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

Wednesday 18 December 2013

Jean Danielou, The Mystery of Advent, 'who is yet to come'

Monastic Office of Vigils



Third Week of Advent
Wednesday 18th 2013
First Reading   Isaiah 46: 1-13

Second Reading  From the writngs of Cardinal Jean
Danielou, S.J. (Le Mystere de L’avent, 126-126-128)

Who is yet to come?
The mystery which we are now living in the world is the mystery of Christ’s gradual coming to every soul and every nation. Christ has indeed come, but he remains always the one who is yet to come. Come he has, but not completely. Thouh the expectation of Israel has been fulfilled, Israel is still waiting. We are for ever in the season of Advent, awaiting the coming of the Messiah. The Messiah has come, but he is not yet fully manifested either in our individual souls or in the human race as a whole. Just as Jesus was born according to the flesh in Bethle­hem of Judea, so he must be born according to the spirit in the soul of each one of us. The whole mystery of the spiritual life lies in the continual birth of Jesus within us. We must be always transforming ourselves into him, making our own the sentiments of his heart and the judgments of his mind. To be a Christian means to be gradually changed into Christ so as to be truly children of the Father.

. Similarly in regard to humankind as a whole, Jesus has not yet fully come. He has come to some peoples, but not to all. In some parts of the human race Jesus is still unborn. The mystical Christ is not yet complete; he is still imperfect, lacking mem­bers. Therefore the Church's missionary prayer is for the com­ing of Christ to the whole world, so that his body may attain its full stature.

Now what is true of the preparation for the coming of Christ in the flesh is also true of the spiritual preparation for his com­ing to our souls, and the preparation for his spiritual coming in his entire mystical body, for God's plan is an integral whole. And just as Mary played an important and altogether special role in the physical birth of Jesus, since she gave him the flesh in which he was born (here we touch the heart of the mystery of the Virgin), so Mary continues to play an important role in the preparation of each subsequent coming of Jesus. She is always
present wherever he is to come.

This applies in the first place to the souls of each one of us. We may truly say that Mary has a special part to play in our spiritual lives, because it is she who prepares for the coming of Jesus in us and who gradually forms him in our souls. But as well as her relationship to individuals, Mary also has a part to play in the coming of Christ to the peoples whom he has not yet reached. Here we touch upon the missionary aspect of the mystery of Mary. The mystery of our Lady is that she was there before Jesus was. She was in Israel before him. In her, if one may so express it, there was already a secret presence of Jesus in Israel before his actual birth, since she was already perfectly united with him and there was no part of her life that was not wholly his. She was present, then, during the time before the in­carnation, and so, since she is a figure of the Church, of human­kind redeemed by Christ, it seems as if in some way the Church must have existed before even Jesus was born. We can see, then, the part our Lady is to play among pagan peoples: the Church has not come to them, Jesus has not yet come to them, yet the Church is there, because Mary is there.

          Responsory Lk 1:45-46; Ps 66:16
Blessed are you who have believed that the Lord's promises to you would be fulfilled. And Mary said: + My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord.
V. Come, and listen, and I will tell what great things God has done in me. + My soul proclaims, ..

Tuesday 29 October 2013

Rabanus Maurus: No One Learns Anything through Speech unless the Mind is Anointed with the Spirit

Night Office 29/10/2013
COMMENT:  
The Night Office this morning gave us the First Reading from Rabanus Maurus. The commentary on Jeremiah has six weighty paragraphs in our Lectionary. The Internet version has a more helpful layout of sentences, i.e. §1-19.
The Website 'Enlarging the Heart' is a Link to some of the Readings from the 'Monastic Office Vigils', a resource of Patristic authors.


  1. ... and he wrote on it at Jeremiah's dictation all ... gave it to Neriah's son Baruchthe scribeHe ... the book which Jehoiakim king of Judah had burnt ...
    biblehub.com/jeremiah/36-32.htm - Cached

Rabanus Maurus (c.780-856): Commentary on Jeremiah, 13 (PL 111:1073-75); from the Monastic Office of Vigils, Tuesday of Week 30 in Ordinary Time, Year 1  

Rabanus Maurus: No One Learns Anything through Speech 
unless the Mind is Anointed with the Spirit 
 Monday, Nov 7 2011 

Rabanus Maurus (c 780 – 856) (left),
supported by 
Alcuin (c 735–804) (middle),
presents his work to Otgar of Mainz,
from a Carolingian Manuscript, c840.

(On Jeremiah 36)
In the Gospel he who is Truth himself says to his disciples:

1.     When you stand before kings and princes, do not think how you are to speak, or what you are to say; what you are to say will be given you at the time, for it is not you who will be speaking but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you.

2.     We must realise that the grace of the Holy Spirit is necessary not only for those who teach but also for those who are taught.
3.     Unless the Spirit is present in the heart of the listener, the teacher is wasting his breath.
4.     Unless there is a teacher within us, the teacher without works in a vacuum.
5.     In Church we all hear the same voice speaking, but all do not understand it in the same way.
6.     Since there is no difference in what is said, why is there a difference in our understanding of it, unless there is an interior teacher giving certain people special instruction through their understanding of words of admonition addressed to all?

7.     Concerning this grace of the Holy Spirit, John says: His anointing will teach you everything.
8.     No one learns anything through speech, therefore, unless the mind is anointed with the Spirit.
9.     Because King Jehoiachim and his servants were not inwardly illumined by the grace of the Holy Spirit who inspired the Prophet, their bodily ears could hear the words of God, but the ears of the heart were deaf to them.
10.                        It is this interior listening which our Lord demands in the Gospel when he says: Those who have ears to hear, let them hear.

11.                        One has to marvel at the blindness of the human mind and the wickedness of the hardened heart.
12.                        Those whom salutary admonitions should have filled with compunction and sorrow for their sins were at pains to burn the scroll containing the words of the Lord.
13.                        They also took every opportunity to insult the Prophet whom they ought to have honoured for his inspired teaching and admonitions.
14.                        And why did they do this? Was it not because there was in them the sort of wicked spirit that always resists grace – a spirit that contrived to produce in their hearts not subtle obedience but intractable obduracy so that they should not be saved by believing and doing penance?

15.                        Yet human pride is impotent when it sets itself to resist divine sovereignty.
16.                        An earthly King gave orders for the Prophet and his scribe to be arrested and sent to prison;
17.                        the King of heaven shielded his blameless saints from human malice so that they came to no harm.

18.                        Jeremiah took another scroll and gave to the scribe Baruch, son of Neriah, and he wrote on it at Jeremiah’s dictation all the words of the book that Jehoiakim King of Judah had burnt in the fire; and much more was added.
19.                        Why was this done if not because, when Judah was ejected by reason of its infidelity, the books of the law and the prophets were preserved for the salvation of the Gentiles, to whom on Christ’s coming passed the whole glory of the Old Testament; for all these things that happened to them were symbolic and they were written down as a warning to us, upon whom the end of the age has come.

Rabanus Maurus (c.780-856): Commentary on Jeremiah, 13 (PL 111:1073-75); from the Monastic Office of Vigils, Tuesday of Week 30 in Ordinary Time, Year 1  

  • Benedict of Nursia

    But in process of time and growth of faith, when the heart has   once been enlarged, the way of God’s commandments is run with unspeakable sweetness of love.
  • ~ Benedict of Nursia ~ [The 'ABOUT] of "Enlarging of the Heart",Website

Thursday 10 October 2013

John Tauler, "Surely this is a great mystery; but I will explain it to you."


Monastic Office of Vigils, John Tauler


27th Week in Ordinary Time
Thursday

First Reading Isaiah 37:21-35
Responsory          Ps 20:7-8; 121:2
Some put their trust in chariots or horses, but our trust is in the name of the Lord. +They will collapse and fall, but we shall rise and stand firm.
V. My help shall come from the Lord, the creator of heaven and earth. + They will collapse ..

Second Reading
From a conference by John Tauler
Second Reading From a conference by John Tauler
Spiritual Conferences, Colledge and Jane, 241-242


Our Lord goes on to say: “Would a father give his children a stone when they had asked him for fish?”
Then he says: “If you, sinful as you are, know how to give the right thing to your children, how much better will your heavenly Father do, and best of all for those who ask him?”
He who is the Word of truth said that things will be given to those who ask. Then how can it be that so many people do ask, and keep on asking all their lives, and yet are never given this living bread? How can this be, when God is so unutterably merciful, so unstinting, when he gives and forgives as no human being knows how, when he is a thousand times more ready to give than we are to receive? These people say the same holy prayers, the Our Father, our Lord’s own prayer, many psalms and the holy collects inspired by the Holy Ghost, and still they are not given what they ask for. Surely this is a great mystery; but I will explain it to you.

The hearts of these people, the depths of their souls, their love and their desires, are possessed by the love of something alien from God. It does not matter what it is: the dead or the living, themselves or other people. Whatever it is, it possesses and fills the place which the true love of God, the true living bread, should occupy, so that it cannot come to them however much they ask and pray for it.
Master Hugh said: “People can no more live without loving that they can live without souls.” It is up to all of us to see for ourselves what we love, because if one sort of love is to enter our hearts, the other must go out. Saint Augustine said: “Empty yourselves so that you may be filled.”
In another place our Lord said that he is the door through which we must pass. 

When we pray we must knock on three places on this door if we are to be truly let in. We must knock with all devotion upon the Sacred Heart of our Lord Jesus Christ, the heart that was opened to us in love, the side that was pierced. We must go in there with all devotion, acknowledging that we are the poorest of the poor, that we are nothing; and like the poor man Lazarus before the rich man’s gate, we must beg for the crumbs of grace. He will give us his grace divinely and supernaturally. 
Next we must knock upon the holy open wounds of his sacred hands, and pray to him to give us knowl­edge of himself, to enlighten us and lift us up to him. 
Lastly we must knock upon the door of his sacred feet, and ask him for a love that is divine and true, a love that will unite us with him completely, so that we are submerged and wrapped up in him.
May our loving God help us all so to ask, seek and knock that we may be let in.

Responsory          Mt 7:7.11
Ask and you will receive; seek and you will find; + knock and the door will be opened to you.
V. If you who are evil know how to give your children what is good, how much more will your heavenly Father give good things to those who ask him. + Knock ...

Wednesday 18 September 2013

Saint Gregory Palamas




24th Week
Monastic Lectionary Vigils  
Gregory’s work must be seen as the
culmination of Eastern mystical theology
 
WEDNESDAY 18/09/2013
First Reading
Hosea 11:1-11
Responsory          fer 31:20; is 54:8
Is Ephraim a son so dear to me, a child in whom I so delight, that
as often as I rebuke him I must remember him still? + My heart yearns for him, I am filled with tenderness toward him, says the Lord.
V. In excess of anger, for a moment, I hid my face from you, but with everlasting love I will take pity on you.+ My heart ...

Second Reading From a homily by Saint Gregory Palamas
                                 Hom. 3:PG 151, 36

Before creating us our Maker brought this whole universe into being from nothing, for the sustenance of our bodily exist­ence. But as for improving our conduct and guiding us toward virtue, what has the Lord in his love of goodness not done for us? He has made the whole of this perceptible universe a kind of mirror of heaven, so that by spiritual contemplation of the world around us we may reach up to heavenly things as if by some wonderful ladder. He has implanted in us the natural law, as an inflexible rule, an infallible judge and an unerring teacher: this is our conscience. If we look deep within ourselves, then, we shall need no other teacher to show us what is good, and if we look outside ourselves we shall find the invisible God visible in the things he has made, as the Apostle says.

After providing a school of virtue in our own nature and in the created world, God gave us the angels to protect us, he raised up the patriarchs and prophets to guide us, he showed us signs and wonders to lead us to faith, and gave us the written law as a supplement to the law of our rational soul and the teaching of the world around us. Then at last, when we had scorned all this in our indolence - how different from his own continuing love and care for us! - he gave himself to us for our salvation. He poured out the wealth of his divinity into our lowly condition; he took our nature and became a human being like us, and was with us as our teacher. He teaches us the greatness of his love and proves it by word and deed, at the same time persuading those who obey him not to be hard-hearted, but to imitate his compassion.

Those who manage worldly affairs have a certain love for
them, as do shepherds for their flocks and owners for their personal possessions, but this cannot be compared with the love of those who share the same flesh and blood, and especially the love of parents for their children. Therefore, to make us realize how much he loves us, God called himself our Father; for our sake he became man, and then, through the grace of the Holy Spirit conferred in baptism, he caused us to be born anew.

            Responsory          1 fn 4:9.16b; fn 3:16
God's love for us was revealed when he sent his only Son into the world so that we might have life through him. + God is love, and whoever lives in love lives in God and God lives in him.
V. God loved the world so much that he gave his only Son, so that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. + God is love ...


http://vox-nova.com/2009/03/07/sunday-of-st-gregory-palamas/

   
Romanian Orthodox Church celebrates St. Gregory Palamas (Grigore Palama), Archbishop of Thessalonica. On this occasion, the parish church St. Gregory Palamas - University chapel will celebrate its patron.
Romanian Orthodox Church celebrates on November 14 St. Gregory Palamas (Grigore Palama), Archbishop of Thessalonica. On this occasion, the parish church St. Gregory Palamas - University chapel will celebrate its patron.
Archbishop Gregory (Grigore) of Thessaloniki, called Palama was born in Constantinople.
For his struggles with heretics was honored with the great gift of the bishop, holding the chair of Thessaloniki and pastoral significance it with great dignity.
Church "St. Gregory Palamas' (Grigore Palama) was consecrated on 26 November 1998. Interior painting was executed in 2004 by Mihai Coman and students of the Theological Institute of Bucharest Heritage Department at the expense of Polytechnic University.
More informations at http://www.basilica.ro/stiri/hram-la-biserica-isfantul-grigorie-palamai-paraclis-universitar_878.html

Sunday 25 August 2013

Night Office J.H. Newman 25 August 2013 Ephes. 4:24

Twenty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time - Year C

Vigils. Second Reading  From a sermon by John Henry Newman  

http://www.newmanreader.org/works/parochial/volume5/sermon13.html
A Word in Season, Readings for the Liturgy of the Hours VI
Augustinian Press 1995

Sermon 13. The State of Salvation Seasons - Epiphany

"That ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness." Ephes. iv. 24.
[Note 1] {178} THESE words express very strongly a doctrine which is to be found in every part of the New Testament, that the Gospel covenant is the means of introducing us into a state of life so different from that in which we were born, and should otherwise continue, that it may not unfitly be called a new creation. As that which is created differs from what is not yet created, so the Christian differs from the natural man. He is brought into a new world, and, as being in that new world, is invested with powers and privileges which he absolutely had not in the way of nature. By nature his will is enslaved to sin, his soul is full of darkness, his conscience is under the wroth of God; peace, hope, love, faith, purity, he has not; nothing of heaven is in him; nothing spiritual, nothing of light and life. But in Christ all these blessings are given: the will and the {179} power; the heart and the knowledge; the light of faith, and the obedience of faith. As far as a being can be changed without losing his identity, as far as it is sense to say that an existing being can be new created, so far has man this gift when the grace of the Gospel has its perfect work and its maturity of fruit in him. A brute differs less from a man, than does man, left to himself with his natural corruption allowed to run its course, differ from man fully formed and perfected by the habitual indwelling of the Holy Spirit.

Hence, in the text, the Apostle speaks of the spiritual state which Christ has bought for us, as being a "new creature in righteousness and true holiness." Elsewhere he says, "If any man be in Christ he is a new creature; old things are passed away; behold all things are become new. Elsewhere, "Be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind." Elsewhere, "Ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." Elsewhere, "We are buried with Him by baptism into death; that, like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life." [2 Cor. v. 17. Rom. xii. 2. Col. iii. 3. Rom. vi. 4.]

What then is this new state in which a Christian finds himself, compared with the state of nature? It is worth the inquiry.

Now, first, there ought to be no difficulty in our views about it so far as this: that there is a certain new state, and that a state of salvation; and that Christ came to bring into it all whom He had chosen out of the world. Christ "gave Himself for our sins (says St. Paul), that {180} He might deliver us from the present evil world." He "hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of His dear Son." He came "to gather together in one the children of God, which are scattered abroad." "As many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God." [Gal. i. 4. Col. i. 18. John xi. 52; i. 12.] 

This is most clear. There can be no doubt at all that there is a certain state of grace now vouchsafed to us, who are born in sin and the children of wrath, such that those who are to be saved hereafter are (to speak generally) those, and those only, who are placed in that saving state here. I am not going on to the question, whether or not there is a visible Church; but I insist only on this, that it has not seemed fit to Almighty God to transplant His elect at once from this world and from a state of nature to the eternal happiness of heaven. He does not suffer them to die as they were born, and then, on death, change them outwardly and inwardly; but He brings them into a saving state here, preparatory to heaven;—a state which the Catechism calls a "state of salvation;" and which St. Luke denotes, when he says, "The Lord added daily to the Church such as should be saved;" [Acts ii. 47.] that is, persons called to salvation, placed in a saving state.
No one ought to deny this; though in this day, when all kinds of error abound, some persons seem to have taken up a notion that the world was fully reconciled all at once by Christ's death at the very time of it, and wholly transferred into a state of acceptance; so that there is no new state necessary now for those who shall {181} ultimately be benefited by it; that they have but to do their duty, and they will be rewarded accordingly; whereas it does certainly appear, from such texts of Scripture as have been quoted, that there is a certain state, or kingdom of Christ, into which all must enter here who shall be saved hereafter. We cannot attain to heaven hereafter, without being in this new kingdom here; we cannot escape from the miseries and horrors of the Old Adam, except by being brought into this Kingdom, as into an asylum, and there remaining.

And further, this new state is one of "righteousness and true holiness," as the text speaks. Christ brings us into it by coming to us through His Spirit; and, as His Spirit is holy, we are holy, if we are in the state of grace. Christ is present in that heart which He visits with His grace. So that to be in His kingdom is to be in righteousness, to live in obedience, to breathe, as it were, an atmosphere of truth and love.

Now it is necessary to insist upon this also: for here again some men go wrong; and while they go so far as to acknowledge that there is a new state, or kingdom, into which souls must be brought, in order to salvation, yet they consider it as a state, not of holiness and righteousness, but merely or mainly of acceptance with God. It has been maintained by some persons, that human nature, even when regenerate, is not, and cannot be, really holy; nay, that it is idle to suppose that, even with the aid of the Holy Spirit, it can do any thing really good in any degree; that our best actions are {182} sins; and that we are always sinning, not only in slighter matters, but so as to need pardon in all we do, in the same sense in which we needed it when we were as yet unregenerate; and, consequently, that it is vain to try to be holy and righteous, or, rather, that it is presumptuous.
Now, of course it is plain, that even the best of men are full of imperfections and failings; so far is undeniable. But, consider, by nature we are in a state of death. Now, is this the state of our hearts under the Gospel? Surely not; for, while "to be carnally minded is death," "to be spiritually minded is life and peace." I mean, that the state of salvation in which we stand is not one in which "our righteousnesses are" what the prophet calls "filthy rags," but one in which we can help sinning unto death,—can help sinning in the way men do sin when left in a state of nature. If we do so sin, we cease to be in that state of salvation; we fall back into a state resembling our original state of wrath, and must pass back again from wrath to grace (if it be so), as we best may, in such ways as God has appointed: whereas it is not an uncommon notion at this time, that a man may be an habitual sinner, and yet be in a state of salvation, and in the kingdom of grace. And this doctrine many more persons hold than think they do; not in words, but in heart. They think that faith is all in all; that faith, if they have it, blots out their sins as fast as they commit them. They sin in distinct acts in the morning,—their faith wipes all out; at noon,—their faith still avails; and in the evening,—still the same. Or they remain {183} contentedly in sinful habits or practices, under the dominion of sin, not warring against it, in ignorance what is sin and what is not; and they think that the only business of a Christian is, not to be holy, but to have faith, and to think and speak of Christ; and thus, perhaps, they are really living, whether by habit or by act, in extortion, avarice, envy, rebellious pride, self-indulgence, or worldliness, and neither know nor care to know it. If they sin in habits, they are not aware of these at all; if by acts, instead of viewing them one and all together, they take them one by one, and set their faith against each separate act. So far has this been carried, that some men of name in the world have, before now, laid it down as a great and high principle, that there is no mortal sin but one, and that is want of faith; and have hereby meant, not that he who commits mortal sin cannot be said to have faith, but that he who has faith cannot be said to commit mortal sin; or, to speak more clearly, they have, in fact, defined a state of salvation to be nothing more or less than a state in which our sins are forgiven; a state of mere acceptance, not of substantial holiness. Persons who hold these opinions, consider that the great difference between a state of nature and a state of salvation is, that, in a state of nature when we sin, we are not forgiven (which is true); but that, in a state of salvation, when we sin, our sins are forgiven us, because we are in that state. On the other hand, I would maintain from scripture, that a state of salvation is so far from being a state in which sins of every kind are forgiven, that it is a state in which there are not sins of every kind to forgive; and that, if {184} a man commit them, so far from being forgiven by his state, he falls at once from his state by committing them; so far from being justified by faith, he, for that very reason, has not faith whereby to justify him. I say, our state of grace is a state of holiness; not one in which we may be pardoned, but in which we are obedient. He who acts unworthily of it, is not sheltered by it, but forfeits it. It is a state in which power is given us to act rightly, and therefore punishment falls on us if we act wrongly.
This is plain, from Scripture, on many reasons; of which I will here confine myself to one or two.

This then is the Christian's great aim, viz. not to come short after grace given him. This forms his peculiar danger, and his special {186} dread. 

Of course he is not secure from peril of gross sin; of course he is continually defiled with sins of infirmity; but whereas, how to be forgiven is the main inquiry for the natural man, so, how to fulfill his calling, how to answer to grace given, how to increase his Lord's money, how to attain, this is the great problem of man regenerate. Faith gained him pardon; but works gain him a reward.

...for the complete Sermon, see Link
  http://www.newmanreader.org/works/parochial/volume5/sermon13.html

Friday 19 July 2013

Jesus, the Good Samaritan

15th in Ord Time Friday 19 July 2013

Night Office. 
Second Reading
From a Sermon on Psalm 51 by Saint Gregory the Great



Welcoming Christ the Physician

Have mercy on me, O God, in your great kindness.

Let us imagine a man seriously injured and gasping for his last draughts of life-giving air.  Lying naked on a rubbish heap, he points to his still unbandaged wounds; he longs for a doctor to come, and in his distress begs for pity.  Sin is the soul's wound.  You who are wounded, recognize in your hearts who your physician is and uncover to him the wounds of your sins.  May he who knows every secret thought hear the groaning of your hearts.  Let your suffering reach him, so that to you also it may be said:  The Lord has taken away your sin.  Cry out with David - see how he speaks:  Have mercy on me, O God, in your great kindness.  It is as if he were saying:  I am in peril from a great wound which no physician can heal, unless the omnipotent physician comes to my aid.  No wound is beyond his power of healing; he heals without asking a fee, he restores health by a mere word.  I should despair of my wound did I not rely on the Almighty.  Have mercy on me, O God, in your great kindness.


Lord Jesus, I pray that you may be moved to pity and come to me.  I have gone down from Jerusalem to Jericho, descended from the heights to the depths, from health to sickness.  I have fallen into the hands of the angels of darkness who have not only stripped me of my garment of spiritual grace but have also wounded me and left me half-dead.  Bind up the wounds of my sins by making me believe that they can be healed, for if I despair of healing they will become worse.  Apply the oil of forgiveness to them and pour in the wine of compunction.  If you place me on your beast, you will be raising the poor from the dust, the needy from the rubbish heap.  For it is you who have carried our sins, who have paid back what you did not take.  If you lead me to the inn of your Church you will nourish me with your Body and Blood.  If you take care of me I shall not transgress your commandments nor fall prey to the rage of wild beasts.  I need your protection as long as I bear this corruptible flesh.  So listen to me, Samaritan, listen to me who am stripped and wounded, weeping and groaning, as I call upon you and cry out with David:  "Have mercy on me, O God, in your great kindness."

Saint Gregory the Great

-Saint Gregory the Great (604) was one of the most important popes and influential writers of the Middle Ages.