Monday, 21 November 2011

Holy Cross Jubilee Dixon Avenue Glasgow

Bp. Mone cuts the Jubilee cake.

Father Neil Donnachie.  PP
1886 1911 2011
Jubilee Thanksgiving Mass
Sunday 20 November 2011
Principal Celebrant: Bishop John Mone
History:
  http://www.holycrossparish.org.uk/H%20C%20History.pdf   

Bishop John Mone and Fr. Neil Donnachie PP
join in the celebration Reception 

Welcome for so many of the Priests ordained from Holy Cross  Parish,
picture  brothers McGlynn from Nunraw.

  

Fr. Peter Link  1886-1889
Bishop Henry Graham
1930-1959
William P Cannon  O’Brien. 1889-1930.
Fr. Patrick Wycherley
1960-1964

Bishop James Ward
1965-1973
Mgr John Gillespie 1973-1984
Mgr John Hanrahan
1984-1995
Fr. Anthony Bancewicz 1995-2004
Fr Neil Donnachie

PARISH PRIESTS

Fr. Neil Donnachie
2004
©2010 Holy Cross Parish. Holy Cross Parish is a Parish of the Archdiocese of Glasgow, a Designated Religious Charity, Number SC01814

Saturday, 19 November 2011

Pope in Benin


Pope Benedict XVI listens to Benin's President Thomas Boni Yayi during a welcome ceremony at Cotonou airport in Benin in this November 18, 2011 picture. Pope Benedict, arriving on his second trip to Africa as Roman Catholic leader, on Friday urged African nations to resist the temptation to surrender to market forces as they grow and modernise.Reuters Pictures logoREUTERS PICTURES 1 HOUR AGO
Pope Benedict XVI listens to Benin's President Thomas Boni Yayi during a welcome ceremony at Cotonou airport in Benin in this November 18, 2011 picture. Pope Benedict, arriving on his second trip toAfrica as Roman Catholic leader, on Friday urged African nations to resist the temptation to surrender to market forces as they grow and modernise.

Pope Benedict XVI prays at the tomb of Archbishop Isidore De Souza at Cotonou Cathedral in Benin in this November 18, 2011 picture. Pope Benedict, arriving on his second trip to Africa as Roman Catholic leader, on Friday urged African nations to resist the temptation to surrender to market forces as they grow and modernise.Reuters Pictures logoREUTERS PICTURES 1 HOUR AGO
Pope Benedict XVI prays at the tomb of Archbishop Isidore De Souza at Cotonou Cathedral in Benin in this November 18, 2011 picture. Pope Benedict, arriving on his second trip to Africa as Roman Catholic leader, on Friday urged African nations to resist the temptation to surrender to market forces as they grow and modernise.

Friday, 18 November 2011

Woman with seven husbands? Lk 20:27-40

Jesus challenged by the Sadducees

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Nivard . . .
Sent:
 Friday, 18 November 2011, 20:13
Subject: 
Woman with seven husbands?
OL 33 Sat 19 Nov 2011        Lk. 20: 27-40.  
The Sadducees asked Jesus this malicious ques­tion; "At the resurrection, to which of the seven brothers will she be wife?" Their ploy is to make Jesus say that love is impossible in heaven.
But when we experience compunction in ourselves, like that of King Antiochus, we begin to see the truth. King Antiochus said, "I am convinced that this is why these misfortunes have overtaken me. I am dying of melan­choly."
The only thing that can console us, on this earth, is the prospect of an unending, all-encompassing heavenly love.
God is love. Everyone who lives in love lives in God and God in each one of them.  
                ‘Magnificat’ today’s introduction modified’
Father, we thank you for hearing our prayer. As we long for heaven, fill our hearts with your love. Through Christ our Lord.
                                                                                           ***************
                                                   What is Heaven Like
When is heaven truly and completely present? It is when all heaviness is gone; when all sluggishness has been overcome, all wickedness, coldness, pride, irrita­tion, disobedience, and covetousness; when there is no danger anymore of falling away; when grace has made one’s whole being open up, body and soul, to the ultimate profundities, when there is no further danger that it will all close in again, become hardened in ways of evil; when all work to be done on earth is finished, and all guilt has been paid by repentance. What all this means is: after death
After death - when time is no longer; when everything is in the everlasting now; when nothing can change any­more, but the creature stands illuminated by the light of eternity, before God - at that time, everything will be open, and will remain so. That is being in heaven.
This is how we properly understand heaven. It is that close presence wherein the Father stands in relation to Jesus Christ. And heaven for us will be participation in this intimacy of love. This condition is already beginning; it approaches closer; now in peril, it is fought over, lost, and won back again. $0 it goes with our Christian life.
                                                                         
MONSIGNOR ROMANO GUARDINI Monsignor Guardini (d. 1968) was born in Italy and was a renowned theologian and writer.


Benin Papal Visit Fri 18 November 2011

Photo: Reuters
 Billboard announces Papal visit to Benin's largest city, Cotonou, Nov. 16, 2011.


Thank you,
Fr. Patrick,
for praying for Pope Benedict.
It is the good message to keep us to the News.
Yours,
Donald.

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: father patrick . . .
Sent: Thursday, 17 November 2011, 22:16
Subject: Prayers for Pope Benedict

Greetings to YOU:

Tomorrow, Friday November 18,
the Holy Father begins a three day Pastoral Visit to Benin in Africa.


We pray for God's Blessings on his Pastoral Pilgrimage.
He will meet with Bishops from all over the African Continent.

We pray for him;
we pray for the church in Africa.

Below is a short article on his Pilgrrimage.

Many Blessings

father patrick

On Benin Trip, Pope Has Message for Africa

Pope Benedict XVI travels to the West African country of Benin on Friday, where he is expected to urge African nations to work towards peace, justice and reconciliation.

The 84-year-old pontiff is scheduled to arrive in Cotonou for a three-day visit to a country whose Roman Catholic population has soared in recent years.

At least 30 percent of Benin's population is now Catholic, and the continent has the fastest-growing Catholic population in the world.

During the trip, Pope Benedict is expected to sign a proclamation of the church's plans for Africa. The document is based on conclusions reached by a group of African bishops who met in 2009 at a Synod in Rome to discuss challenges in Africa including conflict, corruption and poverty.

Benedict will also meet with traditional religious leaders, including practitioners of voodoo.

This will be the second time Pope Benedict has traveled to Africa. During a 2009 trip to Cameroon and Angola.  
 
BBC
Catholic missionaries first arrived
in Benin 150 years ago

Thursday, 17 November 2011

Pope On Psalm 110, to Christ the King


Catechesis 

On Psalm 110, to Christ the King
"We Are Invited to Look to Christ in Order to Understand the Meaning of True Royalty"
VATICAN CITY, NOV. 16, 2011 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the Italian-language catecheses Benedict XVI gave today during the general audience held in St. Peter's Square. The Pope continued with his series of catecheses on prayer, concluding today his reflection on the prayer of the Psalter.

Friday, 18 November 2011,
Mass apt Link to coming Solemnity of Christ the King

PSALM 110: PROPHECY OF CHRIST THE KING

Annunciation Cathedral in Roslindale, MA
In his final catechesis on the Psalms, Pope Benedict fittingly reflects on Psalm 110 (one of the “royal psalms”) as we head towards the final Sunday of our liturgical year, the Solemnity of Christ the King.  As usual, here is the excerpt as we wait for the full text to be published next week:

* * *


Dear friends, in these last catecheses I have wanted to introduce several of the psalms to you -- these precious prayers that we find in the Bible, that reflect life's various situations and the various states of soul that we can have in relation to God. Therefore, I would like to renew to all the invitation to pray the psalms, perhaps forming the habit of using the Church's Liturgy of the Hours -- Lauds in the morning, Vespers in the evening, Compline before going to sleep. Our relationship with God cannot but be enriched in our daily journey to Him and be realized with great joy and trust. Thank you.
[Translation by Diane Montagna]
[The Holy Father then greeted pilgrims in several languages. In English, he said:]
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
In our catechesis on Christian prayer, we now turn to Psalm 110, one of the famous "royal psalms", originally linked to the enthronement of a Davidic monarch. The Church reads this Psalm as a prophecy of Christ, the messianic king and eternal priest, risen from the dead and seated at the right hand of the Father. Saint Peter, in his speech on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:32-36), applies its words to the Lord’s victory over death and his exaltation in glory. From ancient times, the mysterious third verse of the Psalm has been interpreted as a reference to the king’s divine sonship, while the fourth verse speaks of him as "a priest for ever, according to the order of Melchizedek". The Letter to the Hebrews specifically applies this imagery to Christ, the Son of God and our perfect high priest, who lives eternally to make intercession for all those who, through him, approach the Father (cf. Heb 7:25). The final verses of the Psalm present the triumphant King as executing judgment over the nations. As we pray this Psalm, we acclaim the victory of our risen Lord and King, while striving to live ever more fully the royal and priestly dignity which is ours as members of his Body through Baptism.
I offer a cordial greeting the many student groups present at today’s Audience. My welcome also goes to the delegation of the American Israel Affairs Committee. Upon all the English-speaking pilgrims present, especially those from Great Britain, Denmark, Norway, Japan, Canada and the United States, I invoke God’s blessings of joy and peace!
© Copyright 2011 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
[In Italian, he said:]
Lastly, I greet young people, the sick and newlyweds. Yesterday we remembered St. Albert the Great, Doctor of the Church, and today we celebrate the memorials of St. Margaret of Scotland -- who performed works of mercy -- and of St. Gertrude, a Cistercian nun. May their example and their intercession encourage you, dear young people, to remain always faithful to the Lord; may they help you, dear sick, to know how to welcome with serene abandonment all that the Lord gives in every situation of life; and may they support you, dear newlyweds, in forming a truly Christian family.
[Translation by Diane Montagna]


Holy Women Mystics

William,
Thank you for Comment.
It leads far even wider:
e.g.  Online
Complete work:
A link to the text of The Exercises of Saint Gertrude, [http://www.archive.org/details/exercisessaintg00gertgoog] an anonymous translation of Prosper Louis Pascal Gueranger's 1863 Les Exercices de sainte Gertrude, itself a French version of the original Latin.
A Google digital version amazing.
Yours.
Donald
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William ...
To: Donald . . . .
Sent: Wednesday, 16 November 2011, 14:53
Subject: [Blog] Holy Women Mystics

Dear Father Donald,
 
Thank you for a glorious biographical procession of Holy Women Mystics on your Blog in celebration of St. Getrude the Great's feast day.
 
I came upon St. Hildegard of Bingen whilst following links to 'Sophia' (I am reading with fascination a book entitled 'Sophia' by Christopher Pramuk on 'The Hidden Christ of Thomas Merton'): Wikipedia - "Hildegard of Bingen celebrated Sophia as a cosmic figure in both her writing and her art".  
 
And then I blinked last Saturday when I saw a paperback anthology of her writings in a 2nd hand bookshop in a nearby town, a bus-hop away where there are 'grocers' & 'fishmongers' - as opposed to 'supermarkets'! In that I have found the key texts of 'Scivias' on Divine Wisdom, and on the internet gaze in amazement at the orginal manuscript in the Merton College archives at  - http://image.ox.ac.uk/
 
Fr. Michael  . . . made me so aware of the 'heritage' of spiritual writings, and I delight more than ever before in the procession of women mystics.
 
. . .
 
. . . in Our Lord,
William 


Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Saint Gertrude the Great 16 November 2011


Pope Benedict XVI and
the holy women mystics in Church history

Way to go St. Hildegarde of Bingen….the Holy Father knows!

There has been a strange dismissal of St. Hildegarde over the years, and I am not sure why. This was a woman who was a great mystic, writer, poet, musician, artist…oh you name it AND a Benedictine nun!  Maybe this distancing of Catholics from her is in part because of New Agers, like Anglican Episcopal priest Matthew Fox, [...]  

St. Gertrude the Great, “a very powerful champion of justice and truth



St. Gertrude the Great, “a very powerful champion of justice and truth
BENEDICT XVI GENERAL AUDIENCE (the entire text translated in English) from vatican.va Dear Brothers and Sisters, St Gertrude the Great, of whom I would  like to talk to you today, brings us once again this week to the Monastery of Helfta, where several of the Latin-German masterpieces of religious literature were written by women. Gertrude [...]


Yes, Yes, Yes, St. Hildegard…once again Pope Benedict XVI speaks

Once again the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI speaks of the importance of St. Hildegard of Bingen. Vatican City – Pope Benedict’s General Audience from Vatican.va Dear Brothers and Sisters, Today I would like to take up and continue my Reflection on St Hildegard of Bingen, an important female figure of the Middle Ages who [...]

Pope Benedict XVI reflects on “the great” St. Clare of Assisi

Vatican City, Sep 15, 2010 Pope Benedict’s General Audience, from Vatican.va Saint Clare of Assisi Dear Brothers and Sisters, One of the best loved Saints is without a doubt St Clare of Assisi who lived in the 13th century and was a contemporary of St Francis. Her testimony shows us how indebted the Church is [...]

St. Matilda, God’s Nightingale, pray for us

  Describing the exemplary life of a 13th-century German nun, Pope Benedict XVIstressed the importance of liturgy in building a close relationship with God. VATICAN CITY, 29 SEP 2010  Pope Benedict’s General Audience vatican.va Dear Brothers and Sisters, Today I want to talk to you about St Matilda of Hackeborn, one of the great figures [...]

Blessed Angela of Foligno – once again our Holy Father brings us a gifted mystic

Thank God for our Holy  Father, Pope Benedict XVI, and his desire to teach us about the heritage contained in our faith.  I love it now, because once again he is lifting up one of the truly gifted women mystics of the Church for all of us to learn from.  I didn’t know much about her, [...]

St. Elizabeth of Hungary “It Is Christ Whom You Have Washed, Fed and Looked After”

From Pope Benedict’s General Wednesday Audience from Vatican.va Dear Brothers and Sisters, Today I would like to speak to you about one of the women of the Middle Ages who inspired the greatest admiration; she is St Elizabeth of Hungary, also called St Elizabeth of Thuringia. Elizabeth was born in 1207; historians dispute her birthplace. [...]

St. Bridget of Sweden…a “powerful example of feminine sanctity”…Our Holy Father hits another one out of the ballpark!

On the eve of the Great Jubilee in anticipation of the Year 2000 the Venerable Servant of God John Paul II proclaimed St Bridget of Sweden Co-Patroness of the whole of Europe. This morning I would like to present her, her message and the reasons why — still today — this holy woman has much to teach the Church and the world.
We are well acquainted with the events of St Bridget’s life because her spiritual fathers compiled her biography in order to further the process of her canonization immediately after her death in 1373. Bridget was born 70 years earlier, in 1303, in Finster, Sweden, a Northern European nation that for three centuries had welcomed the Christian faith with the same enthusiasm as that with which the Saint had received it from her parents, very devout people who belonged to noble families closely related to the reigning house.

St. Marguerite d’Oingt – A “book lover” after my own heart

From Pope Benedict’s General Audience from vatican.va With Marguerite d’Oingt, of whom I would like to speak to you today, we are introduced to Carthusian spirituality which draws its inspiration from the evangelical synthesis lived and proposed by St Bruno. We do not know the date of her birth, although some place it around 1240. [...]

Saint Juliana of Liège, patron of the feast of Corpus Christi (now there is a dream job to have…forever!)

According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, the origins of Corpus Christi can be traced to St. Juliana of Mount Cornillon. From Pope Benedict’s General Audience from vatican.va Dear Brothers and Sisters, This morning too I would like to introduce a female figure to you. She is little known but the Church is deeply indebted to her, [...]

St. Catherine of Siena, our spiritual “mamma”, teach us to love Christ and the Church with courage

Vatican City –From Pope Benedict’s Wednesday General Audience from vatican.va Dear Brothers and Sisters, Today I would like to talk to you about a woman who played an eminent role in the history of the Church: St Catherine of Siena. The century in which she lived — the 14th — was a troubled period in [...]

Julian of Norwich – “God’s Promises Are Always Greater Than Our Hopes”

“God’s Promises Are Always Greater Than Our Hopes” VATICAN CITY, DEC. 1, 2010 (vatican.va).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave today during the general audience in Paul VI Hall. Dear Brothers and Sisters, I still remember with great joy the Apostolic Journey I made in the United Kingdom last September. England is [...]

St. Veronica Giuliani – “a courageous witness of the beauty and power of divine Love”

“In an instant, I saw five brilliant rays of light shine forth from his most holy wounds, and all came to my face.” St. Veronica Giuliani wrote these words more than three centuries ago, describing her mystical experience of Christ. Vatican City, Dec 15, 2010 / 07:37 pm (vatican.va).- Dear Brothers and Sisters, Today I [...]

Saint Catherine of Bologna: Spiritual Weapons Against Evil

Patroness of Artists and Against Spiritual Temptation VATICAN CITY, 29 DEC 2010 (vatican.va) – Dear Brothers and Sisters, In a recent Catechesis I spoke of St Catherine of Siena. Today I would like to present to you another less well known Saint who has the same name: St Catherine of Bologna, a very erudite yet very [...]

St. Catherine of Genoa and the Experience of Purgatory

VATICAN CITY, 12 JAN 2011 (vatican.va) – Dear Brothers and Sisters, After Catherine of Siena and Catherine of Bologna, today I would like to speak to you about another Saint: Catherine of Genoa, known above all for her vision of purgatory. The text that describes her life and thought was published in this Ligurian city in 1551. [...]

St. Joan of Arc “Bringing the Light of the Gospel Into History”

< VATICAN CITY, 26 JAN 2011 (vatican.va) – Today I would like to talk to you about Joan of Arc, a young Saint who lived at the end of the Middle Ages who died at the age of 19, in 1431. This French Saint, mentioned several times in theCatechism of the Catholic Church, is particularly [...]

St. Teresa of Avila shows that time spent in prayer is not lost

TERESA OF AVILA: CONTEMPLATIVE AND INDUSTRIOUS VATICAN CITY, 2 FEB 2011 (vatican.va) – Dear Brothers and Sisters, In the course of the Catecheses that I have chosen to dedicate to the Fathers of the Church and to great theologians and women of the Middle Ages I have also had the opportunity to reflect on certain [...]


St. Gertrude the Great, “a very powerful champion of justice and truth
St. Gertrude holy card St. Gertrude the Great, a very powerful champion of justice and truth

BENEDICT XVI GENERAL AUDIENCE (the entire text translated in English) from vatican.va
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
St Gertrude the Great, of whom I would like to talk to you today, brings us once again this week to the Monastery of Helfta, where several of the Latin-German masterpieces of religious literature were written by women. Gertrude belonged to this world. She is one of the most famous mystics, the only German woman to be called “Great”, because of her cultural and evangelical stature: her life and her thought had a unique impact on Christian spirituality. She was an exceptional woman, endowed with special natural talents and extraordinary gifts of grace, the most profound humility and ardent zeal for her neighbour’s salvation. She was in close communion with God both in contemplation and in her readiness to go to the help of those in need.
Pope's general audience . . .