Tuesday, 26 March 2013

Holy Week. Christ; the weight of human sin is far more difficult to bear than the physical torture of the soldiers.


www.magnificat.net/english/flip_com_oeuvre/index.asp

MAGNIFICAT Holy Week 2013-03-26. 
The Art Essay of the Month

Mocking of Christ ("1596),
Annibale Carracci (1560-1609),
Pinacoteca Nazionale, Bologna, Italy.
ROME granted Annibale Carracci's Mocking of Christ a singular honour, previously bestowed only on Raphael. This painting crowned Carracci's catafalque during his 1609 funeral at the Pantheon, just as Raphael's Transfiguration had graced his coffin in the same church a century earlier.
Unlike Raphael's monumental altarpiece, the Mocking of Christ was a smaller, more intimate work, meant for personal devotion. The commission had come from Annibale's most important patron, Cardinal Odoardo Farnese, scion of the family that had produced Pope Paul III. Never intended to embellish one of the numerous chapels endowed by the Farnese, it graced the private quarters of the cardinal's palace.
Three figures occupy the canvas expanse. Christ dominates the scene, his head and shoulders filling the centre; one soldier reaches from the lower right corner to place a crown of thorns upon his brow, while another, immersed in shadows, turns, perhaps to call his comrades. The frame encloses only the heads and shoulders, focusing our attention tightly. We find ourselves standing, perhaps uncomfortably, at the heart of the action.
The Gospels describe how Pilate ordered the scourging of Christ before handing him over to be crucified. After the flagellation, the Roman soldiers laid a purple mantle over his soldiers, thrust a reed in his hands, and fashioned a crown of thorns which they pushed on his head, while mocking him with salutes and bows as King of the Jews..
In Carracci's scene, the battalion of sol­diers is reduced to two, but in this close-up the viewer perceives Jesus' pain more intensely. No longer are we bystanders watching from a safe distance, as in Renaissance frescoes. Annibale thrusts us to the forefront. One might easily imagine oneself as one of the soldiers in the realisation of how our own sinfulness makes a mockery of Christ's great love for us.

Annibale's brush erases the welts from the scourge, leaving pristine the flesh of Christ. Only his face reveals his suffering; Christ appears exhausted, as if the weight of human sin is far more difficult to bear than the physical torture of the soldiers.
Carracci did not ignore the written Scriptures lightly. As one of the preferred painters of Counter Reformation patrons, he was keenly aware of how the Church prized fidelity to the Gospels in art. As a Christian and a proponent of artistic naturalism, Carracci's decision to omit the blood shed by Christ and the lacerations of his flesh carried deeper meaning.
Carracci was the forerunner of a new breed of artist, one who would be able to flank theologians and preachers in trying to render the Gospel more vivid and personal to a pub­lic rocked by the Protestant Reformation. One of Annibale Carraccci's closest advisors was Archbishop Giovanni Battista Agucchi, member of the innermost court of Pope Clement VIII. This pope, who had led the Church into the Jubilee year of 1600, fervently believed that art and beauty could inspire the faithful to spiritual greatness. Archbishop Agucchi, consulting with Carracci and his circle, wrote a treatise on beauty and art to guide future generations of painters to use their talents for evangelisation.


 Carracci's Christ radiates beauty. He is luminous while his tormentors are swarthy, his hair curls softly around his shoulders, and his fingers are long and elegant. The red mantle cascading from his shoulders evokes his mortal flesh and his human blood shed for us.
The gnarled fist that presses the crown on Christ's head forms a dramatic contrast with his graceful hands bound by the Roman rope.
Christ's serene beauty draws us to him.
We gaze easily upon his fair features and are all the more outraged to see the soldiers mar his noble face with their rough hands and vicious thorns. He is surrounded by ugliness, cruelty, and ignorance, but the reality of their brutality cannot outshine the beauty of his truth.
Cardinal Ratzinger, addressing a meeting in Rimini in 2002, spoke of beauty and truth in terms that seem intended for Annibale's painting.
"In the Passion of Christ," he said, "the experi­ence of the beautiful has received new depth and new realism. The One who is Beauty itself permitted himself to be slapped in the face, spat upon, crowned with thorns."
The most powerful aspect of Carracci's painting, however, is Christ's expression. Head bowed with weariness, eyes heavy with pain, Jesus nonetheless confronts his aggressor. His face bears neither defiance nor rancour, but profound compassion. From the depths of his suffering, Christ understands the human condition even better. His hands, bound by his captors, do not struggle to break free or remove the crown from his head, but reach out, even at this extreme moment, to draw another soul to himself. Annibale painted the ultimate form of self-giving, il­lustrating the words of John the Evangelist, "now he showed how perfect his love was" (Jn 13:1).
Annibale left a vacant space between Christ and his persecutor, meant to be filled by the viewer. As we stand before it, the outstretched hand of Christ reaches for us, whose sins are like the thorns pressing into his flesh, to call us out of our darkness and into his light.
Elizabeth Lev Writer and professor of art history in Rome, Italy.
To view this masterpiece in greater detail, visit: www.magnificat.com


Jn. 12:1-11 Bl. John-Paul II "A liter of costly perfumed oil" - Blogspot

Bethany 
Blessed John-Paul II   "A liter of costly perfumed oil"  - Blogspot



An interest inquiry into  

MaryWhoAnointsJesus?

JESUS’ ANOINTING IN BETHANY
                                               GOSPEL ACCOUNTS 


----- Forwarded Message -----
From: DGO ...
Sent: 
Sunday, 24 March 2013.
Subject: The Daily Gospel

John 12:3 Then Mary took about a pint of pure nard, an expensive ...

bible.cc/john/12-3.htm
Mary then took a pound of very costly perfume of pure nard, and anointed the feet of ...Then Mary took three quarters of a pound of expensive aromatic oil from .... The other six days before his last passover, at Bethany; the account of whom is ...
 
Blessed John-Paul II, Pope from 1978 to 2005 
Apostolic Exhortation « Vita Consecrata », § 104 (trans. © copyright Libreria Editrice Vaticana)                                        
                                                                                      
"A liter of costly perfumed oil"

Many people today are puzzled and ask: What is the point of the consecrated life? Why embrace this kind of life, when there are so many urgent needs... to which one can respond even without assuming the particular commitments of the consecrated life? Is the consecrated life not a kind of "waste" of human energies which might be used more efficiently for a greater good, for the benefit of humanity and the Church?... But such questions have always existed, as is eloquently demonstrated by the Gospel episode of the anointing at Bethany: "Mary took a pound of costly ointment of pure nard and anointed the feet of Jesus and wiped his feet with her hair; and the house was filled with the fragrance of the ointment". When Judas, using the needs of the poor as an excuse, complained about such waste, Jesus replied: "Let her alone!"

This is the perennially valid response to the question which many people, even in good faith, are asking about the relevance of the consecrated life... "Let her alone!" Those who have been given the priceless gift of following the Lord Jesus more closely consider it obvious that he can and must be loved with an undivided heart, that one can devote to him one's whole life, and not merely certain actions or occasional moments or activities. The precious ointment poured out as a pure act of love, and thus transcending all "utilitarian" considerations, is a sign of unbounded generosity, as expressed in a life spent in loving and serving the Lord, in order to devote oneself to his person and his Mystical Body. From such a life "poured out" without reserve there spreads a fragrance which fills the whole house. The house of God, the Church, today no less than in the past, is adorned and enriched by the presence of the consecrated life... The consecrated life is important precisely in its being unbounded generosity and love, and this all the more so in a world which risks being suffocated in the whirlpool of the ephemeral.
   
   

Messiah Communications


http://messiahcommunications.blogspot.co.uk/p/mary-of-bethany-vs-mary-magdalene.html


MaryWhoAnointsJesus?

By Alan John Meister

                                    JESUS’ ANOINTING IN BETHANY
                                               GOSPEL ACCOUNTS

                                                  COMMENTARY

 Although each of the Gospels relate this event and its circumstances a little differently, when all the Gospels are taken together, we get a composite picture of the account. Moreover, when we examine the inclusions or omissions of each Gospel, we get a good picture of the thematic approach of each Gospel writer. So lets begin by looking at some of the major variations.

First, the timing of the scene. The Johannine Gospel indicates this scene took place six days before Passover, "Six days before Passover Jesus came to Bethany (John 12:1)." This places it on the Monday (six days from the Passover) before the crucifixion of Jesus. Matthew and Mark seems to indicate it took place only two days before the Passover, "You know that in two days' time it will be Passover (Matt. 26:2)," or "The Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread were to take place in two days' time (Mark 14:1)."  But, the literary style of Matthean and Markan Gospels appears to reflecting on a prior event (they are in the past tense). Consequently, the Matthean and Markan texts reflect on the event “after” its occurrence, i..e, having previously occurred in the order of the gospel events. Furthermore these gospels moved the account in order to stress the event as an anointing to prepare Jesus for his death and burial.

Monday, 25 March 2013

Monday of Holy Week 2013 A Word in Season 2001

Exercise: Navigate through Newman's PPS, Parochial and Plain Sermons

http://www.newmanreader.org/works/parochial/volume7/sermon10.html



Newman Reader - Parochial & Plain Sermons 7 - Sermon 10

www.newmanreader.org/works/parochial/.../sermon10.html
7. {133} ST. PETER makes it almost a description of a Christian, that he loves Him whom he has not seen; speaking of Christ, he says, "whom having not seen, ...

John Henry Newman «Enlarging the Heart Enlarging the Heart

enlargingtheheart.wordpress.com/.../john-henry-newman/
Jan 11, 2013 – John Henry Cardinal Newman (1801-1890): Sermons on Subjects of the Day, ... John Henry Cardinal Newman (1801-1890): Parochial and Plain Sermons, vol. 5, Sermon 4: Shrinking from Christ's Coming. .... John Henry Newman: The Cross of Christ So Wounds As to Heal Also Saturday, Apr 7 2012 ...

[2nd Reading, A Word in Season Lectern, 'Remember me, Lord', title and  selection as back coloured, thus],  

Sermon 10. The Crucifixion Seasons - Holy Week

"He was oppressed, and He was afflicted, yet He opened not His mouth; He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so He opened not His mouth." Isaiah liii. 7.
{133} ST. PETER makes it almost a description of a Christian, that he loves Him whom he has not seen; speaking of Christ, he says, "whom having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see Him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory." Again he speaks of "tasting that the Lord is gracious." [1 Pet. i. 8; ii. 3.] Unless we have a true love of Christ, we are not His true disciples; and we cannot love Him unless we have heartfelt gratitude to Him; and we cannot duly feel gratitude, unless we feel keenly what He suffered for us. I say it seems to us impossible, under the circumstances of the case, that any one can have attained to the love of Christ, who feels no distress, no misery, at the thought of His bitter pains, and no self-reproach at {134} having through his own sins had a share in causing them.
I know quite well, and wish you, my brethren, never to forget, that feeling is not enough; that it is not enough merely to feel and nothing more; that to feel grief for Christ's sufferings, and yet not to go on to obey him, is not true love, but a mockery. True love both feels right, and acts right; but at the same time as warm feelings without religious conduct are a kind of hypocrisy, so, on the other hand, right conduct, when unattended with deep feelings, is at best a very imperfect sort of religion. And at this time of year [Note 1] especially are we called upon to raise our hearts to Christ, and to have keen feelings and piercing thoughts of sorrow and shame, of compunction and of gratitude, of love and tender affection and horror and anguish, at the review of those awful sufferings whereby our salvation has been purchased.
Let us pray God to give us all graces; and while, in the first place, we pray that He would make us holy, really holy, let us also pray Him to give us the beauty of holiness, which consists in tender and eager affection towards our Lord and Saviour: which is, in the case of the Christian, what beauty of person is to the outward man, so that through God's mercy our souls may have, not strength and health only, but a sort of bloom and comeliness; and that as we grow older in body, we may, year by year, grow more youthful in spirit. {135}
You will ask, how are we to learn to feel pain and anguish at the thought of Christ's sufferings? I answer, by thinking of them, that is, by dwelling on the thought. This, through God's mercy, is in the power of every one. No one who will but solemnly think over the history of those sufferings, as drawn out for us in the Gospels, but will gradually gain, through God's grace, a sense of them, will in a measure realize them, will in a measure be as if he saw them, will feel towards them as being not merely a tale written in a book, but as a true history, as a series of events which took place. It is indeed a great mercy that this duty which I speak of, though so high, is notwithstanding so level with the powers of all classes of persons, learned and unlearned, if they wish to perform it.

Events of Holy Week unfold 2013



Dear William,
Thank you for the mail that came on Saturday an the eve of Palm Sunday.
 for Holy Week is gloriously enfolding the whole Paschal Mystery.
As the postman, alias sacristan, I was happy to bring your greeting card to each of monks.
We share 'as the events of the Holy Week unfold.
And in the love of the Risen Lord.
fr. Donald

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William W ...
To:  . . .
Sent: Friday, 22 March 2013, 16:40
Subject: Palm Sunday and Holy Week

Dear Fathers,
I have posted my greeting cards to arrive in time to unite with you on Palm Sunday. Not a traditional Easter celebration card, it is in fact a Holy Week greeting, that I may unite with you in the journey of Our Lord across those last days.
In case the post goes awry, I attach to this email images of the card with my seasonal reflection printed on the back.
I created this card using a photograph of a particular pastel drawing of Our Lord (my printer failing to reproduce it satisfactorily), which I have carried in my pocket file-book for thirty years! There are similar pastel drawings on the internet by the same artist, but I have never been able to find exactly the same haunting image. I came across an identical print in a little copy of the ‘Imitation of Christ’ just before Christmas when browsing in the second hand book shop, and I bought the book in order to have a new (more respectable!) copy of the pastel so that I could photograph it to share it with you for Easter! As to my reflection, 'Newness of Life', it tells of a fascination that has arisen in my mind and heart, of a deepening awareness that everything in our life connects with the life of Jesus - as uniquely in so many 'parallel' occurrences in his life, his very experience of creation. Thus have my thoughts wandered.
  
Very few Easter daffodils flowering here in the surrounding parkland! I watch on the weather forecast as the snow clouds settle over East Lothian, and imagine the snow all around you, blanketing you with its stillness. I pray that you haven't been cut off, isolated from supplies and support, but that you are feeling the benefit of the new windows, and ? new boiler. I felt such prayerful concern for you all when that awful bout of flu laid so many low, and pray that all may be well for you all to be together for the start of Holy Week.
An early summer retreat whispers its way into conversations . . . 
With my greetings
and my love in Our Lord,
William


ECCE HOMO !





From the pastel hung in the Corsini Palace, Rome

By GUIDO RENI (1575-1642)

Guido Reni produced such sermons in art as have profoundly moved the generations of men throughout the world ever since his time. Here is one of the most poignant pictures ever conceived and produced showing the "Man of Sorrows" in one of the acutest phases of His suffering:




Then Pilate took Jesus, and scourged him. The soldiers platted a crown of thorns, and put it on his head, and put on him a purple robe. Jesus then came out, wearing the crown of thorns and purple robe, and Pilate said to them,

'Behold the man”. (John19:1-6)


Guido painted innumerable pictures which are to be seen in all principal European galleries. He studied under Calvaert and Ludovico Caracci, and went to Rome in 1599 and again in 1605. Here he worked for the Church, and one can imagine that the prelates welcomed him as a painter who could move souls and stir the imaginations of their congregations. He left the Eternal City and migrated to Bologna, where he died in 1642.





   My kingdom is not from this world. For this I was born, and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.
(John 18:36ff)




Easter Greetings
                (Colossians 1:15ff Amplified Bible – extracts)
“He is the exact likeness and the visible representation of the unseen God, the Firstborn of all creation, for all things were created and exist through him: and he is the Firstborn from among the dead, so that he alone in every respect might be preeminent: for it has pleased the Father that all the divine fullness, the total of the divine perfection, should permanently dwell in him, and God purposed that through his Son’s intervention, all things should be completely reconciled back to Himself, whether on earth or in heaven, as through him the Father made peace by means of the blood of his cross.”                                               
Uniting with you as we approach
the Joy of the Easter Celebration
in the love of Our Lord




Newness of Life
Parallels to the life of Jesus in the life of one who believes in His divinity have significance far beyond that of shared human experience: His incarnation gives true meaning to our earthly existence; His baptism and temptation, His ministry, His death and resurrection, all offer vocational interpretation for our faith. As each event in His life links one with another, the Spirit presents different aspects that draw us to Him in newness of life.
It  was essential that He be made like His brethren in every respect, in order that He might become a merciful sympathetic and faithful High Priest in the things related to God, to make atonement and propitiation for the people’s sins.[Heb 2:17 - AMP]



 I love to stand in the shadows of the garden and watch with Our Lady
As lovingly she sheds her soulful tears over Your lifeless body,
And listen as the grinding stone is rolled across the entrance to the tomb
Concealing the meaning of Your life shrouded in the mystery of death

Wrapped in grave clothes and placed in a lonely rock-hewn tomb
Where no one has ever been lain, life-giving Saviour rejected as before
When You were wrapped in swaddling clothes and lain in a manger
Where no room was to be found in man’s heart, God most abject of all

First born of all creation, You came to reveal the human side of God
Exposed to the experience of the whole of man’s earthly existence,
Curator of the eternal promises to bring healing and redemption
By Your death and glorious resurrection, first born from the dead

And so I ran to the upper room to bury my face in my chrisom-cloth*
But it was gone – I saw it wrapped around Your head in the tomb
There to be rolled up in a place by itself as You arose from the dead,
By baptism bound to You in death, unbound to live in newness of life


* chrisom-cloth - a white robe put on a child at baptism, used as its shroud if it died


We were buried with Him by the baptism into death, so that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glorious power of the Father, so we too might habitually live in newness of life  [Rom 6:4 – AMP].

Henceforth I live to and for God. I have been crucified with Christ - in Him I have shared His crucifixion; it is no longer I who live, but Christ the Messiah who lives in me; and the life I now live in the body I live by faith and complete trust in the Son of God, Who loved me and gave Himself up for me. [Gal 2:19b-20 – AMP] 


Sunday, 24 March 2013

Hosanna ! Blessed is the Kingdom that is to come ! » (Mk 11,9-10)



Hi, William,
We are snowed deep, almost impossible for parking for the congregarion if they can come to for the Palm Procession, Passion and Mass.
Thank you for the E-mail on the Palm Sunday COMMMENT. 
Addding on the DGO (We)Blog.
Blessings for Holy Week.
 fr. Donald

Palm Procession ready
lectern and Holy Water
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William W...
To: Donald. ....
Sent: Sunday, 24 March 2013, 9:33
Subject: DGO - Palm Sunday commentary - remarkable words

Dear Father Donald,
 
I am thrilling at the words on DGO of Saint Cyril of Alexandria (380-444), Bishop, Doctor of the Church (trans. breviary 05/08)  Homily 13 ; PG 77, 1049 
« Hosanna ! Blessed is the Kingdom that is to come ! » (Mk 11,9-10)
 
He is not coming accompanied by the invisible powers of heaven and legions of angels; nor is he seated on a throne lifted high and raised up, overshadowed by the wings of seraphim, with a chariot of fire and beings with numerous eyes, making everything shake with terrifying displays and the sound of trumpets. He comes concealed in human nature. It is a coming of goodness, not justice; of pardon, not reprisal. He appears, not in his Father's glory but in his mother's humility.
 
Such a thought as will hasten me through this day to run to the gates of the city!
 
With my love in Our Lord,
 
William
  

Commentary of the day : 

Saint Cyril of Alexandria (380-444), Bishop, Doctor of the Church (trans. breviary 05/08) 
Homily 13 ; PG 77, 1049 

« Hosanna ! Blessed is the Kingdom that is to come ! » (Mk 11,9-10)
Brethren, let us celebrate today the coming of our King, let us go before him since he is also our God... Let us lift up our hearts to God and not quench our spirits, let us light our lamps with joy and change the clothing of our souls. Let us take palms in our hands like victors and, like the common people, acclaim him with the crowd. With the children let us sing with a childlike heart: “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!”... On this very day he enters Jerusalem; the cross is made ready once more, Adam's bond is obliterated; once more paradise is opened and the thief is taken in; once more the Church makes festival...

He is not coming accompanied by the invisible powers of heaven and legions of angels; nor is he seated on a throne lifted high and raised up, overshadowed by the wings of seraphim, with a chariot of fire and beings with numerous eyes, making everything shake with terrifying displays and the sound of trumpets. He comes concealed in human nature. It is a coming of goodness, not justice; of pardon, not reprisal. He appears, not in his Father's glory but in his mother's humility. Zechariah, the prophet, foretold this coming in former times; he summoned all creation to rejoice...: “Rejoice heartily, O daughter Zion!” It was the very word the Archangel Gabriel had declared to the Virgin: “Rejoice!...”, the same message, too, that our Savior announced to the holy women after his resurrection: “Rejoice”...

“Shout for joy, O daughter Jerusalem! See, your king is coming to you; a just savior is he, meek and riding on an ass, on a colt the foal of an ass”... What does that mean? He does not come in splendor like every other king. He comes in the condition of a servant, of a loving bridegroom, a most gentle lamb, a dewdrop on the fleece, a sheep led to the slaughter, an innocent lamb taken to sacrifice... Today the children of the Hebrews run before him, offering their olive branches to him who is merciful and, with joy, welcoming death's conqueror with palms. “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!”

(Biblical references : 1Th 5,19; Mt 25,7; Mt 21,15; Col 2,14; Lk 23,43; Ez 1,4f.; Ex 19, 16s; Zec 9,9; Lk 1,28; Mt 28,9 Gk; Ph 2,7; Jn 1,29; Jg 6,37; Jr 11,19; Is 53,7)