Monday 12 November 2012

Saint Machar, Feast Day, Aberdeen, Scotland.

   Thank you, Tom. http://www.hagiomajor.blogspot.co.uk
Blogspot: best browse for Saint of the day: 12th November Saint Machar 

November 12 -- Feast of Saint Machar
The Cathedral of Saint Machar, Aberdeen, Scotland.
How many saints have oil fields named after them?  As it turns out, at least six.  Marnoch, Mungo, Mirren, Machar, Monan, and Madoes are all fields in the North Sea, all operated by BP.  The three fields that Shell operates in the Eastern Tough Area of the North Sea are all named for birds: Heron, Egret, Skua.  Then again, if the recent theory that Mungo and Machar are the same saint is true, there's one fewer saint with an oilfield named for him, but no fewer oilfields named for saints. The lack of any evidence of his existence on the continent, in spite of his allegedly having been named the Bishop of Tours and being buried beside St. Martinhimself, calls at least some of the saint's identity into question.

Existence aside, Machan has some cool legends to his credit.  Angels sang by his crib when he was a baby.  As a small child, he touched the body of his stillborn brother and brought the infant to life.  While a disciple of St. Columba, he cured seven lepers and turned a fierce wild boar to stone.  Harried by his growing fame, he was dispatched by Columba to the Picts, a most Christianity-resistant people.  He is said to have founded the church at Aberdeen there; that church, once called St. Machan's is now the High Kirk of the Church of Scotland in the Presbytery of Aberdeen.

Aer Lingus' St. Machan?
Machan didn't rest on his cathedra, however. [Actually, I am not sure he was a bishop yet.  I gather that the pilgrimage to Rome was in part a consecration mission.]  Although Pope Saint Gregory the Greatconfirmed him as Bishop of the Picts, he stopped off in Tours to venerate Martin, was elected bishop while there, and stayed until the end of his days.

Perhaps Machar is an invention of the early forerunner of the Aberdeen Chamber of Commerce.  But if so, why did they not invent a set of bones to for the gullible to venerate as well?  True, Tours does not have a grave for him either, but Europe was ravaged by waves of Northmen who seemed to delight in disrespecting shrines.  For now, I'll insist that Saint Machar, the patron of big brothers who take care of their younger siblings, is a real saint.  When Aer Lingus names a plane after him, I will have all the confirmation I need.  

St Theodore the Studite Nov 12

Saint Theodore of Studis
November 12   
SAINT THEODORE THE STUDITE, abbot
Optional Memorial
Entry antiphon (Ps 15: '5-6).
You, Lord, are my portion and cup,
you restore my inheritance to me;
the way of life you have marked out for me .
has made my heritage glorious.

   Opening Prayer
Lord’
by your holy abbot Theodore
you have endorsed the order and charm of the  cenobitic way of life, .
grant, we pray,
that with him to support 'and inspire us,
we may reproduce by our forbearance the pattern of Christ's sufferings
and merit to be sharers with him in his kingdom,
where he lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, ·
God, forever and ever.

   Prayer over the Gifts

Most merciful God
in Saint Theodore ,you put an end to the old, sinful humanity,
and created instead a new humanity in your own image.
Create in us a new life like his,
so that we may become worthy to offer you this sacrifice of our redemption.
Through Christ, our Lord.

Communion antiphon (See Mt 19: 27-29)
I assure you who left all and followed me:
you will receive a hundredfold in return,
and inherit eternal life.

   Prayer.after Communion

Almighty God,
by the power of this sacrament you have given, us new strength.
Teach us, like Saint Theodore,
always to set our hearts on you above all,
and to grow into the likeness of Jesus Christ:
who lives and reigns forever and ever. 
A Reading about St Theodore the Studite by Donald. Attwater

Theodore the Studite was born in Constantinople in 759 and died on November 11th, 826. He was without question one of the greatest of the Byzantine monks.
St Theodore stands out as a champion of the Church's independence from the State in spiritual matters, as a defender of the legitimacy of sacred images, and as a monastic reformer of genius. In this last respect his influence is very much alive today. Many of his writings have come down to us, including over 5 hundred letters, sermons, and a number of hymns. Like the life of the saint, they are marked with that rigorism and uncompromising detachment from the world, almost amounting to a 'puritanism,' which was characteristic of many of his followers, and in some of his successors was so exaggerated as gravely to disturb the 'Church's peace.

However, there was a less rigid side to his character, as may be seen In some of his letters to private individuals and about personal concerns. There have at all times been monks who look on the secular state of the ordinary Christian with something almost amounting to contempt, as a way of life permitted to man on account of his weakness, instead of what it is, the normal way of life ordained by God for mankind. Not so St Theodore. He set a very high value on domestic life, and knew that holiness was not confined to the cloister. He wrote to a layman: ' These things that I have mentioned are the things that pertain to the true Christian, and do not imagine, Sir, that they are only the concern of monks: they are most strictly enjoined on monks but they are the concern equally of the laity at large — except, of course, celibacy and voluntary poverty, and there are times for abstinence and rules for self-denial regarding even these.'

And to another: 'Every Christian ought to be as it were a reproduction of Christ, related to him as the branch is to the vine or a bodily member to the head.' To a man who had lost his third child he wrote: 'It is sad for you, most sad. But it is far from being so for those who have been taken at so young an age that they were untouched by sin; theirs is a blessed and perfect life In the bosom of Abraham, where they glorify God with sweet song in company with the Holy Innocents and all the other Christ bearing children’ ...
Saints of the East , (The Catholic Book Club, London, 1963. Adapted from pp. 98-100.)



Sunday 11 November 2012

COMMENT: The Imitation, Ronald Knox and Balthasar.



Having seen Hans Urs Von Balthasar's, 'The Heart of the World', likened with Thomas a'Kempis, I wonder.
The literary critique came be seen in the Preface of Ronald Knox, specifically in his Preface of the Imitation.

"A work without frills-until you reach the fourth book, which is purely a manual for the Communicant, it contains curiously little in the way of theology. The very existence of the Holy Spirit is only recognized, for example, in one or two stray allusions. You can feel the influence of a reaction against the over-subtle speculations of the later medieval theologians; those masters who are more concerned to know than to live well (Bk. I, ch. 3), whose arguments will be silenced when Jerusalem is searched with lamps (Bk Ill, ch. 43)." Ronald Knox

The Imitation of Christ by Thomas a’Kempis,
trns. Ronald Knox .
PREFACE
How many books are there whose titles you can clip till they only contain one effective word, and yet be understood by all educated people? The Apologia is one, there is Butler's Analogy, and Paley's Evidences, but you will not find many names to match them: nobody talks of the Anatomy of Melancholy as the Anatomy, or of the Origin of Species as the Origin. Such tests are tiny reflectors that give back the glow of fame; and no book passes this test so well as the Imitation. Among Catholics at least it is the only book which is mentioned in the same breath with the Bible; among the non-Catholics of yesterday the Pilgrim's Progress ("the Pilgrim" for short) was so bracketed. Yet, like other spiritual classics, the Cloud of Unknow­ing, for example, or the Whole Duty of Man, it has created problems of authorship. And the reader has a right to expect, here, a dissertation upon the Dutchman, Groote, who is said to have written the first book as it stands, and the degree of recension to which Thomas a Kempis submitted the second and third: with more information about the circumstances in which the work was composed, and the form of it. But this must be omitted, since I am writing away from books-not, however, away from the Imitation; it has only once, I think, escaped the packer's eye since I received the sub diaconate. "Do not ask," says Bk. I, eh. 5, "who said this, but listen to what is said". There are no frills about the Imitation.
[Footnote}This was Mgr. Knox's contribution to "The Catholic Classics" series in The Tablet and was first published in the issue of April 20th  1940. It was written many years before he started to translate the Imitation and the quotations from the Imitation which appear in it are rendered differently in the present work.

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My aim is to seize upon the characteristic method and effect of the book, and I am not sure that this aim has not been already realized when I have said that there are no frills about the Imitation. It has the frill-lessness of Euclid and the Athanasian Creed. Where the first book is concerned, you may say that even to the style. "Sometimes we think that others are fond of our company when in fact it is beginning to disgust them, from the worthlessness of the character they see in us" (Bk. I, eh. 8): how could you administer in less words a cold douche to a man who has spent the evening with friends? "If you cannot make yourself the man you want to be, how can you expect other people to come up to your specifications?" (Bk. I, eh. 16): "if you bother so little about yourself while you are alive, who is going to bother about you when you are dead?" (Bk. I, eh. 23)-these are barbs which get beneath the skin of the toughest among us; and yet how quietly they are shot.
It has been commonly observed that the first book is concerned almost entirely with the reformation of character, and a good deal of it might have been drawn from heathen moralists-in one place, indeed, Seneca is quoted. But if it . was the author's intention to confine himself to the elements of asceticism, he has certainly outrun his intention; as in the eleventh chapter, where he writes: "If we were thoroughly dead to ourselves, and free from attachments within, we should be able to relish divine things and have some experience of heavenly contemplation". He is already impatient for the illuminative way, and by the first chapter of Book II he is well into it. Detachment, the conversion of the regard inwards, the welcoming of mortifications with and for Christ, are ideals taken for granted. The Imitation, wide as is its use outside the cloister, and indeed outside the Church, was
7 Preface

meant for religious in the first instance, and the author makes no apology for thus suddenly keying us up to concert pitch. The rest of Book II is, and is meant to be, "stripping"; we are not to be content with moral suasions, or treat our own peace of mind as the ideal to be aimed at; we are concerned with nothing less than the establishment of Christ's reign in us. If we are ready to give up having our own way, that is no longer because "it is necessary sometimes to relinquish our own opinion, for the sake of peace" (Bk. I, eh. 9), but because "you are not to think you have made any progress until you feel that you are everybody's inferior" (Bk. II, eh. 2). If we avoid gossip, it is no longer because "we rarely return to silence, without finding that we have soiled our consciences" (Bk. I, eh. 10), but because "you will never know interior devotion, until you hold your tongue about what concerns others, and turn back upon yourself" (Bk. II, ch. 5). And learning is to be distrusted as inadequate, not because "he is truly learned, who leaves his own will and does the will of God" (Bk. I, ch. 3), but because "one thing is still wanting ... that a man should leave all, and leave himself, and go out of himself altogether, and keep nothing for himself of self-love" (Bk. II, eh. 11). We have embarked on an inner circle of spiritual ideas, and no rest is given us. The clerical "we", which softened the effects of Book I, almost disappears in Book II; the author button-holes you with a persistent "thou", and brings every consideration grimly home to you.
So Book II leads us up to that amazingly uncomfortable last chapter, in which the reader feels as if he were being turned over and over on a spit, to make sure that he is being singed with suffering at every point. If a man tells you that he is fond of the Imitation, view him with sudden suspicion; he is either a dabbler or a
8 Preface

saint. No manual is more pitiless in its exposition of the Christian ideal, less careful to administer consolation by the way. But now, when we feel we have been bullied into the illuminative way, is the stripping part all over? Is the third book to be a collection of maxims illustrating the unitive way, and its glimpses of fruition ? Dr. Bigg, in his introduction, writes as if it were: it tells, he says, "of the presence of Christ in the soul, of life in the spirit, of the mystic vision, as cl Kempis understood it". This judgement seems to be founded on one or two passages in the third book, rather than on the book as a whole. The twenty-first chapter, that begins with a beating of the wings as the soul aspires towards God, and culminates in the sudden "Ecce adsum" of the Divine Lover's intervention, leaves asceticism behind and breathes pure mysticism; but it stands almost alone. The dialogue from of the book—it consists entirely of conversations between Christ and the soul—suggests that it is the r 'fruit of a’Kempis' own contemplations; and perhaps the absence of scheme about it can be explained best if we suppose that he simply wrote these down as they came to him in the order of time. But the subjects treated are, for the most part, still in the ascetic sphere; or at best they are consolations addressed to the soul in the dark night which comes before the way of union. It is not in any sense a mystical treatise; [1] the fifty-sixth chapter is still urging us towards the way of the Cross. The writer is still coaxing us onwards; he does not try to take our breath away.
A work without frills-until you reach the fourth book, which is purely a manual for the Communicant, it contains curiously little in the way of theology. The
[Footnote] It is perhaps only fair to state that Mgr. Knox's view of the Imitation as "not in any sense a mystical treatise" is not shared by all writers on the mysticallife.-M. O.

9 Preface

very existence of the Holy Spirit is only recognized, for example, in one or two stray allusions. You can feel the influence of a reaction against the over-subtle speculations of the later medieval theologians; those masters who are more concerned to know than to live well (Bk. I, ch. 3), whose arguments will be silenced when Jerusalem is searched with lamps (Bk Ill, ch. 43). A book without frills—was there ever a spiritual author who told us less of his private experiences? It was he, presumably, who felt anxiety about his final perseverance, and was told to act as he would act if he were certain of it (Bk. I, eh. 25); that is the only echo of autobiography. The whole work was meant to be, surely, what it is—sustained irritant which will preserve us, if it is read faithfully, from sinking back into relaxation: from self-conceit, self-pity, self-love. It offers consolation here and there, but always at the price of fresh exertion, of keeping your head pointing up-stream. Heaven help us if we find easy reading in The Imitation of Christ.
R. A. KNOX