Showing posts with label Night Office Saints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Night Office Saints. Show all posts

Friday 28 August 2015

Saint Augustine,Doctor of Grace. 28 August

    Night Office Saints, Patristic Reading, 
St. Augustine Doctor of Grace  

      Dom Donald's Blog: Saint Augustine, bishop, confessor and doctor, Mem...: Breviary Wednesday, 28 August 2013 Wednesday of the Twenty-First Week in Ordinary Time SECOND READING From the Confessions of Saint...


Wednesday, 28 August 2013

Saint Augustine, bishop, confessor and doctor, Memorial

Breviary

Wednesday, 28 August 2013
Wednesday of the Twenty-First Week in Ordinary Time

SECOND READING
From the Confessions of Saint Augustine, bishop
(Lib. 7, 10, 18; 10, 27: CSEL 33, 157-163, 255)

O eternal truth, true love, and beloved eternity

Urged to reflect upon myself, I entered under your guidance into the inmost depth of my soul. I was able to do so because you were my helper. On entering into myself I saw, as it were with the eye of the soul, what was beyond the eye of the soul, beyond my spirit: your immutable light. It was not the ordinary light perceptible to all flesh, nor was it merely something of greater magnitude but still essentially akin, shining more clearly and diffusing itself everywhere by its intensity. No it was something entirely distinct, something altogether different from all these things: and it did not rest above my mind as oil on the surface of water, nor was it above me as Heaven is above the Earth. This light was above me because it has made me; I was below it because I was created by it. He who has come to know the truth knows this light.

O Eternal truth, true love and beloved eternity. You are my God. To you do I sigh day and night. When I first came to know you, you drew me to yourself so that I might see that there were things for me to see, but that I myself was not yet ready to see them. Meanwhile you overcame the weakness of my vision, sending forth most strongly the beams of your light, and I trembled at once with love and dread. I learned that I was in a region unlike yours and far distant from you, and I thought I heard your voice from on high: “I am the food of grown men; grow then, and you will feed on me. Nor will you change me into yourself like bodily food, but you will be changed into me.”

I sought a way to gain the strength which I needed to enjoy you. But I did not find it until I embraced the mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who is above all, God blessed for ever. He was calling me and saying: I am the way of truth, I am the life. He was offering the food which I lacked the strength to take, the food he had mingled with our flesh. For the Word became flesh, that your wisdom, by which you created all things, might provide milk for us children.

Late have I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, ever new, late have I loved you! You were within me, but I was outside, and it was there that I searched for you. In my unloveliness I plunged into the lovely things which you created. You were with me, but I was not with you. Created things kept me from you; yet if they had not been in you they would not have been at all. You called, you shouted, and you broke through my deafness. You flashed, you shone, and you dispelled my blindness. You breathed your fragrance on me; I drew in breath and now I pant for you. I have tasted you, now I hunger and thirst for more. You touched me, and I burned for your peace.

     
   The_Saint_Augustine_Taken_to_School_by_Saint_Monica.
_Pinacoteca,_Vatican.7_Nicolo_di_Pietro._1413-15._   



          The Oil and the Virgins         

There is the oil, the precious oil; this oil is of the gift of God. Men can put oil into their vessels, but they cannot create the olive. See, I have oil; but didst thou create the oil? It is of the gift of God. Thou hast oil. Carry it with thee. What is "carry it with thee"? Have it within, there please thou God.
 ...10. For, Io, those "foolish virgins, who brought no oil with them," wish to please men by that abstinence of theirs whereby they are called virgins, and by their good works, when they seem to carry lamps. And if they wish to please men, and on that account do all these praiseworthy works, they do not carry oil with them. Do you then carry it with thee, carry it within where God seeth; there carry the testimony of thy conscience. For he who walks to gain the testimony of another, does not carry oil with him. If thou abstain from things unlawful, and doest good works to be praised of men; there is no oil within. And so when men begin to leave off their praises, the lamps fail. Observe then, Beloved, before those virgins slept, it is not said that their lamps were extinguished. The lamps of the wise virgins burned with an inward oil, with the assurance of a good conscience, with an inner glory, with an inmost charity. 

Yet the lamps of the foolish virgins burned also. Why burnt they then? Because there was yet no want of the praises of men. But after that they arose, that is in the resurrection from the dead, they began to trim their lamps, that is, began to prepare to render unto God an account of their works. And because there is then no one to praise, every man is wholly employed in his own cause, there is no one then who is not thinking of himself, therefore were there none to sell them oil; so their lamps began to fail, and the foolish betook themselves to the five wise, "give us of your oil, for our lamps are going out." They sought for what they had been wont to seek for, to shine that is with others' oil, to walk after others' praises. "Give us of your oil, for our lamps are going out."   

 ...11. But they say, "Not so, lest there be not enough for us and you, but go ye rather to them that sell, and buy for yourselves." This was not the answer of those who give advice, but of those who mock. And why mock they? Because they were wise, because wisdom was in them. For they were not wise by ought of their own; but that wisdom was in them, of which it is written in a certain book, she shall say to those that despised her, when they have fallen upon the evils which she threatened them; "I will laugh over your destruction." What wonder then is it, that the wise mock the foolish virgins? And what is this mocking?

 ...12. "Go ye to them that sell, and buy for yourselves:" ye who never were wont to live well, but because men praised you, who sold you oil. What means this, "sold you oil"? "Sold praises." Who sell praises, but flatterers? How much better had it been for you not to have acquiesced in flatterers, and to have carried oil within, and for a good conscience-sake to have done all good works; then might ye say, "The righteous shall correct me in mercy, and reprove me, but the oil of the sinner shall not fatten my head." Rather, he says, let the righteous correct me, let the righteous reprove me, let the righteous buffet me, let the righteous correct me, than the "oil of the sinner fatten mine head." What is the oil of the sinner, but the blandishments of the flatterer?
 ...13. "Go ye" then "to them that sell," this have ye been accustomed to do. But we will not give to you. Why? "Lest there be not enough for us and you." What is, "lest there be not enough"? This was not spoken in any lack of hope, but in a sober and godly humility. For though the good man have a good conscience; how knows he, how He may judge who is deceived by no one? He hath a good conscience, no sins conceived in the heart solicit him, yet, though his conscience be good, because of the daily sins of human life, he saith to God, "forgive us our debts;" seeing he hath done what comes next, "as we also forgive our debtors." He hath broken his bread to the hungry from the heart, from the heart hath clothed the naked; out of that inward oil he hath done good works, and yet in that judgment even his good conscience trembleth.

 ...14. See then what this, "Give us oil," is. They were told "Go ye rather to them that sell." In that ye have been used to live upon the praises  ...of men, ye do not carry oil with you; but we can give you none; "lest there be not enough for us and you." For scarcely do we judge of ourselves, how much less can we judge of you? What is "scarcely do we judge of ourselves"? Because, "When the righteous King sitteth on the throne, who will glory that his heart is pure?" It may be thou dost not discover anything in thine own conscience; but He who seeth better, whose Divine glance penetrateth into deeper things, discovereth it may be something, He seeth it may be something, He discovereth something. How much better mayest thou say to Him, "Enter not into judgment with Thy servant"? Yea, how much better, "Forgive us our debts"? Because it shall be also said to thee because of those torches, because of those lamps; "I was hungry, and ye gave Me meat." What then? did not the foolish virgins do so too? Yea, but they did it not before Him. How then did they do it? As the Lord forbiddeth, who said, "Take heed that ye do not your righteousness before men to be seen of them, otherwise ye have no reward of your Father which is in heaven: and when ye pray, be not as the hypocrites, for they love to pray, standing in the streets, that they may be seen of men. Verily I say unto you, they have received their reward." They have bought oil, they have given the price; they have bought it, they have not been defrauded of men's praises, they have sought men's praises, and have had them. These praises of men aid them not in the judgment day. But the other virgins, how have they done? "Let your works shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven." He did not say, "may glorify you." For thou hast no oil of thine own self. Boast thyself and say, I have it; but from Him, "for what hast thou that thou hast not received?" So then in this way acted the one, and in that the other.
 ...15. Now it is no wonder, that "while they are going to buy," while they are seeking for persons by whom to be praised, and find none; while they are seeking for persons by whom to be comforted, and find none; that the door is opened, that "the Bridegroom cometh," and the Bride, the Church, glorified then with Christ, that the several members may be gathered together into their whole. "And they went in with Him into the marriage, and the door was shut." Then the foolish virgins came afterwards; but had they bought any oil, or found any from whom they might buy it? Therefore they found the doors shut; they began to knock,but too late.
 ..
St. Augustine
.16. It is said, and it is true, and no deceiving saying, "Knock, and it shall be opened unto you;" but now when it is the time of mercy, not when it is the time of judgment. For these times cannot be confounded, since the Church sings to her Lord of "mercy and judgment." It is the time of mercy; repent. Canst thou repent in the time of judgment? Thou wilt be then as those virgins, against whom the door was shut. "Lord, Lord, open to us." What! did they not repent, that they had brought no oil with them? Yes, but what profiteth them their late repentance, when the true wisdom mocked them? Therefore "the door was shut." And what was said to them? "I know you not." Did not He know them, who knoweth all things? What then is, "I know you not?" I refuse, I reject you. In my art I do not acknowledge you, my art knoweth not vice; now this is a marvellous thing, it doth not know vice, and it judgeth vice. It doth not know it in the practice of it; it judgeth by reproving it. Thus then, "I know you not."  

 ...17. The five wise virgins came, and "went in." How many are ye, my Brethren, in the profession of Christ's Name! let there be among you the five wise, but be not five such persons only. Let there be among you the five wise, belonging to this wisdom of the number five. For the hour will come, and come when we know not. It will come at midnight, Watch ye. Thus did the Gospel close; "Watch, for ye know neither the day nor the hour." But if we are all to sleep, how shall we watch? Watch with the heart, watch with faith, watch with hope, watch with charity, watch with good works; and then, when thou shalt sleep in thy body, the time will come that thou shalt rise. And when thou shall have risen, make ready the lamps. Then shall they go out no more, then shall they be renewed with the inner oil of conscience; then shall that Bridegroom fold thee in His spiritual embrace, then shall He bring thee into His House where thou shall never sleep, where thy lamp can never be extinguished. But at present we are in labour, and our lamps flicker amid the winds and temptations of this life; but only let our flame burn strongly, that the wind of temptation may increase the fire, rather than put it out. 

  http://kingsgarden.org/English/Organizations/LCC.GB/LCIS/Scriptures/Fathers/Doctors/AugustinOfHippo/Sermons/Sermon43.html 


Tuesday 30 December 2014

Life of the Soul, Bl. Columba Marmion. 30 DECEMBER - CHRISTMAS SEASON

Image result for Blessed Columba Marmion, O.S.B. Pictures
Bl. Columba Marmion OSB



Night Office Saints, Bl.



Sixth Day of the Octave of the Nativity of the Lord.


Year I
First Reading
Colossians 1:15 - 2:3
Responsory Col 1:18.17
Christ is the head, and the Church is his body; he is the first bom from the dead, + so that in every way the primacy is his.
V. Before anything came into being, he existed: he holds all things in unity. +  So that in ...


Second Reading
From the writings of Blessed Calumba Marmion, O.S.B. (Christ the Life of the Soul 16-19).

Christ as head of the redeeme
From the creation of the first man God inaugurated his plan for us: Adam was endowed with grace that made him a child of God, an endowment for both himself and his posterity. By his own fault, however, he lost the divine gift on his own account and equally for his descendants. Since his rebellion we have all been born in a state of sin, stripped of the grace that would have made us children of God; indeed, we are the very opposite: children of wrath, enemies of God and liable to his anger. Sin thwarted God's design.
Yet in rehabilitating us God proved himself even more won­derful than in creating us, as the Church suggests in a Christmas prayer: "Lord God, we praise you for creating our human nature, and still more for restoring it in Christ." What divine marvel is this for which the Church gives him praise? It is the mystery of the incarnation. Through the Word made flesh God intends to recreate all things. This plan is the mystery hidden in God's mind from the beginning of time, and now revealed to us through Saint Paul. Christ, the man-God, is to be our mediator; he it is who will reconcile us to God and win us grace once more. Since this was foreordained by God from all eternity, Saint Paul rightly speaks of it as an ever-present mystery. It is the last majestic feature of the divine decree of predestination as the Apostle sketches it for us. Let us listen to him with faith, for we are now at the very heart of God's work.
God's purpose is to establish Christ as head of all the redeemed, and of everything that claims any title in this world or the next; so that through him, with him, and in him we may all reach union with God, and thus effectively attain the holiness that he re­quires of us.
The fullness of divine life is in Jesus Christ, and this fullness is to overflow to us and to the entire human race. The divine sonship which belongs to Christ by nature, and makes him the unique Son of God in the absolute sense, is to be shared with us through grace. Thus Christ is by God's, decree the first born of a great family of brothers and sisters, who are children of God by grace as he is by nature.

Here and here alone is the fountainhead of our holiness. Just as the whole being of Christ Jesus is summed up in his divine sonship, so the whole being of a Christian is summed up in our participation in that sonship in and through Jesus Christ. Holiness for us has no other meaning. The more abundantly we share in God's life through Christ's communication to us of that grace which he possesses in fullness forever, the higher will be our holiness. Christ is not simply holy in himself, he is our holiness. All the sanctity God has predetermined for human beings is stored up in Christ's humanity and from that wellspring we must draw.

          Responsorv   Phi! 2:6-7; jn 1:14
Though his nature was divine, + Christ did not cling to his equality with God, but emptied himself, taking the nature of a servant.
V. And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. + Christ did not.




Sunday 19 October 2014

Blessed Pope Paul VI: Seven facts you didn't know about Paul VI

Night Office Blessed, below ...
Pope Paul VI,- The beatification ceremony will be held at the Vatican on 19 October, Pope Francis announced.
BBC News:
Paul VI  seen here in 1963 with US President John Kennedy  wrote the encyclical Humanae Vitae in 1968
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-27357192
Pope Francis has set another of his predecessors on the road to sainthood.
He approved a miracle credited to the intercession of Paul VI - who died in 1978 after a 15-year pontificate and is remembered by many for his ban on artificial contraception for Catholics.
The beatification ceremony will be held at the Vatican on 19 October, Pope Francis announced.
The move came two weeks after the canonisation of two other 20th Century popes - John XXIII and John Paul II.
Beatification is the third of four steps in the process by which someone officially becomes a saint.
It requires at least one miracle to have been attributed to the intercession of a candidate for sainthood who, once beatified, is given the title blessed.
After beatification, a separate miracle would have to be verified in order for Paul VI to be canonised - declared a saint - allowing him to be venerated by the universal Church as "an example of holiness that can be followed with confidence".
Church teaching on families
Paul VI was born Giovanni Battista Montini in the Lombardy region of Italy in 1897, the son of a prominent newspaper editor.
He was elected pope in 1963 and continued the reforms of his predecessor, John XXIII.
Paul VI died in August 1978 and was succeeded briefly by Pope John Paul who died in October 1978.
During his 15-year pontificate he wrote seven encyclicals - the most controversial of which was Humanae Vitae (Of Human Life), published in 1968.
Its uncompromising position on birth control led to protests around the Catholic world and some national Roman Catholic Church hierarchies openly modified the statement.
In 1995 Pope John Paul II supported Paul VI's view on birth control in his encyclical, Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel of Life).
The teaching on contraception is widely disregarded by modern-day Catholics, says the BBC's David Willey in Rome.
October's beatification ceremony will be held at the end of a crucial meeting of global bishops to discuss Catholic teaching on family life, called by Pope Francis.
The bishops will be discussing the results of a worldwide survey commissioned by the Pope about what parts of the Church's teaching on human sexuality Catholics actually follow today.
As is customary, the Vatican gave no details about the miracle - which the Holy See requires must be a phenomenon certified by doctors as having no medical explanation.
But Italian media report the miracle involved a Californian baby who was born healthy despite the pre-birth diagnoses of a ruptured foetal bladder and absence of amniotic fluid.
The mother reportedly refused to abort the child, instead praying for Paul VI's intercession at the behest of a nun. 
Youtube ...   




TWENTY-NINTH WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME Year II
SUNDAY 19/10/2014

First Reading
Sirach 26:1-4.9-18
Responsory          Sir 17:9-11
The Lord has set before them knowledge, a law of life as their inheritance. + An everlasting covenant God has made with them.
V. His majestic glory their eyes beheld, his glorious voice their ears heard. + An everlasting covenant ...

Second Reading
From a discourse by Paul VI (Discourse, 4 May 1970)
Human love is good by its very origin
As holy scripture teaches us, before it is a sacrament marriage is a great earthly reality: God created man in his own image; he created him in the image of God; he created them man and woman. We always have to go back to that first page of the Bible if we want to understand what a human couple, a family, really is and what it ought to be. Psychological analyses, psychoanalytical research, sociological surveys, and philosophical reflection may of course have a contribution to make with the light they shed on human sexuality and love; but they would blind us if they neglected this fundamental teaching which was given to us at the very beginning: the duality of the sexes was decreed by God, so that together man and woman might be the image of God, and like him, the source of life: Be fruitful and increase, fill the earth and subdue it. Attentive reading of the prophets, the wisdom books, and the New Testa­ment, moreover, shows us the significance of this basic reality, and teaches us not to reduce it to physical desire and genital activity, but to discover in it the complementary nature of the values of man and woman, the greatness and the weaknesses of conjugal love, its fruitfulness, and its opening onto the mystery of God's design for love.
The Christian knows that human love is good by its very origin: and if, like everything else in us, it is wounded and deformed by sin, it finds its salvation and redemption in Christ. Besides, isn't this the lesson that twenty centuries of Christian history have taught us? How many couples have found the way to holiness in their conjugal life, in that community of life which is the only one to be founded on a sacrament!
Love one another, as I have loved you. The ways in which they express their affection are, for Christian husband and wife, full of the love which they draw from the heart of God. And if its human source threatens to dry up, its divine source is as inexhaustible as the unfathomable depths of God's affection. That shows us the intimacy, strength, and richness of the communion which conjugal love aims at. It is an inward and spiritual reality, transforming the community of life of husband and wife into what might be called, in accordance with the teaching authorized by the Council, "the domestic Church," a true "cell of the Church," as John XXIII already called it, a basic cell, a germinal cell in the ecclesial body.
Such is the mystery in which conjugal love takes root, and which illuminates all its expressions. The rapture which moves husband and wife to unite is the carrier of life, and enables God to give himself children. On becoming parents, the husband and wife discover with a sense of wonder, at the baptismal font, that their child is from now on a child of God, reborn from water and the Spirit; and that the child is entrusted to them so that they may watch over his physical and moral growth, certainly, but also the opening out and blossoming in him of the new nature. Such a child is no longer just what they see, but just as much what they believe, "an infinity of mystery and love which would dazzle us if we saw it face to face" as Emmanuel Mounier says. Therefore upbringing becomes true service of Christ, according to his own saying: Whatever you do for one of these little ones, you do for me.

          Responsory   Ps 5:7; Is 6:3
Through the greatness of your love I have access to your house. + I bow down before your holy temple, filled with awe.
V. Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of his glory.+ I bow down ...



Tuesday 29 July 2014

MARTHA, MARY AND LAZARUS at Bethany

29 July 2014  Night Office Saints, Memorial.
Cistercian Calendar; Saints. Martha, Mary and Lazarus.     
Bethany. Edinburgh old master 

29 JULY - SAINTS. MARTHA, MARY AND LAZARUS From a Sermon of Saint Bernard on Luke 10: 38-42 

'Jesus entered a village and a woman named Martha received him into her house.' What is the meaning we should draw, my brothers, when we read that only one of the two sisters received the Lord, and that one is she who seems to ‘be the lesser? Mary has chosen the good portion', said Jesus whom Martha received. Martha, it seems was the elder by birth, just as it is obvious that action rather than contemplation is the beginning of salvation. Martha therefore received the Lord into her house in this world; Mary, however, was more concerned how she might be received by him into the house not made by hands, eternal in the heavens. Yet she, too, may be seen to have received the Lord, but in spirit, for 'the Lord is the Spirit.'

But let us move on to consider how rightly ordered charity has shared out in our own daily context these three realities: the external administration of Martha; the contemplation of Mary; the way of penance and renewal of Lazarus. In the spiritually developed person each of these three is found simultaneously. Each individual function is seen best, however, as pertaining to' particular people, so that some are free for contemplation, some are concerned with brotherly service, some are intent on rectifying their lives by penance ...

'A woman named Martha received him into her house.' Those of the community who have charge of a department certainly occupy the place of Martha; the needs of community life and charity have singled them out for various assignments. Would that I too may be found worthy to be counted as faithful among those who hold office! For to whom does the Lord's saying, 'Martha, Martha, you are anxious' seem to apply more fittingly than to those in authority, even though in their position of responsibility their anxiety is praiseworthy? ... ... I quote the words of St. Paul who, while warning officials about anxiety, himself stirs up anxiety on behalf of all the churches. ‘Who is weak’, he asks, 'and I am not weak? Who is made to fall, and I am not indignant? ... . ..

Those who are anxious about much serving should look at Mary, to see how she is at peace, to see 'that the Lord is good’. They should notice how she sits at Jesus' feet, her heart at peace and her mind fixed on him. She keeps the Lord ever in her sight and treasures up the words from his lips, for his appearance is beautiful and speech is gentle. ‘Graciousness is poured upon his lips’ and he is 'the fairest of the children of men' more beautiful, even, than the glory of the angels. Rejoice, Mary, and be thankful for you have chosen the good portion. Blessed are the eyes which see what you see and blessed are the ears which have been privileged to’ hear what you hear.   

PL. 183; co1.421D-425A. Leclercq-Rochais Vo1.5, pp.238-243.
Translation Mt. St. Bernard Abbey 1971