Posted on 11/15/2011 7:05:24 AM PST by marshmallow
This is the New Oxford Note we didnt want to write.
We had been hoping against hope that the accusations against Fr. John Corapi, the popular, charismatic radio and television evangelist, were unfounded. We truly wanted to believe him when he asserted his innocence. He was, after all, a man who, by the grace of God, was lifted out of a life of drug abuse and debauchery, who reverted to the faith under the guidance of the Blessed Virgin Mary, was ordained a priest by Pope John Paul II, and who went on to preach the Gospel with an infectious passion and always in an unapologetically orthodox fashion. His gift for evangelization was unparalleled in our time: He was often likened to a modern-day Fulton Sheen. Nobody else was in his league. He was dynamic yet very human: the epitome of man redeemed.
Fr. Corapi was, by all appearances, a true fighter for the faith, a beacon of light in a time of creeping darkness and confusion. Through his broadcasts and personal appearances he touched the lives of innumerable people, often reaffirming the faith of those in distress and calling into the sheepfold the lambs lost in the American wilderness.
John Corapis conversion story was an incredible testimony to the grace of God even in the darkest of circumstances: he a homeless substance abuser on the streets of LA, while his mother prayed fervent rosaries on his behalf back at his childhood home. Here was a sinner among sinners who at his lowest point was rescued by heavenly intervention. What hope his story brought to the faithful whose friends and family members had fallen away!
Imagine the devastation among his dedicated followers when the façade cracked.
Count us among the crestfallen. We too were admirers of Fr. Corapi. We quoted...............
(Excerpt) Read more at newoxfordreview.org ...
So....you think if YOU won the lottery, YOU could resist Satan’s temptations?
The human condition is, sadly, all too human.
So true, so true, it is hard to resist the world.
It is certainly a difficult thing. I believe that, just as God "gives us power to get wealth" (Deut. 8:18) He also keeps some people poor(er) to keep them from temptation due to their lack of self-discipline.
Years ago, I came across the phrase "sudden wealth destroys a man" in a Christian book. I believed, for years, that it was a direct quote from Proverbs - I've never found it, however. The closest thing I've found was this prayer for middling wealth:
Two things I ask of you;
deny them not to me before I die:
Remove far from me falsehood and lying;
give me neither poverty nor riches;
feed me with the food that is needful for me,
lest I be full and deny you
and say, "Who is the LORD?"
or lest I be poor and steal
and profane the name of my God.
-- Proverbs 30:7-9
Such a shame.
Paybacks will be, well let me just say, I wouldn’t want to have to explain to God his justification for what he did..
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