Monday 25 November 2013

Augustine"For the Church without spot or wrinkle, gathered from every nation and des­tined to reign eternally with Christ, is itself the land of the blessed, the land of the living."


Vision of Ezechiel - Raphael
34th Week Ord Time Monday  2013

First Reading
Ezekiel36:16-36           
Responsory            Ez 11:19-20.19
I shall take away the heart of stone from their bodies, and give them
a heart of flesh, so that they may walk in my ways; + and they shall be my people, and I will be their God.
V. I will give them a new heart, and put a new spirit within them. + And they shall ...

Second Reading
From the treatise Teaching Christianity by Saint Augustine
De Doctrina Christiana III,, 48-49: CCL 32, 108-110

The Lord said: I mean to display the holiness of my great name, which was profaned among the nations, which you profaned in their midst, and the nations will know that I am the Lord. Let the reader therefore take note of how a single people will be superseded and all peoples added to it, for he continues: when, through you, I vindicate my holiness before their eyes.

And I shall take you out of the nations and gather you from every land, and bring you to your own land; and I shall pour clean water over you, and cleanse you of all your idolatry, and I shall purify you and give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you.
Now no one who looks into the matter can doubt that this is a prophecy of the New Testament, which applies not only to the remnant of that one people, of whom it is written elsewhere:  
Even if Israel should have as many descendants as there are grains of sand on the seashore, a remnant will be saved, but also to the other nations according to the promise made to their ancestors who are also our ancestors; and that it is also a promise of those waters of regeneration that we now see imparted to all nations. Thus the spiritual Israel is composed not of one people but of all peoples, who were promised to the patriarchs in their offspring, which is Christ.

This spiritual Israel is therefore distinguished from the natural Israel, which consists of one nation, by newness of grace, not nobility of descent, and by sentiments rather than race. But while the sublime prophecy speaks of or to the natural Israel, it secretly refers to the spiritual Israel, in such a way that while speaking of or to the latter it still seems to be speaking of or to the former. It does this not from an unfriendly attitude that begrudges us an understanding of the scriptures, but rather, like a physician, to exercise our understanding.

Therefore, when the Lord says: And I shall bring you to your own land, and a little later, more or less repeating himself, And you will live in the land that I gave to your ancestors, we ought to understand this not literally as though it referred to the natural Israel, but spiritually, of the spiritual Israel. For the Church without spot or wrinkle, gathered from every nation and des­tined to reign eternally with Christ, is itself the land of the blessed, the land of the living. We are to understand that it was given to our ancestors when it was promised to them by the certain and immutable will of God; for what they believed would be given in its own time was for them, on account of the firmness of the promise and predetermination, the same as if it were already given. Writing to Timothy about the grace given to the saints, the Apostle says: not for any merit of ours but for his own purpose and by the grace granted to us in Christ Jesus from all eternity, and now revealed by the coming of our Savior. He speaks of the grace as given when those who were to receive it did not yet exist, because by the arrangement and predetermination of God what was to take place in its own time, or, as the Apostle says, be revealed, had already been accomplished.

Responsory     Ez 36:23.25
I mean to display the holiness of my great name, which you have profaned among the nations to which you have gone. + When through you I vindicate my holiness before their eyes, then they will know that I am the Lord.
V. I shall pour clean water over you, and cleanse you of all your defilement. + When through you ...






HE AND i "Lord, I am here before You like the dry ground upon which the prophet called down the dew. " 25 Nov 1948

Chronicle:
25th November is the Greeting Birthday for Sr. Noreen.
And it was a happy alighting on the sentences from 'HE AND i', date of 25 November.
The French manuscript of Gabrielle Bossis has a better Shakespearean dialogue by phrases. 

HE AND i, Gabrielle 1948  
 
November 25  -  "Lord, I am here before You like the dry ground upon which the prophet called down the dew. " 
 "I am the Prophet and I am the Dew. My Word is meat and drink, have you noticed? It offers itself to you; you accept it and immediately it begins to grow. This is the Dew that falls from heaven. What a banquet, My child! What new transports of delight! Set off again. You understand: no halting place. Run straight to God as you used to run along the road to meet your father. How happy he was, this earthly father. . . Your Father in heaven is more so,for eagerness is also love  -  love, faith and hope. Do you think that God would turn a deaf ear to the calls of His darling child? He will multiply His gifts, for His treasures are as great as His desire to bestow them. Poor little ones, you have such a false idea of your Saviour. Do you think He would redeem you and then abandon you? Don't set limits to your confidence. He sets no limits to His favours. Hunger for God and you will receive. If you don't call Him, how can He come? Do you go to see people who don't want you?"
"Never stop coming, Lord, I never stop wanting You. " 

 "And when you call Me, believe that I come. "

Saturday 23 November 2013

Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe

iBreviary   

Sunday, 24 November 2013
Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe

SECOND READING

From a notebook On Prayer by Origen, priest
(Cap. 25: PG 11, 495-499)

                      Your kingdom come    

The kingdom of God, in the words of our Lord and Savior, does not come for all to see; nor shall they say: Behold, here it is, or behold, there it is; but the kingdom of God is within us, for the word of God is very near, in our mouth and in our heart. Thus it is clear that he who prays for the coming of God’s kingdom prays rightly to have it within himself, that there it might grow and bear fruit and become perfect. For God reigns in each of his holy ones. Anyone who is holy obeys the spiritual laws of God, who dwells in him as in a well-ordered city. The Father is present in the perfect soul, and with him Christ reigns, according to the words: We shall come to him and make our home with him.

Thus the kingdom of God within us, as we continue to make progress, will reach its highest point when the Apostle’s words are fulfilled, and Christ, having subjected all his enemies to himself, will hand over his kingdom to God the Father, that God may be all in all. Therefore, let us pray unceasingly with that disposition of soul which the Word may make divine, saying to our Father who is in heaven: Hallowed be your name; your kingdom come.

Note this too about the kingdom of God. It is not a sharing of justice with iniquity, nor a society of light with darkness, nor a meeting of Christ with Belial. The kingdom of God cannot exist alongside the reign of sin.

Therefore, if we wish God to reign in us, in no way should sin reign in our mortal body; rather we should mortify our members which are upon the earth and bear fruit in the Spirit. There should be in us a kind of spiritual paradise where God may walk and be our sole ruler with his Christ. In us the Lord will sit at the right hand of that spiritual power which we wish to receive. And he will sit there until all his enemies who are within us become his footstool, and every principality, power and virtue in us is cast out.

All this can happen in each one of us, and the last enemy, death, can be destroyed; then Christ will say in us: O death, where is your sting? O hell, where is your victory? And so what is corruptible in us must be clothed with holiness and incorruptibility; and what is mortal must be clothed, now that death has been conquered, in the Father’s immortality. Then God will reign in us, and we shall enjoy even now the blessings of rebirth and resurrection.

RESPONSORY
Revelation 11:15; Psalm 22:28-29

The kingdom of this world belongs to our Lord and his Christ,
and he shall reign for ever and ever.

All the families of nations shall bow down before him,
for the Lord is our king.
And he shall reign for ever and ever.

If the Optional Vigil is not celebrated, the Office continues with the Te Deum.

St. Columban. FAR EAST, Columban Missionaries

Community Chronicle.
On St. Columban's day we prayed for Fr. Jim McGlynn and Fr. Eddie Sherry and wonderful Columban Missionaries. 
Fr. Jim used to visit the family on breaks from Australia. 
Fr. Eddie was the brother of our Fr. Michael who Edited the FAR EAST magazine in Australia. During his home leave, and in Europe searched for Old Master painting for the Columban Calendar.
Samuel Mulcahy was a Columban Seminarian in Dalgan. He was directed to find his vocation to Roscre Abbey. 
Samuel became, novice Br. Columban. In the end he became the first Abbot of Nunraw Abbey in Scotland.

 
From the Director - God became one of us
The Gospels relate that Jesus was born in a stable, there was no room at the inn. Today we know there is no room in the world for millions of people seeking a better life. Part of our human condition is that we are both merciful and merciless. (more)
Saint Columbanus Abbot
November 23 - Optional Memory
Ireland c. 525-530 - Bobbio, Piacenza, November 23 615
Columba is one of the representatives of the monastic world that give rise to the 'pilgrimage pro Domino', which was one of the factors of cultural renewal and evangelization of Europe. From Ireland passed (c. 590) in France, Switzerland and Northern Italy, creating and organizing community church and founded several monasteries, some of which, for example Luxeuil and Bobbio, famous for the liturgical books of the same name. The monastic rule that encodes its spirituality is marked by great precision and intends to associate with the monks in the sacrifice of Christ. His practice has influenced the new monastic penitential discipline of the West. (Message Rom)
Etymology: Columban = mild, delicate
Emblem: Pastoral Staff
Martyrology: St. Columba, Abbot, that of Irish origin, who became a pilgrim for Christ in the Gospel to educate the people of France, he founded along with many other monasteries that of Luxeuil, which he ruled in strict observance of the rule; forced to ' exile, crossed the Alps and founded the monastery of Bobbio in Napa, famous for its discipline and studies, where well-deserving of the Church, he died in peace, and his body was laid on this day.

http://www.santiebeati.it/dettaglio/30200


2014-Columban Art-Calendar
For the Memorial of Saint Columban:

SECOND READING

From an instruction by Saint Columban, abbot
(Instr. 11, 1-2; Opera, Dublin, 1957, 106-107)

Man’s likeness to God, if preserved, imparts high dignity

Moses wrote in the law: God made man in his image and likeness. Consider, I ask you, the dignity of these words. God is all-powerful. We cannot see or understand him, describe or assess him. Yet he fashioned man from clay and endowed him with the nobility of his own image. What has man in common with God? Or earth with spirit?—for God is a spirit. It is a glorious privilege that God should grant men his eternal image and the likeness of his character. Man’s likeness to God, if he preserves it, imparts high dignity.

If man applies the virtues planted in his soul to the right purpose, he will be like God. God’s commands have taught us to give him back the virtues he sowed in us in our first innocence. The first command is to love our Lord with our whole heart because he loved us first from the beginning, before our existence. Loving God renews his image in us. Anyone who loves God keeps his commandments, for he said: If you love me, keep my commandments. His command is that we love each other. In his own words: This is my command, that you love each other as I also have loved you.

True love is shown not merely in word, but in deed and in truth. So we must turn back our image undefiled and holy to our God and Father, for he is holy; in the words of Scripture: Be holy, for I am holy. We must restore his image with love, for he is love; in John’s words: God is love. We must restore it with loyalty and truth, for he is loyal and truthful. The image we depict must not be that of one who is unlike God; for one who is harsh and irascible and proud would display the image of a despot.

Let us not imprint on ourselves the image of a despot, but let Christ paint his image in us with his words: My peace I give you, my peace I leave with you. But the knowledge that peace is good is of no benefit to us if we do not practice it. The most valuable objects are usually the most fragile; costly things require the most careful handling. Particularly fragile is that which is lost by wanton talk and destroyed with the slightest injury of a brother. Men like nothing better than discussing and minding the business of others, passing superfluous comments at random and criticizing people behind their backs. So those who cannot say: The Lord has given me a discerning tongue, that I may with a word support him who is weary should keep silent, or if they do say anything it should promote peace.

RESPONSORY
Luke 6:47, 48; Sirach 25:15

Anyone who comes to me
and listens to my words and acts on them,
I will show you what he is like.
 He is like a man who while building his house
dug deeply and laid his foundation on rock.

Happy is the man who fears the Lord.
Who is his equal?
Who can compare with him?
 He is like a man who while building his house
dug deeply and laid his foundation on rock.

CONCLUDING PRAYER
   
Let us pray. 
O God, who in Saint Columban
wonderfully joined the work of evangelization
to zeal for the monastic life,
grant, we pray,
that through his intercession and example
we may strive to seek you above all things
and to bring increase to your faithful people.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
 Amen.



Friday 22 November 2013

Fr. Raymond. Diamond Jubilee. 'Sing in Jubilation', St. Mechtild, St Cecilia, St. Augustine

Community Chronicle: 
Fr. Raymond Jaconelli, his brother Louis
with son Raymond and grandson Sergio.

The community and guests joined in the Diamond  Celebration  of Fr. Raymond's monastic first profession.
Recently, Raymond, Abbot Emeritus, attended another celebration marking the important  event of the Church, the Ordination of the new Archbishop, Leo Cushley.
All these 60 years, Raymond has continues to be counted on with the Organ.
On the 19th. November, St. Mechtild reminded of
the “Nightingale of Helfta”', gifted with a beautiful voice, also possessed a special talent for rendering the solemn and sacred music over which she presided as domna cantrix.
Today, 22nd. November, Saint Cecilia, and the echoes of St. Augustine resound in the Church's life of music, 'Sing to God in Jubilation'. http://universalis.com/readings.htm

COMMENT:

St. Mechtilde - Musical and spiritual gifts

She was famous for her musical talents and was called the “Nightingale of Helfta”.[3] Gifted with a beautiful voice, Mechtilde also possessed a special talent for rendering the solemn and sacred music over which she presided as domna cantrix. All her life she held this office and trained the choir with indefatigable zeal. Indeed, divine praise was the keynote of her life as it is of her book; in this she never tired, despite her continual and severe physical sufferings, so that in His revelations Christ was wont to call her His "nightingale". Souls thirsting for consolation or groping for light sought her advice; learned Dominicans consulted her on spiritual matters. At the beginning of her own mystic life it may have been from St. Mechtilde that St. Gertrude the Great learnt that the marvellous gifts lavished upon her were from God.[1]

Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Mechthilde and Gertrude of Helfta, became ardent devotees and promoters of Jesus’ heart after it was the subject of many of their visions. The idea of hearing the heartbeat of God was very important to medieval saints who nurtured devotion to the Sacred Heart. Women such as Saint Mechtilde and Saint Gertrude (d. 1302) perceived Jesus’ heart as the breast of a mother. Just as a mother gives milk to nourish her child, so Jesus in the Eucharist gives us his life blood.[7]

Devotion of the Three Hail Marys

Mechtilde was distressed over her eternal salvation and prayed that the Most Holy Virgin would assist her at the hour of death. The Blessed Virgin appeared to her and reassured her, saying: "Yes, I will! But I wish, for your part, that you recite three Hail Marys every day, remembering in the first the power received from the Eternal Father, in the second the wisdom received from the Son, with the third one the love that has filled the Holy Spirit". The Blessed Virgin taught her to pray and to understand especially how the Three Hail Marys honour the three persons of the Blessed Trinity.
Paragraphs from Wikipedia


Univeralis Office of Readings.
Second Reading
A commentary of St Augustine on Psalm 32

                                  Sing to God in jubilation
Praise the Lord with the lyre, make melody to him with the harp of ten strings! Sing to him a new song. Rid yourself of what is old and worn out, for you know a new song. A new man, a new covenant; a new song. This new song does not belong to the old man. Only the new man learns it: the man restored from his fallen condition through the grace of God, and now sharing in the new covenant, that is, the kingdom of heaven. To it all our love now aspires and sings a new song. Let us sing a new song not with our lips but with our lives.
  Sing to him a new song, sing to him with joyful melody. Every one of us tries to discover how to sing to God. You must sing to him, but you must sing well. He does not want your voice to come harshly to his ears, so sing well, brothers!
  If you were asked, “Sing to please this musician,” you would not like to do so without having taken some instruction in music, because you would not like to offend an expert in the art. An untrained listener does not notice the faults a musician would point out to you. Who, then, will offer to sing well for God, the great artist whose discrimination is faultless, whose attention is on the minutest detail, whose ear nothing escapes? When will you be able to offer him a perfect performance that you will in no way displease such a supremely discerning listener?
  See how he himself provides you with a way of singing. Do not search for words, as if you could find a lyric which would give God pleasure. Sing to him “with songs of joy.” This is singing well to God, just singing with songs of joy.
  But how is this done? You must first understand that words cannot express the things that are sung by the heart. Take the case of people singing while harvesting in the fields or in the vineyards or when any other strenuous work is in progress. Although they begin by giving expression to their happiness in sung words, yet shortly there is a change. As if so happy that words can no longer express what they feel, they discard the restricting syllables. They burst out into a simple sound of joy, of jubilation. Such a cry of joy is a sound signifying that the heart is bringing to birth what it cannot utter in words.
  Now, who is more worthy of such a cry of jubilation than God himself, whom all words fail to describe? If words will not serve, and yet you must not remain silent, what else can you do but cry out for joy? Your heart must rejoice beyond words, soaring into an immensity of gladness, unrestrained by syllabic bonds. Sing to him with jubilation.
Responsory
My lips speak your praise, your glory all the day long. When I sing to you, my lips shall rejoice.
I will rejoice in you and be glad, and sing psalms to your name, O Most High. When I sing to you, my lips shall rejoice.

Let us pray.
Lord God, in your mercy listen to our prayers,
  which we offer you under the patronage of Saint Cecilia.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
  who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
  one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.

Monastic Office of Vigils

St. Mechtild of Hackeborn - 19th November.

St Mechtild of Hackeborn was born about the year 1240. She entered the cloister school of the same monastery where her sister, Gertrude of Hackeborn, was already a member of the community. It was her sister who supervised Mechtild's education. Mechtild had an amiable character, she was highly gifted in mind and body, and possessed of an excellent voice. The monastery of Helfta, under the influence of Mechtild's sister who had become abbess, grew to be a centre of learning, culture and profound spirituality. Mechtild joined the community, following in the footsteps of her elder sister, and she was put in charge of the cloister school.
It fell to Mechtild to teach the other Gertrude – Gertrude the Great –who was fifteen years her junior. They became close friends and it was Mechtild who was to direct the younger Gertrude in the ways of the Spirit when the latter eventually entered the monastery. Gertrude was 1ater to write of Mechtild: "There has never before been anyone like her in our monastery and, I fear, there never will be again."

It is through Gertrude the Great and another nun in the monastery that we have a record of Mechtild's spiritual teaching and mystical experiences. Gertrude had, unknown to Mechtild, been writing down assiduously all that Mechtild told her about her experiences in prayer. Mechtild was alarmed when she discovered this. But she was reassured by our Lord that all this had happened by his will and inspiration. Later Mechtild herself corrected the manuscript. These notes came to be known as the "Book of Special Grace.”The book is centred on the Church's year. It is firmly liturgical, Trinitarian and Christocentric. Its style is warmly affective and joyful, and it shows Mechtild's sound education. In it she urges the use of all the senses in the praise of God, and she stresses devotion to the heart of Christ. Her book was widely read largely due to the influence of the Dominican friars who were in close contact with the monastery.
Mechtild of Hackeborn is often confused with Mechtild of Magdeburg, a contemporary and another mystic, who also lived in the same monastery of Helfta for the last twelve years of her life. [The Ear,l father, had two Earldoms, the daughter Mechtild, the one person. The solution?]
St Mechtild of Hackeborn died on the nineteenth of November around the year 1298.
___________________________________________
Adapted from the New Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 9, 1967, and The Penguin
                                                                                                                  Dictionary of the Saints, D. Attwater.




Thursday 21 November 2013

COMMENT:




Old Calendar: The Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Today the Church celebrates the memorial of the Presentation of Mary. The three feasts of the birthday of Our Lady, the holy Name of Mary and her Presentation in the Temple correspond in the Marian cycle with the first three feasts of the cycle of feasts of our Lord: namely, Christmas, the Holy Name of Jesus, and His Presentation in the Temple (February 2).


  http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/liturgicalyear/calendar/day.cfm?date=2013-11-21

Wednesday 20 November 2013

Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Paul VI, « Gaudete in Domino »

Thursday, 21 November 2013. Thirty-third week in Ordinary Time

Commentary of the day : 
Paul VI, Pope from 1963-1978 
Apostolic Exhortation on Christian joy « Gaudete in Domino » (trans. Libreria Vaticana editrice) 

"Now it is hidden from your eyes"

No holy city here below constitutes this goal. This goal is hidden beyond this world, in the heart of God's mystery which is still invisible to us. For it is in faith that we journey, not in clear vision, and what we shall be has not yet been manifested. The New Jerusalem of which we are already citizens and sons and daughters, comes down from above, from God. Of this only lasting city we have not yet contemplated the splendour, except as in a mirror and in a confused way, by holding fast to the prophetic word. But already we are its citizens, or we are invited to become so; every spiritual pilgrimage receives its interior meaning from this ultimate destination. 

And so it was with the Jerusalem praised by the psalmists. Jesus Himself and Mary His Mother sang on earth as they went up to Jerusalem the canticles of Zion: "perfection of beauty," "joy to the whole world."(72) But henceforth it is from Christ that the Jerusalem above receives its attraction, and it is towards Him that we are making our inner journey. 

(Biblical references : 1Jn 3,2; Ga 4,26; Rv 21,2; 1Co 13,12; Ps 49[48],2; Ps 47[46],3)
 

Danielou, "the very name of the Lord bespeaks jealous love". Night Office Readings





+ Jean Danielou, The Lord of History, 316-318
A WORD IN SEASOM,Readings for the Liturgy of the Hours. Augustine Press 1995
33rd Week Ord Time WEDNESDAY
First Reading
EzekieI20:27-44
Responsory          Ex 20:1-3; Is 42:8
I am the Lord your God who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery. + You shall have no other gods but me.
V. I am the Lord; the Lord is my name. I will not yield my glory to another, nor my honor to idols. + You shall have ...

Second Reading      From The Lord of History by Jean Danielou

If you would only bear with my vanity for a little! Pray be patient with me; after all, my jealousy on your behalf is the jealousy of God himself; I have betrothed you to Christ, so that no other but he should claim you, his bride without spot. Saint Paul is thinking of the churches he has won for Christ betrothed to the Lord. His affection for them is anxious, exacting. He cannot bear any suspicion of infidelity in the engagement; the very thought of them falling short of their promises to Christ is intolerable to him. As he says, he is "jealous" of them; but this quality of mind requires some further elucidation, for the idea of "jealousy" has unpleasant associations. Elsewhere in the New Testament, jealousy sometimes stands for the feeling of resentment against any perfection in others that we ourselves lack; this is certainly one of the vilest deformities of which human nature is patient. Yet the scriptures also use the word in quite another meaning, to denote something of great religious worth, belonging in particular and primarily to God himself.

It is actually stated in the Bible that the very name of the Lord bespeaks jealous love. This terminology is somewhat disconcerting; but it is simply the vivid presentation of one attribute of the living God, namely his absolute refusal to tolerate any rival in human affections. It is important to be accurate here: it is only the worship due to God alone that he will in no case consent to share; there is no question of forbidding the indulgence of ordinary human affections in their proper place. But nothing and no one may trespass upon the exclusive right of God, his primacy, his unique claim of worship. No creature may ever be treated as God.

This scriptural use of language derives, of course, from customary usage in respect of something that is lawful and valuable in human life, and is seen at its best in the jealous regard that husbands and wives have for each other, inasmuch as they will have no intrusion of third parties, or reconcile themselves to any idea that love once given can ever be withdrawn or transferred. Essentially, that is a noble attitude of mind, and simply gives expression to the quality of singleness in human love. Scripture transposes the same attitude of mind into the context of divine love, because the whole Bible is there to show that the bond between the Lord and the Israelites, and between Christ and the soul, is also a single, exclusive and irrevocable union.

Responsory   Jer 3:11.20
Come back, faithless Israel. + No longer will I frown on you, for my love is unfailing.
V. As a faithless wife leaves her husband, so have you, Israel, been faithless to me, says the Lord. + No longer ...




Tuesday 19 November 2013

33rd Wed 'One Talent in Bank' Lk. 19:23

papa-francesco

Intro: Fr. Nivard

Magnificat adapted
33 Wed 19 Nov 13 Lk 17_26-37
 Why did you not put my money in the bank?  

The mother of the Maccabees said to her sons. “The creator of the world will give you back both breath and life.”

To everyone who has will be given more. The act of spending ourselves for Jesus Christ creates a space in us that Jesus will fill with himself.
   We obey the command of the one who places gold coins in our hands with the words, “Do business.” 
   That “business” is what it means to live by faith.

Father, we beg you to sanctify our daily life of prayer, praise and work by purity of heart, through Christ Jesus our Lord.
                          * * * * * * * *

Not Our Talents
Let us ever bear in mind ... that we in this place are only then really strong when we are more than we seem to be. It is not our attainments or our talents, it is not philosophy or science, letters or arts which will make us dear to God. It is not secular favour, or civil position, which can make us worthy of the attention and the interest of the true Christian. A great university is a great power, and can do great things; but, unless it be something more than human, it is but foolishness and vanity in the sight and in comparison of the little ones of Christ. It is really dead, though it seems to live, unless it be grafted upon the True Vine, and is partaker of the secret supernatural life which circulates through the undecaying branches. "Unless the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it." Idle is our labour, worthless is our toil, ashes is our fruit, corruption is our reward, unless we begin the foundation of this great undertaking in faith and prayer, and sanctify it by purity of life.

BLESSED JOHN HENRY NEWMAN († 1890) established the English Oratory in Birmingham, and was a preacher of great eloquence.
Pope Francis 
General Audience of 05/06/2013 (trans. © copyright Libreria Editrice Vaticana) 

"'Engage in trade with these"