I was interested in the yellow bush outside the Church. Fr. M. was able to identify the FORSTHIA, picture.
[Forsythia Bushes - Colourful Shrubs for
Border Plantings].
FOURTH
WEEK OF LENT
MONDAY
Year II
First Reading Leviticus
16:1-28
Responsory Heb 9:11.12.24
Christ came as the high priest of the good things to come. Not with the blood of goats or calves,
but with his own blood t he entered the holy place once for all, and won our eternal salvation.
Y. He did not enter a holy place fashioned by man: he entered heaven itself. + He entered the ...
Second
Reading
From the writings of Blessed
Columba Marmion, O.S. B. (Le
Christ, vie de l'ame, 337-339)
We are the sacrifice
We are
called to be united with Christ in his sacrifice, and with him to offer
ourselves. If we are willing, he takes us with him, immolates us with himself
and lifts us into the Father's presence as an oblation of fragrant sweetness.
It is our very selves that we must offer with Jesus. If the faithful share
through baptism in Christ's priesthood, Saint Peter tells us, it is in order
that they may offer spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus
Christ. So true is this that in a prayer between the offertory and
consecration the Church refers explicitly to the union between our sacrifice
and that of the bridegroom: Lord our God, make these gifts holy, and through
them make us a perfect offering to you.
If we are
to be thus accepted by God, we must make our self-offering one with the
oblation that Christ made of himself on the cross and renews on the altar. Our
Lord substituted himself for us in his sacrifice; he took the place of us all. That
is why the blow that fell on him has morally slain us too: If one died for
all, then all have died. We shall, however, effectively die with him only
by uniting ourselves to his eucharistic sacrifice; and how can we be identified
with him in his character as victim? By handing ourselves over, as he did, in
unreserved obedience to God's good pleasure.
The victim
offered to God must be fully at God's disposal. We must,
therefore, live in this basic attitude of giving everything, absolutely everything,
to God. Out of love, for him we must carry out our acts of renunciation and
self-denial, and accept daily sufferings, trials and pain, to such a point that
we can say, as Jesus said at the hour of his passion: I act like this so
that the world may realize that I love the Father. This is what selfoffering
with Jesus implies. We give God the most acceptable homage he can receive from
us when we offer the divine Son to his eternal Father, and when we offer
ourselves with this holy and perfect sacrifice in the same dispositions
that filled the sacred heart of Christ on the cross: an intense love for the
Father and for our brothers and sisters, a burning desire for
the
salvation of all, and a total abandonment to the divine will in all things,
especially when it goes against the grain and is hard for us. We find
in this the surest means of transformation into Christ, particularly if we
unite ourselves to him in communion, which is the most fruitful way of sharing
in the sacrifice of the altar. When Christ finds us thus united with him he
immolates us with himself, makes us pleasing to his Father and transforms us
more and more into his own likeness.
Responsory
Gal 2:19-20
With
Christ I have been nailed to the cross, t and I live now no longer my own life, but the life of Christ who lives in me.
V. I live by faith in the Son of God who loved me and gave up his
life for me. + And I live ... +
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