214-351-1901
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SCRIPTURE
Ecclesiastes 3.19-20
For what happens to the children of humanity and what happens to the beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the same breath, and humanity has no advantage over the beasts, for all is vanity. All go to one place. All are from the dust, and to dust all return.
WORDS OF HOPE
I lost my cat companion, Sylvester, on Good Friday of this year. He had come to me as a young cat a couple of months after my previous Siamese had left this world unexpectedly. Sylvester was full grown, but less than a year old when we met. He embodied the characteristics of a cat, but also of a smart dog.
When I would come home from work, he would hear the automatic garage door opening and take his place at the end of the kitchen, while I entered from the garage at the other end. He would be sitting up on his hind legs, paws folded in front of him, like some kind of wacky feline dog. From the beginning, I called him Mr. Kitten. He was a very good boy, and earned the title Mr. Kitten, because he always seemed the same as he was at a few months even when he was over 20 years old.
He seemed quite people-friendly when we met and as big as he was, he was still considered a kitten. His furry black and white tuxedo suit was sticky from the outdoors, wandering in and out of the backyard, until one day in the spring I left my back door open so he could come in and visit and check out what was to be his new home. I hadn’t planned on having a kitten ever again. The loss of my other cat had hit me hard. But Sylvester was open to the idea that I was someone he could trust and even allowed me to pick him up the first day. He entered the house as if it was his and remained my best friend for a third of my life and all of his.
Not long after he walked his own rainbow bridge, as some people say, we met Mother Mittens, and her four kittens. Even during the Sylvester years, we always kept food for the wondering neighborhood cats on the front porch. There’s not enough room for that feline family to come in, but we watch and feed them outside that glass door. We do our duty to see to it that she and her children are taken care of. It’s about the exchange of unconditional love. Sylvester had been my best teacher on that subject.
So today, if you are fortunate enough to have one, celebrate your pet today and thank God for that companionship every day. And always celebrate their unconditional love which mirrors that truly Christ-centered love that is like no other.
PRAYER
Thank you for allowing me to be a part of a Creation that includes so many animal neighbors who remind us daily of your calming presence and unconditional love. Amen
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Charlie C. Rose
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com