the service of the common priesthood of the faithful.
Holy Orders is the sacrament that confers the spiritual power and the grace that is needed to fulfill the ecclesiastical functions properly:
- The Eucharist.
- The forgiveness of sins.
- The preaching of the faith, the administration of the sacraments, and government in all that refers to faith and the sacraments.
In this sacrament, the subject receives a special configuration to Christ, as Head of the Mystical Body, called the character. This enables him to participate in Christ’s priesthood in a unique way. The sacrament imprints an indelible (permanent) sacramental character on the soul.
The character cannot be repeated or conferred temporarily.
It is true that someone validly ordained can, for a just reason, be discharged from the obligations and functions linked to ordination, or can be forbidden to exercise them; but he cannot become a layman again in the strict sense.
This “Forever” also matches the Church’s mission.
What if a priest is unworthy?
- Since it is ultimately Christ who acts and effects salvation through the ordained minister, the unworthiness of the latter does not prevent Christ from acting. Christ’s spiritual power in the sacrament (his grace and other effects) is comparable to light: those to be enlightened receive it in its purity; even if it passes through defiled places, light is not defiled.
In the Latin Church, the sacrament of Holy Orders for the priesthood is normally conferred only on candidates who are ready to embrace celibacy freely, and who publicly manifest their intention of staying celibate for the love of God's kingdom and the service of men.
This measure is particularly convenient, as celibacy allows a greater surrender to Christ, a closer imitation of his example, and greater availability for the service of the Church and all souls. Further, it offers an eschatological witness by showing the reality of eternal life, “for in the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage.”
Thus,
“Do not be afraid. Do not be alarmed or surprised. Do not allow yourself to be overcome by false prudence.
The call to fulfil God’s will - this goes for vocation too - is sudden, as it was for the Apostles: a meeting with Christ and his call is followed…
- None of them doubted. Meeting Christ and following him were one and the same."
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Jun 4 Thu - How is the immediate preparation for communion in the Mass Liturgy?
Jun 4 Thu
How is the immediate preparation for communion in the Mass Liturgy?
Our Mother the Church offers us two prayers of preparation for the Lord's coming into our bodies. These prayers date from about the tenth century. They are full of fervor, rather subjective in tone, and suited for private piety, as they are intended for the personal preparation of the priest who recites them.
In the first prayer, the priest begs Christ, Son of the living God, to grant salvation to his servant and to deliver him from all his sins and from every evil.
In the other, the priest declares his own unworthiness and his confidence in Christ's mercy. He asks that the reception of the Eucharist may work not to his condemnation but to his own good.
The priest's personal preparation also allows us to prepare ourselves in silence, not with the noise of words, but with an abundance of acts of love. We feel unworthy as the moment to receive our Lord approaches. But we decide to go on because we know he wants to remain in the consecrated species as our nourishment and the remedy for our weaknesses.
We should never dare to receive the Eucharist in a state of mortal sin. To do so is a sacrilegious abuse of God's mercy. Only a shallow and false love, based on mere sentimentality, can bring us to such a detestable course of action. This mistreatment of the sacrament is a grave offense against God.
St Paul's warning on this issue is quite clear:
"Anyone who eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily will be behaving unworthily towards the body and blood of the Lord. Everyone is to recollect himself before eating this bread and drinking this cup, because a person who eats and drinks without recognizing the body is eating and drinking his own condemnation."
And Pope John Paul II warns us:
"Quite frequently, many participating in the Eucharistic assembly go to Communion; sometimes, there has not been due care to approach the sacrament of penance to purify one's conscience. This can mean that those approaching the Lord's table find nothing on their conscience, according to the objective law of God, to keep them from this sublime and joyful act of being sacramentally united with Christ.
Behind this, there could be the mistaken idea that the Mass is only a banquet in which one shares by receiving the body of Christ to manifest, above all else, fraternal communion."
Therefore, we cannot –and should not– receive our Lord with a soul stained by sin. If we realize we have committed a serious sin, even if we feel contrite, we cannot receive the Holy Eucharist without sacramental confession.
It is not only that penance leads to the Eucharist, but that the Eucharist also leads to penance. For when we realize who we receive in Eucharistic Communion, a sense of unworthiness springs up almost spontaneously, along with sorrow for our sins and an interior need for purification.
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Jun 3 Wed - Do I owe service and sacrifices to God?
Jun 3 Wed
Do I owe service and sacrifices to God?
People have always felt the need to offer sacrifices to God, since man's need to show his reverence towards God in deeds is born of the dictates of natural reason. We are ordained by nature to serve God and worship him with adoration, love, and praise. This is the supernatural virtue of religion that binds us to the one Almighty God.
The Christian has still greater reason to worship God, because, as well as being the all-powerful Lord and Creator, God is our Father, who has wanted to make us sharers in his very life. And as his children, we have to adore him supernaturally, moved by God's own love. We must also seek God's glory in all our actions. Today it is all the more urgent to do so, since “there are people who try to desecrate everything, seeking to convert whatever is in itself sacred, even the very priesthood, into something profane. We want to bring all things to God, each according to its nature: what God has made sacred is sacred."
Ever since Christ died on the Cross for us, our worship should be offered to God through Jesus Christ, mainly in the holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
Saint Josemaría used to comment that, for me, everything seems too little when it is for the Lord. We want to offer him the very best. “Generously give the Lord that young heart you have, that beautiful, splendid life: give your life to him. Make yours the sacrifice of Abel, not that of Cain. Abel gave him the best of his flock." What pleases God most is a clean life, a life entirely dedicated to him, a life of love. “That is why we want to offer our life, our generous dedication, in reparation for our own sins; for the sins of all men, our brothers; for the sins committed at all times, and for those that will be committed until the end of time. Above all, for the Catholics, for God's chosen ones who do not respond, those who betray the special love God our Lord has bestowed on them."
Absolutely everything has to be for God; we offer him the very deepest recesses of our mind and will, our whole being. He receives our offering: it goes up to his throne like incense, united to the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. “We each make the consecratio mundi, the consecration of the world, through our personal dedication to the Lord's service and, through him, to the service of all souls without exception, in the practice of our own job or duty, in the middle of the world, which we love, each in our own state."
Let us give up our lives cheerfully. “If you think that your talents, your personality, your qualities are being wasted; that you're not allowed to take full advantage of them. -Meditate well on these words of a spiritual writer: ‘The incense offered to God is not wasted. Our Lord is more honored by the immolation of your talents than by their vain use.’"
Monday, June 1, 2026
Jun 2 Tue - How does God answer our requests?
Jun 2 Tue
How does God answer our requests?
From blessing to protection: How to interpret the three "Yeses" of Divine Love.
On the path of faith, we often imagine God as a great manager of requests. However, the spiritual theology of the great Doctors of the Church reveals that God does not respond automatically like an algorithm, but like a good Father. His language unfolds in three movements that, although sometimes mysterious, always seek the fullness of the human being.
1. The “Yes” that blesses: The grace of consonance.
When man’s desire aligns with God’s plan, His “Yes” appears as a door that swings wide open. It is not merely a reward for effort, but an active blessing. According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, a blessing is a divine action that gives us life and whose source is the Father.
- Impact: This “Yes” confirms us in our vocation and gives us the joy of ripe fruit.
- Attitude: It is received with gratitude and humility, remembering that every perfect gift comes from above.
2. The waiting that strengthens: The crucible of hope.
At times, the answer seems to remain unresolved. This is not divine oversight; it is a lesson for us to grow. Saint Ignatius of Loyola taught that in times of desolation or waiting, the soul expands.
Sometimes God’s silence is his greatest gift. Waiting fulfills vital functions in the architecture of the spirit; you must:
- Purify the intention: Ask yourself if you are seeking God or God’s consolations.
- Develop patience: A cardinal virtue that allows us to possess ourselves to give ourselves to others.
- Increase the desire: As Saint Augustine said, God delays what He does not want to give soon so that you learn to desire more strongly.
3. The “No” that protects: The invisible hand of the Shepherd
Perhaps the most difficult answer to process is the negative one. However, from an analytical and faith-based perspective, God’s “No” is, in reality, a “Yes” to something greater or a protection against a present evil we cannot see.
“Lord, do not give me what I want, but what you know is good for me.”
God, possessing an eternal vision (beyond linear time), protects us from our own shortsightedness. A “No” today can be the safeguard of our peace tomorrow. It is the manifestation of Preventive Mercy: He closes doors that lead to dead ends, even if at the time the deadbolt seems unjust.
Conclusion: Intelligent Trust
Understanding that God blesses, strengthens, and protects us is a transition from a childlike faith to a mature and constructive one. The spiritual life is not about convincing God to do our will, but about aligning our will with His. At the end of the day, we discover that even in His silences and refusals, God is actively working for our holiness.
In His will is our peace.
Pic: Pantocrator (Almighty God) mosaic. Some excerpts from Miguel Morales Gabriel
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Jun 1 Mon - Is everything that comes to an end in my life a defeat?
Jun 1 Mon
Is everything that comes to an end in my life a defeat?
Pope Leo XIV sent a heartfelt letter, filled with tenderness, understanding, and valuable guidance, to an 18-year-old, Pietro, who had expressed his fears about the uncertainty of his future and the new chapter he was about to begin at university, saying it left him feeling "very confused."
Specifically, he fears losing the friendships he has formed in high school and not knowing what path God has in store for him.
He dreams of “building and bringing to reality the project of a family united in the love of Christ.”
Dearest Pietro,
I read your letter with emotion. In it, I recognize the heart of a young man who is not satisfied and who takes his life seriously. I would like you to consider, first of all, one thing above all else: "You are loved by Jesus."
Not in an abstract way, but personally, as you are today, with your questions and your dreams, your fears, and your desires.
This love precedes you and will always accompany you; it does not depend on the choices you make or the paths you take. Jesus knows well the experience of friendship. He called his disciples friends, shared the bread and the journey with them, and was a friend of Lazarus, Martha, and Mary.
Jesus lived true and authentic bonds to the point of experiencing the pain of detachment and betrayal. For this reason, Jesus would be the first to understand your fear of losing the friendships you've made in these years.
Not everything will remain the same for you, but what has been authentic is not lost; indeed, true love does not dissolve; it remains forever; it matures even when it changes form and circumstances.
The desires of your heart, not the fleeting ones that melt like snow in the sun, but those that endure over time, will make you feel a deep peace and direct you towards a good choice: the gift of yourself and a shared life. From this, discernment is born.
Don't be in a hurry to understand everything right away. Time is a patient teacher and heals wounds.
Daily prayer, even simple and sparse in words, listening to the Word of God, the celebration of the sacraments, and the advice of wise people will help you to recognize which bonds to preserve and make grow, and which ones, without judgment, to cut off.
Not everything that ends is a defeat: sometimes it is just a necessary step toward growth. Your dream of a family founded in the love of Christ is also a precious gift for the Church; nurture it with confidence.
The Lord does not disappoint the desires that He Himself has kindled in your heart.
The restlessness you tell me about is not a negative sign. It is often where God works deeply. It is like the land that the farmer has tilled and is ready to receive a new seed.
I invite you to listen to Him sincerely, and I assure you of my prayers. I ask for you the grace of inner peace, confidence, and a clear outlook on your life. I entrust you to Mary, who, as a young woman, learned to trust despite having kept in her heart questions greater than herself.
Saturday, May 30, 2026
May 31 Sun - How can I imitate the Blessed Trinity?
May 31 Sun
How can I imitate the Blessed Trinity?
The Blessed Trinity is the central truth of our Christian life. It must be possible to live this truth.
God is a social being: three Divine Persons in relationship with one another.
We are also social beings, always in relationships with others: as family members, as members of a school community, as friends, as spouses or parents, and as members of various civic associations and the Church.
In God, each of the three Persons is co-equal.
However, in human relationships, there is often inequality. In some relationships, we are dependent on others, like a child is on a parent.
In others, we and the other depend on each other, as in a friendship.
In yet others, the other is dependent on us, for example, when a teacher instructs a student.
With sacramental grace, we can live all these human relationships as communions of love, imitating God’s inner life.
The best understanding of the inner life of God we have is from Christ. Jesus Christ is the incarnation of God’s love, and He has shown us that the essence of this love is the gift of self.
How does this apply to us?
Vatican II gives us the answer: “Man, who is the only creature on earth which God willed for himself, cannot fully find himself except through a sincere gift of himself.”
It is easy to see how sacrificial love applies when others depend on us. It may be hard to make the sacrifice, yet when we do so, we love as God loves.
But what about when we are the dependent ones?
Even when we depend on others, we can still give ourselves.
- Some examples include obeying the just authority of those on whom we depend, such as following a doctor's orders;
- Offering up the difficult situation, as in patiently waiting when we are hungry;
- Being cooperative and cheerful when seeking technical support over the phone, and so on.
When we accept the consequences of being in a dependent position, we also have a chance to imitate Our Lord when He was a child, during His forty days in the wilderness, and while enduring His Passion.
So, whenever we give ourselves to another person out of love, we are being like the Blessed Trinity.
However, we also have the terrible freedom to be selfish. Every selfish act is not only the opposite of human love; it is also the opposite of the life of the Blessed Trinity.
No one on earth likes to be around a purely selfish person. We can't stand people like that. (Even selfish people dislike other selfish individuals.) This helps us see how such behavior could exclude one from the Beatific Vision.
Remember, to be a follower of Christ means to make an effort to live accordingly, to mend our ways.
The love of God the Father flows to us through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit draws Christians together in fellowship. This is why we can encourage one another, agree with one another, and live in peace with one another.
Friday, May 29, 2026
May 30 Sat - How can I make the best use of my freedom?
May 30 Sat
How can I make the best use of my freedom?
St. Josemaría: “God is a jealous lover. He is not satisfied if we come to meet him with conditions. He longs for us to give ourselves completely, without keeping dark corners in our hearts, where the joy and happiness of grace and the supernatural gifts cannot reach. Perhaps you are thinking, If I say 'yes' to this exclusive Love, might I not lose my freedom?"
“Each one of us has at some time or other experienced that serving Christ our Lord involves suffering and hardship; to deny this would imply that we had not yet found God. A soul in love knows, however, that when such suffering comes, it is only a fleeting impression; the soul soon finds that the yoke is easy and the burden light, because Jesus is carrying it upon his shoulders as he embraced the wood of the Cross when our eternal happiness was at stake."
“But some people do not understand. They rebel against the Creator, in a sad, petty, impotent rebellion, and they blindly repeat the futile complaint recorded in the Psalms: Let us break away from their bondage, rid ourselves of their toils. They shrink from the hardship of fulfilling their daily task with heroic silence and naturalness, without show or complaint. They have not realized that even when God's will seems painful and its demands wounding, it coincides perfectly with our freedom, which is only to be found in God and his plans."
“Such people barricade themselves behind their freedom. ‘My freedom! My freedom!’ they cry. They have their freedom, but they don't use it. They look at it, they set it up, a clay idol for their petty minds to worship. Is this freedom? What use is this treasure to them, if there is no commitment guiding their whole life?"
“Such behavior goes against their very dignity and nobility as human beings. They are left aimless, with no clear path to guide their footsteps on this earth. You and I have met such people. They then let themselves be carried away by childish vanity, by selfish conceit, by sensuality."
“Their freedom turns out to be barren, or produces fruits which, even humanly speaking, are ridiculous. A person who does not choose, with complete freedom, an upright code of conduct, sooner or later ends up being manipulated by others. He will lead a lazy, parasitic existence, at the mercy of what others decide. He will let himself be blown here and there by any wind whatsoever, and it will always be others who make up his mind for him. These are waterless clouds, carried hither and thither by the winds, autumn trees that bear no fruit, doubly dead and rootless, even though they may try to disguise their lack of character, courage, and honesty behind a smokescreen of constant chatter and excuses."
Self-giving is the exercise of our freedom. We give more glory to God by offering him our best talents than by making vain use of them.
“Love is incompatible with boredom or apathy. To love means to renew our dedication every day, with loving deeds of service."
Pic: San Fernando, a man of sincere faith, committed to justice, and selfless service to others, who showed courage even in difficult times.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
May 29 Fri - What should I do when I feel sad?
May 29 Fri
What should I do when I feel sad?
If we are united to God, the joy of our life, nothing should make us sad. St John Chrysostom asks: “What could perturb a saint? Death? No! For he desires it as a prize. Insults? No! For Christ taught us to bear them: Blessed are you when men revile you and persecute you. Illnesses? Not those either. What then could upset a saint? Nothing. In this world, even joy usually ends in sadness. But for those who live their lives according to Christ, even troubles are turned into joy."
Whatever happens, omnia in bonum! Everything works together for the good. God wants it to happen or at least allows it to happen. He sometimes even permits us to make mistakes and experience our own weakness, to draw forth good from it, to set us still more on fire with his love, and make us more sincerely humble.
“Joy is a consequence of divine filiation. It comes from our awareness that we are loved by our Father God, who always welcomes us, helps us, and forgives us."
Sadness causes grave harm to the soul because it is the fruit of pride, just as joy is the consequence of the love of God.
Cast aside sadness. Do you not realize that it is worse than any other state of mind? It is that which most discourages and rebuffs the Holy Spirit. A happy person works well, enjoys good things, and pleases God. But a sad person always acts badly.
Sadness is a great ally of the enemy. A person who is sad is in a near occasion of sin. If this grave danger should ever attack our souls, we must examine ourselves, ask for light, and look for the cause. “Happiness is a consequence of self-surrender."
At the bottom of sadness, we often find the dregs of selfishness and personal concerns. “You are not happy because you make everything revolve around yourself as if you were always the center: you have a stomachache, or you are tired, or they have said this or that...
Have you ever tried thinking about Him, and through Him, about others?"
If we are tempted to be sad, the first remedy is prayer. “You ask me to suggest a cure for your sadness. I will give you a prescription from an expert adviser, the Apostle St James: Is any of you sad? Are you sad, my son - Pray! Try it, and you will see."
Talking and listening to God will bring life back to our souls. Then, with the supernatural outlook of faith, hope, love, and desires for atonement, we will see that we only have reasons for being happy. We will resolve to remove the obstacles that separate us from the Lord, the God of our joy. Once more, we will happily serve our brothers and sisters and all people. “Our service must be carried out joyfully. Wherever there is a child of God, there must be the cheerfulness that comes from interior peace. When we have the spirit of Christ, we will do everything that we do joyfully."
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
May 28 Thu - What does “Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest” mean?
May 28 Thu
What does “Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest” mean?
“Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest” means that Jesus is the one priest who offers the perfect sacrifice and continues to intercede for us forever, fulfilling and surpassing the priesthood of the Old Covenant.
Christ’s priesthood is foretold as “forever,” and Psalm 110 is explicit: “You are a priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek.”
What does “high priest” mean?
In Scripture, a high priest is someone appointed “to act on behalf of men in relation to God, to offer gifts and sacrifices for sins.”
So, when the Church calls Jesus “High Priest,” it means that Jesus truly represents us before God and acts for our reconciliation—not by repeating flawed sacrifices, but by offering what is perfect: His own sacrifice on the Cross.
What does “eternal” add?
In the Letter to the Hebrews, Christ is described as a high priest who enters into the heavenly sanctuary “once for all,” securing an “eternal redemption.”
Hebrews also ties the Eternal High Priest to the nature of his offering. Christ enters the heavenly sanctuary “once for all,” and does so with his own blood, which results in “eternal redemption” for all of us.
This directly answers the problem; while the Old Covenant required repeated sacrifices, Christ does not need to offer daily sacrifices—He offered himself “once for all.”
In Catholic understanding, the Eucharist is intelligible only when we consider that Christ’s priesthood is ongoing—the priesthood of Jesus is not something that ended when He died and rose; it is exercised permanently.
What does make Jesus “our” Eternal High Priest?
The Catechism states that Christ himself is “the eternal high priest of the New Covenant,” and that (through the ordained priest’s ministry) He is the One who offers the Eucharistic sacrifice.
Also, Christ is not only a priest in the past: after entering heaven, He “always lives to make intercession” for those who draw near to God through him.
John Paul II summarizes this intercession and priestly action in heavenly glory: Jesus is eternally consecrated and from there intercedes for us as our Mediator.
How are the “Eternal High Priest” and the Mass related?
Catholic doctrine holds together two truths:
- Christ’s sacrifice is truly one and completed (not repeated),
- Yet it is really made present sacramentally in every Mass, because the eternal High Priest is acting.
That implies that the Eucharistic liturgy is understood as taking place in the context of Christ’s heavenly worship and intercession—not as a circumstantial, purely horizontal religious gathering.
The Church also teaches that in the Eucharist, we are not watching a merely symbolic remembrance. The Mass makes present the sacrifice of the Cross—it does not multiply it or treat it as something new.
So “Eternal High Priest” connects directly to worship: Christ is the principal actor, and the Church’s liturgy participates in his one, permanent priesthood.
In short, the title means that Jesus is the unique priest who offered the perfect sacrifice once for all and continues forever to intercede for you before God the Father—a sacrifice especially made present in the Eucharist.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
May 27 Wed - What are the keys to overcoming temptation and growing in holiness?
May 27 Wed
What are the keys to overcoming temptation and growing in holiness?
In the lives of many people, the path to holiness is marked by intense temptations. Far from weakening them, these struggles must become the very place where their faith is purified and strengthened. Holiness does not consist in the absence of temptations, but in remaining faithful in the midst of them.
One point must be clear: victory is achieved through the Cross. Inspired by Christ, one understands that suffering, accepted with love, is not a defeat, but a source of grace. Trials, interior or external, far from being an obstacle, become an opportunity for union with Jesus. Thus, one learns to see in pain a path of transformation, to the point of finding consolation in difficulties, understood as a participation in the life of Christ.
Another fundamental principle is: one must not engage in dialogue with the enemy.
“Do not enter into dialogue with temptation. Allow me to repeat it: have the courage to run away and the moral strength not to dally with your weakness or wonder how far you can go. Break off, with no concessions!"
Temptation often presents itself through subtle reasoning that seeks to confuse us and weaken. Therefore, the response is not to debate, but to firmly reject it and trust fully in God. Trust in the power of the Lord and not in your own strength.
One must not abandon the spiritual life when one experiences weakness or discouragement.
“After the initial enthusiasm, there began the doubts, hesitations, and fears. You are worried about your studies, your family, your financial situation, and, above all, the thought that you are not up to it, that perhaps you are of no use, that you lack experience in life."
“I will give you a sure means of overcoming such fears - temptations coming from the devil or from your lack of generosity! Despise them: remove those recollections from your memory. The Master already preached this unequivocally twenty centuries ago: ‘Don’t look back…’"
In the face of temptation or failure, the way forward is not to retreat, but to intensify prayer, sacrifice, and trust in God. This advice counters the temptation to give up when one feels fragile, reminding us that faithfulness in small things is key on the path to holiness.
One must realize God’s presence in the midst of trial. He is always in one’s heart, silently sustaining us. Even when God seems absent, His presence acts in the innermost depths of the soul, giving strength to resist and overcome.
Holiness is a path of struggle and love. Far from an idealized vision, holiness is a demanding path, marked by struggle as well as by grace. Thus, one must not lose heart in the face of difficulties, but discover in them an opportunity to grow in love and fidelity to God. This lesson must remain alive: victory does not lie in the absence of battles, but in remaining steadfast in Christ in the midst of them.
Monday, May 25, 2026
May 26 Tue - Do I have “obligations” in my life?
May 26 Tue
Do I have “obligations” in my life?
Before becoming Pope, John Paul II wrote about one’s personal experience of obligation. We all feel “obliged” at some point in life to someone or something. What significance, what meaning, does that experience have?
We all realize that there are things we should do and things we should not. Additionally, some of the things we should do, we don't, while those we shouldn't do, we do.
This is so because man is not the author of moral norms. If that were true, Wojtyła argues, man could dismiss his self-imposed rules.
But we also have the experience that our sense of OBLIGATION endures even when we engage in (vain) self-dispensation. That suggests we are not the source of those moral norms or the sense of obligation flowing from them.
The sense of obligation, he observes, is not a time- and culture-conditioned phenomenon unique to some people. Any honest person must admit that all human beings at some point realize “I ought to do that,” even when they really don’t want to, even when they confess that they cannot avoid it.
The sense of an obligation not created by me challenges all claims of “rights” to “define meaning, the universe, and human life.” It therefore calls into question every assumption of self-made morality, “autonomous ethics,” or subjective “self-definition.”
A deeper reckoning of this would save us from the laws and cultural expectations that flow from those slogans. It is a matter of examining a basic and common experience: “I ought.”
The nagging persistence of the sense of “obligation,” despite our attempts to talk ourselves out of it, leads to another experience: RESPONSIBILITY. If, in good faith, I find I really can’t rationalize that obligation away, and I still feel accountable to its demands, it means I have a responsibility towards it.
It's a responsibility not of my making because—like the obligation—if it really were just my own doing, I could get rid of it. But I can't.
I sense that responsibility comes not from me but from the obligation, and that it keeps me accountable.
Responsibility, then, is not just a self-assumed yoke, the mark of the morally “mature” person. Even when I don’t accept them, I realize there are “obligations” that hold me accountable. Responsibility, then, is not just a matter of my choice.
But what is the value of guilt? Contrary to current assumptions, “guilt can be good.” That’s not to say it’s good if it’s paralyzing or obsessive, but not every manifestation of guilt is bad.
Failing my responsibility by betraying my obligation reveals an accountability I have to the good, independent of my preferences.
In traditional Catholic terms, it is the CONSCIENCE, a source of moral guidance before we act and of judgment after we act. Conscience is a healthy sense of recognition of failings for which I bear an obligation. It is healthy because it acknowledges that first principles lie outside my sovereign will: “good is to be done, and evil avoided.”











