Tuesday 11 June 2013

The Last Supper - Henri Nouwem - illustration by Rembrandt

Note: Robert Ellsberg (Orbis Books), and I have chosen to illustrate this book with several drawings of the life of Christ by Rembrandt, who, as already noted, played a critical role in Henri's spiritual life. (Editor).
Adding here the details of the three groups of the Apostles.
The Last Supper (Rembrandt) after Leonardo da Vinci  
The Last Supper. New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art 
Jesus A Gospel
Henri Nouwen
Edited and Introduced by Michael O’Laughlin
Illustrations by Rembrandt.
Orbis Books, Third Printing 2006

Excerpt pp. 86-94 ... Entering the Heart of the Gospel

The Last Supper

Isn't a meal together the most beautiful expression of our desire to be given to each other in our brokenness? The table, the food, the drinks, the words, the stories: are they not the most intimate ways in which we not only express the desire to give ourselves to each other, but also do this in actuality?" *17[The Life of the Beloved, 88].
He sent two of his disciples, saying to them, "Go into the city and you will meet a man carrying a pitcher of water. Follow him, and say to the owner of the house where he enters, 'The Master says: Where is the room for me to eat the Passover with my disciples?' He will show you a large upper room furnished with couches, all prepared."
-Mark 14:13-5

In the Eucharist, Jesus Gives All
Every time we invite Jesus into our homes, that is to say, into our life with all its light and dark sides, and offer him the place of honor at our table, he takes the bread and the cup and hands them to us saying: "Take and eat, this is my body. Take and drink, this is my blood. Do this to remember me." Are we surprised? Not really! Wasn't our heart burning when he talked to us on the road? Didn't we already know that he was not a stranger to us? Weren't we already aware that the one who was crucified by our leaders was alive and with us? Hadn't we seen it before, that he took the bread, blessed it, broke it, and gave it to us? He did so before the large crowd who had listened for long hours to his word, he did it in the upper room before Judas handed him over to suffering, and he has done it countless times when we have come to the end of a long day and he joins us around the table for a simple meal.
The Eucharist is the most ordinary and the most divine gesture imaginable. That is the truth of Jesus. So human, yet so divine; so familiar, yet so mysterious; so close, yet so revealing! But that is the story of Jesus who "being in the form of God did not count equality with God something to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, becoming as human beings are; and being in every way like a human being, he was humbler yet, even. to accepting death, death on a cross" (Philippians 2:6-8). It is the story of God who wants to come close to us, so close that we can see him with our own eyes, hear him with our own ears, touch him with our own hands; so close that there is nothing between us and him, nothing that separates, nothing that divides, nothing that creates distance.
Jesus is God-for-us, God-with-us, God-within-us. Jesus is God giving himself completely, pouring himself out for us without reserve. Jesus doesn't hold back or cling to his own possessions. He gives all there is to give. "Eat, drink, this is my body, this is my blood ... , this is me for you!"
     
We all know of this desire to give ourselves at the table.
We say: "Eat and drink; I made this for you. Take more; it is there for you to enjoy, to be strengthened, yes, to feel how much I love you." What we desire is not simply to give food, but to give ourselves. "Be my guest," we say. And as we encourage our friends to eat from our table, we want to say, "Be my friend, be my companion, be my love-be part of my life-I want to give myself to you."
In the Eucharist, Jesus gives all. The bread is not simply a sign of his desire to become our food; the cup is not just a sign of his willingness to be our drink. Bread and wine become his body and blood in the giving. The bread, indeed, is his body given for us; the wine his blood poured out for us. As God becomes fully present for us in Jesus, so Jesus becomes fully present to us in the bread and the wine of the Eucharist. God not only became flesh for us 'years ago in a country far away. God also becomes food and drink for us now at this moment of the Eucharistic celebra­tion, right where we are together around the table. God does not hold back; God gives all. That is the mystery of the Incarnation. That too is the mystery of the Eucharist. Incarnation and Eucharist are the two expressions of the immense, self-giving love of God. And so the sacrifice on the cross and the sacrifice at the table are one sacrifice, one complete, divine self-giving that reaches out to all humanity in time and space.
The word that best expresses this mystery of God's total self-giving love is "communion." It is the word that contains the truth that, in and through Jesus, God wants, not only to teach us, instruct us, or inspire us, but to become one with us. God desires to be fully united with us so that all of God and all of us can be bound together in a lasting love. The whole long history of God's relationship with us human beings is a history of ever-deepening communion. It is not simply a history of unities, separations, and restored unities, but a history in which God searches for ever-new ways to commune intimately with those created in God's own image. *l8 [With Burnig Hearts, 66-9].

Betrayal by One of the Twelve

It seems that there are more and more people in our society who have less and less influence on the decisions that affect their own existence. Therefore, it becomes increasingly important to recognize that the largest part of our existence involves waiting in the sense of being acted upon. But the life of Jesus tells us that not to be in control is part of the human condition. His vocation was fulfilled not just in action but also in passion, in waiting. *19 [A Spirituality of Waiting,” Weavings January 1987, 17].

 
Jesus was deeply disturbed and declared, "In all truth I tell you, one of you is going to betray me." The disciples looked at each other, wondering whom he meant. The disciple whom Jesus loved was reclining next to Jesus; Simon Peter signed to him and said, "Ask him who it is he means," so, leaning back close to Jesus' chest he said, "Who is it, Lord?" Jesus answered, "It is the one to whom I give the piece of bread that I dip in the dish." And when he had dipped the piece of bread he gave it to Judas son of Simon Iscariot. At that instant, after Judas had taken the bread, Satan entered him. Jesus then said, "What you are going to do, do quickly" -John 13:21-7

God Handed Jesus Over
Jesus, sitting at table with his disciples, said, "One of you will betray me" (John 13:21). I read this today in the Gospel.
As I look more closely at Jesus' words as they are writ­ten in Greek, a better translation would be "One of you will hand me over." The term paradidomi means "to give over, to hand over, to give into the hands of." It is an important term not only to express what Judas did, but also what God did. Paul writes, « •.. he did not spare his own Son, but 'handed him over' for the sake of all of us" (Romans 8:32).
If we translate Judas' action "to betray," as applied to Judas, we do not fully express the mystery because Judas is described as being an instrument of God's work. That is why Jesus said, "The Son of Man is going to his fate, as the scriptures say he will, but alas for the man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed [handed over]" (Matthew 26:24).
This moment when Jesus is handed over to those who do with him as they please is a turning point in Jesus' min­istry. It is turning from action to passion. After years of   
 
Detail of The Last Supper.  
teaching, preaching, healing, and moving to wherever he wanted to go, Jesus is handed over to the caprices of his enemies. Things are now no longer done by him, but to him. He is flagellated, crowned with thorns, spat at, laughed at, stripped, and nailed naked to a cross. He is a passive victim, subject to other people's actions. From the moment Jesus is handed over, his passion begins, and through this passion he fulfills his vocation.
It is important for me to realize that Jesus fulfills his mission not by what he does, but by what is done to him. Just as with everyone else, most of my life is determined by what is done to me and thus is passion. And because most of my life is passion, things being done to me, only small parts of my life are determined by what I think, say, or do. I am inclined to protest against this and to want all to be action, originated by me. But the truth is that my passion is a much greater part of my life than my action. Not to recognize this is self-deception and not to embrace my pas­sion with love is self-rejection.
It is good news to know that Jesus is handed over to passion, and through his passion accomplishes his divine task on earth. It is good news for a world passionately searching for wholeness.
Jesus' words to Peter remind me that Jesus' transition from action to passion must also be ours if we want to follow his way. He says, "When you were young you put on your own belt and walked where you liked; but when you grow old you will stretch out your hands, and somebody else will put a belt round you and take you where you would rather not go" (John 21:18).
I, too, have to let myself be "handed over" and thus fulfill my vocation."

The Farewell Discourse

In Jesus, God became one of us to lead us through Jesus into the intimacy of his divine life. Jesus came to us to become as we are and left us to allow us to become as he is. By giving us his Spirit his breath, he became closer to us than we are to ourselves. It is through this breath of God that we can call God "Abba, Father,” and can become part of the mysterious divine relationship between Father and Son. *21 [Reaching Out, 89].

"Do not let your hearts be troubled. You trust in God, trust also in me. In my Father's house there are many places to live in; otherwise I would have told you. I am going now to prepare a place for you, and after I have gone and prepared you a place, I shall return to take you to myself"
-John 14:1-3

"l Am the True Vine, and My Father Is the Vinedresser"
Jesus said, "I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser. Every branch in me that bears no fruit he cuts away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, to make it bear even more" (John 15:1-2).
These words in today's Gospel open a new perspective on suffering for me. Pruning helps trees to bear more fruit. Even when 1 bear fruit, even when 1 do things for God's kingdom, even when people express gratitude for coming to know Jesus through me, I need a lot more pruning. Many unnecessary branches and twigs prevent the vine from bearing all the fruit it can. They have to be clipped off. This is a painful process, all the more so because I do not always know that they are unnecessary. They often seem beautiful, charming, and very alive. But they need to be cut away so that more fruit can grow.
It helps me to think about painful rejections, moments of loneliness, feelings of inner darkness and despair, and lack of support and human affection as God's pruning. I am aware that I might have settled too soon for the few fruits that I can recognize in my life. 1 might say, "Well, I am doing some good here and there, and I should be grateful for and content with the little good I do." But that might be false modesty and even a form of spiritual laziness. God calls me to more. God wants to prune me. 
Detail of The Last Supper.
  
A pruned vine does not look beautiful, but during harvest time it produces much fruit. The greatest challenge is to continue to recognize God's pruning hand in my life. Then I can avoid resentment and depression and become even more grateful that I am called upon to bear even more fruit than I thought I could. Suffering then becomes a way of purification and allows me to rejoice in its fruits with deep gratitude and without pride."

Abide in My Love"

Jesus says, "If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father's commandments and abide in God's love" (John 15:10). Jesus invites me to abide in his love. That means to dwell with all that I am in him. It is an invitation to a total belonging, to full intimacy, to an unlimited being-with.

"I have told you this so that my own joy may be in you and your joy be complete. This is my commandment; love one another, as I have loved you. No one can have greater love than to lay down his life for his friends. "
-John 15:11-3

The anxiety that has plagued me during the last week shows that a great part of me is not yet "abiding" in Jesus. My mind and heart keep running away from my true dwelling place, and they explore strange lands where I end up in anger, resentment, lust, fear, and anguish. I know that living a spiritual life means bringing every part of myself home to where it belongs.
Jesus describes the intimacy that he offers as the connectedness between the vine and its branches. I long to be grafted onto Jesus as a branch onto the vine so that all my life comes from the vine. In communion with Jesus, the vine, my little life can grow and bear fruit. I know it, but I do not live it. Somehow I keep living as if there are other sources of life that I must explore, outside of Jesus. But Jesus keeps saying, "Come back to me, give me all your burdens, all your worries, fears, and anxieties. Trust that with me you will find rest." I am struggling to listen to that voice of love and to trust in its healing power.
I deeply know that I have a home in Jesus, just as Jesus has a home in God. I know, too, that when I abide in Jesus I abide with him in God. "Those who love me," Jesus says, "will be loved by my Father" (John 14:21). My true spiritual work is to let myself be loved, fully and completely, and to trust that in that love I will come to the fulfillment of my vocation. I keep trying to bring my wandering, restless, anxious self home, so that I can rest there in the embrace of love." *23 [Sabbatical Journey].

"I Pray That They May Be One"

Jesus prays for unity among his disciples and among those who through the teaching of his disciples will come to believe in him. He says, "May they all be one, just as, Father, you are in me and I in you" (John 17:21).

"With me in them and you in me, may they be so perfected in unity that the world will recognize that it was you who sent me and that you have loved them as you have loved me. "
-John 77:23

These words of Jesus reveal the mystery that unity among people is not first of all the result of human effort, but rather a divine gift. Unity among people is a reflection of the unity of God. The desire for unity is deep and strong among people. It is a desire between friends, between married people, between communities, and between countries. Wherever there is a true experience of unity, there is a sense of giftedness. While unity satisfies our deepest need, it cannot be explained by what we say or do. There exists no formula for unity.
When Jesus prays for unity, he asks his Father that those who believe in him, that is, in his full communion with the Father, will become part of that unity. I continue to see in myself and others how often we try to make unity among ourselves by focusing all our attention on each other and trying to find the place where we can feel united. But often we become disillusioned, realizing that no human being is capable of offering us what we most want. Such disillusionment can easily make us become bitter, cynical, demanding, even violent.
Jesus calls us to seek our unity in and through him. When we direct our inner attention not first of all to each other, but to God to whom we belong, then we will discover that in God we also belong to each other. The deepest friendship is a friendship mediated by God; the strongest marriage bonds are bonds mediated by God.
This truth requires the discipline to keep returning to the source of all unity. If, in the midst of conflict, division, and discord, we would always try to enter together into the presence of God to find our unity there, much human suf­fering could be relieved." *24 [The Day to Daybreak, 180, adapted].





Leonardo trail is hot on the pursuit. On to Rembrandt, On to Henri Nouwen.


Dear William,
Always the irons in fire keep us shoed on the trot.
Thank you.
Yesterday, browsing in the abbey shop, a book screamed for attention; "Jesus A Gospel" by Henri Nouwen. Six years after Nouwen's death the publisher, Orbis Books,formed this collection of Nouwen's writing. Through much of it is owed to the influence of Rembrandt, the best known "The Return of the Prodigal".
"Jesus, A Gospel" is illustrated by Rembrandt, and in particular "The Last Supper".
The later Blog Post may find this further after-Leonardo by Rembrandt.
...
yours Donald
PS. We are just expecting the return monks from the Iona safari.

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William J. W....
To: Donald ..
Sent: Thursday, 6 June 2013, 14:13
Subject: Fr Stephen and Leonardo's painting and Iona 1450 
Anniversary

Dear Father Donald,
 
...'bundle' of Fr Stephen's papers arrived safely. It was a lovely experience for me.
The Abbey will soon be quietness itself with almost half the number away on Iona. Looking at the map, it is quite a trek...
 
Your dawn photo of the crucifix at the head of the stairs - in the dawn light the bronze figure, the most haunting of images.
 
Leonardo's Last Supper is occupying me too! I have found a marvellous website, with write-up and first rate video lecture:
So much detail I had missed... to reflect upon, and go beyond.
 
There is SO much drawing us on.... in our desire for God it is like following spellbound a vast throng of saints and angels who point out so many wonders!
 
Wonderfully for us, the internet opens the doors on so many rooms for us...
 
Dreaming happily, thank you!
... in Our Lord,
William
 
 
Sacristy - Tapestry of Leonardo 'The Last Suppr'
            

Meanwhile, re. 'the heaven of heavens', the Leonardo trail is hot on the pursuit.

After breakfast this morning, after thought of the tapestry in the Sacristy I remembered the large painting in on the wall in the Scriptorium. 
Inscribed names of the 12 Apostles - Knights Templars' present.
 Bartolomeo,    Andrea.           Pietro,    Giovanni,     Jesu Cristo,                 Tomaso,   Filippo,           Matteo,   Simone
    Giacomo il minore,              Giuda,              Cenacolo Leonardo Da Vinci,       Giacomo il maggiote,         Taddeo.


This is a magnificent framed painting presented from the Knight Templars. 

Before Lauds, no one around and armed with camera, I shot the details of Leonardo.
To Christ's right, the three; Judas, Peter and John
Peter asks John who the one that shared dish with Christ
The pictures will tell the whole story, or the visual part of it. See......
At that hour, the dawn on the bronze Crucifix silhouetted the cross at the stair head
In Dno.
Donald


Uploaded on 21 Jun 2011
The Last Supper
Painted by Leonardo da Vinci from 1495-1498
From "Werke" by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

From the LearnOutLoud.com Audiobook "Art Masterpieces":
http://www.learnoutloud.com/Free-Audi...

For a high quality PDF of this image, please go here:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ArtHis...
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See Chrysostom Blog.



The Solemnity of the Most Holy
 
Body and Blood of Christ
June 2, 2013


Study of the Readings

Ed. by
Joyce Ann Zimmerman, et al.

• Words, Phrases
• To the point

• First Two Readings
Experience

more...
The Word Engaged

John
Kavanaugh, S. J.
In the Beginning Was the Covenant
They also remind us, however, what it is that God so much wants from us. It is that relationship, that free “yes,” that gaze back that says with all one’s heart, “I do believe, I hope, I love.”
Meals
The geographical world of our Mediterranean ancestors in the Faith was divided by gender into male space and female space.
Both genders could be in common spaces but never together at the same time.
Unlike the wise men, you do not merely see Christ’s body: you know his power as well, and whole divine plan for our salvation. Having been carefully instructed, you are ignorant of none of the marvels he has performed.
Preparing for Sunday

Larry
Gillick, S. J.
...
Coming Soon
Scripture In Depth

Reginald H. Fuller
We generally think of the Last Supper as the institution of the Eucharist. But the New Testament sees two further bases for the rite: the meals of the earthly Jesus with his followers and the appearance meals after the resurrection.

Monday 10 June 2013

Pope Francis, Sacred Heart of Jesus, the feast that sets the tone for the whole month

Sunset - silhouettes, reflections, mirrors, shadows.
Nunraw - South Cloister - sunset silhouettes   

Pope Francis reflects on
the Sacred Heart of Jesus 



Pope Francis reflects on the Sacred Heart of Jesus | Pope Francis, Sacred Heart of Jesus,Zofia Czeska Maciejowska,  Congregation of the Virgins of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary; Margaret Lucia Szewczyk,  Congregation of the Daughters of Our Lady of Sorrows.
Sacred Heart of Jesus - José María Ibarrarán -Wiki image
Pope Francis reflected on the Sacred Heart of Jesus during his audience with pilgrims gathered in St Peter's Square for the Angelus on Sunday. The text follows:
Dear brothers and sisters!

The month of June is traditionally dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the highest human expression of divine love. Just this past Friday, in fact, we celebrated the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus: the feast that sets the tone for the whole month. Popular piety highly prizes symbols, and the Heart of Jesus is the ultimate symbol of God's mercy – but it is not an imaginary symbol, it is a real symbol, which represents the center, the source from which salvation for all humanity gushed forth.

In the Gospels we find several references to the Heart of Jesus, for example, in the passage where Christ says, “Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart. (Mt 11:28-29)” Then there is the key story of the death of Christ according to John. This evangelist in fact testifies to what he saw on Calvary: that a soldier, when Jesus was already dead, pierced his side with a spear, and from the wound flowed blood and water (cf. Jn 19.33-34). John recognized in that – apparently random – sign, the fulfillment of prophecies: from the heart of Jesus, the Lamb slain on the cross, flow forgiveness and life for all men.

But the mercy of Jesus is not just sentiment: indeed it is a force that gives life, that raises man up! [This Sunday]’s Gospel tells us this as well, in the episode of the widow of Nain (Luke 7:11-17). Jesus, with his disciples, is just arrived in Nain, a village in Galilee, at the very moment in which a funeral is taking place. a boy is buried, the only son of a widow. Jesus’ gaze immediately fixes itself on the weeping mother. The evangelist Luke says: “Seeing her, the Lord was moved with great compassion for her (v. 13).” This “compassion” is the love of God for man, it is mercy, i.e. the attitude of God in contact with human misery, with our poverty, our suffering, our anguish.

The biblical term “compassion” recalls the maternal viscera: a mother, in fact, experiences a reaction all her own, to the pain of her children. In this way does God love us, the Scripture says.
And what is the fruit of this love? It is life! Jesus said to the widow of Nain, “Do not weep,” and then called the dead boy and awoke him as from a sleep (cf. vv. 13-15). The mercy of God gives life to man, it raises him from the dead. The Lord is always watching us with mercy, [always] awaits us with mercy. Let us be not afraid to approach him! He has a merciful heart! If we show our inner wounds, our sins, He always forgives us. He is pure mercy! Let us never forget this: He is pure mercy! Let us go to Jesus!

Let us turn to the Virgin Mary: her immaculate heart – a mother’s heart – has shared the “compassion” of God to the full, especially at the hour of the passion and death of Jesus. May Mary help us to be meek, humble and compassionate with our brethren.

After the Angelus, Pope Francis said:
Dear brothers and sisters!
Today in Krakow are proclaimed Blessed two Polish women religious: Zofia Czeska Maciejowska, who, in the first half of the 17th century, founded the Congregation of the Virgins of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary; Margaret Lucia Szewczyk, who in the 19th century founded the Congregation of the Daughters of Our Lady of Sorrows. With the Church in Krakow we give thanks to the Lord!
I affectionately greet all the pilgrims present today: church groups, families, schools, associations, movements.

I greet the faithful from Mumbai, India.
I greet the Family Love Movement of Rome, the confraternities and volunteers of the Sanctuary of Mongiovino, near Perugia, Umbria, the Young Franciscans of Umbria, the "House of Charity" in Lecce, the faithful of the province of Modena, whom I encourage [in their work of] reconstruction [the region was hard-hit by an earthquake in 2012], and those of Ceprano. I greet the pilgrims of Ortona, where we venerate the relics of the Apostle Thomas, who made a journey “from Thomas to Peter”! Thank you!
I wish you all a good Sunday, and a good lunch!
Source: Vatican Radio/VIS

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Sunday 9 June 2013

St Columba - 1450th Anniversary of the arrival of St Columba on Iona

The Apostolic Nuncio in Great Britain,
Archbishop Antonio Mennini

St Columba 1450th Anniversary Celebrations


During the Year of Faith the Catholic Church in Scotland will celebrate the 1450th Anniversary of the arrival of St Columba on Iona. The celebration will include

Mass on the Solemnity of St. Columba
Sunday 9th June 2013
St. Columba’s Cathedral, Oban at 5pm

Pilgrimage to Iona
Monday 10th June 2013
led by
His Excellency
Archbishop Antonio Mennini
Apostolic Nuncio to Great Britain
Rt. Rev. Joseph Toal, (Bishop of Argyll & the Isles)
and the Bishops of Scotland
Iona Abbey.jpg
Iona


Saturday 8 June 2013

Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Breviary  
Cloister ICON donated by Sacred Heart Convent, Craiglockart.
  

Saturday, 8 June 2013 
The Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary
SECOND READING

From a sermon by Saint Laurence Justinian, bishop
(Sermo 8, in festo Purificationis B.M.V.: Opera, 2, Venetiis 1751, 38-39)

Mary stored up all these things in her heart

While Mary contemplated all she had come to know through reading, listening and observing, she grew in faith, increased in merits, and was more illuminated by wisdom and more consumed by the fire of charity. The heavenly mysteries were opened to her, and she was filled with joy; she became fruitful by the Spirit, was being directed toward God, and watched over protectively while on earth.

So remarkable are the divine graces that they elevate one from the lowest depths to the highest summit, and transform one to a greater holiness. How entirely blessed was the mind of the Virgin which, through the indwelling and guidance of the Spirit, was always and in every way open to the power of the Word of God. She was not led by her own senses, nor by her own will; thus she accomplished outwardly through her body what wisdom from within gave to her faith.

It was fitting for divine Wisdom, which created itself a home in the Church, to use the intervention of the most blessed Mary in guarding the law, purifying the mind, giving an example of humility and providing a spiritual sacrifice.

Imitate her, O faithful soul. Enter into the deep recesses of your heart so that you may be purified spiritually and cleansed from your sins. God places more value on good will in all we do than on the works themselves.

Therefore, whether we give ourselves to God in the work of contemplation or whether we serve the needs of our neighbor by good works, we accomplish these things because the love of Christ urges us on. The acceptable offering of the spiritual purification is accomplished not in a man-made temple but in the recesses of the heart where the Lord Jesus freely enters.

RESPONSORY

O pure and holy virgin,
how can I find words to praise your beauty?
 The highest heavens cannot contain God whom you carried in your womb.

Blessed are you among women,
and blessed is the fruit of your womb.
 The highest heavens cannot contain God whom you carried in your womb.

CONCLUDING PRAYER  
Nunraw, Icon on west cloister
  


Let us pray.

Father,
you prepared the heart of the Virgin Mary
to be a fitting home for your Holy Spirit.
By her prayers
may we become a more worthy temple of your glory.
Grant this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
 Amen.

Friday 7 June 2013

The Most Sacred Heart of Jesus - Solemnity - Year C

Byzantine/Icon painting for the Sacred Heart Convent, Craiglockhart, Edinburgh - later a bequest to Nunraw Abbey. 
as from: Jesus Christ Pantocrator, Detail from deesis mosaic from Hagia Sophia Jesus-Christ-from-Hagia-Sophia
Friday, 07 June 2013

The Solemnity
Of the Sacred Heart
(Community evening Chapter Sermon by Fr. Hugh).

Although the Feast of the Sacred Heart is not an ancient feast, it was established in 1856, the significance of the heart in biblical thought is well established. The Jews conceived: the heart as the centre of a persons whole being, his deepest self, including his intellect, will and emotions. Our Lord himself said: "A man’s words flow out from what fills his heart" (Mt.12 v. 35) It is the preoccupations of the heart which determine one's attitude to God and to other people.
So in honouring the Sacred Heart we are contemplating Christ's deepest self the well-spring of all his redeeming activity. This could: be summed up in one word; love.

In some monasteries, a statue of the Sacred Heart is placed in the centre of the cloister garth, in the middle of the monastery. In this way it is seen as a symbol of the love of Christ which should keep the whole place ticking over. The stimulant of all a monastery’s activity and the feature which characterises its life. Although at Nunraw we have no statue in the cloister garth we have a large painting of the Sacred Heart in the cloister which could surely be seen as serving a similar purpose, portraying Christ's love as the driving force of the monastery and of each of its members.

This picture, painted in the Byzantine/Icon tradition was given to us when the Sacred Heart. Convent, Craiglockhart, Edinburgh, closed down some years ago. It was in fact specially painted for them in honour of their dedication to the Sacred Heart and hung in the entrance hall. Like most icons it is traditional rather than original and shows Christ as the Pantocrator, the Ruler of' the Universe. The only new feature is the discreet outline of the heart of Jesus in the centre of Christ's body.
The connection of Christ as Lord! and His; Sacred: Heart is surely significant. To the Jews; of Our Lord’s time the title ‘Lord’ indicated divinity and by implication blasphemous. 

The oldest known icon of Christ Pantocratorencaustic on panel (Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai). The two different facial expressions on either side may emphasize Christ's two natures as fully God and fully human.[4][5] Wikipedia

to continue....