Sunday, 1 September 2013

Lacordaire O.P. - Night Office Reading


Lacordaire o.p.,(mononymous), pupit orator
 
Night Office
Monastic Lectionary
A Word in Season, Readings for the Liturgy Hours VI..


TWENTY-SECOND WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME
SUNDAY
First Reading   2 Kings 14:1-27
Responsonory;  Mt 24:7.11-13; Eph 6:11
Nation will go to war against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. Many false prophets will arise and lead many astray, and as lawlessness spreads, most people's love will grow cold. But + whoever perseveres to the end will be saved.
v. Put on the whole armour of God, so that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. +Whoever perseveres ...

Second Reading   From a Letter by Lacordaire
Lacordaire, Lacordaire et ls Parole de Dieu: Etudesreligeuses 759, 66-67

If, taught gradually by the Church and imbued with her life-giving breath, we enter with facility of heart into that monument of truth built by God which is the Bible, we will pass under many shadows in its depths, passages where one has to bend one's head, and sublimities where our understanding will almost fail. However, supported by our unfailing companion, the Church herself, we will go from inspiration to inspiration under the firmament of the holy Word, rejoicing with it in the open plains of eternity, admiring Jesus Christ as he comes ever nearer, longing for him with the patriarchs, seeing him from afar with the prophets, greeting him with the harp of the psalms, until at last, on the threshold of the second temple, he appears to us wholly filled with his glory and death, predestined victim of the reconciliation of souls, and sovereign explication of all that is by all that was.

This vision of Jesus Christ not only fills the long roll of holy books; it interweaves great world events. The Christian sees these events therein under the hand of providence, guided by the laws of justice and grace. In this light he discerns the succession of empires, the rise and fall of great races. He realizes that neither chance nor fate mean anything, but that everything progresses under the twofold impulse of the freedom of man and the wisdom of God. This view of the true meaning of history enraptures the Christian. He gains an understanding of life which no experience could give him, because experience shows him only man, whereas the Bible reveals at one and the same time both God in man and man in God.

This revelation not only makes itself felt in the great moments of the Bible; it is there throughout. God is never absent from his work. He is in the field with Boaz, behind the daughter of Naomi, just as he is in Babylon at Belshazzar's feast. He sits by Abraham's tent as a traveler wearied by his journey, just as he dwells on the summit of Mount Sinai in the thunder proclaiming his presence. He helps Joseph in prison, just as he crowns Daniel in captivity. The smallest details of family or wilderness, the names, places, and events, all these are filled with God, and it is in the course of four millennia, from Eden to Calvary, from righteousness lost to righteousness regained, that one follows from beginning to end, step by step, all the movements of his mercy and all those of his might.

Who could remain unmoved by so great a pilgrimage?  Guided by faith along such paths, who could fail to return home a better man? The Bible is at one and the same time the drama of our destiny, the primitive history of the human race, the philosophy of saints, the legislation of a people chosen and governed by God; within the providence of four thousand years it is the preparation and the seed of the whole future of mankind; it is the storehouse of all the truth needed by man, the charter of his rights, the treasury of his hopes, the abyss of his consolations, the kiss of God upon his heart; finally, it is Christ the Son of God who has saved him.

                                                               Responsory     Rm 15:4; 2 Tm 3:16
All that was written long ago in scripture was written for our instruction,+ so that by its encouragement we might have hope.
V. All scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for refuting error, for correction, and for training in right living, +so that by its ...


Lacordaire, Henri Dominique (1802-1861) Ordained priest in 1827, he worked in association with Lammenais for the periodical L'Avenir, until its modernist teaching was condemned in the Encyclical Mirari vos in 1832. He broke with Lamennais, went to Rome and was clothed as a Dominican there in 1839. The restoration of Dominican life in France in 1850 was due to his efforts. Throughout his life he was impelled by the desire to bring Christianity to a new birth in his own age. He wrote much, including many letters to young people who sought his help. These show his skill and devotion as a spiritual director.



September Our Lady of Sorrows

Sorrowful Heart of Mary,

September, 2013 - Overview for the Month

The month of September is dedicated to Our Lady of Sorrows, whose memorial the Church celebrates on September 15. September falls during the liturgical season known as Ordinary Time, which is represented by the liturgical color green.
The Holy Father's Intentions for the Month of September 2013
General: That people today, often overwhelmed by noise, may rediscover the value of silence and listen to the voice of God and their brothers and sisters.
Missionary: That Christians suffering persecution in many parts of the world may by their witness be prophets of Christ's love. (See also www.apostleshipofprayer.net)
Feasts for September
The feasts on the General Roman Calendar celebrated during the month of September are:
1. Twenty-Second Sunday in Ordinary TimeSunday
3. Gregory the GreatMemorial
8. Twenty-Third Sunday in Ordinary TimeSunday
9. Peter Claver (USA)Memorial
12. Most Holy Name of MaryOpt. Mem.
13. John ChrysostomMemorial
14. Exaltation of the Holy CrossFeast
15. Twenty-Fourth Sunday in Ordinary TimeSunday
16. Cornelius and CyprianMemorial
17. Robert BellarmineOpt. Mem.
19. JanuariusOpt. Mem.
20. Andrew Kim Taegon, Paul Chong Hasang and CompanionsMemorial
21. MatthewFeast
22. Twenty-Fifth Sunday in Ordinary TimeSunday
23. Pio of PietrelcinaMemorial
26. Cosmas and DamianOpt. Mem.
27. Vincent de PaulMemorial
28. Wenceslaus; Lawrence Ruiz and CompanionsOpt. Mem.
29. Twenty-Six Sunday in Ordinary TimeSunday
30. JeromeMemorial
Focus of the Liturgy
The Gospels for the Sundays in September 2013 are taken from Year C, Cycle 1, the Gospel of St. Luke.
September 1st - 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time 
In this Gospel Jesus tells the parable of the wedding banquet.
September 8th - 23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time
"Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after me cannot be my disciple."
September 15th - 24th Sunday in Ordinary Time 
This Gospel relates the parable of the Prodigal Son.
September 25th - 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time 
The parable of the dishonest steward is the subject of this Gospel.
September 29th - 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time 
The Gospel tells the parable of Dives and Lazarus.
Highlights of the Month
During September, as in all of Ordinary Time (formerly known as Time After Pentecost), the Liturgy does not focus on one particular mystery of Christ, but views the mystery of Christ in all its aspects. We follow the life of Christ through the Gospels, and focus on the teachings and parables of Jesus and what it means for us to be a follower of Christ. During Ordinary Time we can concentrate more on the saints and imitate their holiness as Christ's followers.
This month the main liturgical feasts are St. Gregory the Great (September 3), St. Peter Claver (September 9), Holy Name of Mary (September 12),St. John Chrysostom ( September 13), Exaltation of the Holy Cross(September 14), Sts. Cornelius and Cyprian (September 16), St. Robert Bellarmine (September 17), St. Andrew Kim and Companions(September 20), St. Matthew (September 21), St. Pio (September 23), Sts. Cosmas and Damian(September 26), St. Vincent de Paul (September 27) and St. Jerome (September 30).
The feasts of the Birth of Mary (September 8), Our Lady of Sorrows (September 15)and Sts. Michael, Gabriel and Raphael (September 29) are superseded by the Sunday liturgy.
Month of the Harvest

Saturday, 31 August 2013

Office of Readings - The Letter of Paul to Philemon


St. Philemon
Saturday, 31 August 2013
Saturday of the Twenty-First Week in Ordinary Time

 [A Word in Season, Readings for the Liturgy Hours VI].
First Reading
The Letter of Paul to Philemon   
            Responsorv          Gal 3:26-28
You are all children of God through faith. Baptized into Christ, you have clothed yourselves in Christ. + There are no more distinctions between Jew and Greek, the slave and the free, male and female.
V. You are all one in Christ Jesus. + There are no more ...   

Second Reading   
From a commentary on Psalm 118 by Ambrose
Ambrose, Exositio in Psalmum 118, XIV, 24-26, CSEL 62 313-316

It makes a big difference whether you do what is pleasing to God willingly or from necessity. The Apostle was completely free; but freely, not from necessity, he became the servant of all in order to win over as many people as possible. He became everything to everyone not because of any legal requirement but of his own free will. He has shown me the loftiness of his intention in the letter he wrote to Philemon. Because he wished another person to be like himself, he made it clear that it was out of no necessity but of his own free will that he had returned the slave Onesimus to his master. Interceding for Onesimus, he says: "Receive him as my own heart. I should have liked to keep him with me to serve me on your behalf during my imprisonment for the gospel, but I did not want to do anything without your consent, so that your goodness might not be from compulsion but of your own free will."

How eagerly he endeavours to persuade! He was God's cho­sen instrument, yet he did not disdain to share his thoughts with another, because he did not want to do him out of his reward for doing something freely.

The Lord looks for voluntary servants. In the book of Isaiah he says: "Whom shall I send?" He could certainly have commanded his servant, whom he had found worthy of being sent, but he preferred not to do him out of his reward for making a spontaneous offering. He waited for him to offer himself; although he knew his good will, God still awaited his words so that he might earn a greater recompense. Thus it was that Isaiah volunteered, saying: "Here am I, send me," and so was sent to the people.

Jeremiah excused himself saying: "Lord God, I am not a good speaker; I am too young. " The Lord said to him: "You shall go wherever I send you and say whatever I tell you to say." The prophet made his age an excuse out of diffidence, fearing that because of his youth he would be unable to carry out the divine commands. But God judged that age should be considered in terms of character rather than years, and discerned beforehand in his youthful servant the maturity of robust wisdom. He said there­fore: "Do not say you are too young." In other words, he was not to judge his powers by thinking of his lack of years, for faith had given him the grey .hairs of wisdom. And again, when the same prophet said later: "Lord, you have deceived me, and I have been deceived." And I said: "I will not mention his name, or say anything else in his name," he added: "and there rose in my heart a burning like fire blazing in my bones, and I was completely broken and unable to bear it."

We see then that even if some have reason to think they should be excused from their office, or should refuse to undertake it, our Lord nevertheless either persuades them to think better of it, or inspires them with a desire for prophetic revelation, wishing them to undertake the office freely, not from necessity, so that they may receive a greater recompense for their total dedication.
                                                                 
Responsory      2 Cor 9:7.6
Each one should make up his or her own mind what to give and not be reluctant or feel under compulsion, + for God loves a cheerful giver.
V. Thin sowing means thin reaping; the more you sow the more you will reap,+ for God loves ...