Tuesday, 16 December 2014

The Great "O" Antiphons of Advent



The Great "O" Antiphons of Advent
These last appeals to God seem to read as if the iron of our misery is in our very blood.
The Great “O” Antiphons of Advent thumbnail

The Great “O” Antiphons of Advent   William J. McGarry S.J.  From December 17 to 23 the liturgy has seven antiphons which begin with O and are addressed before and after the Magnificat to the Lord King of the Advent….In their magnificent yet simple beauty the Great O’s are the quintessence of the Advent liturgy. Their language bears the weight of God’s eternity and mercy. They are a poignant cry of the soul of the people of Advent; they address God by the most compelling and tender of divine names, and they always end with an intense COME, VENI. All have the same structure, the O of apostrophe, and imperative of appeal. And while the imperatives of the season are often joyous and clamorous, these last appeals to God seem to read as if the iron of our misery is in our very blood. For though even in other parts of the liturgy of the last week our optimism continues and our hope is bright, in the solemn ceremonial of the evening Magnificat we are soberly acknowledging that our dire wretchedness can be remedied only by omnipotent mercifulness.Only one of the Great O’s is read each day of our approach to Christmas. The effect of this is noticeable, for we definitely feel a growing intensity as each evening passes. We seem to be making a forward step and to be covering infinite distances from eternity to Bethlehem. There is a climatic order in these antiphons. In the first, O Sapientia, we take a backward flight into the recesses of eternity to address Wisdom, the Word of God. In the second, O Adonai, we have leaped from eternity to the time of Moses and the Law of Moses (about 1400 B.C.). In the third, O Radix Jesse, we have come to the time when God was preparing the line of David (about 1100 B.C.). In the fourth, O Clavis David, we have come to the year 1000. In the fifth, O Oriens we see that the line of David is elevated so that the peoples may look on a rising star in the east, and hence in the sixth, O Rex Gentium, we know that He is king of all the world of man. This brings us to the evening before the vigil, and before coming to the town limits of Bethlehem, we salute Him with the last Great O, O Emmanuel, God-with-us. We have traveled a long distance and have waited long, but at Bethlehem we are to find the Little One who is Emmanuel, God of God and Light of Light, and yet God with us.”
From He Cometh (2011)

++ ++ + + + +
Marcellino D’Ambrosio
These moving ”O Antiphons” were apparently composed in the seventh or eighth century when monks put together texts from the Old Testament, particularly from the prophet Isaiah, which looked forward to the coming of our salvation. They form a rich, interlocking mosaic of scriptural images. The great “O Antiphons” became very popular in the Middle Ages when it became traditional to ring the great bells of the church each evening as they were being sung….
In Latin: the first letters of Sapientia, Adonai, RadixClavisOriensRex, andEmmanuel in reverse form the Latin words: ERO CRAS.  These can be understood as the words of Christ, responding to his people’s plea, saying  “Tomorrow I will be there.”

From The Crossroads Initiative (2014)

______________________________________________

The Great "O" Antiphons of Advent
UCAN SpiritualityThese last appeals to God seem to read as if the iron of our misery is in our very blood.


O Antiphons of Advent: O Emmanuel

  

Abbot Lehodey, Cistercian. Meditation (MAGNIFICAT 16/12/2014)

Meditation, Mass Advent, 
  Amazon.com:  5 reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
 Best book on the subject of abandonment 26 Nov 2011
By Theo Published on Amazon.com
Product Details
I'm not sure what the other reviewer of this book wanted, but I want to offer a different perspective, as I've owned and used this book for years. I own a whole shelf load of books on abandonment, including the great classic, Self-Abandonment to Divine Providence, by JP de Caussaude. This book, Holy Abandonment, exceeds them all.

The author, a Cistercian priest writing in the early 20th century, takes the entire Catholic tradition of suffering and abandonment, and develops and summarizes it in a very helpful and methodical way. It is also laced with countless practical examples from the lives of the greatest Catholic saints. I learned more on the subject from this one book than from all the other books on abandonment combined, not only on a theoretical, but a very practical level. Has helped me immeasurably through all the difficulties and contradictions of life I've encountered since, and in a way the helps me really grow in holiness and trust in the Lord, regardless of what is happening in life. I'm very appreciative of Tan Books for keeping this in print, and recommend it to everyone. It is a real classic and one of the best books on my shelf.

The book first lays a foundation for understanding the concept of abandonment and how to recognize the will of God in your life. It then, chapter by chapter, explains how to practice abandonment in virtually every sort of difficulty in life: prosperity and adversity, health and sickness, reputation, humiliations, works of zeal, prayer, interior trials, you name it, in really detailed and specific ways. It is exhaustive and practical, and based on sound theology and the experience of the saints.

This is not lightweight, watered-down spirituality, but real meaty stuff, solid food for those serious about growing in holiness and real closeness to the Lord. Truly an irreplaceable book.
3rd Advent Tuesday 16/12/2014
The holy Gospel according to Matthew      21:2R-32
JESUS SAID TO the chief priests and elders of the people, "What is your opinion? A man had two sons. ..."

MEDITATION         OF THE    DAY  
Courtesy of MAGNIFICAT.COM
_____________________________________________________________
By Abbot Lehodey, Cistercian
Sharing in the Docility of the First Son

The action of God has not always the same degree of intensity. He increases or diminishes it according to the designs of his love, and according to the strength and generosity of different souls. If he does not judge it well to treat them all with a constant holy severity, at least he makes them pass through alternate seasons of consolation and desolation, peace and combat, light and obscurity. By means of such continual vicissitudes, he renders them pliable and docile to all his motions. For, owing to repeated changes in her interior state, the soul finally loses her attachment to every condition and is ready to welcome all at the will of the Holy Spirit who breathes where he pleases and as it pleases him.

In short, by means of all these trials, says the Venerable Louis de Blois, "God purifies, humbles, instructs our souls, and renders them pliable to his will; everything defective, everything deformed, everything disagree­able to his sight, he removes from them, and at the same time embellishes them with all the ornaments which can make them pleasing in his eyes. And when he finds them faithful, full of patience and good-will; when the long endurance of tribulations has brought them, with the assistance of his grace, to such a degree of perfection that they suffer with tranquillity and joy all manner of temptation and afflictions: then he unites them not intimately to himself, confides to them his secrets and his mysteries and communicates himself to them without reserve.”
Dom Vitalis Lehodey, O.C.R.
Dom Vitalis Lehodey, O.C.R. (+1948) was abbot of Notre Dame de Grace, Bricquebec, France.


Product Details

 

 The Ways of Mental Prayer

Jan 1, 2009
by Rt. Rev. Abbot Dom Vitalis Lehodey O.C.R.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Ways of Mental PrayerFebruary 16, 2010
 Product Details By 
Eileen Rupel "Eileen Mary" (Huntington, WV United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAM
This review is from: The Ways of Mental Prayer (Paperback)
I enjoyed this particularly because of its "hands-on" approach to mental prayer. Various states of mind are described, and methods outlined to match each state of mind. So I have hope I will be able to acheive some quality of mental prayer. which enhances my overall prayer life. It's not easy, but definitely worthwhile, especially if any of us find ourselves asking "mental prayer"--what is that? You will find your way! Highly recommended.

Jean Danielou, S.J. (Le Myslere de l'Avent, 82-84) The mission of John the Baptist, 3rd Advent Monday

COMMENT:
Cardinal Jean Danielou SJ

Night Office Readings, Patristic Lectionary.
Jean Danielou, second paragraph merits lines as poem; 'One might say he was an educator of souls; his task was as it were to rough-hew them, to do the preliminary chiselling that would make them more receptive to Christ's message.

Our Lord's etching would have been too strong for souls not previously prepared for it.' (Mission of the John Baptist).

THIRD WEEK OF ADVENT Year I, MONDAY

First Reading
Micah 7:1-13
Responsory     Mi 7:7; Gn 49:18
I will look to the Lord, + I will await my God and saviour.
V, I will wait for your salvation, Lord. + I will await.

Second Reading

From the writings of Cardinal Jean Danielou, S.J. (Le Mystere de l'Avent, 82-84)
The mission of John the Baptist

As John the Baptist was the Lord's precursor even before his birth, so also he was the forerunner of Christ's public life. After the desert period came the crowning moment of a life spent preparing the way for Christ. There was a man sent from God whose name was John. This man came as a witness, to give testimony to the light, so that all might come to believe through him. He himself was not the light; his task was to bear witness to the light.

This text shows that the essential mission of John the Baptist was to bear witness to the light, to point to Jesus.
His was a pre-eminent role in the preparation for the coming of Christ and of Christ's own work.
John it was who paved the way for our Lord's public life and teaching by predisposing the souls of his hearers to receive it.
One might say he was an educator of souls; his task was as it were to rough-hew them, to do the preliminary chiselling that would make them more receptive to Christ's message.
Our Lord's etching would have been too strong for souls not previously prepared for it.
They needed some schooling in advance.
Their interests had to be redirected; it was necessary to wean them from worldly habits and to arouse a spiritual dissatisfaction in their hearts.

That was John the Baptist's assignment. Sent to people utterly heedless of the things of God, it was his task to awaken in them sufficient concern to disturb their settled ways and to stir up their initial goodwill, so that they might be capable of understanding Christ.
John the Baptist thus joins the long succession of those who have taken part in the work of preparing for the Lord's coming, those who, like John, were withdrawn by God from the things of this world and mysteriously admitted to the divine plans, in order that they might blaze the way for God among the people. John in his turn will move among his contemporaries to mark out the Lord's ways, smoothing paths and levelling hills. But for such a mission he must from the outset be utterly gripped by the inner vision he has received; he must be possessed by the Lord in the depths of his being, since it is a hard furrow he will have to plough. The people of the Baptist's generation were absorbed in the same pursuits as the people of our own day, Saint Luke describes them in a memorable passage, the soldiers engaged in vio­lence and false charges, and the tax collectors in demanding more than their due.
Such is human nature. It was so in the time of John, and it is the same today. Preoccupied with worldly affairs, people are completely heedless of God. As one goes here and there in the world it is very painful to experience the utter indifference of the rank and file; to shake the world out of this indifference there have to be prophets, that is to say, souls possessed by the divine vision who can rouse the masses from their inertia, They have to be authentic witnesses. A witness is someone who has first been granted an inner vision; God has introduced him to the divine viewpoint so that he can pass on what he has seen to others.
So it was with John the Baptist. God first admitted him to his own counsel, revealing to him the mystery of the divine plan, drawing him into the desert to share with him his own joy; then came the essential part of his vocation: he was a witness to Christ, that is to say, he was the one who pointed out Christ to the people.

          Responsory   Lk 1:17.76
He will go before him in the spirit and power of Elijah, + to turn fathers back to their sons, to restore unbelievers to the wisdom of the just, and to prepare a holy people for the Lord.
V. You, child, shall be called the prophet of the Most High; you will go before the Lord to prepare his way. + To turn fathers ...   

Monday, 15 December 2014

Catholic Roman Urdu Prayers: The Eucharist, Fr. Mitch Pacwa, SJ

    

Monday, 25 March 2013

The Eucharist, Fr. Mitch Pacwa, SJ

Catholic Roman Urdu Prayers: The Eucharist, Fr. Mitch Pacwa, SJ: "They devoted themselves to the teachings of the apostles and to the communal life, to the breaking of the bread and to the praye...  
 + + + + + + +
"They devoted themselves to the teachings of the apostles and to the communal life, to the breaking of the bread and to the prayers" Acts 2:42

It is called the "source and summit" of our Catholic faith - The Holy Eucharist. But do we really understand its true meaning? In Fr. Mitch Pacwa's The Eucharist: A Bible Study Guide for Catholics you will see the essential connection between the Eucharist and the Scriptures, and through reflection and discussion you'll learn to apply the principles in your own life. In this study you will find answers to these questions and more:

Where do we see symbols of the Eucharist in the Old Testament?
How do the Old Testament sacrifices prefigure Christ's sacrifice?
What did Jesus mean when he said "Do this in remembrance of me"?
Why is Jesus called the Lamb of God?
How do we meet Jesus in the breaking of the bread?

Perfect for group or individual study, The Eucharist will change the way you look at the Mass and allow you to meet Jesus as transformed by his gift of life.

Buy a copy for UK click here
USA click here or here

Old Testament Prophets # 26 - Micah of Moresheth

COMMENT:
This morning was the Prophecy of Michaeas
Night Office had the Micah Reading 7:1-13 (Br. Seamus) and the Jean Danielou passage (Fr. Hugh) on John the Baptist 'Mission of John Baptist' and the Prophets (Mt:11-15),  floodlight onto Christ, Messiah .
The Baptist has thought on Elijah and Isaiah and all thought on the one to come. In fact it is Christ who awakes the lives of all the prophets and OT Saints.
The so called Minor Micah  Reading set me puzzled.
Happy to encounter the Video of Fr. Mich Pacawa SJ I was delighted by the OT popular series broadcast on EWTN. See below.  
 Fr. Mitch Pacwa, S.J. brings a scholarly and linguistic approach to the prophets of Israel -- those seers and messengers who said that faith in God was a matter of life or death. He places the prophets in their historical context and shows how the Church (interprets them in relation to the New Testament and modern society.)
                     

Published on 21 Jan 2013
Old Testament Prophets # 26 - Micah of Moresheth  


The Old Testament Prophets - First in a 4 part series on the Prophet Micah

Hosted by Fr. Mitch Pacwa



Micah one of the minor prophets.

The Old Testament Prophets # 26 -- Micah Of Moresheth
The Old Testament Prophets # 27 -- Judgment And Promise Of Judah
The Old Testament Prophets # 28 -- A Promise For Zion And David
The Old Testament Prophets # 29 -- Controversy And Hope

I do not own the copyright on this and no infringement is intended. This is for non-profits and activism only.
This is from the EWTN audio library a wonderful resource of spiritual audio files.


The Prophet Michaes (Micah)
Douay-Rheims Bible

Sunday, 14 December 2014

Gaudete Sunday: Go Rose, or Go Home!

Fr. Aelred to Homily



Gaudete Sunday: Go Rose, or Go Home!


Published on 14 Dec 2013
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Background Imagery, Courtesy: Kevin Cole, Pacific Coas

Third Sunday of Advent 2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons - Independent Catholic News

COMMENT 2

Third Sunday of Advent 2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons - Independent Catholic News

Third Sunday of Advent 2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons
 Comment  Email  Print

Third Sunday of Advent 2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons | Third Sunday of Advent,  Fr Robin Gibboins
The prophecies of Isaiah which we hear all though Advent, have long been some of my favourite pieces of scripture. There is contrast and colour, light and dark, intensity and joy, sorrow and despondency,  but always the pilgrimage towards a time to come of hope and peace! 
The passage used on the third Sunday of Advent, taken from Isaiah 61 is especially poignant given the troubled state we Christians find ourselves caught up in throughout our world. The Prophet’s words are not only of comfort to us, but also an exhortation of hope, to carry on with our mission of testimony to Christ’s presence and love.
As a priest, a pastor working not only with Catholics from the eastern tradition, now under persecution, but engaged in ecumenism and academic life, my time, like the rest of you, can be very taken up with all kinds of issues and demands, sometimes too many. It can lead to overload and a spiritual fatigue, so Isaiah’s list of essential elements for our Christian and Priestly calling are a welcome recipe for reinvigoration.
Here they are; we are anointed to be sent out, to heal, proclaim the good news, announcing Gods constant love for our living world, and importantly for our messy human race, to do everything we can, practically, morally and spiritually to release people from the tyranny and slavery of sin, whatever form that might take! We are not alone, for the love of God is particularly revealed in the work of Spirit for us.
I can only speak for myself, but I hope that the relationship Isaiah reveals God has with us is your own. For God really is the joy of my soul, I am clothed with salvation and wrapped in God’s mantle of justice. I have to let go of my fears, let God into my life. Like John the Baptist, I too am the herald that is called to prepare the Lord’s way in my world, now, a testimony to the light that will never go out, the morning star that is the risen Christ. That’s our destiny as Christians; we might seem a voice crying in a wilderness of unbelief and ridicule, but through us, like John, people will hear that voice of the Spirit calling.
Paul calls us to be people of unceasing prayer, that total relationship with God in every aspect of our lives!

Gaudete,Third Sunday of Advent (B), Reflections

     Gaudete Sunday 

Sancta Maria Abbey: http://www.nunraw.com.uk (Website)  
Blogspot :http://www.nunraw.blogspot.co.uk 
|
domdonald.org.uk 

On Thursday, 11 December 2014, 16:18,
Fr. Nivard ...> wrote:

Magnificaat, p. 146 adapted, 2 Advent Thu 11 Dec 2014 Mt 11:11-15
A greater than John the Baptist has never been seen
   The Lord our God grasps our right hand and says to us.
   “Do not be afraid. I WILL HELP YOU... The poor and needy... I, the God of Israel, will not abandon them.”    
   God’s mercy always comes to us by way of other people.
   The greatness of John the Baptist is his total obedience to Christ by which all “see and know... observe and understand that the hand of the Lord has done this”.
   Father in heaven, grant us humility so that your Son may increase in us and flow out to others through Christ our Lord.
   + + +  .


Sunday Gospel Reflection with Fr. Bill Grimm

Published on 10 Dec 2014
The place we really live our faith is not in a church. It is in the desert of our workplaces, our schools, our streets, our homes. There is no other place for the world to hear our call to prepare the way of the Lord, to join us on the way of and to the Lord.      

Third Sunday of Advent 2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons - Independent Catholic News 

Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons
 Comment  Email  Print
 
Third Sunday of Advent 2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons | Third Sunday of Advent,  Fr Robin Gibboins
The prophecies of Isaiah which we hear all though Advent, have long been some of my favourite pieces of scripture. There is contrast and colour, light and dark, intensity and joy, sorrow and despondency,  but always the pilgrimage towards a time to come of hope and peace!
The passage used on the third Sunday of Advent, taken from Isaiah 61 is especially poignant given the troubled state we Christians find ourselves caught up in throughout our world. The Prophet’s words are not only of comfort to us, but also an exhortation of hope, to carry on with our mission of testimony to Christ’s presence and love.
As a priest, a pastor working not only with Catholics from the eastern tradition, now under persecution, but engaged in ecumenism and academic life, my time, like the rest of you, can be very taken up with all kinds of issues and demands, sometimes too many. It can lead to overload and a spiritual fatigue, so Isaiah’s list of essential elements for our Christian and Priestly calling are a welcome recipe for reinvigoration.
Here they are; we are anointed to be sent out, to heal, proclaim the good news, announcing Gods constant love for our living world, and importantly for our messy human race, to do everything we can, practically, morally and spiritually to release people from the tyranny and slavery of sin, whatever form that might take! We are not alone, for the love of God is particularly revealed in the work of Spirit for us.
I can only speak for myself, but I hope that the relationship Isaiah reveals God has with us is your own. For God really is the joy of my soul, I am clothed with salvation and wrapped in God’s mantle of justice. I have to let go of my fears, let God into my life. Like John the Baptist, I too am the herald that is called to prepare the Lord’s way in my world, now, a testimony to the light that will never go out, the morning star that is the risen Christ. That’s our destiny as Christians; we might seem a voice crying in a wilderness of unbelief and ridicule, but through us, like John, people will hear that voice of the Spirit calling.
Paul calls us to be people of unceasing prayer, that total relationship with God in every aspect of our lives!
+ + + 
ICN;   http://www.indcatholicnews.com/news.php?viewStory=26254  

Third Sunday of Advent 2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons | Third Sunday of Advent,  Fr Robin Gibboins
The prophecies of Isaiah which we hear all though Advent, have long been some of my favourite pieces of scripture. There is contrast and colour, light and dark, intensity and joy, sorrow and despondency,  but always the pilgrimage towards a time to come of hope and peace! 
The passage used on the third Sunday of Advent, taken from Isaiah 61 is especially poignant given the troubled state we Christians find ourselves caught up in throughout our world. The Prophet’s words are not only of comfort to us, but also an exhortation of hope, to carry on with our mission of testimony to Christ’s presence and love.
As a priest, a pastor working not only with Catholics from the eastern tradition, now under persecution, but engaged in ecumenism and academic life, my time, like the rest of you, can be very taken up with all kinds of issues and demands, sometimes too many. It can lead to overload and a spiritual fatigue, so Isaiah’s list of essential elements for our Christian and Priestly calling are a welcome recipe for reinvigoration.
Here they are; we are anointed to be sent out, to heal, proclaim the good news, announcing Gods constant love for our living world, and importantly for our messy human race, to do everything we can, practically, morally and spiritually to release people from the tyranny and slavery of sin, whatever form that might take! We are not alone, for the love of God is particularly revealed in the work of Spirit for us.
I can only speak for myself, but I hope that the relationship Isaiah reveals God has with us is your own. For God really is the joy of my soul, I am clothed with salvation and wrapped in God’s mantle of justice. I have to let go of my fears, let God into my life. Like John the Baptist, I too am the herald that is called to prepare the Lord’s way in my world, now, a testimony to the light that will never go out, the morning star that is the risen Christ. That’s our destiny as Christians; we might seem a voice crying in a wilderness of unbelief and ridicule, but through us, like John, people will hear that voice of the Spirit calling.
Paul calls us to be people of unceasing prayer, that total relationship with God in every aspect of our lives!
 Reflection with Fr. Robin Gibbons