Daily Reflection: 30 October 2023

I briefly saw this headline the other day that stated: Professor Studies Free Will and Discovers It Doesn’t Exist.

And with that, we are relegated to either robots or purely animals, no different than a sloth or a caterpillar, or a computer.

I didn’t even bother to read it, because sometimes, you just don’t have time for nonsense.

Every single one of us knows that we have free will and the reason we know this, is because we exercise it all the time.

I didn’t want to get out of bed this morning to pray, because I was comfy and cozy. I could have just stayed in bed and, as St. Paul says in Romans 8:12, “live according to the flesh.”

But, I willed myself up because I need to live according to the spirit.

People have been trying to deny free will for ages now. Generally, what it all boils down to is an attempt to justify “living according to the flesh.”

“I can’t help it,” people say.

The excuse is that we are just “programmed” to give into any and all desires of the flesh.

But, St. Paul clearly points out that we have been given free will. You can either chose a life given over to the flesh OR a life given over to the spirit. There is a choice there.

Free will is a gift of God, Catholic Pilgrims, though it does mean people will chose the bad many times. Without free will, we would merely be programmed to act certain ways and we would have zero agency over our lives. We know that’s not the case. We have the ability to deny the flesh and chose something higher, which in the eyes of the world may seem counterintuitive to a happy life.

The Saints would say otherwise.

Live the Faith boldly and travel well Monday.

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Daily Reflection: 26 Aug 2025

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Daily Reflection: 24 Aug 2025

In January of 2019, the day before my 40th birthday, my husband came to me smiling and said, "Pack your bags! We are going to Cincinnati for a day!" I instantly felt dread. Not because I didn't want to go with him, but because it would mean leaving our kids home alone for one night. My oldest was a senior in high school and completely capable. My best friend lived not far away and we would only be a hour south. Still, I was nervous about leaving. My kids urged, "Mom, it's going to be just fine. Everything is fine." But, I couldn't shake my need to think that I was the only one who could take care of things properly. Reluctantly, I agreed to go, though I was struggling to trust. Off we went and, thankfully, I fixed my attitude and we had a wonderful time. When we got home the next afternoon, I spotted my best friend's van near our house. "Hmm...is this a surprise?" I wondered. Upon entering the house, it was completely quiet and I snuck into the kitchen and found my family, my best friend's family, and my dad, sister, and nephews all there to surprise me. "SURPRISE!" they all yelled. What I didn't know the day before was that my husband had to get me out of the house so that my family from Kansas could arrive to surprise me. They were there the whole night with my kids. We often don't trust God when He asks us to walk the Narrow Path. We don't trust Him with our happiness and have faith that a life walked in imitation of Christ will be worth it. What I would have missed out on if I had chosen to stay home and not trust my husband and kids. What we miss out on when we don't trust Christ with our lives. Trust in the Narrow Path, Catholic Pilgrims. It won't disappoint. Have a blessed Sunday.

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Daily Reflection: 21 Aug 2025

Yesterday, I watched a video of Charlie Kirk debating a cocky Oxford student on the topic of religion. Charlie always impresses me with his ability to keep calm, especially when the other guy is agitated and loud. Anyway, I won't go into all the details, as the video was rather long, but the basic idea was that non-religious Oxford man was trying to say that orthodox Christians are wrong in how we interpret Scripture when it comes to the sinfulness of homo$exual acts. The guy was trying to say that it was "all a linguistic error," you see. Charlie did a very good job of explaining what the verses actual say, but the guy wasn't really listening. At one point, though, seeing that trying to explain Scripture wasn't working, Charlie appealed to Tradition. This shocked me, as Charlie Kirk is a pretty staunch Protestant. He even acknowledged, as much, in his argument when he said, 'Now, I'm a Protestant, but we have 2000 years of Tradition..." I was like, "Whoa," and kept eating my popcorn with wide-eyed amusement. However, Mr. Oxford Man brushed that off. And then, the debate turned into both men trying to prove whose interpretation was correct. Round and round it went until the moderator cut it off. Charlie is close. So close. What he's missing is that third pillar--the teaching authority of the Church--the Magisterium. Mr. Oxford Guy has no authority to tell anybody what Scripture means. Protestantism lacks the Magisterium, which is why you have hundreds of denominations all saying THEY know what Scripture says. Once you chuck the authority given to Christ's Church by Christ, well, this is the inevitable outcome. As a Catholic, I do not nor should I, appeal to my own authority on interpretation. I should appeal to the authority of the Church given to us by Christ. The Church that canonized the Scriptures, passed on the Traditions when the Scriptures weren't yet compiled, and has authority from Christ. Like I said, he's close. He's got two of the pillars. Let's pray that he, and others in the same boat, find that third pillar, Catholic Pilgrims. Live the faith boldly and travel well this Thursday. *Pillars are from Laodicea in modern day Turkey

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