Dom Donald's Blog
  • Home
  • Sermons
  • Psalm 118
  • Nunraw Abbey Shop

Thursday, 27 February 2014

Charles Dumont: Monk-Poet, Caldey - Waves, Holy Waves

COMMENT: Community Reading in the Chapter before Compline. The Biography of Fr. Charles Dumont, ocso, Scourmont Abbey, proves to the be best book  giving us the most impressive account of contemporary Cistercians (Trappist) monks.


Charles Dumont: Monk-Poet
In the School of Charity with Bernard and Aelred          115

Other activities were also occupying Fr. Charles. For one thing, he had to get to work seriously on material on Saint Bernard and the Blessed Virgin Mary to be presented at the Faculté des Religions et des Humanismes laiques of the Inter-University Center for Formation, in Charleroi." These talks, scheduled for the middle of January, required careful preparation because he was to speak to Christians and non-Christians, agnostics and atheists. He chose as title: Saint Bernard, monk, poet and mystic of Our Lady. In his first lecture, he entered into his subject with soft steps:

I thank you for inviting me to speak to you about Saint Bernard and what he thought, meditated and wrote on the Virgin Mary. I must first tell you that I come as a monk, without any university qualification. So I will speak about doctrinal theology only to the extent that it helps us to situate Saint Bernard and understand what he sang, prayed and contemplated .... It is that Bernard whom I am going to present to you, hoping that you will love him. . .
Before plunging into the subject, let me quote Solzhenitsyn. The scene is a woman history professor in Moscow explaining her course to the Marxist girls in her class: “To reject the Middle Ages means to break up western history, and then nothing comprehensible remains in the contemporary frag­ment. . . So what was more important? Oh, if you want to know what was most important during the Middle Ages, it is the spiritual life, a spiritual life of such intensity that it outweighs material existence, so that humanity has never known anything like it either before or after.”  




.......................  Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn  Novelist

  • Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn was an eminent Russian novelist, historian, and tireless critic of Soviet totalitarianism. He helped to raise global awareness of the gulag and the Soviet Union's forced labour camp system. Wikipedia     .............................................................................


  • Page 118
    Charles Dumont: Monk-Poet
    .. (5.16.92). \'\Then he was quite well again he and Br. Pierre-Andre set out for Caldey. On their peregrinations they had long discussions which included, of course, the subject of contemplative identity:
    As regards the challenge of modern mentality, this is a very confusing term–not because of the translation but because of the very ideal! Why should we compete with worldly values that's out of date! We have been intimidated during the last twenty years by worldly values. . . This is not the language of the first two chapters of the First Letter to the Corinthians. The two wisdoms are not on the same wave length. (4.3.92)

    Visiting Caldey always brought back memories. The sea, especially, enchanted him. Enjoying some solitude on the island he wrote a poem, one of the few he wrote in English:  


    Waves, Holy Waves
    O the waves by night
    So calmly kissing
    The sand of my life.

    Majestic drum of time
    Bordering silence eternal.

    O gentle silver edge
    Slowly gliding on my past,
    Compassionate waves
    Take away the sins of the world.

    Ocean of love
    Sea of boundless heart
    By the fingers of your tender waves
    Touch my restless mind,

    Grant us peace.

    About 321,000 results (on Google) 

    Search Results

    1. Images for The sea at Caldey

       - Report images

    Posted by Fr Donald at 16:53 No comments:
    Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
    Labels: Poems

    Symeon the New Theologian - calling the Holy Spirit a treasure.

    Ann Persson is the author of The Circle of Love:  Praying with Rublev's Icon of the Trinity -see below. 


    Night Office, Patristic Lectionary,  Augustine Press 1999
    Seventh Week in Ordinary Time Year II Thursday
    First Reading
    2 Corinthians 4:5-18  

     Responsory     2 Cor 4:6; Dt 5:24
    God has said: Let light shine out of darkness. + He has shone in our hearts that we might make known the glory of God shining on the face of Christ Jesus.
    V. The Lord our God has shown us his glory and greatness, and we have heard his voice. + He has shone...

    Second Reading
    From a treatise by Saint Symeon the New Theologian (Traites Theologiques et Ethiques J, 10: se 122, 252-254)
    We receive the Word of God in our hearts - calling the Holy Spirit a treasure
    Everyone of us believes in him who is the Son of God and son of Mary, ever-virgin and mother of God. And as believers we faithfully welcome his gospel into our hearts, confessing in words our belief, and repenting with all our soul of our past sins. Then immediately, just as God the Word of the Father entered the Virgin's womb, so also in ourselves the word which we receive in learning right belief appears like a seed. You should be amazed when you hear of such an awe-inspiring mystery, and because the word is reliable you should receive it with full conviction and faith.

    In fact we receive him not bodily, as the Virgin and Mother of God received him, but both spiritually and substantially. And the very one whom the chaste Virgin also received, we hold in our own hearts, as Saint Paul says: It is God, who commanded light to shine out of darkness, who has shown in our hearts to reveal the knowledge of his Son. In other words: he has become wholly substantial in us. And that he actually meant this, he made clear in the next verse: But we contain this treasure in earthenware pots, calling the Holy Spirit a treasure. But elsewhere he also calls the Lord Spirit: The Lord is the Spirit, he says. And he tells us this so that if you hear the words the Son of God, you should think of and hear the words the Spirit at the same time. Again, if you hear the Spirit mentioned you should join the Father to the Spirit in thought, because con­cerning the Father too it is said: God is Spirit. You are constantly taught that the Holy Trinity is inseparable and of the same substance, and that where the Son is the Father is also, and where the Father is the Spirit is also, and where the Holy Spirit is the whole of the deity in three persons is, the one God and Father with Son and Spirit of the same substance, "who is praised for ever. Amen."

    So if we wholeheartedly believe and ardently repent, we receive the Word of God in our hearts, as has been said, like the Virgin, if of course we bring with us our own souls chaste and pure. And just as the fire of the deity did not consume the Virgin since she was supremely pure, so neither does it consume us if we bring with us chaste and pure hearts; on the contrary it becomes in us the dew from heaven, a spring of water, and a stream of immortal life.
      
    Symeon the New Theologian (949-1022), born in Galata in Paphlagonia, Symeon was educated in Constantinople, where in 977 he entered the famous monastery of Studios. Soon afterward he transferred to the nearby monastery of Saint Mamas, was ordained priest in 980, and about three years later became abbot. During his twenty-five years of office he instilled a new fervor into his community, but opposition to his teaching forced him to resign in 1005 and in 1009 he was exiled to Palonkiton on the other side of the Bosphorus. He turned the ruined oratory of Saint Marina into another monastery, and although he was soon pardoned, chose to remain there until his death rather than compromise his teaching. The greatest of Byzantine mystical writers, Symeon combined the contemplative tradition of Mount Sinai with the cenobitic tradition of Saint Basil and Saint Theodore of Studios. Symeon was much influenced by the homilies attributed to Macarius of Egypt, and taught that mystical experience of God is a normal part of a truly Christian life. For him this meant having a personal relationship with Christ dwelling in us through the Spirit. Symeon is called the "new" theologian to distinguish him from Saint Gregory Nazianzen, who has the title of "the theologian."


    Ann Persson is the author of The Circle of Love: 
    Praying with Rublev's Icon of the Trinity 
    We can trust the Holy Spirit to lead us into worship, not of the icon but of the Godhead that it portrays.
    Although the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are of one essence, nevertheless there are individual distinctions, and Rublev makes that wonderfully plain to see.

    God the Holy Spirit

    We will start following the movement around the circle with the figure on the right, the Holy Spirit. He is the one who leads us in and interprets the life of God to us. He is dressed in a blue tunic with a gorgeous light-green mantle, probably painted in terre verte pigment, otherwise known as 'green earth'. Green is the liturgical colour of Pentecost in the Orthodox Church and the symbolic colour of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit, who breathes life, wears colours that speak of creation. Blue reminds us of sky and water; green speaks of vegetation. All living things owe their freshness to his touch. 
    ...
    His is the only stave that is seen in its full length, as if it is pointing towards earth. His hand gives the impression of not only blessing the cup of sacrifice but also of indicating downwards, for he is the one who breathes the life of God into us. His action is to transform us and it is through him that we are invited to experience new life in Christ.

    Above the Spirit is a mountain. Maybe the mountain represents faith, a gift of the Holy Spirit or the meeting places where God revealed his glory, such as Mount Sinai, where he appeared to Moses, or the mount of transfiguration, where Jesus was seen in glory by three of his disciples.

    As the icon is based on the story of Abraham, however, perhaps the mountain represents Mount Moriah, on which Isaac, the promised son in the story, would be offered for sacrifice–Abraham's response to a test that God devised to prove his faith. The story is recorded in Genesis 22 and it is a foreshadowing of the greater story of the triune God's self-sacrificing love in the giving of the Son to be our Saviour.
    The curvature of the body and the bowed head of the figure on the right draw us into the circle and lead us towards the central figure, whom I have taken to be Christ the Son. The Spirit does not let us stay with himself. His work is to reveal God the Father through God the Son.

    Posted by Fr Donald at 11:03 No comments:
    Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
    Labels: Night Office Readings, Theology
    Newer Posts Older Posts Home
    Subscribe to: Comments (Atom)

    Abbey Shop

    Reception Entrance to

    The Abbey Shop

    Open Daily 2pm to 4.30pm and after Mass on Sundays.

    It is situated directly above the Reception room.

    • Home
    • Psalm 118
    • Sermons

    Bernard 900 at Citeaux

    O.C.S.O. Order of Cistercians
    of the the Strict Observance

    Vocations Year 2012-2013

    The ninth centenary of St Bernard’s entry into the Abbey of Cîteaux

    Monday, 06 August 2012

    On the occasion of the ninth centenary of St Bernard’s entry into the Abbey of Cîteaux, Dom Olivier, abbot of Cîteaux, has asked us to pass on the following invitation to all the members of the Order:

    Our community is going to celebrate the ninth centenary of St Bernard’s entering Cîteaux (1112 or 1113?). To mark the event, we are setting up a campaign of prayer for vocations, from 20th August 2012 to 20th August 2013. We invite you to join us with this prayer:

    PRAYER FOR VOCATIONS

    Most gracious Father,
    in setting up the New Monasteryour fathers followed the poor Christ into the desert.
    Thus they lived the Gospel
    by rediscovering the Rule of Saint Benedict in its purity.

    You gave Bernard of Fontaine
    the ability to make this new life attractive and appealing to others,
    in the joy of the Holy Spirit.

    Grant that we today, after their example,
    may live our charism deeply
    in a spirit of peace, unity, humility,
    and above all, in the charity which surpasses all other gifts.
    May men and women of our time
    be newly called to follow the Gospel in monastic life,
    in the service of the Church’s mission,
    and in a world forgetful of You.

    Remember Lord, Cîteaux,

    where Bernard arrived with his companions.
    May the brothers there
    continue to live in the enthusiastic and generative spirit of the founders.

    Remember all who live the Cistercian charism.

    Remember all Cistercian communities,
    those which are aging and those newly-born,
    in all parts of the world, north and south, east and west.

    Let them not lose courage in times of trial,
    but turn to her whom Bernard called the Star of the Sea.

    Holy Father,
    from whom we have already received so much,
    grant us again your blessing
    that our communities may grow in numbers,
    but above all in grace and in wisdom,
    to your glory,
    who are blessed for ever and ever.

    Amen.

    900 years, anniversary

    Bernard arrived 1112-1113

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Fra_bartolomeo_02_Vision_of_St_Bernard_with_Sts_Benedict_and_John_the_Evangelist.jpg

    Dom Donald's Blog

    Followers

    Nunraw Abbey

    Nunraw Abbey
    Scotland

    Nunraw Abbey - Divine Offices

    Night Office

    Vigils & Meditation 3.30 am

    Lauds 6.30 am .

    Weekdays Community Mass & Terce 8.00 am.

    Sext 11.45 a.m.

    None 2.00 pm

    Vespers 6.00

    Compline 7.30

    ____________________________

    Sunday, None 8.45 am.

    Sunday Community Mass
    (Holidays of Obligation) 11.00 am.

    None 2.00 pm

    Vespers 6.00

    Compline 7.30

    Please check special Season Times.

    Nunraw

    Nunraw
    Monastic chapel

    Blog Archive

    • ▼  2016 (2)
      • ▼  March (1)
        • St John Ogilvie A Reading about
      • ►  January (1)
    • ►  2015 (298)
      • ►  November (14)
      • ►  October (37)
      • ►  September (49)
      • ►  August (29)
      • ►  July (13)
      • ►  June (23)
      • ►  May (32)
      • ►  April (16)
      • ►  March (24)
      • ►  February (27)
      • ►  January (34)
    • ►  2014 (440)
      • ►  December (59)
      • ►  November (35)
      • ►  October (32)
      • ►  September (32)
      • ►  August (32)
      • ►  July (37)
      • ►  June (33)
      • ►  May (31)
      • ►  April (39)
      • ►  March (33)
      • ►  February (30)
      • ►  January (47)
    • ►  2013 (496)
      • ►  December (38)
      • ►  November (36)
      • ►  October (38)
      • ►  September (33)
      • ►  August (41)
      • ►  July (30)
      • ►  June (35)
      • ►  May (44)
      • ►  April (39)
      • ►  March (52)
      • ►  February (43)
      • ►  January (67)
    • ►  2012 (389)
      • ►  December (51)
      • ►  November (26)
      • ►  October (50)
      • ►  September (38)
      • ►  August (35)
      • ►  July (24)
      • ►  June (40)
      • ►  May (37)
      • ►  April (31)
      • ►  March (26)
      • ►  February (15)
      • ►  January (16)
    • ►  2011 (380)
      • ►  December (20)
      • ►  November (26)
      • ►  October (24)
      • ►  September (43)
      • ►  August (40)
      • ►  July (42)
      • ►  June (26)
      • ►  May (36)
      • ►  April (33)
      • ►  March (33)
      • ►  February (24)
      • ►  January (33)
    • ►  2010 (387)
      • ►  December (37)
      • ►  November (34)
      • ►  October (37)
      • ►  September (44)
      • ►  August (41)
      • ►  July (28)
      • ►  June (36)
      • ►  May (26)
      • ►  April (28)
      • ►  March (29)
      • ►  February (19)
      • ►  January (28)
    • ►  2009 (197)
      • ►  December (26)
      • ►  November (23)
      • ►  October (22)
      • ►  September (19)
      • ►  August (21)
      • ►  July (12)
      • ►  June (18)
      • ►  May (22)
      • ►  April (11)
      • ►  March (11)
      • ►  February (4)
      • ►  January (8)
    • ►  2008 (98)
      • ►  December (10)
      • ►  November (4)
      • ►  October (1)
      • ►  August (10)
      • ►  July (3)
      • ►  June (11)
      • ►  May (16)
      • ►  April (8)
      • ►  March (14)
      • ►  February (10)
      • ►  January (11)
    • ►  2007 (79)
      • ►  December (14)
      • ►  November (10)
      • ►  October (14)
      • ►  September (16)
      • ►  August (18)
      • ►  July (3)
      • ►  June (4)

    Donald Blogspot

    • AD2000 Aus Magazine
    • Abbey of Novy Dvur
    • Abbey of Saint-Joseph de Clairval
    • Adoremus Bulletin
    • All Saints and All Souls of the Benedictine Order
    • Anima Christi
    • Benedictine Daughters of the Divne Will - Luisa Carretta
    • Bible Scripture Net
    • Biblical Greek
    • Biblical History
    • Biblos
    • British Catholic Blog
    • CN CathNews (Aus)
    • Cath Info Net
    • CathNews Asia
    • Catholic Blog Directory
    • Catholic Convert
    • Catholic Culture Liturgy
    • Catholic Doors Ministry
    • Catholic Encyclopedia
    • Catholic News Agency
    • Catholic Online
    • Catholic Treasure Chest
    • Catholic Web Spiritual Life
    • Catholicism Org
    • Christian Classics
    • Christus Rex et Redemptor Mundi
    • Cistercian Abbey OL of Atlas
    • Cistercian Bamenda Abbey Cameroon
    • Cistercian Betlehem Abbey N. Ireland
    • Cistercian Bolton Abbey Ireland
    • Cistercian Caldey Abbey Wales
    • Cistercian Glencairn Vocations
    • Cistercian Latroun Abbey Israel
    • Cistercian Mellifont Abbey IE
    • Cistercian Mount Melleray Abbey
    • Cistercian Mount Saint Bernard Abbey England
    • Cistercian Nunraw Abbey Scotland
    • Cistercian Order of the Strict Observance (Trappists)
    • Cistercian Priory Midelt Morocco
    • Cistercian Roscrea Abbey
    • Cistercian Whitland Abbey Wales
    • Cistercian pre-Foundation Norway
    • Cistercians Wiki
    • Collegeville Catholic Web
    • Contemplative Vocation Station
    • Daily Gospel
    • Daughter of the King
    • Deacon John's Posterous
    • Divine Office Latin VatII
    • Divine Will
    • EWTN
    • Early Church Fathers
    • Enlarge the Heart
    • Felix Just
    • Fr Nivard's Blog
    • Fr Z. What Does the Prayer Realy Say
    • Free Library
    • Full of Grace and Truth Blogspot
    • Furness Abbey
    • Holy Spirit Interactive Online
    • Independent Catholic News
    • Jesus Christ Savior
    • Knox Bible ('you' version)
    • Neve Shalom Israel
    • Nsugbe Priory
    • Once I was a Clever Boy
    • Order of Anglican Cistercians
    • Our Lady of Sprinbank
    • Patrology Online
    • Poor Clares Faughart
    • Poor Clares Wales
    • SQPN Star Quest Production Network.
    • Saint of the Day
    • Shrine of Holy Wappng
    • The Catholic Herald
    • US Conf Catholic Bishops
    • Vatican Insider
    • Vutus Christi
    • Zenit Rome Dossier
    • http://http://onceiwasacleverboy.blogspot.co.uk/2011/11/st-margaret-of-scotland.html
    • http://www.catholic-convert.com

    Translate

    Dom Donald

    Dom Donald
    Cistercian Monks ocso
    Configure Text

    Total Pageviews

    Chief Akaoluchukwu

    Chief Akaoluchukwu
    In 2002 Dom Donald was made a chief of the Igbo tribe, Nigeria.
    Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.