Pints With Aquinas - 173: What is prayer? (& How to do it)
Episode Date: October 1, 2019Today I discuss what prayer is, three obstacles I experience when praying, how to develop a prayer rule of life, and 3 reasons Aquinas says we should pray out loud. Please support our work here. It i...s not essential to such a prayer as this that it be vocal. And yet the voice is employed in such like prayers for three reasons. First, in order to excite interior devotion, whereby the mind of the person praying is raised to God, because by means of external signs, whether of words or of deeds, the human mind is moved as regards apprehension, and consequently also as regards the affections. Hence Augustine says (ad Probam. Ep. cxxx, 9) that "by means of words and other signs we arouse ourselves more effectively to an increase of holy desires." Hence then alone should we use words and such like signs when they help to excite the mind internally. But if they distract or in any way impede the mind we should abstain from them; and this happens chiefly to those whose mind is sufficiently prepared for devotion without having recourse to those signs. Wherefore the Psalmist (Psalm 26:8) said: "My heart hath said to Thee: 'My face hath sought Thee,'" and we read of Anna (1 Samuel 1:13) that "she spoke in her heart." Secondly, the voice is used in praying as though to pay a debt, so that man may serve God with all that he has from God, that is to say, not only with his mind, but also with his body: and this applies to prayer considered especially as satisfactory. Hence it is written (Hosea 14:3): "Take away all iniquity, and receive the good: and we will render the calves of our lips." Thirdly, we have recourse to vocal prayer, through a certain overflow from the soul into the body, through excess of feeling, according to Psalm 15:9, "My heart hath been glad, and my tongue hath rejoiced." - Read the rest here. Suggestions for a daily prayer routine Stage 1: Morning offering before your feet hit the floor + Rosary or Jesus Prayer during the day + Examination of conscience at night. Stage 2: Morning offering before your feet hit the floor + 10 min scripture reading in the morning + Rosary or Jesus Prayer during the day + Examination of conscience at night. Stage 3: Morning offering before your feet hit the floor + 10 min Scripture reading in the morning + Rosary or Jesus Prayer during the day + 3 Our Fathers, 3 Hail Mary’s, 3 Glory Be’s in front of the Blessed Sacrament + Examination of conscience at night. Matt SPONSORS EL Investments: https://www.elinvestments.net/pints Exodus 90: https://exodus90.com/mattfradd/ Hallow: http://hallow.app/mattfradd STRIVE: https://www.strive21.com/ GIVING Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mattfradd This show (and all the plans we have in store) wouldn't be possible without you. I can't thank those of you who support me enough. Seriously! Thanks for essentially being a co-producer coproducer of the show. LINKS Website: https://pintswithaquinas.com/ Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/matt-fradd FREE 21 Day Detox From Porn Course: https://www.strive21.com/ SOCIAL Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mattfradd Twitter: https://twitter.com/mattfradd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattfradd MY BOOKS Does God Exist: https://www.amazon.com/Does-God-Exist-Socratic-Dialogue-ebook/dp/B081ZGYJW3/ref=sr_1_9?dchild=1&keywords=fradd&qid=1586377974&sr=8-9 Marian Consecration With Aquinas: https://www.amazon.com/Marian-Consecration-Aquinas-Growing-Closer-ebook/dp/B083XRQMTF/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=fradd&qid=1586379026&sr=8-4 The Porn Myth: https://www.ignatius.com/The-Porn-Myth-P1985.aspx CONTACT Book me to speak: https://www.mattfradd.com/speakerrequestform
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I heard a funny joke from Trent Horn the other day that I had to share with you.
There are three things that God doesn't know. First, what a Jesuit is about to say.
Second, what a Dominican just said. And third, how many Franciscan orders there are.
Come on, that's good. Welcome to Pints with Aquinas. Today, we're going to be
talking about prayer. Aquinas gives three reasons that vocal prayer is helpful. I'm going to suggest
three stumbling blocks to prayer that I experienced and that you might experience as well. I'm also
going to suggest three different prayer rules for life that you could begin implementing if you are
kind of sucky at prayer. Also want to let you know, if you're a patron, you are now going to be getting Pints with Aquinas episodes a day early and ad-free. So if you're a
patron and you want this to be ad-free and a day early, go to patreon.com slash Matt Fradd. Forgot
to make that announcement next week. Last week, not next week. I didn't forget next week. Here's
the show.
Yes, welcome back to Pints with Aquinas.
This is the show where you and I pull up a barstool next to the angelic doctor to discuss theology and philosophy.
Lovely to be with you today and really bloody pumped to be speaking about prayer.
I just got back from a long road trip with my family.
We were up in Maryland for a friend's wedding and that was really lovely.
There's something beautiful about going to a wedding where you know the couple understand fully what marriage is and have been, you know, living separately and saving themselves for their wedding night.
Like a really, there's something to celebrate there.
It was just absolutely tremendous.
I think some of you, my wife was posting photos on her Twitter account.
There's a funny, if you go to my Twitter account, Matt Fradd,
there's a photo of me and Matt Walsh.
You know who Matt Walsh is maybe from The Daily Wire?
He was at the wedding and both of us read.
I think they were just trying to upset all of their liberal friends or something.
Anyway, it says,
Matt Fradd looking more dour than a Matt Walsh podcast.
So Matt Walsh's podcast, pretty bloody serious and intense.
But for some reason in this photo,
I look like I want to kill everybody. So that was fun. Also, interesting tidbit, I did chat
with Matt and he said he wants to come down to Atlanta to be on a Matt Frad Show episode. So,
you know, nothing like generating more controversy to make everybody upset with me.
So look forward to that. Anyway, so back in Atlanta, super happy to be here.
Today I want to talk about prayer, not because I am in any way, shape, or form an expert on prayer,
not because I have reached the lofty heights of the, I guess, the seven-story mansion or something, you know, the interior castle or something, but because I, probably like you,
am a beginner. And it can help, I think, at times to talk with
beginners about what they're struggling with and if they're learning anything. So you'll be hearing
from me, who's definitely a beginner, about three stumbling blocks I experience in prayer and what
I'm doing to overcome them. I'm going to be talking about a daily rule for life with regards to prayer
that I think you're going to find tremendously helpful.
And then we'll also be looking at what the experts say, what the saints say, and what St.
Thomas Aquinas says. And after that, as I already said, we're going to be taking some of the
questions from Patreon. So let's do this. Oh, I have to say this too. Many of you beautiful, fine people were so pumped to hear what I shared
recently with regard to my traveling to Africa next year, doing this on more of a, you know,
more frequently. I just give you an update on that. I'm currently looking at developing a
nonprofit. Many of you have reached out and have, this is not a lie, this sounds like I'm
exaggerating, but let me say several people have reached out and offered me a really significant
sums of money. I just want to ask you, I want to thank you for offering that, but I want to ask you
to hold off on that for now. What I'd love to do is maybe wait till we have this non-profit up,
that way the government doesn't take a big chunk of it. Also, I'm open to you not giving me money at all, but maybe you buying me catechisms and things. And we can discuss
that. But I want you to know that my assistant reached out to me, told me you've written to her.
I'm super honored and humbled, but I just want to hold off for a moment and I will definitely
be in touch. And a big thanks to all of you who are giving me relatively small amounts,
but no less helpful amounts in the sense, because there's so many of you giving at patreon.com slash Matt Fradd and getting all those free perks in return. So big
thanks for that. All right, let's look at what the catechism first has to say about prayer.
I love this quote from St. John Damascene. Here it is. He says, prayer is the raising of one's
mind and heart to God, or the requesting of good things from God. Now, I don't know about you,
but when I heard that, when I read that for the first time, something in me felt frustrated.
Not because I thought he was wrong, but because I knew he was right. That prayer really is that
simple. And yet, since I'm bad at prayer, and since prayer is so vital for me, I have to conclude that I am
bad at something that I ought not to be bad at, because it's both simple and vital. Does that
make sense? So in one sense, prayer is very simple. All it is, is the raising of one's mind
and heart to God, or the requesting of good things from God. So why is it that you and I find prayer so difficult?
Here's a few reasons.
And these are my three stumbling blocks that I mentioned a moment ago.
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like of beer. franciscan.university.com. The first, for me at least, is that I have this
preconceived idea as to how prayer ought to feel and look.
And because when I go and pray, I often don't experience that preconceived notion,
I conclude that I haven't prayed or that I was unsuccessful in praying. And I, like you,
don't like being unsuccessful in things. If I am routinely unsuccessful at something, I tend to give up.
This is why I don't play soccer anymore. You know, even, you know, like a game with some friends who
are taking the game seriously. Like I'll opt out of that. Why? Because I'm just not bloody good at
soccer. There may have been a time when I was somewhat decent at it, but now that I'm not and
don't like failing, I just don't
tend to engage in things that I fail at. And since I have a preconceived idea as to how prayer ought
to feel and look, and since I don't often reach that preconceived idea in actuality, I conclude
that my prayer was unsuccessful. Is that true of you too? It's true of me. And what do I mean? I
guess I mean, you know, I expect prayer to look a certain way.
And I don't even know really what I mean by that, you know,
that I have to be in some sort of cold stone church with incense,
not incest, incense, should edit that out, won't,
incense, wafting, icons, candles burning,
you know, something like beautiful like something beautiful like that. Or I expect
to feel a certain way. I don't even know what I mean by that. I used to joke, but I think it's
rather insightful. When I served with Net Ministries, national evangelization team,
they stress the importance of having a daily prayer life. And I would sometimes joke with my brothers on the team. I would say, for me, I pray until I'm no longer guilty about having not prayed.
And then I feel somewhat successful, right? And I call that a good prayer time.
That's not a good mentality to have when it comes to prayer, but I was just being as honest as I
could. I feel guilty that I haven't prayed. So I'm going to go sit down. If I sit down long enough,
I no longer feel guilty. And I call that a good prayer time because I mean I don't
feel guilty anymore. What are the preconceived notions and ideas that you bring into prayer?
How do you think it ought to look? How do you think you ought to feel? I mean, I've certainly
had prayer experiences where I have had, I think, tremendous insights into the Word of God. You know,
sometimes you open up the word of God
and it feels like the words are just smacking you in the face. And you're like, oh my goodness,
this was here all along. I've been reading Colossians a lot lately. And I'm like, how come
nobody ever told me this was in the Bible? Now I'm joking, of course. I've read it before,
but for some reason it never spoke to me. But lately it's been just smacking me upside the
head in the most beautiful of ways. Or I'll have a tremendous sense of peace come upon me. I'll have anxieties that I bring to prayer and I submit and surrender
them to the providence of God and notice a sort of tangible, guttural relaxation and rest in him.
Okay. But often when I pray, I don't experience this. I would say most times when I pray,
I don't experience this. Like a lot of the time I pray, you know, like I know, look,
I know that environment matters. You shouldn't expect to say pray in, I don't know, Times Square
in New York City while everyone's hustling and bustling about you. You know, you should set
aside, I'm using an extreme example, I know, but you should set aside time to pray, you know, lock yourself in your room, etc.
But you know what?
I have four kids and my four kids have personalities that are as loud and outrageous as mine and my wife's.
And it's just not always possible to do it.
And so sometimes I find myself sitting on the couch with, you know, shoes and bits and pieces littered about the place
because my kids haven't picked them up. And I've got a basket of bloody laundry that's erupting.
And I'm now sitting down because I've got like five minutes or 10 minutes, the kids are out of
the house for some reason. And I open up my Bible and I'm just like, you know, this doesn't feel
how prayer should feel. It doesn't look how prayer should look, or at least how I think it
should look. The second stumbling block is distractions. Now, the Catechism of the Catholic
Church says this about distractions. This comes from paragraph 2729. Distractions reveal to us
what we are attached to, and this humble awareness before the Lord should awaken our preferential All right, I just realized I haven't really kind of given a solution to that first stumbling block, have I?
I laid out the problem.
I didn't really lay out the solution.
I suppose the solution is recognizing just what prayer is, and that is raising one's
heart and mind to God. And this can be done whenever, during the day and wherever you are.
I suppose we might get to an answer to this towards the end of this episode as I give you
a daily rule for life regarding prayer and why it is so essential to establish a prayer time or
times throughout your day. So we'll get to that.
But here's the second one. That's distractions. I love what the Catechism of the Catholic Church
has to say about this, because I don't know about you. I go to Eucharistic Adoration. I was there
this morning, actually. This morning was okay, because it was a big church and there wasn't a
ton of people in the church. But sometimes you'll go to these Eucharistic chapels that are more like closets. And I kneel down and I listen to the person murmuring the
rosary behind me. I cannot tell you how much that frustrates me. It just frustrates me. I'm like,
we can all hear you. Or when you have like two old ladies up the back who decide to catch up
in this little prayer chapel and they're showing each other the photos from their families or something.
And you wanna be happy for them,
but at the same time, you want to throw something at them.
And that's not an option.
So you just sit there and you'd be angry.
I don't know.
So I feel distracted in that way.
And another thing is I just find myself,
my head is fluttering all about the place,
90 miles an hour.
And so I'll kneel down and I'll just, you know, think about
how my guts hurts from something I ate this morning or, you know, I'll think about that
stupid thing I said yesterday that I'm really embarrassed about or I'll just get this sense
of foreboding or this sense of anticipation, nervousness about something that has to happen
that day, yeah? Or I'll begin to think about my kids and
what they did that bugged me or something, you see? And one solution I've found is rather than
trying to swat them away, just to not worry so much. And when they come up, actually offer them
to God as a prayer, offer those distractions as a prayer. Again, here's what the catechism says. These distractions reveal what we're attached to.
And so what do you do when you are kind of exposed in this way that you're attached to
these certain things? I guess you could like pretend that you're not really attached and
then try to pray in a way that you think you ought to be praying. Or as the catechism says,
you can have a sort of humble awareness of
them before the Lord. And this should awaken, it says in the catechism, our preferential love for
Him and lead us resolutely to offer Him our heart to be purified. So I like to offer my distractions
to the Lord in prayer very intentionally. And this makes sense, I think, if you think about it in
terms of like a married relationship. You know, like when I go out on a date with my wife, suppose I'm thinking of a
million different things and they're all kind of important to me and they're coming up in my mind.
But I think to myself, no, I mustn't talk about this with my wife. So let's just sit here and do
whatever a date's supposed to look like. What is it people on dates talk about, you know?
I think my wife would say,
what are you thinking about? What's going on? Where are you? And that would be a good time for
me to say, I'm sorry, I'm just thinking about this silly thing that I said yesterday I'm super
embarrassed about. Well, what did you say? Well, I said, you see what I mean? And I think prayer
is raising one's heart and mind to God. it's also can be a conversation between friends,
you know, where you tell the Father what you're going through. And so something I've been doing
lately in prayer is, you know, I'll remember something I said yesterday, it was embarrassing,
and I'll just say, God, Father, I just give this to you. I don't know why I did that.
I'm sorry that I did it. I repent of it. I think it was wrong. And then I'll talk to the Lord about
what belief I've agreed to about myself because of this thing I said, you know? So you say like,
Father, like, what do I believe about myself because of this? And you might already begin
to feel it, right? This like, I'm an idiot or I'm a loose cannon or whatever it is, you know?
And you say, Father, is it true that I'm a loose cannon, you know? Is it true that I'm an idiot or I'm a loose cannon or whatever it is, you know? And you say, father, is it true
that I'm a loose cannon? You know, is it true that I'm always failing, that I'm always socially
awkward? And I'm trying to use other examples that don't just pertain to me, but I keep accidentally
hitting the ones that absolutely do pertain to me, you know? But you're like, father, what does
this say about me? I'll give you a real life example. This happened recently and it's a powerful
story and I wasn't going to share it, but heck, here we go. It's super great. I think I wasn't say about me? I'll give you a real life example. This happened recently and it's a powerful story
and I wasn't going to share it, but heck, here we go. It's super great. I think I wasn't going
to share it because it's actually really embarrassing because I'm super ashamed of
how I reacted. So here's what happened. I went to divine liturgy and after divine liturgy,
while there were still some prayers taking place, sometimes there are these extra communal prayers
that take place after divine liturgy, but my kids have sort of had enough. So I said, yeah,
let's just head out. And so I was sitting out the back with them. They were
going to the bathroom, waiting until everyone else came out so they could start eating snacks
and things. And this old woman, older woman, not old woman, older lady came out of the bathroom
and she looked at my son and she said, why aren't you in there praying? At least that's how I heard her say it.
I don't want to put that on her anymore,
but like it sounded like an old woman snapping at my kid.
And this just really frustrated me because I don't know, maybe I've got some wounds
from like old people being rude to children in church,
either my children or when I was a child.
So what I said next, I just want you to know
I'm super embarrassed about, okay? So judge me, but I've been to confession, so just I've judged myself.
So I looked at her and I said, because I said he could, just like that, like very pointedly. Now,
if that's all I said, I think that would have been okay. But I went further and here's where
it gets super embarrassing. I looked at her and I said,
why are you out here just like that? How terrible is that? So I was like, why aren't you in there
praying? And I said, because I said he could. Why are you out here like that? Just like that.
It was super rude of me. And I come from a very small kind of parish. And so the conversation
ended abruptly. She went back in there. I kind of
felt a little embarrassed. And then a few days later, I went out for coffee with my priest,
Father Lewis, and we were sitting down and I said, Father, this thing's just troubling me.
I said this thing to this old lady. And he said, yes, I know. I said, what? How do you know? And
he said, well, I think there was someone else in the room who heard it and they mentioned it to me.
I said, oh gosh, I need to apologize. He said, yes, you need to apologize. Okay.
So the next week I got to divine liturgy, I went to confession and confessed this irritableness
and the snappiness. And then I was waiting for her and her husband to come. Now, I didn't know
how she was going to respond. We often find it easy to ask forgiveness of people if we think they will respond well.
You know, if they'll kind of almost congratulate us, right?
Like, look at how humble you are.
But you don't always know how people are going to respond.
I mean, maybe she'd just be super angry at me.
I didn't know.
So anyway, her and her husband come.
They sit down like the third pew or something.
And then the husband gets up and goes somewhere. I'm like, okay, here's my chance. So I stand up and I walk up and I sit down and I
just, you know, she turns to me. She's a little shocked that some rando just sat next to her.
She doesn't know who I am yet. And I said, hey, I just want to say, I'm really sorry for being
rude to you last week. You did nothing wrong to deserve that and i was totally wrong to have snapped at you like that and
i just asked that you would please forgive me and she kind of hesitated for a second and then said
i accept it and i was like okay good okay yes well good uh thank you and i got up and i left and i
really had no idea really what that meant but it was nice that she said i accepted she accepted my
apology i suppose is what she meant so the next week I was somewhere else. I forget where,
didn't get to go to divine liturgy. I think I went to the Latin mass down in Atlanta.
I met a bunch of people there who knew of Pines of Aquinas. And then anyway, the next week,
this is just last Sunday, after divine liturgy, I see this old lady for the first time since I've
apologized to her. And she starts pointing at me and like calling me over to her not pointing at me like accusatory but like hey
come here come here and oh yeah so I start following her she's like come here okay and I'm
following her and I really don't know what's going to happen and she go takes me to where the fridge
and freezer are and she pulls out a plate of like beautiful chocolate cookies that she had made for my family.
I couldn't believe it.
She's like, hey, I baked this for your family.
Oh my gosh.
I said, thank you so much.
That is so generous of you.
And I took them back to the table and I made an effort of getting all of my kids to go to her and say, you know, thank you so much.
And it was good, right? Because one of my children was like, you don't need to apologize to her. Did
you hear the way she spoke to me? I'm like, no, you've done something wrong. You need to apologize.
And so anyway, the point is that was just an amazing Christian moment. I have totally forgotten
why I have told you about this story under the second stumbling block header.
What was it? It was a great story. Okay. But there was a point as well. Oh, yes. The point
is that stupid thing I said yesterday and the things that I began to believe about myself,
right? Like I'm just an idiot. I'm such an idiot. I'm always stepping at it. All right. So the point
with the stumbling block is you say, okay, well, father, I feel like an idiot. Is it true that I'm
an idiot? And if the father is speaking to you, he's not going to be like, totally,
unless he's joking.
Like, no, you are a beloved son of God, a beloved daughter of God.
So do you see what I mean?
Like you just bring whatever is rising up within you to the Father.
It's as best as you're able.
You worry about something tomorrow.
Father, I'm worried about this.
Why am I worried?
I know
what you've said, that you'll take care of me. What does this reveal to me about my lack of
trust in you? What have you said about why I should trust you, Father? Let your distractions
lead you into this sort of dialogue, this prayerful dialogue. At least that's what I've
been doing, and that's what I've found very helpful. Okay, here is the third stumbling block, and that is not being intentional. In other words,
praying only when I want to. Okay, let me share with you two quotations. One comes from St.
Gregory Nazianzus, and the second is a quote from the Catechism of the Catholic Church. And both drive home to us the absolute importance of prayer. And then we'll talk about why we need to
be intentional about prayer. The first comes from St. Gregory Nazianzus, who says, we must remember
God more often than we draw breath. That's pretty difficult. But here's what the Catechism says.
We cannot pray at all times. That's something St. Paul told us to
do. If we do not pray at specific times, consciously willing it. I really like that.
You know, we can have this vague desire to pray at all times, just like we can have a vague desire
to be healthy, but unless we're intentional about praying or eating well and exercising,
it won't come about. And so you and I need to be intentional about our prayer.
And for me, oftentimes, I'm not, right?
I'm not.
I pray when I want to pray.
Now, if that happens to be frequently, then that's good.
But sometimes it's not frequently at all.
So I might get up and I might just be totally exhausted.
And the idea of praying my morning prayers might come to mind. But I might think, you know what, I just, I don't really, and I don't even think about it.
If I thought about it, I'd be guilty of it, right?
And so I'm like, I just quickly bat it away and stand up and busy myself, distract myself with something else.
So this kind of gets back to that first thing about like thinking that prayer ought to look or feel a certain way. Once you recognize that it doesn't actually have to, because as St. John Damascene says, prayer is merely the raising
of one's mind and heart to God. Then what you have to do is say, well, okay, all I got to do to pray
successfully is to do that. And then you need to be intentional about prayer. So here's what I want
to do. Before reading from Thomas Aquinas on the importance of vocal prayer. I want to suggest three daily rules of life
with regards to prayer. Now, when I say a rule of life, you know, you think of these Benedictines
and these Dominican sisters, and they have a daily prayer life that they have to stick to.
I remember when I was discerning the priesthood, I'd go to the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal
website or something, you know, and it'll say, you know, they pray from like 5 a.m. to 6 a.m.
They have Holy Mass at 6 a.m.
Then they have like spiritual reading from this to this.
And that's not optional for them.
It's not like, you know, if you want to, we have morning prayer available.
If you want to sleep in, that's cool too.
But obviously, it's available.
And I just, if you want, you can do it.
That's not what they're saying. It's obligatory. Now, obviously, as if you're a parent with small children,
you can't commit to the same life that a monk or a friar or a nun can, but we can still commit to
something. And that's my point. We ought to commit to something. So what I want to do now is suggest three daily prayer routines going from
easiest to hardest. Okay. Easiest to hardest. This is the bare minimum we should do. So if you hear
this and you think, oh gosh, there's so many more things you could do that you've left out.
As I say, this is the bare minimum. Okay. So, um, here would be stage one. And I want
to encourage you, you know, if you don't yet have a daily prayer routine and you you're desperate
for someone to tell you, let me bloody tell you and just take one of these and do it. Okay. So
here's stage one, right? So if you're not into praying regularly, here's what you should at least
do. Again, just a suggestion, but I think adopt one of these and be faithful to it. Number one,
make a morning offering before your feet hit the floor. Okay? What is a daily offering? And by the
way, I want to point out, I am aware that we have evangelical listeners as well as Catholic listeners.
To my Protestants out there who listen frequently, I want you to know that I love you.
I learn from you. You are so welcome here. So if I suggest some things that are specifically
Catholic that you don't think that you can yet pray, okay, but then think of an equivalent,
okay? So when I say a daily offering before your feet hit the floor, what I mean is to memorize some prayer in which you offer your day to God before your feet have
hit the floor. It's that simple. You wake up, you're groggy, you kind of rub your eyes a bit,
and you're looking forward to your coffee. Before your eyes hit the floor, make a daily prayer.
And it can be something as simple as this, you know, Oh Jesus, through the immaculate heart of Mary, I offer you my prayers, works, joys,
and sufferings of this day in union with the holy sacrifice of the mass offered throughout the
world. I offer them for all the intentions of your sacred heart, the salvation of souls,
reparation for sin, the reunion of all Christians. I offer them for the intentions of
our bishops and of all the apostles of prayer, and in particular, for those recommended by our
Holy Father this month. There are many different ways that you can... A daily offering doesn't
have to be that exactly. It can be something a lot simpler, but something like that, all right, I think would be really
good. What I'll do is I'll throw this text up in the show notes, and I would recommend that you
would put that by your dresser and then pray it every morning. Another small thing you could do
is if you wear a scapula or a crucifix around your neck, like the first thing you should do
when you gain consciousness, right, is kiss
that crucifix, make the morning offering and get out of your bed, right? That's the first thing.
The second thing you could do is you could pray the Holy Rosary that day and or the Jesus prayer
for my Eastern Catholics out there or Orthodox. And then the final thing is to do an examination
of conscience that night. Do you see how simple that is?
So if you're looking for a prayer rule for life, I've just given you a very simple one.
Morning offering before your feet hit the floor, a rosary at some point during the day,
and then finally an examination of conscience at night.
And if you're a Protestant and can't pray the rosary or even the Jesus prayer,
maybe 10 minutes of scripture
reading can be the thing that you set yourself, something like that. Now, what is an examination
of conscience? This is actually something I've been doing a lot lately because I'm
in Exodus 90, which is like an ascetical program for men that I'm doing with a few brothers.
Basically, it means this. At the end of your night, spend some time reflecting upon your day
from when you woke up and then gradually go through each hour of the day as best as you're able, thanking God for the many blessings that you have received from him that day.
That's the first step.
And now that you've thought about your day and thanked him for the blessings, repent of the ways that you have failed.
So repent for your, you know, lack of charity or for your moodiness or for the ways you didn't pray when you said that you would or for not helping a friend or for your lust or pride or whatever it is.
Repent of those things and ask God's grace to help you not commit those same sins the next day.
It's that simple.
Don't make it something that's too complicated.
Again, I want to make this as easy as possible for you because when we make things too intricate and complicated, again, we have this preconceived idea of how prayer ought to look and that gets in the way of us actually praying. So there you go. That's stage
one. Again, I'm going to put all of these in the show notes so you can see them. Stage two,
like if you're a little more advanced than that, offer a morning offering before your feet hit the
floor. Do 10 minutes of scripture reading in the morning. Do a rosary or Jesus prayer during the
day and then do examination of conscience at night. So you're just adding 10 minutes of scripture reading in the morning, do a rosary or Jesus prayer during the day,
and then do examination of conscience at night. So you're just adding 10 minutes of scripture
in the morning for that one. Stage three would be this. And again, if you're not keeping up,
just look in the show notes, they'll be here. Morning offering before your feet hit the floor,
plus 10 minutes of scripture reading in the morning, plus a rosary or a Jesus prayer during
the day. And then in addition to this, visit the blessed sacrament and offer three Our Fathers,
three Hail Marys, and three Glory Bees every single day, every single day. And then finally
make an examination of conscience at night. Now, some of you might be thinking, Matt, you know,
you didn't incorporate enough Bible reading into that. You didn't incorporate daily mass into that. You didn't incorporate whatever, adoration.
That's right. And you'll remember, I said that these were bare minimum things, because here's
what I think happens. You and I get super pumped about praying and we're like, oh my gosh, I'm
going to do a holy hour every day and I'm going to do this every day. But the spirit is willing,
but the flesh is weak.
So we start out strong and we last two or three days and then we stop.
So what I'm saying is why don't we be a little more humble in our aspirations and be faithful to those aspirations. Rather than coming up with these big plans and then failing and then losing
heart, start small. So again, check out the show notes and commit to something like that.
Again, daily offering, rosary in the middle of the day, examination of conscience. I think that
could be a really awesome way for you to begin growing in prayer. And all right, let's take a
look at what Thomas Aquinas has to say before taking a look at the questions that we're getting
in from our patrons right now. Always excited to get questions from our patrons because they're always super cool. All right. So this comes from Aquinas' section on prayer,
the Secunda Secundae, question 83. There's a lot of great stuff in here, by the way.
There's 17 different articles. I want to look at article 12, whether prayer should be vocal. All right. There's so
much wisdom in this. So like, here's the first objection to Aquinas' answer, just to kind of
show you what he's responding to. So someone could say something like, you know, it would seem that
prayer ought not to be vocal because prayer is addressed chiefly to God. Now, God knows the language of the heart.
Therefore, it's useless to employ vocal prayer.
Here's the second objection.
Further, prayer should lift man's mind to God.
But words, like other sensible objects, prevent man from ascending to God by contemplation.
Therefore, we should not use words in our prayers.
Third objection. Further, prayer should be offered to God in secret, according to Matthew 6.6, but
thou, when thou shalt pray, enter into thy chamber, and having shut thy door, pray to thy
father in secret. That comes from Matthew 6.6. But prayer loses its secrecy by being expressed
vocally. Therefore, prayer should not be vocal. All right. So these are sort of the objections that he's going to respond to.
So let me kind of show you his main response here. Okay. When it comes to individual prayer,
right? And by individual prayer, we're talking about prayer, not communal prayer, like the holy
sacrifice of the mass, but individual prayer, which is offered by a single person. He says, whether he pray for himself or others, right? This is this individual
prayer. It's not essential to such a prayer that it be vocal. And yet the voice is employed in such
like prayers for three reasons. Okay. So we're going to look at these three reasons. So again,
that's really, he's saying, you don't have to use your voice. It's not a matter of necessity, but here's three reasons.
It's a really good idea. Okay. And I think you'll resonate with each of them. First, he says,
in order to excite interior devotion, whereby the mind of the person praying is raised to God,
because by means of external signs, whether of words or of deeds,
the human mind is moved as regards apprehension and consequently also as regards the affections.
Hence, Augustine says that by means of words and other signs, we arouse ourselves more effectively
to an increase of holy desires. Hence, then alone should we use
words and such like signs when they help to excite the mind internally. But if they distract or in
any way impede the mind, we should abstain from them. And this happens chiefly to those whose
mind is sufficiently prepared for devotion without having recourse
to those signs. Wherefore, the psalmist says, my heart hath said to thee, my face hath sought thee.
And we read of Anna in Samuel chapter 1 verse 13, that she spoke in her heart.
All right, so let's just pause there and just think about that. I really like this. I was
actually listening to a video today of a bloke who was sharing on YouTube about his desire to pray
the Holy Rosary. And he said he was driving to work and he started shouting one of the decades.
Now, I'm sure he didn't mean shouting in like a violent, crazy way, but speaking the decade very
loudly. Why? Just like Aquinas is saying here, to sort of excite this internal disposition to make it focus
more upon God. And so this is why praying out loud can be very helpful. And I'm sure you've
noticed this. If you sit down, come into adoration, or you sit in your chair or you shut the door,
and you start praying the rosary, you can be very distracted, especially if you've just walked in to pray.
And of course, when you start to speak the words out loud, it orders your mind. And this is why I think vocal prayer often leads to contemplation, right? So you speak, you're kind of directing
yourself, and then this leads to sort of contemplation. It's sort of like how lovers
engage, isn't it? You and your spouse,
hopefully, might begin to speak with each other, chatting about the day. And as you go along
throughout the night, you might just begin to enjoy sitting in each other's presence and think
to yourself, it wouldn't be the same if she weren't sitting here, even though neither of us
is speaking or something like that. So that's really good. I've even had people say that if you find that your desire to read Holy Scripture or to pray is lacking, then you should do something
physical, like get down on your knees, kiss the book, kiss the Bible with your lips, kiss it,
thank God for it. You know, and if you're an evangelical listening, I think, you know,
you could employ some of these things. Sometimes people look at Catholics and say, golly, the sign of the cross, they're genuflecting, they're bowing. Why do they do all these things?
You don't need to do these things. I think the answer sometimes is, yeah, you're right. You
don't need to do these things. But because we are incarnate beings, not just angels, not spirits,
but like matter and soul, we lead the soul with what we do with the body. And even if you're an
evangelical listening, I'm sure you've found this to be the case. Like, do you pray better if you're
sitting up reading your scriptures or, you know, or if you're laying in bed holding the Bible above
you? Do you know what I'm saying? Like, we have to take our physicality into account. So that's
one reason praying out loud is a good idea.
Here's the second reason Aquinas gives. He says, the voice is used in praying as though to pay a
debt so that man may serve God with all that he has from God. That is to say, not only with his
mind, but also with his body. And this applies to prayer considered especially as satisfactory.
Hence, it's written in Hosea 14, three, take away all iniquity and receive the good, and we will render the calves of our
lips. All right. So it's a more kind of fuller expression of prayer. And this gets back to what
I was saying a moment ago, using our whole body to kind of give back to the Father. Here's the third reason praying out loud is helpful. He says,
we have recourse to vocal prayer through a certain overflow from the soul into the body,
through excess of feeling. According to Psalm 15, 9, my heart hath been glad and my tongue
hath rejoiced. So when we encounter something inspiring or beautiful, we want to praise it,
make noises in some sense, say something intelligible. And this is another reason
that we use our voice. Let's look at some of these responses to those objections we saw a moment ago.
The first objection you'll remember is that God doesn't need you to speak. He knows the language
of the heart. And Aquinas says to that, vocal prayer is employed
not in order to tell God something he does not know, but in order to lift up the mind of the
person praying or of other persons to God. In other words, we don't pray out loud for God's sake,
we pray out loud for our sake. You'll remember that the second objection had to do with words
like other sensible objects being
distracting and that's why we shouldn't pray out loud and aquinas is going to say to this that
words about other matters do distract the mind and hinder the devotion of those who pray but
words signifying some object of devotion lift up the mind, especially one that is less devout. And I,
at least, am one who is less devout. And so using words that I read out of a prayer book or
something can very much help me in that way. Now, what about thirdly? The third objection
you'll remember is this idea that we're supposed to be praying to God in secret. And if we pray
with our voice, we're going to lose that secrecy.
Here's what he says.
He quotes Chrysostom in saying that,
Our Lord forbids one to pray in the presence of others in order that one may be seen by others.
Hence, when you pray, do nothing strange to draw men's attention,
either by shouting so as to be heard by others,
or by openly striking the heart or extending the hands so as to be seen by many. And yet,
according to Augustine, it is not wrong to be seen by men, but to do this or that in order to be seen
by men. I think that's a really good distinction. I know for me at times, I was
doing this last night, I was walking around the neighborhood praying the Holy Rosary. And sometimes
it occurs to you, doesn't it? Like, am I? I want people to, I do, I do want people to notice that
I'm doing it. I noticed that in me. I want people to recognize I'm praying and I want them to know
it's a Catholic thing, you know? And I think partly that is actually because I want them to know it's a Catholic thing, you know? And I think partly that is actually because I want them to know that I love Jesus Christ.
That really is it.
And then another part is perhaps for pride.
And that's something that needs to be discerned.
And so that's not always easy to discern.
And I think for me, that really wasn't the reason I was praying, you know, walking around the neighborhood.
It really wasn't.
I would have been just as happy to pray the rosary in my pocket, except it's kind of more cumbersome.
And I wanted them to, I love when I see people praying the rosary, it kind of inspires me. And
that's kind of why I was doing it. But there've definitely been times in the past where I think
to myself, yeah, I'm really just doing this to impress this girl or something, you know,
in that situation, it would be wrong. All right. So there are three reasons
that we should pray and to pray vocally. We've talked about three stumbling blocks to prayer,
and now we're going to take some really fascinating questions from our patrons.
All right. A very big thanks to all of you who support me on Patreon and make all of this work
possible. If you're not yet a patron and want to be, please go to patreon.com slash Matt Fradd,
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patreon.com slash Matt Fradden. If you are a patron, seriously, I know I say this all the
time to you on Patreon, but from the bottom of my heart, thank you for supporting all the work
that we're doing here. Okay, the first question, and I haven't read these in advance.
I mean, I skimmed some of them, so I know kind of some of the topics.
That's why I know they're interesting, but I haven't read them.
So here we go.
Ryan McKee says,
Would love to hear what led you to love the King James Version of the Bible.
As a former Anglican, I love it as well,
and just recently purchased an awesome King James Version with Apocrypha
from Cambridge University Press.
All right.
First of all, Catholics don't call the Deuterocanonicals the Apocrypha.
Protestants do.
We call it the second canon.
And this is something that the church has always used up until the time of the Reformation
when Martin Luther decided to excise some of these books
from the canon, he had reasons that he thought justified him in doing so. I won't get into all
that here, but just a quick technical note. You may have heard the phrase apocrypha or
deuterocanonicals. Catholics use the word deuterocanonicals. Interestingly enough,
the deuterocanonicals were present in the first edition of the King James Version as an appendix. So that's an interesting fact. I very much like
the King James Version. I don't use it on a day-to-day basis. I use the RSV or I have an ESV
app. ESV is based on the RSV and I very much enjoy that. The reason I like the King James Version is
why I like traditional prayers and the Latin mass. And, you know, I'm attracted
to those things because I think that words matter. The way we phrase things matters. The way we pray
matters. And when you use banal language, you know, that doesn't often lead the mind to God.
Sometimes different translations can give you different insights into different matters.
But I do very much like the King James version of the Bible. So I think it's
fine. I think it's a beautiful... I could not get into the Douay-Rheims, which precedes the King
James version and is thought to be the kind of Catholic standard Bible based off the Vulgate.
I couldn't really get into it. I didn't find it as beautiful. That's just a personal preference. I would think that if you could get into the Vulgate, if you could get into
the Douay-Rheims, then you should. You should choose that over the King James Version,
just because you avoid the complications of not having extra books in the Bible. I shouldn't say
extra books, but the right amount of books. All right. Daniel Miller says, what are your thoughts on universalism or what does Aquinas have to say about it, if anything?
Was listening to the Trent Horn podcast you recommended?
Good.
I'm glad you guys are listening to my recommendations.
Trent is amazing.
He's going to be in the Matt Fradd show, by the way, in a few months.
So thanks for making that possible.
He says, find myself attracted to the idea of universal salvation, but I also find that it makes no sense.
What's the point of evangelizing or even Jesus coming to earth if everyone is saved in the end
anyways? It consoles me in the thought of my atheist family members being saved, but it
contradicts with everything I understand about living and religion. All right, so there's several things
to pass out here. First of all, Augustine and Aquinas certainly believe that many people go to
hell and are not universalists in the sense that all will eventually be saved. And some universalists
would go on to say that even the demons will eventually be saved and there will be universal salvation.
Okay.
Now you say, what's the point of evangelizing?
Okay, well, I'm trying to think from a universalist perspective, right?
So this isn't my answer specifically, but I'm trying to give them a fair shake.
I think they would say, when you come to Jesus Christ and live in relationship with him, isn't that a beautiful thing?
Doesn't that increase the value of your life? And if it does, and if it is significant, wouldn't you want that
for other people? So a universalist would perhaps say that even if people are saved in the end,
it would be good for them to know Jesus now, and that's why they evangelize. And then you say,
what's the point of Jesus coming to earth if everyone's saved? Well, they would say to that,
well, it's precisely because Jesus came to earth
that all will be saved in the end anyways.
Do you see?
So that would be their response.
But I think the more traditional understanding is that people go to hell
who reject Christ.
And, you know, this whole area of soteriology can get rather complicated.
And I don't necessarily want to
delve into it at length here, but you asked, what does Aquinas have to say? Aquinas indeed believes
that many people go to hell. Okay. But we can hope, I think, that your family will be saved.
We can hope for that. And we can pray that God would bring that about, you know, so we can trust
that the father loves your family, Daniel, more than you do,
more than I do, right? And that he can make a way for them to receive salvation, you know,
so don't give up, don't despair. Stephen Lehman says, favorite video game? Which Lord of the Rings
character is your favorite? Gosh, favorite video game. I haven't played video games in forever but i was a big fan of the tex
murphy uh games back when you know this is around nine in the 90s i liked them a lot pandora
directive was really good um and then i like some first person shooters like quake i always found
quake terrifying but you see i'm not pointing any recent ones out because i haven't really played
them in forever uh lord of the rings character gosh it, it's so hard to say. They're all my favorite for different reasons. How could you
not say Sam Gamgee? How could you not say Frodo? How could you not say Gandalf? How could you not
say Strider? It's one of the beautiful things about that book is many of the characters are
very lovable. Mark Doob says, what does Aquinas have to say if anything about spirituality,
Mark Doob says,
what does Aquinas have to say if anything about spirituality,
sorry, spiritually healthy relationships between orthodox and mercy?
Lately, it would seem by some in the church
that these two things are incompatible
instead of complimentary.
Yeah, I think this kind of gets to what Daniel
was asking a moment ago about universalism.
I really don't want to get into this all again
because whenever I do, something blows up. But
Bishop Robert Barron, I think, hopes that all will be saved. And he doesn't see in that a
contradiction from Christ's words about hell. Bishop Barron certainly does not reject the
existence of hell. Bishop Barron isn't even making a claim about the probability that many will be
in heaven. He simply hopes that all will be saved. And I think you're right. I think we tend to push back against excesses,
right? So if you encounter somebody that's talking about universalism and you're seeing
this kind of takeover in the church, I think a tendency is to speak forcefully against it,
to use an analogy from Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics, you bend the stick back the other way,
past where it ought to be, so that it will then be straight again, you see? And I think people
might have the tendency to do this in the other direction. And I think we have seen this, haven't
we? That people often say, you know, when I was a kid, it was all hell and you're going to hell
and God's going to punish you. Whereas today, we've seen this reaction against
that. And so you say, how do we compliment these things? I think by reading the word of God and
the catechism of the Catholic church. Coming into relationship with Christ and being saved
for all eternity is easy, but so is going to hell. Both are easy. We have to accept the free grace of God given to us
initially through baptism ordinarily, right? And then we have to be faithful to that grace and
work out our salvation with fear and trembling, like St. Paul said. But responding to the grace
of God is easy because God gives us the grace to do it and we just have to choose to do it.
But we can just as easily choose to reject the grace of God and make, as one of the epistles says, I think it's James, but I'm not
sure, shipwreck of the faith. So I think the two can be harmonized. We just don't want to fall into
either excess. James and Alison Lee says, I grew up evangelical, have started going to mass the past few months since listening
to this podcast and reading Into the Deep. I find the daily mass to be an incredible avenue of
spending time with our Lord, despite not being able to receive the Eucharist. The reverence and
devotion of the 40 plus people who are there is so compelling. Yet I must admit, Sunday Mass has not been a
similar experience. Of the hundreds there, it's evident many do not take the Eucharist seriously.
That is, you know, hungover college students, many leaving right after the Eucharist before
the priest has concluded Mass. I really believe the Lord is there either way, but I still find
the reverence of those around me greatly affects me, probably more than it should. While I yearn for daily mass, I haven't been much interested in going back on Sundays.
Any advice on how to better appreciate the worship on Sunday in such a context? Okay, this is from
James and Alison Lee, so I'm not sure who is writing this. I'll just assume that it's James.
Okay, so I'll speak to you as James. James, many Catholics listening to this podcast are nodding their head in agreement. We fully understand the experience
you're going through. See, as Catholics, we're obligated to attend Sunday mass. We are not
obligated to attend daily mass. Therefore, you're naturally going to find people who are more
serious about their Catholic faith at the masses. They're not obligated to attend, but are going out
of devotion for our Lord, love for Jesus Christ. So it shouldn't surprise you. I think I would say
this. First, it sounds like you're still a Protestant, so you are not actually obligated
to go to Sunday Mass, right? You're not obligated to go to Mass during the weekdays either. So you
say you have a desire to go to daily Mass, but not necessarily Sunday Mass obligated to go to Mass during the weekdays either. So you say, you know,
you have a desire to go to daily Mass, but not necessarily Sunday Mass. That's okay. You could
do that right now as you continue to discern coming into the fullness of the Catholic faith.
You could go to a daily Mass. And in the meantime, I might suggest that you look up different
parishes in your area. Maybe see if you have a Latin mass in your area
that you could attend, or you could ask some of those going to daily mass whose devotion you find
so beautiful, do you know of any other masses around here where it's this devout on Sundays,
and you might make the decision to go to Sunday mass there? Because I agree with you. I've been
to some, you know, go to holy mass on a Sunday and you think, goodness gracious, people are shuffling about the place like it's a 7-Eleven.
There's no sense of reverence here. The music's awful. You know, this is very difficult. Now,
as a Catholic, I'm obligated to go to Holy Mass and so would go whether or not, but if it's not
my only option, I would certainly go somewhere else. So that would be my advice. Okay. Benjamin Chavez says, a follow-up on the Timothy Gordon episode. I would
like to hear your thoughts on it. Yeah. Thanks, Benjamin. Okay. So for those of you who haven't
seen it, it was a pretty provocative interview. And so what would be my thoughts? My thoughts
would simply be this. I was not prepared and and shame on me, for that episode. I had not
watched TNT, Timothy, what are their names? Taylor Marshall and Timothy Gordon. I hadn't
watched a full episode. I'd watched little clips here and there. All I knew was here are two men
who love the Catholic faith and are serious about it. That's really all I knew. And so a friend of
mine called me and said, hey, Timothy Gordon's in the area.
He'd be open to being on your show. Would you like that? And I said, totally.
So I didn't read his book. So the point in me saying all this is I was caught flat footed.
So there was one point in the episode where Timothy Gordon seemed to have been making the claim that it was always a sin for a mother to work. Now, when he made that claim,
I just had no idea how to respond. And again, shame on me for not being prepared for that,
you know, encounter. So I didn't respond right then and there, because he was quoting these
different encyclicals. And I couldn't obviously pause right then and there and read the encyclicals.
So I wrote a follow-up article after I had gotten
out of that interview and thought about it and read some things. But that would be my thought.
I think Timothy Gordon is a very good man. He loves Jesus Christ. He's a very good husband.
Him and his wife and children came over to our place. And it was just evident that he loves his
children and loves his wife. And so that's all I got to say about him.
I think he's a good dude.
All right.
Trey Weaver says, should we boycott business or corporations that support Planned Parenthood
or abortion in general?
If so, where do we draw the line on that?
I recently looked up a list of Planned Parenthood donors, and it seems like every major company
in America from all sectors and supported in some way, it feels like we'd have to live off the grid in order to do so thoughts.
Okay. This is a good question, Trey. I wish I was more prepared to answer it.
You know, in moral theology, we talk about actions that are more or less proximate to the sin.
And you can be culpable for one sin, the nearer you are to that sin,
but the further you are away from it, you're still participating in it, but you're not culpable,
right, for any sort of wrongdoing that's happening. So an example would be,
you know, a friend says to me, I want an abortion. And I say, all right, well, get in the car with me. You know, here's the money. I'm driving you now. All right. So I am very
closely connected with that sin and have sinned grievously. Okay. That's very different from
buying a cappuccino at Starbucks, you know? And I'm not sinning by buying a cappuccino at
Starbucks, generally speaking. It might be a very admirable thing to no longer drink Starbucks because they support Planned
Parenthood and LGBTQ stuff, all right?
Very admirable.
But that's different to saying that it's sinning if I go.
Now, suppose I was to show up at a Starbucks and it said 10% of today's proceeds go to
support Planned Parenthood.
Well, okay, they're making a
public show of it. Then to walk into that place would be to sort of offer my support in a public
way. And so in that case, I would refrain. So I guess the only point I'm making here is we're not
called to refrain from, you know, we're not called to boycott every single business that is tied to something
immoral because it's just totally impractical. It can be an admirable thing, but we're not
strictly speaking called to boycott every single one. I think that's what I would say. Now, there
are some that are more egregiously, yougregiously promoting certain abominable activities than others. And in those cases, I think there might little bit uncomfortable. What do you do when you come across it with the little fr America, it's a very sensitive issue. So I'm going to do
my best here. I think what I do is I read the word. Again, I think the N word we're talking
about is usually the N-E-G-R-O, right? Again, I'm so afraid of Americans killing me that I just,
I don't know how much is offensive and how much isn't. And I really do not mean to be offensive
to any people for which this is an offensive word. I really do mean that. But I would read that word
and then I would explain to my children, she's referring to black people, but this is a word
that is very insulting. And so we don't use that word anymore. And here's why. I think that could
be one way. The other way would be simply to replace the word with, you know, whatever,
a little black child or something like that. You know, if your children are older, you don't want
to prevent them from seeing what Flannery said, but if you think it's going to cause more confusion
than not, and they're only young, you might do that. Oh my goodness gracious. There is so many wonderful questions here. Why don't I take
one more? Penny Marchetti says, when do you plan to have the Flannery O'Connor book club? Yes. Okay.
In October or November, Father Damien Ference is currently getting his PhD in Flannery O'Connor
and philosophy and Thomas. It's all kind of
baked together there. So he's going to be doing a five-week book club on her, just for you patrons.
So soon we'll release the reading material for you to read. And as I say, there'll be videos that he
will lead, and then he'll be commenting with you and me in the comment section so that we can really
understand what we're reading. So that's coming soon, I promise.
And if you're not yet a patron and you want to have access to that as well as a whole bunch of other things, that's something you could consider doing.
All right.
I think that'll do it for now.
God bless you.
Thank you very much for tuning in to Pints with Aquinas.
And I hope that you have a lovely day.
Bye.