Wednesday 24 April 2013

Saint John 12:37-50. Retrospective and Resume of Out Lord's Ministry

Ronald Knox and Ronald Cox.   

The Gospel Story
Reflections of John and the Evangelist.
A Summary of the Lord's Life.

It was the occasion of the Gospel Reading for the Mass this morning.
The brightness of the Paschal Candle and the reading gave new illumination to mind and heart.

The Amplified Bible adds savoury of translation:

Joh 12:49  This is because I have never spoken on My own authority or of My own accord or as self-appointed, but the Father Who sent Me has Himself given Me orders [concerning] what to say and what to tell. [Deut. 18:18, 19.] 
Joh 12:50  And I know that His commandment is (means) eternal life. So whatever I speak, I am saying [exactly] what My Father has told Me to say and in accordance with His instructions. 


The Commentary for Navarre BibleJohn 12:44-50 brings the theological presence to the text. not withstanding contoversy of 'The Unbelief of the Jews'.   


    44-50.  With these verses St. John brings to an end his account of our Lord's public ministry. He brings together certain fundamental themes developed in previous chapters--the need for faith in Christ (verse Joh_12:44 ); the Father and the Son are one yet distinct (cf. Joh_12:45 ); Jesus is Light and Life of the world (verses Joh_12:46 , Joh_12:50 ); men will be judged in accordance with whether they accept or reject the Son of God (verses Joh_12:47-49 ). The chapters which follow contain Jesus' teaching to His Apostles at the Last Supper, and the accounts of the Passion and Resurrection.   

   45.  Christ, the Word Incarnate, is one with the Father (cf. Joh_10:30 ); "He reflects the glory of God" ( Heb_1:3 ); "He is the image of the invisible God" ( Col_1:15 ). In  Joh_14:9  Jesus expresses Himself in almost the same words: "He who has seen Me has seen the Father". At the same time as He speaks of His oneness with the Father, we are clearly shown the distinction of persons--the Father who sends, and the Son who is sent.
  In Christ's holy human nature His divinity is, as it were, hidden, that divinity which He possesses with the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit (cf. Joh_14:7-11 ). In theology "circumincession" is the word usually used for the fact that, by virtue of the unity among the three Persons of the Blessed Trinity, "the Father is wholly in the Son and wholly in the Holy Spirit; the Son wholly in the Father and wholly in the Holy Spirit; the Holy Spirit wholly in the Father and wholly in the Son" (Council of Florence, "Decree Pro Jacobitis, Dz-Sch", 1331).   

   47.  Christ has come to save the world by offering Himself in sacrifice for our sins and bringing us supernatural life (cf. Joh_3:17 ). But He has also been made Judge of the living and the dead (cf. Act_10:42 ): He passes sentence at the Particular Judgment which happens immediately after death, and at the end of the world, at His Second Coming or Parousia, at the universal judgment (cf. Joh_5:22 ; Joh_8:15-16 ).




<< John 12:49 >>
Strong'sTransliterationGreekEnglishMorphology
3754 [e]hotiὅτιforConj
1473 [e]egōἐγὼIPPro-N1S
1537 [e]exἐξfromPrep
1683 [e]emautouἐμαυτοῦmyselfPPro-GM1S
3756 [e]oukοὐκnotAdv
2980 [e]elalēsaἐλάλησαspoke,V-AIA-1S
235 [e]all'ἀλλ'butConj
3588 [e]hotheArt-NMS
3992 [e]pempsasπέμψαςhaving sentV-APA-NMS
1473 [e]meμεmePPro-A1S
3962 [e]patērπατὴρFatherN-NMS
846 [e]autosαὐτόςhimself,PPro-NM3S
1473 [e]moiμοιmePPro-D1S
1785 [e]entolēnἐντολὴνcommandmentN-AFS
1325 [e]dedōkenδέδωκενgaveV-RIA-3S
5101 [e]tiτίwhatIPro-ANS
3004 [e]eipōεἴπωI should say,V-ASA-1S
2532 [e]kaiκαὶandConj
5101 [e]tiτίwhatIPro-ANS
2980 [e]lalēsōλαλήσωI should speak;V-ASA-1S
ΚΑΤΑ ΙΩΑΝΝΗΝ 12:49 Greek NT: Westcott/Hort with Diacriticsὅτι ἐγὼ ἐξ ἐμαυτοῦ οὐκ ἐλάλησα, ἀλλ’ ὁ πέμψας με πατὴρ αὐτός μοι ἐντολὴν δέδωκεν τί εἴπω καὶ τί λαλήσω.ΚΑΤΑ ΙΩΑΝΝΗΝ 12:49 Greek NT: Greek Orthodox Churchὅτι ἐγὼ ἐξ ἐμαυτοῦ οὐκ ἐλάλησα, ἀλλ’ ὁ πέμψας με πατὴρ αὐτός μοι ἐντολὴν ἔδωκε τί εἴπω καὶ τί λαλήσω·
ΚΑΤΑ ΙΩΑΝΝΗΝ 12:49 Greek NT: Tischendorf 8th Ed. with Diacriticsὅτι ἐγὼ ἐξ ἐμαυτοῦ οὐκ ἐλάλησα, ἀλλ’ ὁ πέμψας με πατὴρ αὐτός μοι ἐντολὴν δέδωκεν τί εἴπω καὶ τί λαλήσω.
ΚΑΤΑ ΙΩΑΝΝΗΝ 12:49 Greek NT: Stephanus Textus Receptus (1550, with accents)ὅτι ἐγὼ ἐξ ἐμαυτοῦ οὐκ ἐλάλησα ἀλλ' ὁ πέμψας με πατὴρ αὐτός μοι ἐντολὴν ἔδωκεν τί εἴπω καὶ τί λαλήσω
ΚΑΤΑ ΙΩΑΝΝΗΝ 12:49 Greek NT: Byzantine/Majority Text (2000)οτι εγω εξ εμαυτου ουκ ελαλησα αλλ ο πεμψας με πατηρ αυτος μοι εντολην εδωκεν τι ειπω και τι λαλησω
ΚΑΤΑ ΙΩΑΝΝΗΝ 12:49 Greek NT: Textus Receptus (1894)οτι εγω εξ εμαυτου ουκ ελαλησα αλλ ο πεμψας με πατηρ αυτος μοι εντολην εδωκεν τι ειπω και τι λαλησω
John 12:49 Hebrew Bibleכי אני לא מלבי דברתי כי אם אבי השלח אתי הוא צוני את אשר אמר ואת אשר אדבר׃
John 12:49 Aramaic NT: Peshittaܕܐܢܐ ܡܢ ܢܦܫܝ ܠܐ ܡܠܠܬ ܐܠܐ ܐܒܐ ܕܫܕܪܢܝ ܗܘ ܝܗܒ ܠܝ ܦܘܩܕܢܐ ܡܢܐ ܐܡܪ ܘܡܢܐ ܐܡܠܠ ܀
Latin: Biblia Sacra Vulgataquia ego ex me ipso non sum locutus sed qui misit me Pater ipse mihi mandatum dedit quid dicam et quid loquar

Monday 22 April 2013

Six times to let sense through, and so attune to His love.


Gabrielle Bossis.
April 17 
– 1948
Gabrielle's sentence gripped my wondering,
It takes some time to get her drift....
The syntax did not hang together.
There is magnetism in pondering, and in chewing the cud.

Gabrielle's words skip breaths. 
Then His voice listens, and His word switches on light.
'This is His love.'  'Is it so difficult to think of your Lord.'    


Gabrielle Bossis HE AND i
1948 April 17
"Lord, I should so love to live Your words, 
and I am always myself, 
still my old self."

 "Is it so difficult to think of your Lord? Is it so difficult to talk with Him and to keep Him company?


When you meet someone in a  waiting room, don't you instinctively approach that person and in a kindly way do your best to make the time pass pleasantly for him? And if he were a poet, or a scholar, or someone great in the eyes of the world, wouldn't you go even further and show more joy?

My child, it’s a God who is waiting at the door of your heart, a God who is all yours and who is in you. You open to Him when you talk to Him, when you look at Him, when you try to take your thoughts off the things around you so that you may turn them to Him with the utmost tenderness.

Don't think that this is a fable I'm telling you. It is the simple reality. But as it's all happening in the shadow land where everything is imperfection, you find it difficult to believe, and you are slow in acting upon it. That is why I am like that person in the waiting room. If only you could approach Me more often with all your kind charm, you might suspect My long yearnings. You might think, 'He's waiting for the world.' Yes, My little child, for everyone, and for such a long, long time... I came to Bethlehem to seek them and I shall go on seeking them right to the end of the world.

This is the patience of God. This is His love. Then how could you ever understand? Yet it would be very sweet to believe, wouldn't it? So quicken your faith by telling Me about it often. More often. Don't get weary: you will hope more and love more. It's your great God who wants you greatly, My very frail little girl."


Sunday 21 April 2013

COMMENT: after Fr. Raymond's Homily, pre-echo of Pope Francis


Behind and prior to every vocation to the priesthood or the consecrated life there is always someone’s powerful and intense prayer: a grandmother’s, a grandfather’s, a mother’s, a father’s, a community’s... This is why Jesus said: “Pray to the Lord of the harvest,” that is, God the Father, “that he might send workers for the harvest!” (Matthew 9:38). 

Vocations are born in prayer and from prayer; and only in prayer can they persevere and bear fruit. I would like to underscore this today, which is the World Day of Prayer for Vocations. Let us pray in particular for the new priests of the Diocese of Rome, whom I had the joy to ordain this morning. And let us invoke Mary’s intercession. Today there were 10 young men who said “Yes” to Jesus and were ordained priests this morning... This is beautiful! Let us invoke Mary’s intercession, she who is the Woman of “Yes.” Mary said “Yes” her whole life! She learned to recognize Jesus’ voice from the time she carried him in her womb. Mary our Mother, help us to recognize Jesus’ voice always better and to follow it to walk along the path of life! Thank you.

ZENIT

The world seen from Rome

Daily dispatch - April 21, 2013

On the Good Sheperd
VATICAN CITY, April 21, 2013 (Zenit.org) - Here is the translation of the Holy Father's address to the faithful gathered at St. Peter's Square before and after the recitation of the Regina Caeli today. 
* * *

Good Shepherd Sunday - Homily Fr. Raymond



----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Raymond . . .
To: . . .
Sent: Sunday, 21 April 2013, 10:16
Subject: Good Shepherd Sunday

Good Shepherd Sunday
Today is Good Shepherd Sunday.  
It is a day when we focus on the Church’s need for vocations; Vocations to continue the mission of Christ, the mission of the Good Shepherd in his Church.

The word vocation implies two people: God who calls and the one whom he calls; God  who calls and the one whom He wants to respond to his call.  To understand the meaning of the word “Vocation” in its religious sense we would do well to think first about its meaning in general.  There are many senses in which we can use the word “Vocation” when we consider our lives as a whole.  First there is the fundamental common basic vocation we all have to life and existence.  It is so important to pause for a moment to realise ourselves as all having this fundamental “Vocation”.  We didn’t just come into existence, we were called into existence.  And our lives on this earth, and indeed in heaven hereafter, are nothing but our acknowledgement of and response to this call; our response to this choice God made to call us into existence.  The Psalmist puts it very neatly when he sings “I thank you, Lord, for the wonder of my being.”

Each of us is like a song, a melody; a song sung by our creator into the universe.  God doesn’t just  create us and set us down and go off and do something else.  Just as the song ceases as soon as the singer stops singing, so would we cease to exist if God forgot us for an instant.  But then, after this first basic “Vocation” to our existence there come other vocations from God, other ‘movements’ in the great symphony of life.  These “Vocations” are many and varied.  One of the most basic and primary ones is, of course, the “Vocation” to marriage and family.  In our society, the couple may think that they alone have chosen each other, but Jesus tells us differently: “What God has joined together, let no man put asunder.”  Even though they don’t realise it or acknowledge it, it is God who has called them to be together. What God has joined together, let no man put asunder." In that understanding, every marriage is an arranged marriage, arranged by the Creator himself; and even if one or other of the parties to the marriage is unfaithful to it, God is always faithful to it.  It is always His Marriage and God is such a jealous God.

Much more obviously a vocation from God, however, is the call to the priesthood or the religious life.  This vocation, this call, is a call to dedicate one’s life in a special and exclusive way, not to another human person, but to the knowledge and love and service of God and his Church.
This is the meaning of the word “Vocation” which we are considering today. It is a word which speaks of the very life blood of the Church.  It is a fundamental factor in her very existence.  Without it She cannot survive, hence the great importance of prayer for vocations to the priesthood and the religious life in the Church.



David Torkington 'clarity of thought and openness of expression'

David Torkington

COMMENT:

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William W. . . .
To: Donald. . . . .

Sent: Saturday, 20 April 2013, 23:09
Subject: [Blog] Evening Lectio - David Torkington

  
Dear Father Donald,
 
Thank you for a truly delightful discovery, the writing and the blog of David Torkington. I am very attracted by his clarity of thought and openness of expression, and will indeed follow this up for myself. 
 
- - - - -
 
I have made a book discovery (of a thousand-and-one gems) in the 2nd hand book shop - "Encyclopedia of Theology, the concise Sacramentum Mundi, edited by Karl Rahner", Burns and Oates, 1975 (3rd edition 1981). It has the most superb 'essays' on 'every possible' topic by names that make me blink. You will most likely have the book (or the full Sacramentum Mundi) but just in case - and for the joy of sharing my discovery, the cover reads: 

"It offers more than 1800 pages of thought and information on the major themes of traditional and modern theology. Edited by Professor Karl Rahner, it aims to provide a basic text presenting the findings of modern scholarly thought and research into the main themes. It draws on the work of an international team of 600 theologians, exegetes and specialists in various fields, and contains major articles dependent on contributions by more than 200 experts in the natural and human sciences. It draws on the great standard works 'Sacramentum Mundi', 'Lexikon fur Theologie und Kirche' and 'Theologisches Taschenlexikon', and offers in addition important articles that have never previously appeared in English as well as original discussions of certain key topics...many of these Essays have been written by Professor Rahner himself." 

The Tablet summed it up nicely: "A modestly priced theological library". My copy took me two visits to pluck up the courage to buy, but on the second visit I just couldn't put it down despite the natural humility of a layman in the face of such learning, and the cost £12, but I see that Amazon's price is far higher: 

Rahner Concise
Encyclopedia 1975
 
 
To have a book of such Essays is like having a seat at the back of a series of lectures! A privileged purchase. SO much to understand, such enrichment desired.
 



Delighting in David Torkington's very personal writing, and in all you present on your Blog, thank you Father.
 
. . . in Our Risen Lord,
William
 

Saturday 20 April 2013

Evening Lectio Friday of the Third week of Easter


In the Chapter Reading before Compline, we are listening to the the book by David Torkington, 'Inner Life' A Fellow Traveller's Guide to Prayer.

The Monastic Lectio Divina, sometimes, can surf the heavy waves.
David said, "I gave up trying to become an existential philosopher  ... [In] 'A way of Life',... Martin Buber had chosen to detail the essence of his existential philosophy in stories so that even I was able to understand what I had been unable to understand before."
This evening, David's writing was ringing on all peals of bells to my ear:
 "For the first time in my life I began to set aside daily quality space and time for prayer because I knew that I needed to turn within and to learn to savour in silence this mysterious presence. It was here that I came to realise as never before that we are all called not just to share in the life of Christ but also to share in his sacred and sacrificial action. In other words we are drawn up into the infinite vortex of life and love that endlessly reaches out from the Son and into the Father and from the Father into the Son. It is into this Trinity of everlasting life and love that Jesus came to invite us. This is the home for which we were created and for which we yearn the more we come to experience 'the love that surpasses all understanding' reaching out to embrace us." 




Inner Life – David Torkington
9. Converging streams

The climbing of the great Ingleborough set the scene for a week of solitude in our little cottage where I was led within myself as never before. It was the first time I'd ever reflected on my own inner life.
It seemed to have been composed of two parallel worlds - the world of religious experience and the world of mystical experience, that had developed side by side without ever meeting in any real way that enabled the one to make sense of the other. The world of religious experience was specifically Catholic, it was the world of Sunday Mass and weekly confession, of days of fasting and abstinence, of special feasts and holidays. It was the world of Catholic schools, of catechism to teach me my faith and to show me how to live it, of apologetics to show me how to reason round it and explain it to others, of annual retreats to set me alive in the Church with what bored me to death in the classroom.

The world of what I called my mystical experience wasn't specifically Catholic at all. It was an experience I had in common with others, other Christians of different traditions from my own, with Muslims and Jews, with Buddhists and Hindus, with Gnostics and agnostics and atheists too. They all seemed to have access to the same experience that I had at first thought was personal to me alone, though they all interpreted it according to their own religious or non-religious points of view. After all, why shouldn't everyone feel the touch of the One who loved them into being in the first place, and who loves them still no matter where or when they happen to be born, or what particular tradition they happen to be born into. Even dreary old apologetics had taught me that God calls everyone to what everyone wants more than anything else.

I reflected on my life I thought it strange that I'd never experienced through the practice of my Catholic faith what I'd experienced on my beloved moors, through my favourite music, or on those mysterious nights when I'd gaze for hours at the milky way and much more, experi­ences that had made me mourn for days without knowing what had moved me. There had been occasional 'feelings' that had filled me with a certain peace of mind after 'a good confession', or a sense of goodness as I walked home after early-morning Mass, or was it merely smugness? My emotions had been moved from time to time too during parish missions, or at the singing of the Credo at Lourdes, or at the Easter blessing in St Peter's Square, but never anything to compare with those profound and personal experiences that did not depend on the rites and rituals of the Church I'd been brought up in.

These two streams of experience seemed to have trickled through my life side by side without ever meeting, at least not in a way that I could understand. Then I was introduced to St Augustine at the beginning of the school retreat only two weeks after that unforgettable holiday.

Augustine had been a pagan when he'd experienced the Creator peering out at him through creation, and penetrating him with his presence, but it didn't satisfy him, just as it hadn't satisfied me. It simply made his heart more and more restless, as it had made mine. But Augustine had a perceptive mind that enabled him to see so simply and so swiftly what lesser minds always seemed to complicate. If the Creator could make himself present through his work how much more could he make himself present through his Masterwork.

Suddenly I could see through Augustine's eyes that the One I'd never fully encountered in either my religious or my mystical experience could be encountered in Christ, in whom and for whom everything had been created from the beginning. In him my two separate streams would converge, my two separate worlds would become as one.

When the retreat master said that prayer was the only way to come to know him deeply and personally, I knew what I had to do. I joined the Monday meditation group, 'Handley's half hour' as it was called. However, despite seeing what I ought to do with my mind, I needed some­thing, or someone, to move my heart. I received the inspiration I needed from two of the teaching staff; one was a layman, the other a priest

My Photo
David Torkington



10. Reflection on St Martin Buber
Saturday, 28 April 2012

A Reflection on Martin Buber

I don't think Mr. Hogg would have been employed in the first place had his predecessor not suddenly dropped dead on his way to school. Mr. Hogg was what was called in those days a 'beatnik' and would not, in the normal way of things, have been accepted as a suitable candidate to teach English to the sixth form. He always wore a pair of filthy denim trousers, a multi-coloured shirt, a grubby old duffel coat and sandals even when it was snowing. When he wasn't delivering brilliant lectures on English literature, he was to be found in the library reading existential philosophy. We idolised him. I even took to reading Martin Buber, the man he continually quoted in class. He leant me his book, entitled 'I and Thou', which I wrestled with for weeks before throwing in the towel. I gave up trying to become an existential philosopher and decided to look like one instead, like the other boys in the class who fell under the spell of the remarkable Mr. Hogg.  Unfortunately for all of us the board of governors failed to fall under the same spell and he was dismissed at the end of term.  

Several years later I came across a little book by Martin Buber in a second hand bookshop called 'A way of Life'. I read it from cover to cover on the bus home. As an Orthodox Jew steeped in the rabbinical tradition, Martin Buber had chosen to detail the essence of his existential philosophy in stories so that even I was able to understand what I had been unable to understand before. One of his stories told of a carpenter from Lubin, who had a dream in which he saw a vast treasure of immense value that he was given to understand was meant for him if he could only find it. Immediately he gathered the tools of his trade together in an old carpetbag and set out in search of what he had seen in that dream. After searching in vain through five continents he returned home tired and exhausted and flung his tools down on the ground before the hearth he had left forty years before. The floorboards gave way under their weight to reveal the treasure he had seen in that dream a generation before.           

The Kingdom of God is within, and we search in vain if we search for His Presence anywhere other than where we are now, and search in any other place than deep down within us. It is here that the One who is the 'Infinitely Distant' has chosen to become the ‘Infinitely Near'. 

After God had revealed Himself to Moses in the Burning Bush, and given him the law on Sinai, He told him to pitch another tent for He would now dwell among the people and travel with them. In this tent or tabernacle, as it was called, there was placed a large ornate oblong box called the Ark of the Covenant in which the Ten Commandments were kept written on stone tablets. At either end of the Ark there were the two golden Cherubim facing each other. God’s mystical presence on earth was believed to dwell at an indivisible point in space equidistant between the two Cherubim. This mystical presence was called ‘the Shekinah’ from the Hebrew word meaning to pitch a tent. The Ark had handles on it so that God could travel with His people and even accompany them into battle, for with God on their side who could defeat them? After they had arrived at the Promised Land and the temple was built, the Ark was placed at the far end inside the 'Holy of Holies'. This now became the holiest place on earth where God's Presence dwelt behind a huge veil that separated it from the rest of the Sanctuary. When in the prologue to his Gospel St John writes –“The Word was made flesh and dwelt amongst us.” He originally used the word ‘Shekinah’ so the most accurate translation of these words would be –“The word was made flesh and he pitched his tent amongst us.”           

When Jesus was finally glorified upon the Cross the temple veil was rent in two. The message was simple:-  The Presence of God on earth was no longer to be found in the Holy of Holies in a man-made temple, but in the temple of Christ's own body and the bodies of every man and woman who freely choose to receive him. This is why Jesus Himself said that the Kingdom of God is within you, as it is within Him, and why St. Paul said that our very bodies are now the temples of the Holy Spirit.

Funnily enough it took a Jewish philosopher who rejected Jesus to help me realise one of the most profound truths that He ever taught. It made me realise too that this sublime truth was not just a great mystery for me to marvel at but also a mystery that I must enter into. For the first time in my life I began to set aside daily quality space and time for prayer because I knew that I needed to turn within and to learn to savour in silence this mysterious presence. It was here that I came to realise as never before that we are all called not just to share in the life of Christ but also to share in his sacred and sacrificial action. In other words we are drawn up into the infinite vortex of life and love that endlessly reaches out from the Son and into the Father and from the Father into the Son. It is into this Trinity of everlasting life and love that Jesus came to invite us. This is the home for which we were created and for which we yearn the more we come to experience 'the love that surpasses all understanding' reaching out to embrace us. 

I've stopped going on the pilgrimages that meant so much to me in the past, time is short so why should I waste any more time looking without for what I can only find within. I'm not trying to suggest that we shouldn't seek out special places to help us come closer to God, but they are only special places because they create the best possible environment for us to savour the One who has ‘pitched His tent’ within us and who travels with us wherever we go. I found such a place for myself ten years ago in a remote Benedictine monastery in Spain. The Abbot was an Englishman who explained to me how the vow of stability taken by the monks helped them to search for the Presence within that so often eludes spiritual butterflies who find it difficult to settle anywhere for long. He didn't recognise me, why should he, but I recognised him.  I couldn't see what he was wearing beneath his habit but I wouldn't mind betting it was the same old denim trousers, and the multi-coloured shirt. He was certainly wearing the same sandals. When I asked him if he was called after St. Martin of Tour, he said no, he had called himself after another Martin whose memory wasn’t celebrated in the Christian calendar!

Friday 19 April 2013

Nunraw - MacLay(ing) monastery road

MacLay Motorway Maintenance.

They say one picture is worth a thousand words.
One would be enough for a Motorway Maintenance.
There is more versatility in the maintenance of a monastery, 
and here the MacLay maintenance at Nunraw Abbey is new experience.
At last got over the snow.
The photographer is br. Donald 







.





MacLay
maclayheadquarters
Head OfficeMacLay Civil EngineeringStirling Road, Airdrie, LanarkshireML6 7JA http://www.maclaycivil.net

Thursday 18 April 2013

Holy Land Journal - Links of Terrasanta

From: Terrasanta.net 
Pilgrims inside the Holy Sepulchre church at Jerusalem. (photo: L. Senigalliesi)

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William W....
To: Donald.... 
Sent: Wednesday, 17 April 2013, 21:52
Subject: [Blog] Holy Land

Dear Father Donald,
 
I am greatly enjoying sharing in your delight at 'Jo McG's' Holy Land visit, linking back to your journals, building up for myself quite a wonderful photo library and making my own virtual tour.
 
I was just wondering if 'Jo McG' has seen this Terrasanta link:
which I saved three years ago and have so often revisited:
 
How many memories you will cherish!
 
With my love in Our Risen Lord,
William


Tuesday 16 April 2013

Ein Karem - Visitation, Ratisbonne Sion Convent



Courtyard of the Church of the Visitation, with the Magnificat in many languages.

Church of the Visitation, Jerusalem


The Church of the Visitation on Ein Karem. 
Photo Creative Commons License Nir Nussbaum.
Said to be built over the home of John the Baptist's parents, the Church of the Visitation stands high up on the hillside of Ein Kerem in Jerusalem. From here there is a wonderful view of the valley and the surrounding wooded hills.          http://www.sacred-destinations.com/israel/jerusalem-church-of-visitation.htm        

----- Forwarded Message -----From: Jo McG. . . .
To: Donald . . . . .
Sent: Saturday, 13 April 2013, 21:25
Subject: Fw: Ein Karem
 
Dear .. . . .,
Tues. 26March....Our morning was occupied with three more interesting lectures on the Gospel of JOHN.
In the afternoon, we caught our bus to  EIN  KAREM, a village on the outskirts of Jerusalem. We went first to the SION CONVENT on the summit of a hill overlooking surprisingly green valleys and bare mts. I thought how difficult it must have been for Mary to travel all the way from Nazareth to visit her cousin Elizabeth - no tarmac roads as today!
The Srs.of Sion welcomed us and then explained the various buildings and their apostolate
There are three communities here all living the same charism - the apostolic cty.,the small contemplative cty. and the Brothers of Sion.They have a large guesthouse as their ministry is mainly one of Welcome. We then had some free time to pray in the contemplative Chapel or wander in the well-kept,spacious garden - an oasis of peace,ideal for prayer.
From there,we walked down the steep hill into the village centre, a hub of activity,and walked up an even steeper hill to the CHURCH OF THE VISITATION. On a long,fairly high wall in front of it are many "Magnificats"in the various languages.We then entered the Lower Church, fairly small with some colourful paintings - Zechariah in the Temple, Mary meeting Elizabeth,etc. The larger Upper Church was much more impressive, beautifully decorated with several murals. I was very happy to be in this holy place and, in union with Mary, we all joyfully sang the "Magnificat".
At 8pm, we had a very meaningful and prayerful Reconciliation Service in the ideal place,
the LITHOSTROTOS. DEO GRATIAS for another memorable day!
Yours . . .  Jo. 
+ + + 

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Donald . . .
To: Jo McG . . .
Sent: Monday, 15 April 2013, 21:01
Subject: Fw: Ein Karem and pictures

My dear Josephine,
Many thanks for the Ein Karem on the 'Journal'.
It is lovely, and sets all the memories of the places, Visitation, Sion Convent, St. John Baptist, John in the Desert.
Google map opens up every nook and cranny. The technology is astonishing.
Hopefully I will insert some of the pictures to your Email but for the moment I am  diverted by simply viewing the abundance, not least the hospitality we do enjoyed with the Sisters Ein Karem convent.
Yours  . . .
Donald.




 
Marian Year 1954
 
   

 

Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion   

Ratisbonne tomb,
Ein Karem
The monastery of Les Soeurs de Notre-Dame de Sion (Sisters of Our Lady of Zion)   founded by two brothers from France, Theodore and Marie Alphonse Ratisbonne, who were born Jewish and converted to Christianity.[15] They established an orphanage here. Alphonse himself lived in the monastery and is buried in its garden. 

Marie-Alphonse Ratisbonne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie-Alphonse_Ratisbonne
In 1858 Ratisbonne established the Convent of Ecce Homo in the Old City of Jerusalem for the Sisters of Sion. In 1860, he built the Convent of St. John on a ...


Mary's Spring  

Traditional site of Mary's Spring

According to Christian tradition, this village fresh-water spring is the location where Mary and Elizabeth met. The spring waters are considered holy by some Catholic and Orthodox Christian pilgrims who visit the site and fill bottles with its waters. The spring was repaired and renovated by Baron Edmond de Rothschild. Arab inhabitants also built a mosque on the site, of which the maqam (shrine) still remains.





To be continued .....  
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