Tuesday 11 September 2012

Danielou - Holy Pagans of the Old Testament - Lot: Hospitality.



Holy Pagans of the Old Testament 
Not heard a word from the Second Nocturn Reading but, for the purpose, went back to the Lectern. It was exciting to follow the seeming inverse of order of clues.  

  • Danielou -  
  • Holy Pagans of the Old Testament - 
  • Lot  - Hospitality.



Danielou, Jean (1905-1974) was born into a privileged family; his father being a politician and his mother an educationalist. He did brilliantly at his studies, and in 1929 entered the Society of Jesus, where he came under the influence of de Lubac and got to know Teilhard de Chard in. In 1940 he was chaplain to students in Paris and committed to the cause of resistance. Widely ecumenical in his views, he was a peritus at Vatican II under Pope John XXIII, and was made a cardinal by Pope Paul VI. As an author he was at home in many fields of erudition, including scripture, patristics, theology, and spirituality. 
+ + +

TWENTY-THIRD WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME
TUESDAY    Year II
First Reading  2 Peter 2:1-8
Verse 2:7, "And he rescued righteous Lot ..." (AMB)
Second Reading
From the writings of Cardinal Jean Danielou
(Holy Pagans of the Old Testament, 112-115)
Hospitality
Lot is a witness to the fact that, in the natural order, certain men were able to know the true God and to serve him, and he is one of the saints of the cosmic religion, of the first covenant. 
But, while the outstanding thing to be observed in Henoch is knowledge of the true God, in Lot it is the practice of true virtue. God reveals himself in two ways in the natural order. On the one hand he reveals his existence through his providence in the cosmos. But he makes known his law in another way, through the conscience. The sense of good and evil is written in the heart of man apart from all positive revelation. This is Saint Paul's teaching:
For when the Gentiles, who have not the law, do by nature those things that are of the law, these having not the law are a law unto themselves, who show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience bearing witness to them. And this law is a revelation from God, for there is no purely human morality; there is only religious morality. Love of the good can have no other basis but the infinitely holy will of a personal God.
Lot stands as the model of the man who is righteous according to this natural law written in the heart, and that in a twofold way. First of all because of his hospitality; he gives a welcome to the two angels whom he takes for travelers; he washes their feet and gives them unleavened bread. Hospitality is one of the basic virtues of the natural order. It signifies in effect that every man, for the very reason that he is a man, is to be treated with respect. It is a sign that the biological variations of races and nations are overridden. This hospitality Lot practices to the point of heroism; he is persecuted because of it. He is the saint of hospitality.
Lot is also the model of purity , and in this his example has a salutary value, for Sodom and Gomorrah have become symbols of sexual perversion. Lot bears witness to the truth that the actualities of love are subject to the law of God. Moreover, Saint Paul teaches in the Letter to the Romans that perversion of love was the result of the abandonment of God. Lot's purity  in the midst of an impure world is thus a testimony of his fidelity to God. And in a world like ours, in which an insidious sensuality is corroding a certain spiri­tual integrity, his example is a reminder that even before all posi­tive law true religion was always manifested by purity .
But what makes for Lot's greatness is not only that he was a righteous man, but the fact that he lived as such in the midst of a sinful world.
Being devoted to God and to his law, he is afflicted at the sight of sin. This antipathy to sin is the hallmark of a soul that loves God, for God detests sin. Yet Lot is willing to live among sinners. Not that he can do anything for them. He exemplifies a world in which witness alone is possible, and in this sense he witnesses to the impotence of natural holiness in the face of the world's sin. But at least he can suffer, and that must often be the portion of the righteous one, accepting his loneliness in a world submerged by materialism and impurity .

Monday 10 September 2012

Aphasia Ephphatha 'He has done all things well' Mark 7:31-37



----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Donald . . .
To: Nivard . . .
Sent: Monday, 10 September 2012, 11:00
Subject: Ephasia and Ephphatha Mk.7:31-37

Hi, Nivard,
Sometimes the Night Office rouses up the Aphasia/Ephphatha experience.
There was not a word of the Second Reading, Title or paragraphs, I could hear until  the comment, "He has done all things well". Not to hear  another word until again, "He has done all things well", again and again, (actually on eight occasions, including Genesis 1:31).
That was too much for me getting back to the Lectionary and uncover the mystery. 
The Second Reading is from St. Lawrence of Brindisi, the Sunday Gospel Mark 7:31-37.
I count eight utterances of, "He has dona things well", and repeats in the paragraphs.
The Gospel concludes also verse Mk:7,37, "He has dona things well".
How did I miss all this?
Maybe the explanation may also be in the Gospel, Verse 34, "He said to him, "Ephphatha", and the link with the word Ephasia.
It is possible that, "deaf man who had an impediment in his speech" suffered from a Stroke. 
It is interesting comment on patients.
"Speech Impediments:
- Auditory Aphasia - Don’t know what speech sounds like.
- Gibberish Aphasia – Speak words and Phrases that make no sense.
-  Motor Aphasia – Know what they want to say but cannot utter the words. 
- Amnesic Aphasia – Can’t recall certain words that are familiar.
St. Lawrence of Brindisi is new to me, and wonderfully on pitch.

Donald



LAWRENCE OF BRINDISI (1559-1619) was born at Brindisi and educated at Venice. In 1575 he entered with the Capuchins and was sent to Padua to study philosophy and theology. He had a prodigious memory and was said to know the Scriptures by heart in the original. This enabled him to convert many Jews. Raised to a high degree of contemplation himself, he evangelized much of Europe, speaking to the hearts of those who heard him. From 1602 he served a term as minister general of the Capuchins. As chaplain to the imperial troops he led them into battle and to victory against the Turks on two occasions, armed only with a crucifix. He died at Lisbon while on an embassy. His writings include eight volumes of sermons, commentaries on Genesis and Ezekiel, and other didactic or controversial works. Pope John XXIII added his name to the list of Doctors of the Church.

TWENTY- THIRD SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME Year B
Gospel: Mark 7:31-37
Returning from the district of Tyre, Jesus went by way of Sidon toward the Sea of Galilee, right through the Deca­polis region. And they brought him a deaf man who had an impediment in his speech; and they asked him to lay. his hand on him. He took him aside in private, away from the crowd, put his fingers into the man's ear and touched his tongue with spittle. Then looking up to heaven he sighed; and he said to
him, "Ephphatha," that is, "Be opened" And his ears were opened, and the ligament of his tongue was loosened and he spoke clearly. And Jesus ordered them to tell no one about it, but the more he insisted, the more widely they published it Their admiration was unbounded. "He has done all things well," they said "he makes the deaf hear and the dumb speak."
+ + +
From a homily by Saint Lawrence of Brindisi
(Horn. I, Dom. XI post Pent 1.9.11.12: Opera omnia, t 8, 124.134.136-138).

To imitate Christ by doing all things well is not simply a matter of doing good works: we must also do them with the right intention All God's good works are done for our sake, so we must do ours for his sake.
Just as the divine law says that when God created the world he saw all that he had made and it was very good, so the gospel, speaking of our redemption and re-creation, affirms: He has done all things well A good tree bears good fruit; no good tree can bear bad fruit As fire can give out nothing but heat and is incapable of giving out cold; and as the sun gives out nothing but light and is incapable of giving out darkness, so God is incapable of doing anything but good, for he is infinite goodness and light He is a sun giving out endless light, a fire producing endless warmth. He has done all things well
And so today we must wholeheartedly unite with that holy throng in saying: He has done all things well He has made the deaf hear and the dumb speak

Like Balaam's ass, this crowd certainly spoke under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit Clearly it was the Holy Spirit who said through its mouth: He has done all things well; in other words he is truly God, because making the deaf hear and the dumb speak are things that only God can do. There is a transition here from the particular to the general This man has worked a miracle that only God could work; therefore he is God" who has done all things well.
He has done all things well. The law says that all God did was good; the gospel says He has done all things well. Doing a good deed is not quite the same as doing it well. Many do good deeds but fail to do them well The deeds of hypocrites, for example, are good, but they are done in the wrong spirit, with a perverse and defective intention. Everything God does, however, is not only good but is also done well The Lord is just in all his ways and holy in all his deeds. With wisdom you have done them all: that is to say, most wisely and well, So he has done all things wen they say.
Now if God has done all his good works and done them well-for our sake, knowing that we take pleasure in goodness, why I ask do we not endeavour to make all our works good and to do them well, knowing that such works are pleasing to God?
If you ask what we should do in order to enjoy the divine blessings for ever, I will tell you in a word. Since the Church is called the bride of Christ and of God, we must do what a good wife does for her husband Then God will treat us as a good husband treats a dearly loved wife. This is what the Lord says through Hosea: I will betroth you to myself with justice and integrity, with tenderness and compassion; I will betroth you to myself with faithfulness, and you shall know that I am the Lord. So even in this present life we shall be happy, this world will be an earthly paradise for us; with the Hebrews we shall feast on heavenly manna in the desert of this life, if only we follow Christ's example by striving to do everything well so that He has done all things well may be said of each one of us.


Sunday 9 September 2012

Monks in Japan, Cistercian (Trappist)

PHARE  Our Lady of the Lighthouse Abbey, Japan
Community E-mail


Trappist ice cream lures tourists

Trappist ice cream: expensive, remote and oh-so-delicious
Japan
September 6, 2012

Catholic Church News Image of Trappist ice cream lures tourists
Trappist ice cream gets visitors flocking to the abbey where it's made

  • Scrumptious cookies, artisan butter, and fine butter-based candies: these are some of the products of Hokkaido’s Trappist abbey for male Religious, and they are famous throughout Japan.
  • Last year, these Trappists launched a new line of soft-serve ice cream. At 320 yen (about US$4), it is on the expensive side, and it can only be purchased at Our Lady of Pharos Monastery in Hokuto City, Hokkaido, some 670km north of Tokyo. Ever since the ice cream’s introduction, rave reviews have appeared online for its “unforgettable taste.”
  • The soft-serve will remain on sale through early November. When eaten together with one of the renowned Trappist cookies, the result is “double delicious.”
  • Tourists visiting the Trappist shop had been requesting ice cream, so Abbot Kunihiko Yoshimoto put the idea to the rest of the abbey about two years ago. A team of 12, including both monks and lay employees, was assembled, with Brother Makoto Kamata at the head.
  • This team collaborated with industry experts to refine the recipe in a process including three tasting sessions and lots of research and discussion. The distinctive taste of the resulting ice cream comes from its use of the famous Trappist butter. The butter is cultured with lactic acid, giving it a rich flavor and a tantalizing aroma.
  • The monastery is somewhat removed from civilization, causing Br. Kamata to worry. But as rumor of the soft-serve spread, the monks found a hit on their hands, with 20,000 people served in just the past year.
  • A recent Thursday saw a steady stream of ice-cream seekers arrive by car and motorcycle, from parents and their children to couples, young people, and tourists. Priests on retreat stopped by, and construction workers building what will become the Hokkaido-Shinkansen rail line showed up, still wearing their work clothes.
  • A daycare service for the elderly arrived with 15 people in a van. According to the caregivers, this is the fifth trip to the store since someone first suggested an ice cream run to the monastery. But these visitors aren’t only here for the soft-serve: after their snack, they remain on the property for a while, spending time in the adjoining church building and enjoying the vistas of the surrounding nature.
  • Br. Kamata says that, since they started selling ice cream, the number of people coming to relax at the monastery has grown.
  • “I think it’s great. These people came out here just to visit the monastery. If they get even just a small taste of what it means to be at rest in the presence of God, I’ll be really happy.”    

  http://www.japan-i.jp/explorejapan/hokkaido/donan-hakodate/hakodate/4oa00l00000072pn.html

Trappist MonasteryTrappist Monastery
Trappist Monastery was built in 1896 as the first monastery in Japan, and its official name is “Our Lady of the Lighthouse Trappist (Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance) Monastery.” 
Rows of beautiful poplar trees line the way to Trappist Monastery, a grand building of red brick built in 1908, nestled in the midst of a large, tranquil forest. 
The monks still live each day according to strict precepts. 
The Trappist cookies, butter, butter candy, and jam made at the monastery are highly popular as Hokkaido’s local specialties. 

Only male visitors are allowed to tour the inside of the monastery, with prior request by reply-paid postcard required.



Saturday 8 September 2012

YOU AND i Gabrielle Bossis. 1949 At hospital


YOU AND i Gabrielle Bossis. 
1949
S
eptember 8  -   At the hospital after an operation.
 "I could have come for you, couldn't I? And you would have let yourself be taken joyously. But youstill want to do a little work for My glory, don't you? Gaily too? Isn't it true that nothing is worthliving for except service for Me? And do you believe that I wait upon you so that you may waitupon Me? I'll keep on giving you all you need in your mind and heart. Have I ever failed you? Don'tfail Me.Together we'll weave the last threads of your life-pattern. 
  Together... always. Isn't that power?When you feel weak as you do today, take your Brother's power to love, to praise, to thank our Father. Don't deprive Him of any smile. A smile is a happy amen. And give the same to the peoplearound you.They need joy and kindness so much. Don't ever have to accuse yourself of having given begrudgingly, but go eagerly, go with power. Go as though you were going to God."
September 15  - Convalescent. Holy hour.
 "Let your return to life b....


Joachim Jeremias 'Central Message'

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Donald - - -
Sent: Friday, 7 September 2012, 20:25
Subject: Re:
Joachim Jermias
In a Blogspot, a word from Joachim Jermias is so on focus;
A hardback first edition of Joachim Jeremias, The Central Message of the New Testament, published by SCM in 1965. The last lines of Jeremias in The Central Message of the New Testament, on the Johannine Prologue (John 1.1-18), are a good example of his style and his way of doing New Testament theology from the standpoint of a faith both critical and confident:

It is in a world which knew of God's silence as a token of his inexpressible majesty that the message of the Christian church rings out: God is no longer silent - he speaks... [and] God has not always remained hidden. 
There is one point at which God took off the mask; once he spoke distinctly and clearly. 
This happened in Jesus of Nazareth; this happened above all on the cross...God is no longer silent. God has spoken. 
Jesus of Nazareth is the Word - he is the Word with which God has broken his silence. Page 90
- - - - - - - - - - 

July 08, 2009

Joachim Jeremias and the Central Message of the New Testament

SCM MapWell I'm on holiday. That's when you get doing what you like. I like second-hand bookshops. So that's what we did, Graeme and I. James Dickson's out at Kilsyth, via Caulders Garden Centre with tea room. Only bought three books - two of them recently published but well reduced. One of them a wee gem from another era. A hardback first edition of Joachim Jeremias, The Central Message of the New Testament, published by SCM in 1965. What was a surprise about the book was the reverse of the dust cover. Unlike the bad and often annoying habit of contemporary publishers, who put the mutually congratulatory blurb of sympathetic peers on the back, this one has something much more interesting. A map. The SCM Map of Theology 1965, showing the university whereabouts of some of SCM's main European continental authors. Fascinating and a who's who of mid-20th century and mainly German and Swiss Protestant biblical scholars. It both dates me and pleases me that I've read something by most of them, and lots of stuff by some of them.

JeremiasJoachim Jeremias himself I have admired and enjoyed reading ever since working through Volume 1 of his New Testament Theology: The Proclamation of Jesus. He never finished the second volume - and some of his main contentions are now questioned or superceded. But there is a seriousness of purpose and a reverence for the words of Jesus in Jeremias that helped to reassure a young Scottish Baptist student who had discovered that reading German biblical criticism can be like a debut attempt at white water rafting not knowing how to hold the paddle. So I bought this book in appreciation of 
a good man and a careful scholar. His other books, The Parables of Jesus, The Eucharistic Teaching of Jesus and Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus, show the same careful learning tracing its way through ancient cultures and texts.

The last lines of Jeremias in The Central Message of the New Testament, on the Johannine Prologue (John 1.1-18), are a good example of his style and his way of doing New Testament theology from the standpoint of a faith both critical and confident:
It is in a world which knew of God's silence as a token of his inexpressible majesty that the message of the Christian church rings out: God is no longer silent - he speaks... [and] God has not always remained hidden. There is one point at which God took off the mask; once he spoke distinctly and clearly. This happened in Jesus of Nazareth; this happened above all on the cross...God is no longer silent. God has spoken. Jesus of Nazareth is the Word - he is the Word with which God has broken his silence. Page 90

Nativity BVM 8 Sept


Saturday 8th. September
The Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary  
Night Office: First Reading. From the book of Genesis (3:9-20).
There is a selection of commentaries on Genesis, and on the Gospel of Matthew 1.
However, the passage from Genesis on Adam and Eve shadows and dark  dawn out to the New Adam and New Eve.

 Google: Nativity of Mary, the passage from Genesis on Adam and Eve shadows and dark dawn out to the New Adam and New Eve, Blogspot
About 4,730 results (0.45 seconds)

1.  The Luminous Mysteries – Part One

SUMMARY
1.      The proper perspective within which we ought to read the account of Gen. 1-3 is from the standpoint of Moses.  We must stand with Moses on Mount Sinai and be wrapped in a vision of Paradise.  We must see paradise with our own eyes and experience the drama which unfolds upon that sacred ground.  This perspective, which involves the reader in the story of creation, will be important as we journey with our Lord through each Luminous Mystery.
2.      The first image of Eden is that of light and darkness.  This contrast will come to full stature with the revelation of the Light of the world, the Son of God, who stands against the powers of darkness.  This image will be first encountered throughout the Luminous Mysteries, as Christ our God confronts the evil of sin and death.
3.      The second image of Eden is that of the Waters which have three characteristics: death, life, and the Spirit.  This image will be most prevalent in the first Luminous Mystery, the Baptism of Christ.
4.      The third image is that of sonship.  Adam is made in the image and likeness of God and is called to act out that reality in his relation to the world as king and marital companion.  The fulfillment of his vocation will confirm upon Adam the permanent supernatural status as a son of God bound to the Father by a covenantal union.  We will encounter this image throughout the Luminous Mysteries as Christ restores man to his proper relationship with the Father.  With the raising of fallen man in the Jordan River, the Proclamation of the Kingdom, and the Transfiguration we will begin to see the restoration of man as a son of God.
5.      The forth image is that of the Fall.  Adam and Eve are called to union with each other and with God but instead of the divine covenantal union, God’s children seek life apart from God on the seventh day.  With the Fall, Adam and Eve lose their royal inheritance and their royal robes, clothed now in the image of the animals.  At the wedding at Cana, we will encounter the restoration of the fallen Eve in the person of Mary.
6.      The fifth image of Eden is the merciful Father who seeks the restoration of His creation and the reunion with his prodigal children. In each of the Mysteries of Light, the forth and fifth images will be brought forth.  As Christ condescends to become a partaker in our plight we will again and again see our Lord touch the fallen Adam and bring him back to life, uniting him to the heavenly Father who seeks union with his creation.
7.      The sixth image is the reason for exile, the Tree of Life.  Man is cast forth from the Garden and the Cherubim are placed at the gate of Paradise.  At the table of the Eucharistic banquet we will receive from the hand of Christ the fruit of the Tree of Life which will be for the life of the world.
8.      The final image of Paradise necessary to begin our journey through the Luminous Mysteries is that of location.  The Jews believed that Jerusalem was the location of the Garden of Eden.  As Christ comes forth from the Jordan, we will walk with him toward Jerusalem and see in his footsteps and actions the restoration of Paradise.
9.      The hope that burned in the hearts of the Jewish people at the time of Christ was that God would wash them from their sin, restore them to their ancient Paradise, and once again dwell with his children in a covenant union.  This hope would not be in vain, for as Christ transfigures our human nature by his actions of grace, we are introduced to the restoration of mankind.

Friday 7 September 2012

2. Royal Road of the Cross; Night Office The Imitation of Christ Bk.2 Ch.12

COMMENT: 


Thank you, William,
We are coming close to the Feast of 'The Exaltation of the Cross'. 
 
I have edited slightly the text of the Cyber Library translation of  Bk.ii, Ch.XII of Imitation.    
      
It is good of you to set me in pursuit of Joachim Jeremias, and have found others  hot on second hand books.
Yours...
Donald




----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William W- - -
To: Donald - - -  
Sent: Friday, 7 September 2012, 15:25
Subject: Re: Kempis - references to the Cross

Dear Father Donald,
 
How 'co-incidental' - I was this morning in the bookshop, and was very taken with a translation of the 'Imitation'... but [happily] resisted, to now receive the on-line resource you discovered with so fine a translation - thank you!  It is a very 'striking' extract you researched from the Night Office - so many references to the Cross... which repetition brings quietness and opens the heart to acceptance "lead you to the desired goal where indeed there shall be no more suffering"
 
I too was sitting up late last evening (but not as late by equivalent rest hours as yourself!), entirely engrossed in a book that has become a 'text book' for me (which means I have given in to the temptation to underline and write in the margins) - Joachim Jeremias, 'New Testament Theology, Vol.1, The Proclamation of Jesus'. The theology is not presented under 'aspects' of theology but in the order of the life and teaching of Jesus. It colours in so many threads for me in the Christology tapestry, revealing the figure of Jesus even more clearly.The focus of last night's chapter was (page 181) "the gift of being a child of God stamps the whole life of Jesus' disciples.. which becomes clear in three ways: being a child of God brings certainty of a share in future salvation / everyday security / and courage to submit to what is unpredictable in the divine will" - "in particular, it is suffering that appears in a new light where men are conscious of being children of God"... "Nothing happens without God. Jesus believes that unconditionally. Stronger than all questions, riddles and anxieties is the one word, 'Abba'. The Father knows."  
 
"Leave consolation to God; let Him do as most pleases Him.  On your part, be ready to bear sufferings and consider them the greatest consolation, for even though you alone were to undergo them all, the sufferings of this life are not worthy to be compared with the glory to comeLet this be the final conclusion -- that through much suffering we must enter into the kingdom of God.
 
Thank you for sharing with me the keys upon the keyring that leads to the discovery of such heavenly treasure!
 
With my love in Our Lord,
William