Friday 15 June 2012

Gabrielle Bossis Holy Hour, reflection Day of Sacred Hear of Jesus

It is the Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus and found the Holy Hour below apt for the words: "You will see Me everywhere.
I’ll be your Host and your Guest, who has taken your heart and asks the free gift of it.
Two lives in one”.

Following from Gabrielle, "Lord, to console You in Your AGONY", after the Gospel at  the Community Mass  John 19:37 They shall look on Him Whom they have pierced. [Zech. 12:10.] widens to the Bible reflection. Next Blogspot.


YOU YOU AND i, P102_103 Gabrielle Bossis

October 24 – 1940 – Holy Hour.
“Allow me, Lord, to console You in Your agony as though I had been created for that alone.”
“Direct everything in you to this end – all that I have given you, for it is I who gave you everything – your heart, your understanding, your memory.
It is I who gave you an imagination capable of stirring your heart. Is it too much to expect that you will use My gifts for Me? When you offer them I forget that I have given them to you. I receive them as though they came from you, and My heart is so touched. If you only knew...? I am like a happy father: ‘My little girl did that for Me.’ And I am much more than an ordinary father. But only in heaven will you see these delicate touches I’ve received from my children.
Let this encourage you to live very close to Me, to find life impossible without Me. Let me share everything. Disappear ceaselessly in My heart. And be sure that I’ll replace you. Always act as though you saw Me, for I am really there. And aware of the great yearning, the intense thirst that I have for souls, surrender yourself unceasingly as though it were for the first time. For Me, it will always be like a first joy to receive you.
Don’t get the idea that it is the greatest number of prayers that touches your God. It’s the way you speak to Him. Be irresistible in love, abandonment and humility.
And when you ask Him for bread, He will not give you a stone, but a double portion...
When you tidy your house, think that it is Mine and you will make it more beautiful.
When you prepare your meals think that it is to honour Me.
And when you rest your body, think that it is My body, My friend; and this is the reality since all that you have is first Mine, isn’t it?
You will see Me everywhere.
I’ll be your Host and your Guest, who has taken your heart and asks the free gift of it.
Two lives in one”




Wednesday 13 June 2012

Great patroness for Children's Adoration:St Juliana of CornillionSt.

Great patroness for Children's Adoration:St Juliana of CornillionSt. Juliana COMMENT
http://www.childrenofhope.org/

ZE10111707 - 2010-11-17
Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-30993?l=english

ON A SAINT OF THE FEAST OF CORPUS CHRISTI


"Today in the Church There Is a 'Eucharistic Springtime'"

VATICAN CITY, NOV. 17, 2010 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave today during the general audience in St. Peter's Square.

* * *

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

This morning, too, I would like to present to you a little-known woman to whom, however, the Church owes great recognition, not only because of the holiness of her life, but also because, with her great fervor, she contributed to the institution of one of the most important liturgical solemnities of the year, that of Corpus Christi. She is St. Juliana of Cornillon, known also as St. Juliana of Liege. We have certain details of her life above all from a biography probably written by an ecclesiastic contemporary of hers, in which are gathered several testimonies from people who knew the saint directly.

Juliana was born between 1191 and 1192 in the neighborhood of Liege, in Belgium. It is important to stress this place, because at that time the Diocese of Liege was, so to speak, a true "Eucharistic cenacle." Before Juliana, eminent theologians had illustrated the supreme value of the sacrament of the Eucharist and, always at Liege, there were women's groups generously dedicated to Eucharistic worship and to fervent communion. Led by exemplary priests, they lived together, dedicating themselves to prayer and to charitable works.

Orphaned at 5 years of age, Juliana and her sister Agnes were entrusted to the care of the Augustinian nuns of the convent-leper hospital of Mont Cornillon. She was educated above all by a sister named Sapienza, who followed her spiritual maturation, until Juliana herself received the religious habit and became as well an Augustinian nun. She acquired notable learning, to the point that she read the works of the Fathers of the Church in Latin, in particular St. Augustine and St. Bernard. In addition to keen intelligence, Juliana showed from the beginning a particular propensity for contemplation; she had a profound sense of the presence of Christ, which she experienced by living in a particularly intense way the sacrament of the Eucharist and pausing often to meditate on the words of Jesus: "And lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age" (Matthew 28:20).

At 16 she had her first vision, which was then repeated many times in her Eucharistic adorations. The vision showed the moon in its full splendor, with a dark strip that crossed it diametrically. The Lord made her understand the meaning of what had appeared to her. The moon symbolized the life of the Church on earth; but the opaque line represented the absence of a liturgical feast. Juliana was asked to do her utmost in an effective way to bring about its institution: a feast, namely, in which believers would be able to adore the Eucharist to increase their faith, advance in the practice of virtue and make reparation for offenses to the Most Holy Sacrament.

For about 20 years Juliana, who in the meantime had become prioress of the convent, kept secret this revelation, which had filled her heart with joy. Then she confided in two other fervent adorers of the Eucharist, Blessed Eva, who led an eremitical life, and Isabella, who had joined her in the monastery of Mont Cornillon. The three women established a sort of "spiritual alliance" for the purpose of glorifying the Most Holy Sacrament. They wished to involve also a much esteemed priest, John of Lausanne, canon of the church of St. Martin in Liege, asking him to question theologians and ecclesiastics about what they had in their hearts. The answers were positive and encouraging.

What happened to Juliana of Cornillon is frequently repeated in the life of saints: to have the confirmation that an inspiration comes from God, it is always necessary to be immersed in prayer, to be able to wait with patience, to seek friendship and encounters with other good souls, and to subject everything to the judgment of the pastors of the Church. It was, in fact, the bishop of Liege, Robert of Thourotte, who, after initial hesitations, took up this proposal from Juliana and her companions, and instituted, for the first time, the solemnity of Corpus Domini in his diocese. Later, other bishops imitated him, establishing the same feast in territories entrusted to their pastoral care.

To saints, however, the Lord often asks that they overcome trials, so that their faith is enhanced. This happened also to Juliana, who had to suffer the harsh opposition of some members of the clergy and even of the superior on whom her monastery depended. Then, of her own volition, Juliana left the convent of Mont Cornillon with some companions, and for 10 years, from 1248 to 1258, was a guest of several monasteries of Cistercian Sisters. She edified everyone with her humility; she never had words of criticism or rebuke for her adversaries, but continued to spread with zeal Eucharistic worship. She died in 1258 in Fosses-La-Ville, in Belgium. In the cell where she lay the Most Blessed Sacrament was exposed and, according to the words of her biographer, Juliana died contemplating with a last outburst of love the Eucharistic Jesus, whom she had always loved, honored and adored.

Won over also to the good cause of the feast of Corpus Domini was Giacomo Pantaleon of Troyes, who had known the saint during his ministry as archdeacon in Liege. He, in fact, having become Pope in 1264 and taking the name Urban IV, instituted the solemnity of Corpus Domini as a feast of obligation for the universal Church, the Thursday after Pentecost. In the Bull of institution, titled "Transiturus de hoc mundo" (Aug. 11, 1264), Pope Urban also re-evoked with discretion the mystical experiences of Juliana, giving value to their authenticity. He wrote: "Although the Eucharist is celebrated solemnly every day, we hold it right that, at least once a year, there be a more honored and solemn memoria of it. The other things, in fact, of which we make memoria, we do so with the spirit and with the mind, but we do not obtain, because of this, their real presence. On the other hand, in this sacramental commemoration of Christ, Jesus Christ is present with us in his substance, even if under another form. In fact, while he was about to ascend to heaven he said: "And lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age" (Matthew 28:20).

The Pontiff himself wished to give an example, celebrating the solemnity of Corpus Domini in Orvieto, the city where he then dwelled. By his order, in fact, the famous corporal with the traces of the Eucharistic miracle that happened the previous year, in 1263, in Bolsena, is the kept in the cathedral of the city -- and it is still kept there. [The miracle was this:] While a priest consecrated the bread and the wine, he was prey to strong doubts about the real presence of the Body and Blood of Christ in the sacrament of the Eucharist. Miraculously some drops of blood began to spurt from the consecrated Host, confirming in that way what our faith professes. Urban IV asked one of the greatest theologians of history, St. Thomas Aquinas -- who at that time was accompanying the Pope and was in Orvieto -- to compose texts of the liturgical office for this great feast. These are masterpieces in which theology and poetry fuse, still in use today in the Church. They are texts that make the cords of the heart vibrate to express praise and gratitude to the Most Holy Sacrament, while the intelligence, penetrating the mystery with wonder, recognizes in the Eucharist the living and true presence of Jesus, of his sacrifice of love that reconciles us with the Father, and gives us salvation.

Even if after the death of Urban IV the celebration of the feast of Corpus Domini was limited to some regions of France, Germany, Hungary and northern Italy, it was again a Pontiff, John XXII, who in 1317 revived it for the whole Church. Henceforth the feast experienced a wonderful development, and is still much appreciated by the Christian people.

I would like to affirm with joy that today in the Church there is a "Eucharistic springtime": How many persons pause silently before the Tabernacle to spend time in a conversation of love with Jesus! It is consoling to know that not a few groups of young people have rediscovered the beauty of praying in adoration before the Most Blessed Sacrament. I am thinking, for example, of our Eucharistic adoration in Hyde Park, in London.

I pray so that this Eucharistic "springtime" will spread increasingly in every parish, in particular in Belgium, the homeland of St. Juliana. The Venerable John Paul II, in the encyclical "Ecclesia de Eucharistia," said: "In many places, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is also an important daily practice and becomes an inexhaustible source of holiness. The devout participation of the faithful in the Eucharistic procession on the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ is a grace from the Lord which yearly brings joy to those who take part in it. Other positive signs of Eucharistic faith and love might also be mentioned" (No. 10).
Blessed Sacrament
at the Shrine

Remembering St. Juliana of Cornillon we also renew our faith in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist. As we are taught by the Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, "Jesus Christ is present in the Eucharist in a unique and incomparable way. He is present in a true, real and substantial way, with his Body and his Blood, with his Soul and his Divinity. In the Eucharist, therefore, there is present in a sacramental way, that is, under the Eucharistic species of bread and wine, Christ whole and entire, God and Man" (No. 282).

Dear friends, fidelity to the encounter with the Eucharistic Christ in Sunday's Holy Mass is essential for the journey of faith, but let us try as well to frequently go to visit the Lord present in the Tabernacle! Gazing in adoration at the consecrated Host, we discover the gift of the love of God, we discover the passion and the cross of Jesus, and also his Resurrection. Precisely through our gazing in adoration, the Lord draws us to himself, into his mystery, to transform us as he transforms the bread and wine. The saints always found strength, consolation and joy in the Eucharistic encounter. With the words of the Eucharistic hymn "Adoro te devote," let us repeat before the Lord, present in the Most Blessed Sacrament: "Make me believe ever more in You, that in You I may have hope, that I may love You!" Thank you.

St. Juliana - West Window Women, Roscrea

St. Juliana - West Window Women, Roscrea
 St Juliana of 
Mount Cornillon
(1192-1258)


In the 1250s St Juliana of Mount Cornillon, an Augustinian nun, was the one chosen by God to have the Feast of Corpus Christi introduced into the Church of Liege, in present-day Belgium, and then into the Universal Church

Banished by a local mob, she took refuge in a number of monasteries of Cistercian nuns over the last decade of her life

She was buried at the Cistercian Monastery of Villiers. Cistercian art never hesitated to show her in the habit of their Order

So we see her with the Monstrance in her hand, in a stained glass window of Cistercian Saints at the Church of Mount Saint Joseph Abbey, Roscrea.   
www.iec2012.ie    



Ireland had more than thirty-five monasteries of Cistercian monks before the Reformation, but probably only two of nuns, while there were hundreds of houses of Cistercian nuns on the Continent of Europe. Thirteen nuns are depicted in the window, an extraordinary group of twelfth to thirteenth century women, but we cannot claim Irish identity for any of these.
St Juliana of MounCornillonBlHumbeline,  Bl. Ida of Nivelles
 
  St. Lutgard   
Examining the group one notices an unusual sight, a nun holding the monstrance with the Blessed Sacrament exposed. Who could she be? She is Saint Juliana of Mount Cornillon, in the diocese of Liege in Belgium. She was noted for her devotion to the Blessed Sacrament exposed. Gradually her devotion spread to the locality and then to the whole diocese, just as it has been spreading throughout Ireland in recent years. Liege was the first diocese in Christendom for which the feast of Corpus Christi was approved by Rome. Soon it extended to the whole Church, thanks to the prayer life of Saint Juliana. All this is related in Bis Tertium. The Eucharistic Congress of 2012 will give Irish Cistercians an opportunity to promote devotion to their own Saint Juliana.
Who is the important lady with the crozier, beside Saint Robert? There is a wonderful painting of 1635 entitled "The Holy Nuns of Citeaux," thirty-three of them. All are named and each has some pertinent clue as to her identity. The most important lady right in the centre, with crozier and book in hand, is Blessed Humbeline, sister of Saint Bernard. In fact the whole picture is sometimes referred to as the "The Humbeline Tree." Humbeline was Prioress, not Abbess of Jully, a Benedictine and not Cistercian Priory, so she had neither a crozier nor a white habit. The artist of 1635, however, did not scruple to give both to Saint Bernard's sister, nor did the stained glass artist of 1893, when giving Humbeline the central position in this window.
And then there is the nun in the most honoured place of all, up beside Our Lady with the Divine Child stretching towards her. Bis Tertium tells us of Blessed Ida of Nivelles in South Belgium, to whom the Blessed Virgin entrusted Jesulum, we would say Iosagdn, into her arms. So we conclude thaIdis the nun in the window with her Iosagdn. Ida had besides a special devotion to the Passion of Christ, offering all her anguish for suffering priests and religious. She died in 1231.
The first nun recorded in Bis Tertium is Lutgard of Aywieres in the Netherlands, to whom five pages are devoted. Although much courted in her youth and promised in marriage by her father, she remained a virgin. On the right side of the right light she wears the virgin's crown and gazes lovingly on the crucifix resting on her arm. For the last seven years of her life Lutgard was blind.

 Mount Saint Joseph Abbey
Roscra, Co. Tipperary
www.msjroscrea.ie