Tuesday, 11 September 2007

The Holy Name of Mary

The Holy Name of Mary
In the monastic community we are awash with Scriptures and Theology and Lectio Divina, Spiritual reading. In practice prayer for the monk is the prayer of simplicity; the simpler the better. The simplest, the most familiar of the simplest prayers can fill all the monk's day, like, for example; - the Hail Mary - the Holy Mary.
The "Angelic Salutation", as we call it, has two invocation of the Name of Mary.
The first invocation, "Hail Mary" is greeting and praise and thanksgiving and proclamation.In great Cathedrals there is a feature known as the Galilean Porch, that is the main entrance to the sacred place.
Here it is the Visitation Porch, so to speak, that summonses us with the Name of Mary. When Elizabeth greets Mary, "Blessed is the fruit of your womb", it can be seen as a revolutionary feminist Proclamation. Elizabeth the expectant mother of John the Baptist, Mary the expectant mother of Jesus, leading us, in the most human approach, the birth of the Child Jesus, to the greatest Mystery, to the Incarnate the Son of God.
The second, "Holy Mary" starts us off, in the same way as we begin each Mass, recognizing that we are sinners. "Pray for us sinners", - NOW and at the hour of our death.- NOW is the only time. As one theologian put it, there is no NEXT life. There is only the NOW of the Divine Presence. The same applies to the HOUR of death. The NOW and that HOUR are part of the fullness of presence in God.

ORDINARY TIME: THE HOLY NAME OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY.
The Collection of Masses of the Blessed Virgin Mary, published by the Congregation of Divine Worship in 1986, is a set of 46 Masses intended for use at Marian shrines and for communities who wish to celebrate the Memorial of the Blessed Virgin on Saturday.
A memorial of the Most Holy Name of the Virgin is celebrated on 12 September A commentary on the Opening Prayer of the Mass itself forms a litany of the Holy Name of Mary.


"Lord our God, when your Son was dying on the altar of the cross, he gave us as our mother the one he had chosen to be his own mother, the Blessed Virgin Mary; grant that we who call upon the holy name of Mary, our mother, with confidence in her protection may receive strength and comfort in all our needs" (Marian Sacramentary, Mass for the Holy Name of the Blessed Virgin Mary).

Abbot's Sunday Chapter Talk.

Abbot's Sunday Chapter Talk.
The Mind of the Lord - Sunday 23
The Book of Wisdom tells us in today's first reading that no one can fathom the mind of God or understand his purposes."Gods ways are not your ways. As far as the heavens are above the earth so are his ways above our ways."
And yet this very passage ends by thanking God for the Gift of Wisdom which he has sent by his Holy Spirit, a gift which enables us to know just what his mind is in or regard and just what his wonderful plans and purposes are for our destiny.
Without that gift who could dare to surmise the unspeakable wonders of the life of grace he has called us to. That we should be called and should really be God's children, partakers of his divine life already here and now; that we will see him face to face; that we will know him as we are known by him.
This is wisdom indeed and it is an utterly gratuitous gift of God; a gift that demands only our Faith in it as the price to pay for it.
The sacred author goes on to lament the vagaries and uncertainties of our human reasoning and how difficult it is to have certainty even about the things of this world.
"The reasonings of mortals are unsure...our perishable body presses down the soul, our tent of clay weighs down the mind. It is hard enough for us to fathom the things of earth..........who then can discover what lies in heaven?All the more wonderful then is the unwavering certainty that comes with the Gift of Faith. What a gift indeed!
By this gift of Wisdom "the paths of those on earth have been straightened" the sacred author adds.
In these few words lies the secret of a life, not of freedom from suffering, but of the strength that comes from peace and confidence, from hope and trust. "...the paths of men have been straightened...." means that we know where we are going and we know how to get there. We are not wandering aimlessly through a life that is meaningless and purposeless."and men have been taught what pleases you" .....means that, no matter how true it is that the mind of God is ultimately unfathomable, yet there is a sense in which we always know what is the will of God in our regard. We need only take life just as it comes at us, with its constant procession of ups and downs, with its joys and sorrows, its failures and its triumphs. Whatever he sends us in life is a vehicle of grace. "....all things work together unto good for those who fear the Lord."
Still, we might object, "life as it comes at us" so often calls for a response and so often we just dont know what response God expects us to make. There are indeed such situations, so often we just dont seem to know what to do. In these situations God doesn't expect us to "know what to do" all he asks is that we do our best with good will and he will attend to the rest. He is teaching us one of the greatest lessons of life, namely that LIFE really a much bigger game than we can play. It is ultimately God's own game and he is fully in charge and he alone can work it all out. If we can approach life in that spirit then we can acquire a peace and strength and confidence that nothing can shake. It is all God's game and God is on our side and "If God is for us, who is against us?"
God bless.
Fr Raymond

New Cathedral of Galloway - any memories of Bishop Mellon?

Subject: New Cathedral of Galloway - any memories of Bishop Mellon?
To: "Harry Conroy" info@scottishcatholicobserver.org.uk
Dear Harry, Thank you for your kind efforts to find a picture of Right Reverend William Mellon, Bishop of Galloway - 2nd February, 1952.
Happily I have been fortunate in obtaining a photograph of Bishop Mellon, from a friend, the Archivist of Paisley Diocese, Canon Canning. He had been given it by Mgr Kinsella, VG of Galloway, now retired in Nazareth House Cardonald.
I have also found, something which I think you mentioned, the Obituary - printed in the Catholic Directory for Scotland of 1953.
Abbot Raymond will be at the Consecration of the new Cathedral of St. Margaret's in Ayr on Fri 14th September. The above Obituary tells us something from, that the evolution of Galloway Diocesan territory and the transfer of its Cathedral from the South to other parts in the North has had quite a History.
No doubt Scottish Catholic Observer will have a full beam of spotlighting on the occasion.
My request had stemmed from a grand niece of the Bishop who came with her children to visit Nunraw. Her father, Ted Mellen, had tried his vocation as a monk at Nunraw from 1950. Before joining he had made the Holy Year Pilgrimage following Hilaire Belloc's "Path to Rome". In later year's he was surprised to find how much things had changed in the monastery (in the church). - His daughter had asked us to remember in our prayers "her father, Edward Farquharson Mellen, who was a novice at the Abbey in the 1950's. The 36th anniversary of his death, aged 46, is on 23rd August". Owing to a fire in the home in Edinburgh most of the family records perished. Some of the younger generation are now into restoring the Family Tree. Interesting in the Biographical Note of the Obituary of Bishop Mellon is the reference the Coat of Arms. "His coat-of-arms described him well. It shows a hand grasping a pastoral staff, together with some sheep. The motto he chose was the one attributed to St. Ninian, the first Bishop of Galloway: Fides Petri in Sede Petri"," (The Faith of Peter in the See of Peter). See also the Galloway Icon of St. Ninian. Much water has flowed under the bridge since those days.In 1950 Bishop Mellon was at Nunraw to Ordain Fr. Stephen. He was functioning in Edinburgh in the inter-regnum between the Acrchbishops Andrew Joseph MacDonald and Gordon Joseph Gray.
I look forward to seeing what SCO does for the profile of the present Bishop of Galloway. The memory of Bishop Mellon seems to have disappeared in the mists of Solway Firth. Perhaps we will hear more of him in the celebrations of the transferred Cathedra.

Tuesday, 4 September 2007

Life-line Quotes.


Life-line Quotes.
In his sermon today, 23rd Sunday, 9th Sept 07, Fr. Hugh, in reference to God’s idea of success being different from ours, quoted Abbot Columban Hawkins, Guadalupe Abbey, US. As a visitor to Nunraw in the 1960s Abbot Columban was shown around Melrose Abbey. Coming back from that extensive ruin, suggesting the glories of the past, he spoke to the community. Fr. Hugh recalled his words; "Our works fail us but the love with which we do them is eternally written in the heart of God".


In an Email from S. Korea, Sr.Mary sent this lifeline quote;
"Inch by inch, life is a cinch.
Yard by yard, life is hard".
A busy student had been bewailing to a friend the pressures he was under..
His friend gave him the advice given him by his grandmother, "Inch by inch, life is a cinch. Yard by yard, life is hard".
The other moaned, here I am desperate with work and you give me advice from your grandmother.
But he thought about it later and began listing the things he needed doing and went on to tick them off as he got through the day.
It worked. Ever since then he has kept noting down life-line quotes like this.

FEEDBACK latecomer's perspectives on Mary

Feed-back re "Perspectives on Mary".
Abbot Raymond writes.
Dear Friends, I wish to share with you all the feed-back I received from William Wardle re. "Perspectives on Mary". It beautifully illustrates the irresistible bond God has created between each of us and our heavenly Mother. God bless, Fr Raymond
From William Wardle.
Dear Father Raymond,
I first came under the influence of Mary when I used to attend an Anglo-Catholic church. I was 30 years old, an Anglican. There was a beautiful statue of Mary, in front of which stood a branching candle holder. I kept feeling I wanted to know her and to have her look down on me, on my life, feeling that there was a deep love surrounding her. I earnestly desired to be part of 'her world': I knew instinctively that in her life, in her world, I would come to know Jesus more intimately. After several nervous, self-conscious attempts, I knelt before her and lit a candle to her honour. Immediately, I felt her eyes looking down upon me from within the life that surrounded her. I taught myself the Hail Mary (which I first heard on the lips of the Anglican priest in whose care I was considering my vocation). I didn't know her well but wanted simply to join my voice to all those who knew her, that she might know of my desire (the evening Angelus coincided with my arrival at home, only two hundred yards from the Catholic church). I was conscious that I had been introduced to the Mother of the One who, I believed, had invited me to meet her, the One whom I longed to call my best friend. This I still believe.

I found prayers in old prayer books (on the shelves of the second hand bookshop) that praised her, but, without a Catholic background, I couldn't understand them (Mary the Ark of the Covenant, the House of Gold, the Mystical Rose etc.). I was very much in awe of her major titles (Mother of God, Mary Immaculate etc) but all I could think of was that she was the Mother of the friend whose companionship I was seeking so earnestly, Jesus. Other titles I observed (Help of Christians, comfort of the afflicted, refuge of sinners etc) and whilst I was sure these all applied to her, these titles just made be feel a stranger amongst those who surrounded her. Following the priest's recommendation, it was St Francis de Sales who introduced me to the Catholic love for Our Lady, increasing my desire for devotion to her.

The elderly priest died, bidding me from his hospital bed to read Thomas Merton's "Seven Storey Mountain". I became a Catholic two years later... for I so desired to be fully in Mary's company and to receive Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament: through her I had come to recognise - and long for - Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament. I knew that I needed to receive His welcome into His Living Presence to there be properly introduced to, and received by, His Mother. I remember weeping in front of the Bishop when he proposed some distant date for my reception... he very kindly did not delay, and received Edith and I shortly afterwards in a private ceremony.

My Scripture reading began to reveal new avenues of faith. This came about through my visits to Nunraw (which I discovered upon completing Thomas Merton's final journal: I needed to continue his journal through my own experience): "Read the Scriptures", I was told when I asked concerning the best course of reading! I began to recognise the Mother of Jesus in the Salvation Story as it began to unfold before my eyes, in prophetic type and shadow down all the centuries till she is fully revealed as in all her glory as the Virgin of Nazareth: she was within the warp-threads of a great tapestry upon which I had begun to gaze in earnest.

But, on a personal basis, I was an adult, not a little child: it had come about that as if a traveller in a foreign town I had been received by her, but I remained uncertain of the language of devotion, very uncertain as to the protocol (for I was aware that she was far more than she at first gave me to understand): and, I felt very self-conscious to be received into her world for, unlike the children of her family, those who knew how to keep close to [their] Mother, I knew only that she had accepted me and had shown me that she knew [my] needs in a way that [I] didn’t: she knew that I had abandoned a desire to be ordained in the Anglican tradition because I had come to know her and to long for her Son within the intimacy of the Blessed Sacrament.

Truly, I could never let a day go by without invocation of her; without some moments at least of communion with her in prayer. And whilst I appreciate, and love to hear her many titles, I do not - even yet - feel accustomed to them, but love to hear them repeated. Her rosary brings me great joy and consolation, but I remain quite unable to accomplish (even) the praying of the Hail Mary in the time that is allowed in public, and so it is usually alone that I love to handle the beads... often failing to complete the stanzas and follow the intended set of meditations before being drawn away into meandering paths of contemplation. I know simply that I am welcome to call upon her, always in her home with Jesus, assured of her welcome: she often tells me where I have been and what I have been doing, of the dangers avoided through her intercession, letting me know that she has been watching over me ... even when I may not have remembered to call upon her. Perhaps most special to me is to observe the heavenly thread of her presence throughout the Scriptures; and I have found as the years pass that the more I come to know her Son, the closer I feel to her.
THANK YOU for causing me to give expression to something so precious to me.
With love in Our Lord,
William.

Tenth Anniversary of Mother Teresa of Calcutta

Feast of St. Cuthbert.
We have a proprietary claim on St. Cuthbert as the most important missionary of the Borders Country of Scotland & England ‘from Berwick to Galloway and Northumberland’. Cuthbert was known for his charm and winning ways and also for his gift of reading souls. One might find the type of person who discerns our spirit too closely rather off-putting. In the Mass Introduction Fr. Hugh recalled what the First Abbot, Dom Columban Mulcahy, used to say, that, “a genuinely recollected man is an attractive personality, there is nothing forbidding in his attitude”. As the Hymn expresses it, the attraction of The attractiveness of Cuthbert, as Fr. Hugh said, might be define in the words of the Hymn, “the beauty of holiness”.

Feast of St. Cuthbert.We have a proprietary claim on St. Cuthbert as the most important missionary of the Borders Country of Scotland & England “from Berwick to Galloway and Northumberland”. Cuthbert was known for his charm and winning ways and also for his gift of reading souls. One might find the type of person who discerns our spirit too closely rather off-putting. In the Mass Introduction Fr. Hugh recalled what the First Abbot, Dom Columban Mulcahy, used to say, that, "genuinely recollected man is an attractive personality, there is nothing forbidding in his attitude". As the Hymn expresses it, the attraction of The attractiveness of Cuthbert, as Fr. Hugh said, might be defined in the words of the Hymn, "the beauty of holiness".

About St Cuthberts Way
Taken at an easy pace, this 62 mile walking holiday along St Cuthberts Way from Melrose to Holy Island is a walk through the spiritual and historic life of the Borders.
Walking along St Cuthberts Way we pass through Melrose Abbey, the times of St Cuthbert, Trimontium, Dere Street and Roman road building, the lands of the Border rievers and St Cuthbert's Cave, will all become familiar. Journey's end on the walk is Lindisfarne, and we finish in the time honoured way across the Pilgrims' Ford.St Cuthberts Way follows tracks, paths and country roads with the longest days probably being the 3rd and 4th but no problem to those who pace themselves sensibly. (Scottish Tourism C-N-Do Scotland)


Tenth Anniversary of Mother Teresa of Calcutta.
We have also been remembering the anniversary of another very attractive holy person, Mother Teresa of Calcutta.
For the Guesthouse Chapel I had two things, as it were in my pocket, one was Mother Teresa’s Daily Prayer, “the Fragrance of Jesus” by Cardinal Newman, the other was the extraordinary article, “The ‘Atheism’ of Mother Teresa” by the Papal Chaplain, Fr. Cantalamessa.
The contrast of the two echoes the Gospel, “so be ye wise as serpents and innocent as doves”.


1. Mother Teresa's Daily Prayer
Dear Jesus, help me to spread Thy fragrance everywhere I go.
Flood my soul with Thy spirit and love.
Penetrate and possess my whole being so utterly
that all my life may only be a radiance of Thine.
by Cardinal Newman
St Paul uses the word fragrance and also the word aroma in " Cor. 2:15. His words are echoed in Newman's prayer, "But thanks be to God, who in Christ Jesus always leads us in triumph. and through us spreads the fragrance of the knowledge of him everywhere. For we are the aroma of Christ to God " . . .

2. "The 'Atheism' of Mother Teresa," Is the title of the National Catholic Register article of the preacher to the papal household. Commenting upon the recently published book, Mother Teresa: Come be My Light.
He makes many excellent observations about both Mother Teresa's "dark night of the soul" and the existential anguish endured by many atheists.
Mother Teresa was able to see her trial ever more clearly as an answer to her desire to share the sitio (thirst) of Jesus on the cross: “If my pain and suffering, my darkness and separation give you a drop of consolation, my own Jesus, do with me as you wish. ... Imprint on my soul and life the suffering of your heart. ... I want to satiate your thirst with every single drop of blood that you can find in me. ... Please do not take the trouble to return soon. I am ready to wait for you for all eternity.”
. . . .
The point about the "a-theism" of Jesus, of course, goes right to the heart of the mystery of the Incarnation and the Paschal Mystery. Could Jesus, who is God, experience the absence of God? This is addressed at length by Hans Urs von Balthasar in Mysterium Paschale, who writes that "The handing over of self is a 'total existential commitment." Elsewhere (Theo-Drama III, I think) von Balthasar writes that, on the Cross, "God is forsaken by God" because of man's godlessness. As von Balthasar notes, this scandal of the Cross is the "one unique scandal in which the believer can glory." Likewise, and because of that Scandal, the "scandal" of Mother Teresa's "atheism" is something in which believers can also glory, not arrogantly, but with the recognition that all of us are called to be purified, made holy, and die to self, by God's grace.
By the Side of the Atheists
The world of today knows a new category of people: the atheists in good faith, those who live painfully the situation of the silence of God, who do not believe in God but do not boast about it; rather they experience the existential anguish and the lack of meaning of everything: They too, in their own way, live in the dark night of the spirit.
Albert Camus called them “the saints without God.” The mystics exist above all for them; they are their travel and table companions. Like Jesus, they “sat down at the table of sinners and ate with them” (see Luke 15:2).
COMMENTS on the above Blog focus mostly on the remark, “How wrong author and atheist Christopher Hitchens is when he writes “God is not great. Religion poisons everything,” and presents Mother Theresa as a product of the media-era”. Very worthwhile discussion.
Read the entire article
See the Ignatius Press Blog

Monday, 3 September 2007

PERSPECTIVES ON MARY


PERSPECTIVES ON MARY

Sun. Mass Homily 2 Sept 07 (Abbot Raymond)


There are many different ways of looking on Mary. She has many perspectives when looked on in the light of God’s great plan of salvation . There is for instance the perspective of :
The Mystic and the Poetic: This we encounter in the poetic titles from the Litany of Loreto. We call Mary the Ark of the Covenant, the House of Gold, the Mystical Rose etc.
The Basic and Dogmatic: Mother of God, Mary Immaculate etc
The Simple and the Practical: Help of Christians, comfort of the afflicted, refuge of sinners etc
The View of the Scripture Scholar: Mary is the great “Woman” of Prophecy. She is a golden thread running through the whole history of revelation from the very first chapters of Genesis onwards appearing time and time again in prophetic type and shadow down all the centuries till she is fully revealed as in all her glory as the Virgin of Nazareth.
The View of the Theologian: She is seen as God’s great “Theology Book”, written, not by pen and ink on parchment, but in living flesh and blood. Men write their books in pen and ink. God dips his finger into the inkwell of his creative power and writes what he has to say in living Characters on the pages of history.
She is the Person whose life is like the warp-threads of a great tapestry whose beautiful pattern is only seen when crossed by the woof –threads of the great mysteries of her Divine Son into a beautiful and most meaningful whole.
But, most importantly for us all perhaps: Mary is Mother – That is the title under which Jesus confides us all to her keeping when he said with his dying breath at the most solemn moment of his life: “Behold your Mother”.
We can’t all be Great Scripture Scholars or Great Theologians, or Great Saints, or even Great Sinners. These all have their own particular perspective on Mary; their own particular approach to Mary. But the one perspective we all must have on Mary is that she is a Mother to us and this is the perspective of Mary that Jesus holds up to us at the most solemn moment of his life as he hung dying on the Cross.
What does it mean that she is a Mother to us? The Role of Motherhood is as rich and varied as life itself, but let’s just focus on one particular aspect of it. Let’s focus on the relationship between a mother and her very young child - a child still not able to care for itself in anyway, a child still without knowledge of things and still very dependent and vulnerable. This is a good picture of much that we may dare to call our life in the spirit. “….we don’t even know what to pray for” as St Paul tells us.
A child at this early stage in life knows only one thing – how to cling to its Mother. It has no idea of its needs or the dangers around it. It only knows how to keep close to its Mother and panics if she is not in sight.
How do we translate this into our relationship with Mary. Let us always keep close to her realising that she knows our needs in a way that we don’t. She knows the dangers around us in a way that we don’t, and above all we must realise that she really cares for us in these things. And how do we keep close to her? By frequently saying the hail Mary for instance; by saying the Rosary; by never letting a day go by without invocation of her; without some moments at least of communion with her in prayer.

Sunday, 2 September 2007

St. Constantine’s SVDP Nunraw Retreat

St. Constantine’s SVDP Nunraw Retreat
St. Constantine’s SVDP, Govan Glasgow Saturday 2 Sept 2007-09-02.When the coach from St Constantine’s arrived there were a number of elderly people. I asked the bus driver for a block or something to help negotiate the high step to the ground, as in the past. He could not do it. He said only the vehicle is insured. Anything separate from the vehicle is not insured – I ask you! What next.Then helping the elderly people up the stairs to the Chapel another thought occurred to me. The monastery has a stair-climbing device to lift weights and I began to think there must be an adaptation for taking disabled persons up and downstairs. (There is such a device as I learned later from ‘Ask.com’). When it came to the Mass later in the afternoon I had another distraction. The mechanism of our stair-climbing sack-barrow consists of two sets of three wheels pivoting from step to step. There are many symbols to explain the Trinity. Here was one ready made to describe the Father, Son and Holy Ghost – all Three working inseparably, united in one essential unity. It is an image.The Conference of the SVDP organised a Retreat asking to have the Day facilitated.My introduction was to point out that the best ‘facility’ was the place itself; plenty of space in the grounds, the Stations of the Cross on the length of the back avenue leading to the abbey, the Chapel in the Guesthouse.By way of a theme the gem from Newman came to mind, “Quietness within, Guilessness without”, and, with the 10th Anniversary of Princess Dianna the Homily of Cardinal Hume came to mind, “When Lord did we see you hungry and feed you . . .” The theme seemed to flow through the day through an short time of Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament in the morning, the ‘marathon’ (exaggeration) Way of the Cross on the South Avenue to visit the Abbey, and Mass at the end of the afternoon.
Thoughts were directed to prayer and the role of the SVDP, I quoted a letter that seemed to express the spirit of caring at the heart of both. In previous days two groups of CARERS had made a visit to Nunraw. In fact the ‘Carers’ were not the usual National Health or Social Welfare groups but rather ‘Carers’ at home looking after ailing or elderly relatives, themselves needing respite if only for a Day Visit. I quoted one of two letters of acknowledgement: “As you may imagine, the carers of East Lothian for whom I advocate, work, lobby and make a nuisance of myself for, are a bunch of people who have a pretty hard time, doing what they can- usually untrained- for their sick loved ones, and normally have little or no time for themselves. A trip such as this means so much to them- and the peace and tranquillity of Nunraw is the perfect antidote to the stressful situations most of them are in.We will no doubt return- I know we will be welcome. Many thanks. Yours sincerely, Kathleen”
The hidden wonder of so many helping hands of support “recall us to ourselves, and assure us that we need not give up our usual manner of life, in order to serve God, that the most humble and quietest station is acceptable to Him”, as Newman expresses the spirit of “quietness within, guilelessness within”.
[Photos, L. Vincent & Betty Larmour, R. Willie & May McCann].


Thursday, 30 August 2007

Beheading of St. John the Baptist – August xxix

Beheading of St. John the Baptist – August xxix
At the mid-morning tea break conversation turned to Salome in the account John the Baptist. The question was whether the dancing step-daughter of Herod Antipas was names in the Gospel. The organist remembered the catchy Antiphon of the old Horas Diurnas (Daily Hours). It was mood of the music was quite surprising, a sprightly melody of the dance, “My Lord, give me on a dish the head of John the Baptist” – a strange gaiety expressing the macabre.Salome’s name does not appear.
Her historical place is clear in non-biblical texts and is stamped on a coin struck by Herod. The fact that her name appears in the title of so many works of art, music and drama is the ironic aspect of how she introduces so many to the drama of the martyrdom of John the Baptist. The name Salome, as such, has been kept with similar non-Scriptural figures, like the name of Dismas, the good thief, the names of the Magi.How is it, I wonder, we seem to be familiar with the actual name of Salome? She is well known from the Gospels as the wife of Zebedee, mother of James and John, (Mark 15;40). The Liturgy does not mention the name Salome but seemed to be associated with it in the tuneful music the Organist was humming.

Monday, 27 August 2007

St Benedict 8th Instrument ‘Courtesy’?

Commentary on Rule of Benedict
8th Instrument of Good Works

The Abbot spoke of the 8th Instrument of Good Works, ‘To honour all men’, in our evening Chapter on the Rule. Rudeness or harshness are the last aspects to characterise the monk. It applies to the community; it applies to the whole cross section of Guests. One aspect of ‘Honouring all men’ was movingly expressed by Hilaire Belloc on Courtesy.

ON COURTESY

Of Courtesy, it is much less
Than Courage of Heart or Holiness,
Yet in my Walks it seems to me
That the Grace of God is in Courtesy.

On Monks I did in Storrington fall,
They took me straight into their Hall;
I saw Three Pictures on a wall,
And Courtesy was in them all.

The first the Annunciation;
The second the Visitation;
The third the Consolation,
Of God that was Our Lady's Son.

The first was of St. Gabriel;
On Wings a-flame from Heaven he fell;

And as he went upon one knee
He shone with Heavenly Courtesy.

Our Lady out of Nazareth rode -
It was Her month of heavy load;
Yet was her face both great and kind,
For Courtesy was in Her Mind.

The third it was our Little Lord,
Whom all the Kings in arms adored;
He was so small you could not see
His large intent of Courtesy.

Our Lord, that was Our Lady's Son,
Go bless you, People, one by one;
My Rhyme is written, my work is done.

Sunday, 26 August 2007

Abbot's Chapter Talk

Abbot Raymond's Sunday talk to the community this morning focused on
"SERVICE" as a key word in St. Benedict. 'We are, therefore, about to found a school of the Lord's service,
a school of the Lord's service, (Prologue)


ONLY ONE MASTER

It is God, of course, whom we serve as our one and only True Master. It is true that we also serve each other, but that service is ultimately rendered to the God who made us to love and serve, not only himself, but also each other. All honest service then is rendered ultimately to God. Jesus has this idea very much in mind when he says that we can have only one ultimate master: “Call no one on earth your master” he says. You have only one Master, the Christ.
This saying: “You have only one Master, the Christ.” is so typical of Jesus’ teaching. He uses absolute uncompromising statements which seem to be so rigid and uncompromising. “Call no one on earth your Master; your Father, your Teacher”. But to stick to the title we are considering at the moment – Master; surely we do indeed have many other Masters in life. From the day we are born we have those in authority over us till the day we die; from our parents to our teachers to our Civil Authorities, all of whom Scripture obliges us to obey, again the puzzle is resolved if we realize that all legitimate authority comes ultimately from God and when it steps out of the line of his justice and truth, then it is no longer legitimate, no matter how powerful it may be.

So it is not the legitimate service of any master that Jesus is warning us against when he says “Call no one on earth your Master”, but the yielding to the illegitimate use of authority. What could the practical implications of this prohibition be? When do we come up against Masters who lead us away from God by their commands? Certainly the Civil Authorities do at times enact legislation that is against the law of God and so lead souls astray. But there are also other sources of influence in our lives, sources which demand our obedience in their own way; influences which try to master us in their own way. And these forces are very powerful indeed and we can allow ourselves to be mastered by them. We have to be in a constant state of rebellion against them. There are, for instance, all the forces of the world in general and of society around us demanding that we conform to them. “You must do this”, they say or “You must do that, if you are to really get a life.” “You must get a hold of this; you must get a hold of that if you are to find satisfaction in life. You must go here, you must go there, or you are missing out on life”.
Then, lastly, there is a force much more powerful to master us than all these things; a force all the more powerful because much more insidious; a force that disguises itself as not being our master at all, but as being our very best and most intimate friend; a force that even claims to be at our service rather than to be our master although, in reality, it is the greatest of all tyrants. This most dangerous and powerful of all masters is nothing else than our own self –will. The man who can master that is a free man indeed.

Parish Picnic

Parish Picnic

Dear Fr Peter,
Thank God it kept dry for the Livingston Parish Picnic at Nunraw.
The people were wonderful.
One got the sense of a real family of the community of St. Peter's
May the Lord continue to bless you and all in the Parish.
Herewith ATTACHED are some pictures of the day.
It was a joy to meet Edward & Terry Egan. How amazing to discover that Ed. lost the use of his speech and Terry lost her sight, and how happily they complement each other's (dis) abilities.


Friday, 24 August 2007

Gala Rome Trip Youth Group


Youth Group Gala Rome Trip.

Preparatory Retreat Nunraw 18 Aug 2007

In the Scottish Borders three Parishes, Melrose, Selkirk & Galashiels have one priest, Fr. John Creanor as PP. The Youth Group from the Holy Trio of Parishes is planning to make the journey to Rome.
I explained to the young folk from Melrose and its environs that when the foundation of Nunraw was begun in 1946 there was talk of adopting the name “New Melrose”. Some new monasteries choose an ancient Cistercian monastery for their title. In fact the young community at Nunraw preferred to begin a new name. Their choice received further affirmation when the history of Nunraw was discovered already had Cistercian roots. As a Grange of the Cistercian convent of Haddington it was known as Nunraw, the NUN’s Row (of buildings).
After their trip to the Holy City they will return and hopefully return to Nunraw for a de-briefing Retreat of all their experiences in Rome.


Feast 24th August Saint Bartholomew

Newman on St Bartolomew’s Vocation
of “quietness without, guilelessness within”,
“not give up our usual manner of life, in order to serve God”

To Mark St Bartholomew’s Day, we had a rather unusual reflection in the Night Office.

It was a gem of insight of John Henry Newman. With so little in the Gospel, there is minimum scope for exegesis but what Newman does beautifully is to catch a glimpse of the character of Bartholomew, and then to draw us into deep waters of quietness and guilelessness.

The passage echoed for me someone’s life long raport to Newman’s teaching. This convert friend was impelled to write a few words in response to a rather crude comment by a Nun saying that Newman was no longer useful.

She wrote, “I don't think it's true that "Newman can only be a partial guide for someone living in the nineteen eighties" In 1952 I was 24 and the wife of Naval Chaplain. . . . .
I spent a long time reading Wilfrid Ward's Life of Newman, Faber, and then anything and everything I could find on Newman. It seemed as though he were speaking directly to me, understanding my situation, and most of all understanding my LOVE for the Anglican Church as no Catholic I met could understand it. In the end, my love for my own Church was to be the greatest barrier to my conversion. . . .
It is now the nineteen eighties, much is changed, but I find more relevance in Newman's writings today than I did even then. He made it abundantly clear that the path to Rome and its onward journey was no easy matter. Nor is it”.

From a sermon by John Henry Newman (Parochial and Plain Sermons, volume 2, pp. 335-337)

When Philip told him that he had found the long-expected Messiah of whom Moses wrote, Nathanael (that is, Bartholomew) at first doubted. He was well read in the scriptures, and knew the Christ was to be born in Bethlehem; whereas Jesus dwelt at Nazareth, which Nathanael supposed in consequence to be the place of his birth, - and he knew of no particular promises attached to that city, which was a place of evil report, and he thought no good could come out of it. Philip told him to come and see; and he went to see, as a humble single-minded man, sincerely desirous to get at the truth. In consequence, he was vouchsafed an interview with our Saviour, and was converted.
Now from what occurred in this interview, we gain some insight into St. Bartholomew's character. Our Lord said of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile! and it appears, moreover, as if, before Philip called him to come to Christ, he was engaged in meditation or prayer, in the privacy which a fig-tree's shade afforded him. And this, it seems, was the life of one who was destined to act the busy part of an apostle; quietness without, guilelessness within. This was the tranquil preparation for great dangers and sufferings! We see who make the most heroic Christians, and are the most honoured by Christ!
An even, unvaried life is the lot of most men, in spite of occasional troubles or other accidents; and we are apt to despise it, and to get tired of it, and to long to see the world or, at all events, we think such a life affords no great opportunity for religious obedience. To rise up, and go through the same duties, and then to rest again, day after day, to pass week after week, beginning with God's service on Sunday, and then to our worldly tasks, so to continue till year follows year, and we gradually get old - an unvaried life like this is apt to seem unprofitable to us when we dwell upon the thought of it.
Many indeed there are, who do not think at all; but live in their round of employments, without care about God and religion, driven on by the natural course of things in a dull irrational way like the beasts that perish.
But when a man begins to feel he has a soul, and a work to do, and a reward to be gained, greater or less, according as he improves the talents committed to him, then he is naturally tempted to be anxious from his very wish to be saved, and he says, "What must I do to please God?" And sometimes he is led to think he ought to be useful on a large scale, and goes out of his line of life, that he may be doing something worth doing, as he considers it.
Here we have the history of St. Bartholomew and the other apostles to recall us to ourselves, and to assure us that we need not give up our usual manner of life, in order to serve God; that the most humble and quietest station is acceptable to him, if improved duly - nay, affords means for maturing the highest Christian character, even that of an apostle Bartholomew read the scriptures and prayed to God; and thus was trained at length to give up his life for Christ, when he demanded it.

Wednesday, 22 August 2007

St Rita in the Moors



St Rita in the Moors
What has Saint Rita of Cascia to do with a Shooting Lodge in the moors above Nunraw?

WATCH THIS SPACE

Icon of Our Lady of the Atlas 7

Among the variegated monastic and other wayfarers of the Guesthouse, one, Sr. Peter.
painted the ICON of Our Lady of the Atlas 7 on the occasion of our 50th Anniversary of Nunraw.
Now she has been requested to send some copies of the small Prayer Card to France.
I have been able to send some out of the precious few remaining reproductions for devotees of the Seven Monks martyred in Algeria, but I pointed out that the English version is not going to be so useful to French speakers. Perhaps someone will DO a translation. See
copy of the Icon and the Text.

On 21st May 1996 seven monks of the Cistercian-Trappist monastery of Our Lady of Atlas in Algeria died by assassination at the hands of terrorists - FR. CHRISTIAN de Cherge, BR. Luc Dochier, FR. CRRISTOPRE Lebreton, BR. MICREL Fleury, FR. BRUNO Lemarchand, FR. CELESTIN Ringeard, BR. PAUL Favre-Miville. Icon of Sancta Maria Memory of 7 Monks of Atlas by Sr. Peter, Holy Cross Abbey, Whitland

Seven candles denote the seven monks who died. At Profession they placed their 'vows' on the altar. We have not been asked to shed our blood- they did so. "SANCTA MARIA­MATER DEI".- how often did the monks pray, "Holy Mary, Mother of God" - pray for us now and at the hour of our death". Our Lady's outer garment is painted brown, which denotes the earth - everyday ordinary things. Within it is yellow (as in the halo) since "she is all glorious within". Three, stars, - On her head and shoulders denote that she was a virgin before, during and after the birth of her Child. Her inner vestment is red, denoting royalty, power and humanity which she gives to her Son, so His cloak is red. His inner vestment is white & yellow denoting holiness and divinity. On his right shoulder band the sun is depicted, not with the rays shining down to the world, but back to the one who made it, acknowledging the true light of the world. In His right hand He holds the closed scroll reminding us that the whole mystery is not yet revealed. His right hand points towards Mary. It is a "blessing hand"-blessing will come through the three fingers extended to remind us of the Trinity.
1996 Sancta Maria Abbey, Nunraw, Scotland, EH41 4LW