Chris Manion's Blog, page 9
May 24, 2017
Miracles Always Fascinate, But Would You Be Convinced?

Miracles always fascinate me, although the Doubting Thomas in me flashes like a neon sign when I read of them. The miracle below melted the stubborn toughness that still clings to the edges of my soul’s robe.
I’m not sure why I find myself drawn to images or stories of mules over the past few years. I almost bought an original oil painting by Linda Sasse at the ArtsQuest festival a few years ago. If memory serves me well, it was in pastel colors and featured three mules. I couldn’t figure out where I’d put it in my home and more interestingly, couldn’t figure out why I was drawn to it. Mules are not high on my list of redeeming creatures for whom I have a fondness.
It certainly couldn’t have anything to do with my stubborn nature that God may be working on…
The Irresistible Argument of Miracles
Stubborn thinking may play a part in this miracle. Let’s see.
Saint Anthony (1195-1231) worked hard to convert those who did not believe in the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist because he genuinely felt sorry for them. He saw that they were depriving themselves of the most precious gift of the Eucharist, and he believed that no one could long survive without this spiritual nourishment.
Often, he was called to defend the dogmas of our faith to heretics, especially the Albigensians, who were multiplying in the South of France and the North of Italy.
However, theological arguments alone were not enough to convince those minds closed by pride and ignorance. Our Saint presented them with the irresistible argument of miracles.
He Perceived No Change
During his travels through a city called Rimini, Saint Anthony engaged in conversation with a particularly stubborn heretic. This man obstinately refused to admit the mystery of transubstantiation, for he perceived no change in the sacramental species after the words of consecration.
In vain, Anthony presented proofs drawn from both Scripture and Tradition. When his efforts failed before the stubborn obstinacy of his doubter, he decided to alter his strategy.
“You possess,” he told the man, “a mule that you ride often. I will present a consecrated host to it; if it falls on its knee before the Blessed Sacrament, will you recognize the real Presence of the Savior under His Eucharistic appearance?”
“Certainly,” responded the unbeliever, who felt confident that the outcome of such a proposition would be to the apostle’s detriment.
If the Mule Falls on its Knees Before the Blessed Sacrament …

Mules and miracles (see Numbers 22: 21-39)
The two men agreed to meet again in the market square three days later. Then they went their separate ways, each to prepare for the spiritual showdown in his own way.
The heretic, in order to insure victory, deprived his beast from all food for the three days. Our saint employed gentler methods, preparing for his assured victory by doubling his accustomed time in prayer.
At the set day and time, Anthony left the Church, carrying a ciborium in his hands. The skeptic arrived leading the famished animal by the bridle.
A considerable crowd had gathered on the square, curious to attend such a remarkable sight. With a smile on his lips, the doubter, believing victory already to be his, set a sack of oats before the animal.
As all watched in breathless anticipation, the hungry animal turned away from the proffered food and turned toward the Sacred Host held high by the Miracle Worker. With a graceful motion uncharacteristic of his breed, the beast of burden bowed low to the ground, giving due reverence to his Creator. It did not straighten or stand up again until it had received permission from the Saint to do so.
It is easy to imagine the effect the miracle produced. A cheer rose up from the assembled crowd, many making the sign of the Cross to seal their belief in what they had just witnessed.
The heretic honored his word and converted. Several others who had shared his stubborn unbelief also embraced this most marvelous proof of Our Savior’s True Presence among his creatures.
If such a miracle occurred before you, would you change your beliefs? Click here for another feel good story like this.
“I will be with you always, even to the end of the world.” (Matt. 28:20)
The post Miracles Always Fascinate, But Would You Be Convinced? appeared first on Chris Manion.
May 17, 2017
Trust, talking to God, and the Gift of Tears

Speaker author Chris Manion
I’m off to tell more stories from my book at the Coastal Library in Santa Rosa Beach, FL today at 10 a.m. including the little-known spiritual gift of tears. Crossing my fingers for an audience, however small.
One of the topics in the book and in my talk is the gift of tears. I address this topic for two reasons.
I was confused by spiritual tears falling effortlessly without reddening of the eyes.
I’d never heard of the gift of tears, and I’m fairly well-read on spirituality, contemplation, and numerous Catholic authors and saints.
My research for the gift of tears turned up very little.
“Weeping sometimes accompanies spiritual growth and causes embarrassment or guilt if the experience is different from that of others around us, or we simply don’t understand it.

“We are ‘citizens of two realms;’ the physical and the spiritual in its unfathomable mystery,” says author Paula Huston (author, The Dilemma of Demons, reflection in Give Us This Day: Prayer for Today’s Catholic, October 9, 2015). The gift of tears is of this spiritual realm. These tears fall without any reddening of the eyes and flow without strain or effort.
“Throughout the New Testament, the Holy Spirit acts in diverse ways (e.g. filling people, falling upon them, anointing some). According to the late Right Rev. John Richards, Bishop of Ebbsfleet (Canterbury): ‘The gifts of the Holy Spirit are not rewards for our goodness, nor badges marking our maturity, nor are they favours which we have merited. If you have ten such gifts, you are not thereby a better person than one with none. If you have the gift of service that does not make you inferior to or more mature than someone with, say the gift of miracles. There can be no prestige or pride in testifying to any that one has received, therefore, only gratitude.’ http://www.HelpForChristians.co.uk/articles/a28.asp
“The spiritual gift of tears was an unknown to me. I didn’t understand them. Because they embarrassed me, I brushed them away and suppressed thinking about them. This gift wasn’t listed among the gifts of the Holy Spirit in 1 Corinthians 12 that I studied for the sacrament of Confirmation. I never heard it mentioned in a single homily nor any class I took despite eleven years of parochial education. It felt like a secret. I added it to my plate of whys—already including contemplative prayer—that had not been taught to me or mentioned as I had grown up.
“Ah, church of mine! Share more generously your wondrous secrets with us. Our hearts long to hear them.”
Excerpt from God’s Patient Pursuit of My Soul (Redemption Press, 2017).
The post Trust, talking to God, and the Gift of Tears appeared first on Chris Manion.