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Alone but never lonely

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2024

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Much has recently been written in the popular press about that vast army of women who live on their own. Following the publication of such articles, a number of these people hotly denied that they are lonely but many others admitted that their loneliness is so great that it is the overwhelming aspect of their lives. Let us hope that no Catholic women were amongst those who made this sad admission: there is certainly no need for them to do so.

According to the Oxford Dictionary, to be lonely is to be ‘solitary, isolated, unfrequented, companionless'. What an impossible situation for the practising Catholic! Frequent reception of Holy Communion and a thoughtful pondering over the doctrine of the Indwelling must immediately prevent sucn abysmal loneliness. The woman who lives alone has perhaps more chance than many others to think frequently how the whole of her life is a partnership with Christ.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1958 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 2 Cor. 2, 7.

2 Gen. 2, I.

3 I Tim. I, 5.

4 Rom. 5, 8.

5 Cf. 1 Tim. 1, 5 and Rom. 13, 10.

6 Cf. 1 John 3, 16.

7 1 John 4, 19.

8 Rom. 8, 32.

9 Matt. 22, 40.

10 Rom. 5, 5.