Tuesday, 5 February 2013

RIDER on BBC Songs of Praise 'I Believe in Angels' after the 7 days broadcast.

 
At the National Gallery 150 paintings of Angels,
with Our Lady, Nativity and Saints.


Rider to the Broadcast

I believe in angels ! - YouTube

www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuB7cJR3ZiI
May 1, 2011 - Uploaded by peoplepassion
ABBA Lyrics: I have a dream... a song to sing, to help me cope with anything ... I believe in angels ...


 Saturday, September 29, 2012  
Feast of the Archangels
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/lorenzo-costa-the-adoration-of-the-shepherds-with-angels

The Adoration of the Shepherds with Angels about 1499, Lorenzo Costa   

There are nine choirs of music-making angels on each side of the Holy Family and adoring shepherds. Two larger angels, centre, blowing trumpets, herald the arrival of a further group of angels bearing the Instruments of the Passion.

HYMNS
·        1. Praise, My Soul, The King Of
·        2. Angel Voices Ever Singing Choir

3 All Through The Night  Sir Willard White    
 4 At The Name Of Jesus  Choir 

·       5. In Heavenly Love Abiding
6. Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise,

7. When at night I go to sleep. Evening Prayer BBC Radio 2 Choristers Of The Year 2009: Jacquelyne Hill & Laurence Kilsby


·             

·            Factsheet for Sunday 3rd February 2013

Pam Rhodes meets people who believe they have encountered angels and introduces some popular angelic hymns.

·            Interviewees

Here is some background information on the contributors that appeared on this week's programme; 

ROY GODWIN 
Roy Godwin was travelling with his wife and children on a road through a dense forest one frosty night in December 1981 when he crashed with another vehicle who was travelling on the wrong side of the road. His family were removed from the car and taken off to hospital but Roy was trapped in the damaged vehicle with major injuries. Suddenly a strange figure came through the forest and sat down beside him on the passenger seat. The encounter was unusual, not least because of the unusual words the stranger spoke and Roy believes that the mysterious figure might have been an angel. 

DR PAULA GOODER 
Dr Paula Gooder is a freelance writer and lecturer in Biblical Studies. She explains the origin of the word “angel” and explores the potential different meanings of the word in both the Old and New Testaments. She also ponders why Christians today often don’t talk about angels despite being surrounded by depictions of them in stained glass windows in many churches. Finally she reveals her own beliefs about what constitutes an angelic encounter. 

WALLACE AND MARY BROWN 
Wallace Brown felt called by God to leave his leafy parish in Leicestershire and continue his ministry on a council estate in Birmingham. So he became the vicar of St Boniface’s Church in Quinton. But he and his wife Mary soon discovered that a violent gang gathered every day around the walls of the church. After several months, they were finding life there very difficult but Mary felt that God was calling them to pray for guardian angels to protect the walls of the church, so they did – with seemingly miraculous results. 

LORNA BYRNE 
Lorna Byrne says she has seen angels since she was a tiny child and has written several books about her experiences including “Angels in my Hair”. She describes how angels appear to her and how she believes that everyone, no matter what their religion or what sort of person they are, has their own guardian angel.

Lorna Byrne  

www.lornabyrne.com/
A Message of Hope from the Angels by Lorna Byrne Read more →. someone to watch over you. Someone is watching over you, an inspirational music video ...

·            Locations  

·        The National Gallery 
Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 5DN





Monday, 4 February 2013

Saint Agatha and Angel with St Peter

Following the stirring the BBC TV presentation of 'I Believe in Angels', 
St Peter Healing St Agatha

tomorrow it brings the Liturgy of St Agatha in prison visited by St Peter and an Angel.


NEWMAN CHAPLETS
A Journey  to God through Prayer
http://www.newmanchaplets.com/chaplets-iii-saints-january-december/saints-february/


ST AGATHA
Virgin & Martyr
Feast Day 5th February
Chaplet of St Agatha
A chaplet for victims of breast cancer – for private use only.
Patroness of: Sicily, bell founders, breast cancer, against fire, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, for rape victims, torture victims, etc
Legend says that carrying her veil, taken from her tomb in Catania, in procession has averted eruptions of Mount Etna. Her intercession is reported to have saved Malta from Turkish invasion in 1551. Saint Lucy d.c303 visited her shrine and interceded successfully for her mother, to whom Saint Agatha, by the grace of God gave healing.
Commence on the single bead of the pendant saying: O glorious Martyr, Saint Agatha, you endured assaults on your body and spirit with dignity and courage. Strengthen us now in our hour of supplication and be our advocate, that we may receive the healing grace of our Lord, Jesus Christ. Amen
On each of the three sets of beads say five times: Ave Maria…
On the small bead following the first set say: Jesus Christ, Lord of all things, You see my heart, You know my desire. Possess alone all that I am. I am Your sheep, Make me worthy to overcome the devil
On the small bead following the second set say: Lord, my Creator, You have ever protected me from the cradle; You have taken me from the love of the world and given me patience to suffer: receive now my soul.
Conclude on the medal saying: Dearest Saint Agatha, hear and sustain us!
Saint Agatha – The tradition of virgin martyrdom personified
St Agatha in prison visited by St Peter and an angel. Alessandro Turchi (1578-1649)
Agatha is one of the most notable of the early virgin martyrs, put to death probably under the persecution of Decius (250-253). There remains no early or contemporary account of her martyrdom other than the witness of widespread veneration from the earliest of times. In both the Martyrologium Hieronymianum (c.6th cent) and the fifth or sixth century Martyrologium Carthaginiense, a celebration for Saint Agatha is recorded on the 5th February, while, in the sixth century Venantius Fortunatus (c.530-c.600 ) mentions her in a poem on virginity and describes her as one of the celebrated Christian virgins and martyrs. In addition to these sources, and among the poems of Pope Damasus (Pope between 366-384) is a hymn to Saint Agatha which, while not his own composition but by an unknown later author, was most probably composed for a liturgical celebration. Other references include a letter of Pope Gelasius (492-496) to one Bishop Victor which mentions a Basilica of Saint Agatha, while the letters of Gregory I (Pope between 590- 604) make mention of a church dedicated to Saint Agatha at Rome, in the Subura.It had previously been assigned to the Arian Goths for their use and later restored to Catholic worship by Pope Gregory I.
... Further enraged by this evidence of tenacity and faith, the Governor ordered that her breasts be crushed and hacked off. This unusual torture is represented in the iconography associated with the saint. Agatha was returned to prison with neither food nor medical attention, but her Lord, who was indeed her light and her salvation gave her comfort, for, in a vision she saw Saint Peter surrounded by heavenly light. The Apostle comforted and strengthened Agatha while healing her of the wounds. But the cruelties were not over. Four days later, Quintianus had the young girl rolled naked over live coals mixed with broken pottery; she would not survive this agony. As she was returned to the prison Agatha prayed: ‘Lord, my Creator, Thou hast always protected me from the cradle, Thou hast taken me from the love of the world and given me patience to suffer. Receive now my soul.’After saying these words Agatha breathed her last.

Sunday, 3 February 2013

God can make better saints . Charles de Foucauld


Monday, 04 February 2013
Monday of the Fourth week in Ordinary Time

Mark 5:1-20.
.... But he would not permit him but told him instead, "Go home to your family and announce to them all that the Lord in his pity has done for you." v.29
Then the man went off and began to proclaim in the Decapolis what Jesus had done for him; and all were amazed. 

Commentary of the day : 
Blessed Charles de Foucauld (1858-1916), hermit and missionary in the Sahara - Meditations on the Gospels, no.194 

"Go home to your family and announce to them
all that the Lord in his pity has done for you"
When we want to follow Jesus, don't let us be surprised if he doesn't allow us to do so straight away or even if he never allows us to do so... Indeed, his eyes see further than ours: he doesn't just want our own good but everyone's...

Certainly, to share in his life with and like the apostles is a blessing and a grace and we should always strive to come close to this imitation of his life. But that is no more than an outward grace.

By filling us with grace interiorly God can make better saints of us without this exact imitation... than with it. By increasing faith, hope and charity in us he can make us far more perfect in the world or in a mitigated [religious] Order than we would be in the desert or in a strict Order... 

If God doesn't allow us to follow him we should neither be surprised nor afraid nor saddened about it but say to ourselves that he is treating us like the Gerasene and has very wise and hidden reasons for it. What is needed is that we obey him and throw ourselves into his will. Besides..., maybe Jesus allowed the Gerasene to join the apostles some months or years later. 

Let us always hope, as far as opportunity allows, to lead the life that is most perfect in itself and, for the time being, let us lead perfectly the life Jesus gives us, the one where he wants us to be. Let us live in it as he would live himself if his Father's will placed him there. Let us do everything there as he would do it if his Father had put him in that situation... True perfection is to do the will of God.

I Believe in Angels BBC TV Episode 3 Feb 2013


 Angels come our attention for very practical needs.
And I enjoyed the BBC Programme; a lovely instructive viewing, and backing up to 
interest in Angels is already to the fore of prayer.
The Hymns of the programme fill up to theology, art, music...   

The BBC TV episode from the Songs of Praise  

Pam Rhodes meets people who believe they have encountered angels.
FIRST BROADCAST: 03 Feb 2013
Songs of Praise-I Believe in Angels


http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b01qm07p/Songs_of_Praise_I_Believe_in_Angels/ 

Related Link: The National Gallery (www.nationalgallery.org.uk)
                          Angels in My Hair (http://www.lornabyrne.com/)
                                   Dr Paula Gooder (www.gooder.me.uk)   

Saturday, 2 February 2013

Presentation of the Lord 2013

Sixty seven years ago, the first of the founders arrived at Nunraw from Roscrea, our Mother House.  


----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Fr. Mark . . .
Sent: Saturday, 2 February 2013, 8:26
Subject
:  Presentation of the Lord

Introduction to the Presentation of the Lord.    Feb 2, 2013

Today’s celebration of the Presentation of the Lord in the temple is not simply a single feast.  It is the conclusion of the Christmas season, during which we celebrated the joy of the coming of the Lord as man into our world.

I had the good fortune to be in Rome two years ago and saw for myself the various cribs still in place in the middle of St Peter’s Square.  They were from various parts of the world and from different cultures and, naturally, attracted crowds of people.

Christ came at Christmas – a light shining in the dark – and today we light candles to celebrate that same light that has been given to us to brighten up our lives and prevent us from stumbling, from falling because of the darkness that can overshadow us..

Sixty seven years ago, the first of the founders arrived at Nunraw from Roscrea, our Mother House.  Those were difficult and hard times settling in. - There are always hard times.  And so we need to continue trusting in the guiding hand of God.

Simeon praised God in the temple because he saw that light - long expected - had finally come into the world.  That same light has been handed on to us.  But he also gave a warning to Mary that there would be sorrow in her life because the power of the darkness had not yet been fully overcome.  We celebrate the joy of Christ’s coming to us in the flesh, therefore, but remain aware of our constant need of his help in our human weakness.

We extinguish our candles now, but they will be relit for the duration of the gospel, creed and Pr of the Faithful.

After the Prayer of the Faithful
This is the point where we take our lighted candles, symbols of God’s light in us, and offer them back to God before the altar.  There they will remain shining throughout our celebration of the Eucharist, our Thanksgiving to God.


Feast of the Presentation of the Lord. Sermon by Br, Barry



Terce 2 Feb 2013 View Window
Foundation Day
Ordinary Time: February 2nd
Feast of the Presentation of the Lord





----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Br.  Barry  ...
Sent: Saturday, 2 February 2013, 8:31
Subject: Presentation

PRESENTATION 2013.

‘Forty days have passed since we celebrated the joyful feast of the Nativity of the Lord’. The Christmas Season has come and gone. The days after Epiphany were followed by the feast of the Baptism of the Lord. Although part of Ordinary Time, the Baptism can be seen as the climax of the revelations of Christmastide because of its dramatic revelation of the Divine Persons of the Most Holy Trinity.

The Presentation of Jesus by Mary and Joseph occurred decades before the Baptism. Does that mean that the Trinity has no place or, at best, only a place in the background of today’s feast ?

The Father is present for ‘ the Lord is in his holy temple, the Lord whose throne is in heaven ( psalm 10 ). The Son, the Logos, is there of course, an infant in his mother’s arms. What of the Holy Spirit ? As is to be expected in Luke’s gospel, the Spirit features prominently. But notice a strange thing. Mary, bride of the Spirit is there. Her Son, conceived by the Spirit is there. St. Joseph, spouse of Mary is there.
Yet it is Simeon whom the Evangelist associates with the Holy Spirit.

Simeon is prompted by the Spirit to go the Temple in the first place. Movement is a proper characteristic of the Holy Spirit. In the Holy Trinity, the Father is said to generate the Son but the Spirit ‘proceeds’ from the Father and the Son.

Saint Albert the Great, no less, has tried to say something about this procession of the Spirit from the Father and the Son, albeit in the strange language of the medieval scholastics: ‘the term’ procession’ indicates locomotion and voluntary motion. To proceed simply by such motion befits the Holy Spirit because love and spirit proceed voluntarily.’ You have to think about that one.

Against this should be set the wise words of St. Gregory Nazianzus, ‘What then is Procession ? You tell me what is the Unbegotteness of the Father and I will explain to you the Generation of the Son and the Procession of the Spirit, and we shall both be frenzy- stricken for prying into the mystery of God’.
Simeon, then, moves through the Temple prompted by the One who is always associated with movement.

Next, still under the influence of the Spirit, he recognises the Saviour in Mary’s child. This is a perfect example of St. Irenaeus’ famous formula: ‘ just as there is no knowing the Father without the Son, so there is no knowing the Son without the Spirit’. Simeon then directs his talk to Mary. His attention is on Jesus, his talk with Mary, Simeon is a model of devotion.

He introduces a note of the Cross, ‘a sword shall pierce your own soul’: the Spirit has revealed to Simeon that all his marvellous privileges: his prophetic knowledge of the future, his setting eyes on the Saviour, his friendship with God have their source in the Cross.
Just why has the Evangelist linked the Holy Spirit with Simeon in these ways. It is clear that readers and listeners to this Gospel passage are meant to identify with Simeon. He is the most prominent character even if not the most important one. So for us too there is no knowing the Son without the Spirit, there is no friendship with God, nor any of the supernatural graces, without the Spirit.

The feast of the Presentation has also been the World Day of Consecrated Life since 1997. The Presentation is about a total offering of a life. In his Apostolic Exhortation on the Consecrated Life, Pope John Paul the Second wrote ‘ the consecrated person points to Christ loved above all things and to the mystery of the Trinity……. as the ultimate goal of every religious journey’.
That would make Simeon a model religious.



______________________________________________
Dom Donald's Blog: Presentation Feb 2nd - Nunraw anniversary 1946

02 Feb 2011
Presentation Feb 2nd - Nunraw anniversary 1946. Candlemass, the Solemnity of the Presentation of the Lord. The Rite of the Blessing of the Candles was celebrated in the early morning Cloister, We carried the lighted ...


COMMENT: Angels in Common Preface II




612 The Order of Mass
COMMON PREFACE II
Salvation through Christ

It is truly right and just, our duty and our salvation,
always and everywhere to give you thanks,
Lord, holy Father, almighty and eternal God.

For in goodness you created man
and, when he was justly condemned,
in mercy you redeemed him,
through Christ our Lord.

Through him the Angels praise your majesty,
Dominions adore and Powers tremble before you.
Heaven and the Virtues of heaven and the blessed Seraphim
worship together with exultation.
May our voices, we pray, join with theirs
in humble praise, as we acclaim:

Holy, Holy, Holy Lord God of hosts . . .



Friday, 1 February 2013

Mass - Angels and Archangels



Friday 1 February 2013  
Friday of week 3 of the year   
Listening to the Mass this morning, the voice of the Presiding priest was clear, 
and at that point I was riveted to the words of Angels and Archangels,
Thrones and Dominions, all hosts and Powers. 
Leads me back to the classic history and theology of Danielou - the picture right.
Then N. mentioned to me that the BBC Songs of Praise are to feature 
the author of 'Angels in My Hair' by Lorna Byrne.  
Already, after dream of chaos I was asking the Angels to guide thoughts, 
and felt the words from the Common Preface I speaking even more clear.
+ + +


The Order of Mass
COMMON PREFACE I
The renewal of all things in Christ

It is truly right and just, our duty and our salvation,
always and everywhere to give you thanks,
Lord, holy Father, almighty and eternal God,
through Christ our Lord.

In him you have been pleased to renew all things,
giving us all a share in his fullness.
For though he was in the form of God, he emptied himself
and by the blood of his Cross brought peace to all creation.
Therefore he has been exalted above all things,
and to all who obey him,
has become the source of eternal salvation.

And so, with Angels and Archangels,
with Thrones and Dominions,
and with all the hosts and Powers of heaven,
we sing the hymn of your glory,
as without end we acclaim:

Holy, Holy, Holy Lord God of hosts . . .


  http://www.universalis.com/static/mass/orderofmass.htm  

Thursday, 31 January 2013

St. Bridgid of Ireland (+ 523)

Brigid's Cross
courtesy fisheaters.com

Friday, 01 February 2013
St. Bridgid of Ireland (+ 523)

SAINT BRIDGID
Abbess, and Patroness of Ireland
(c. 453-523)
Santa_Brigida_dIrlanda-di_Cell_Dara-I
        Next to the glorious St. Patrick, St. Bridgid, whom we may consider his spiritual daughter in Christ, has ever been held in singular veneration in Ireland. She was born about the year 453, at Fochard in Ulster. During her infancy, her pious father saw in a vision men clothed in white garments pouring a sacred unguent on her head, thus prefiguring her future sanctity. While yet very young, Bridgid consecrated her life to God, bestowed everything at her disposal on the poor, and was the edification of all who knew her. She was very beautiful, and fearing that efforts might be made to induce her to break the vow by which she had bound herself to God, and to bestow her hand on one of her many suitors, she prayed that she might become ugly and deformed. Her prayer was heard, for her eye became swollen, and her whole countenance so changed that she was allowed to follow her vocation in peace, and marriage with her was no more thought of. When about twenty years old, our Saint made known to St. Mel, the nephew and disciple of St. Patrick, her intention to live only to Jesus Christ, and he consented to receive her sacred vows. On the appointed day the solemn ceremony of her profession was performed after the manner introduced by St. Patrick, the bishop offering up many prayers, and investing Bridgid with a snow-white habit, and a cloak of the same colour. While she bowed her head on this occasion to receive the veil, a miracle of a singularly striking and impressive nature occurred: that part of the wooden platform adjoining the altar on which she knelt recovered its original vitality, and put on all its former verdure, retaining it for a long time after. At the same moment Bridgid's eye was healed, and she became as beautiful and as lovely as ever.
......................



Evening Prayer 2.1.10, St. Brigid (or Bride) of Ireland, c. 523

St. Bride's, London, designed by Christopher Wren