Wednesday 28 May 2014

Ascension Day: Praying with the Glenstal Icons, Byzantine Chapel



The Glenstal - Book of Icons   
with appreciation of the author, Dom Gregory Collins OSB.  
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Dear Folks,
Sr. Mary Teresa, Happy Birthday to Mary. Showers of Blessings for a long and joyful apostolate and also many graces of the Ascension Day in Scotland - and Poland?.

Just had chat with Sr. jomc on Skype.
Before, I was in the Abbey Shop and found the Glenstal Abbey "Praying with the Glenstal Icons"  and Attached the picture, above. The writer is Dom Gregory Collins osb, now Abbot of the Abbey of the Dormition, Jerusalem.
We could well have the 'Meditation on the Icon of Christ's Ascension into Heaven' as it echos the monastic Liturgy quotations. Maybe you may visit the Glenstal Byzantine Chapel, not far away..

Tomorrow, Fr. Raymond will have the Homily on Ascension.
God love.
fr. Donald & Niv.

Previously the Mass introduction of Fr. Nivard:   
On Wednesday, 28 May 2014, 10:43, Nivard wrote:

Daily Reading & Meditation Don Schwager © 2014 adapted
Wednesday (May 28): John 16:12-15

The Holy Spirit will guide you into all the truth

Are you hungry for truth? Jesus proclaimed that he is the Truth, the Way, and the Life.
It is the gift of God.
Many skeptics of truth do not want to believe in an absolute Truth.


________________________________________   


A Meditation on the Icon of Christ's Ascension into Heaven

As they were watching, he was lifted up, and a cloud
took him out of their sight. 
(Acts 1 :9)

Reflecting othe scene of the Ascensio
The celebration of the mystery of the ascension developed liturgically in the Eastern churches as a dramatic com­memoration of the final event in the history of Christ's saving deeds on behalf of the world. The event itself is recorded in the so-called longer ending of St Mark's gospel (16:19-20), but it is also implied in that of St Matthew (28:16-20). St Luke is the one who provides the most detailed account, both at the end of his gospel (Luke 24:50- 53) and in the opening chapter of the Acts of the Apostles (1:1-14). St John's gospel does not contain such a record, because with his characteristically unitary understanding of the work of Jesus, John sees his glorification as a single action, beginning with his lifting up on the cross (12:32) and culminating in his resurrection.

However, the church's liturgical wisdom, in its desire to celebrate the mysteries of Jesus, has followed the Lucan account since it allows for a distinct event in which the work of redemption culminates. At the last supper John records that Jesus promised the coming of another Paraclete (comforter or counsellor) whom the Father would send in his name (John 14:15; 26). For this reason, he says, it is to the disciples' advantage that he should return to the Father (John 16:7) so that the Holy Spirit may come to them.

St Luke takes up this close connection between the departure of Jesus and the arrival of the Holy Spirit, a con­nection expressed also in the various liturgical traditions of Christianity, East and West. Indeed he tells us that just before his ascension, the Lord commanded his disciples to wait in Jerusalem until the promised Spirit would come (Acts 1 :4-5).

The tradition of the church has discerned three deep truths in the mystery of Christ's ascension. The first we find emphasised in the letter to the Ephesians: Christ has ascended on high so as to become the head of his body the church and to fill all things with his presence (Ephesians 1: 20-23). The author sees the ascension as the end of the trajectory traced by Jesus in his act of self-emptying, which led to the cross and the descent to the dead. Christ has received the fullness of grace as head, so as to pour it out on his body the church (Ephesians 4:7-10):
But each of us was given grace according to the measure of Christ's gift. Therefore it is said, 'When he ascended on high, he made captivity itself a captive; he gave gifts to his people. ' (When it says, 'He ascended', what does it mean but that he had also descended into the lower parts of the earth? He who descended is the same one who ascended far above all the heavens, so that he might fill all things.)
The letter observes that all the gifts of ministry given by the ascended Christ to the church enable the whole body to grow up to the stature of its glorified Lord.

The second truth contained in this mystery is similar to the first, It concerns Christ's continuing work as mediator of the new covenant and is particularly emphasised in the letter to the Hebrews. In heaven at the right hand of God the Father, the risen Jesus exercises his priestly ministry, interceding for the sins of the people and pleading his completed sacrifice in the presence of the Father (Hebrews 5-9). Liturgical tradition (including that of Rome) frequently mentions an altar on high where this priesthood is carried out. Jesus has lifted up the sacrifice of love he accom­plished on the cross and carried it back into its source in the circle of love within the Trinity.

The third truth emerges by reflecting on the scene of the ascension itself as we see it depicted here. The icon shows the company of the disciples gathered beneath the ascended Lord. He is radiant in the glory of heaven where he is attended upon by angels. In the centre stands Mary the Theotokos with her hands crossed in prayer. She too is accompanied by angels, 'men in white' as the scriptural account names them, who speak to the disciples. In many icons the group of apostles includes not only Peter but also Paul. By including Mary and Paul, the icon shows that the ascension is not just a commemoration of a past event, but an icon of the church which is about to be born through the descent of the Spirit at Pentecost.

The ascension is the mystery by which the historically conditioned events of the life of Jesus received their perpetual validity for us. By enthroning our humanity the instrument by means of which he carried out our redemption - at the right hand of the Father, Christ has, in the words of the Roman liturgy; 'given our mortal nature immortal worth'. Thanks to his ascension, the events of his life and death become for us, in the power of the Holy Spirit, a fountain of life and grace in the church until he comes again in glory. It is therefore the basis of our worship and our future glorification. Where Christ our head has gone in glory, there we; the body, are called in hope.

However, it is not enough for the church simply to accept this passively, gazing in unbroken contemplation after her departing Lord. The angels ask (Acts 1: 11),
Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking up toward heaven? This Jesus who has been taken up away from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.
The implications are clear. There is no time to simply stand and gaze. The church like Mary of Bethany (Luke 10:38-40) must never lose sight of her heavenly Lord (Hebrews 12:2). But at the same time she is not called to passivity or inertia. Like Jesus, Christians must allow themselves to be driven by the Spirit (Mark 1: 12). They are called to be apostles, to proclaim the good news of God's redeeming love. That is the task of Christ's disciples in the time between the ascension and the second coming.   
  
Prayers before the Icon of the Ascension

O King of glory and Lord of hosts who ascended in triumph today above all the heavens: do not leave us orphaned but send to us the promise of the Father, the Holy Spirit of truth, alleluia.
(Roman Rite antiphon for the feast of the Ascension)
Be exalted, 0 God, above the heavens. Let your glory be over all the earth. (Psalm 57: 5)  
Prayers before the Icon of the Ascension  


Lord Jesus Christ you are seated at the right hand of the Father: receive our prayer!

Lord Jesus Christ, you ascended on high: send us the Holy Spirit!

Lord Jesus Christ in the glory of the Father: lead us on the way to God's kingdom!

Let God arise, let his enemies be scattered, let those who hate him flee before him. Sing to God, sing praises to his name;
lift up a song to him who rides upon the clouds ­his name is the Lord - be exultant before him. (Psalm 68:1,4)

Make our minds ascend 0 Lord to the place of your dwelling and our hearts to the meeting place of your majesty.
May our rise thoughts to the contemplation of your
glory:
and grant that we may honour with fitting praises this illustrious mystery of your ascension,
and give glory to your Father and to the Holy Spirit. (Hymn from the Syrian tradition)

The oldest known icon of Christ Pantocrator,e.g. encaustic 

Monday 26 May 2014

Poem - God's Garden. COMMENT to the Templar Annual Service

Comments, Knights, Poems, 
From Donald
domdonald.org.uk 
Dear William,
One poem leads to picture and poem again.
Families also processed in the Knights Templar celebration.
In the Buffet, talking with a mother and the children, I came to my news' of "God's Garden".  Joan's interest was the instant response of the poem and her  garden, "God's Garden".  She has been fond of the poem, - 
"One is nearer God's heart in a garden
Than anywhere else on earth."
The Blog prompts the happy association of picture and poem above, (the full poem shown below, W,).  
 Thank you ...
Donald. 
  &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&     
Fw: Poem -- 'God's Garden'.  
On Sunday, 25 May 2014, 11:48, William ...
> wrote:
Dear Father Donald,
...  
Edith was thrilled to see her garden photos on your Blog! The garden is her retreat - she often quotes the line from the poem, 'God's Garden': "One is nearer God's heart in a garden than anywhere else on earth" (the full poem is shown below!)
It will be wonderful to celebrate the Ascension with you on Thursday! Such a bonus for me!
Nearly there! DV.
With my love in Our Lord,
William
  

        Poem - God's Garden
THE Lord God planted a garden
In the first white days of the world,
And He set there an angel warden
In a garment of light enfurled.
So near to the peace of Heaven,
That the hawk might nest with the wren,
For there in the cool of the even
God walked with the first of men.
And I dream that these garden-closes
With their shade and their sun-flecked sod
And their lilies and bowers of roses,
Were laid by the hand of God.
The kiss of the sun for pardon,
The song of the birds for mirth,--
One is nearer God's heart in a garden
Than anywhere else on earth.
For He broke it for us in a garden
Under the olive-trees
Where the angel of strength was the warden
And the soul of the world found ease. 

                                 Dorothy Frances Gurney  

Eastertide 6th Sunday Eusebius of Caesarea


Caldey sea scape, Chapel
 Patristic Lectionary.......

... Anoint the lintel of our mind with the blood of the Lamb who was sacrificed for us  ... 


SIXTH WEEK OF EASTER Year II 

SUNDAY
First Reading      Acts 24:25-25:27 (or 24:25; 25:6-27)

Responsory      Lk 21:12-13; Mk 13:9
They will lay hands on you and persecute you. You will be taken be­fore synagogues and put in prison for my name's sake. + That will be your chance to bear witness, alleluia.
V. They will hand you over to the courts; you will stand before gov­ernors and kings on my account.+ That will be ...  

Second Reading
From the writings of Eusebius of Caesarea
(Treatise on the Paschal Solemnity 7.9.10-12: PG24 , 701-706)   

Sunday Eucharist
In the time of Moses the paschal lamb was sacrificed only once a year, on the fourteenth day of the first month toward evening, but we of the new covenant celebrate our Passover every week on the Lord's day. We are continually being filled with the body of the Saviour and sharing in the blood of the Lamb. Daily we gird ourselves with chastity and prepare, staff in hand, to follow the path of the gospel. Leaning on the rod that came forth from the root of Jesse, we are always departing from Egypt in search of the solitude of the desert. We are constantly setting out on our journey to God and celebrating the Passover. The gospel would have us do these things not only once a year but daily.

We hold our Eucharistic celebration every week on the day of our Lord and Saviour, for this is our paschal feast, the feast of the true Lamb who redeemed us. We do not circumcise the body with a knife, but with the sharp edge of the word of God we cut away all evil from our souls. We use no unleavened bread, except for that of sincerity and truth. Grace has freed us from outworn Jewish customs and created us anew in the image of God. It has given us a new law, a new circumcision, a new Passover, and made us Jews inwardly, thus releasing us from our former bondage.

On the fifth day of the week, while having supper with his disciples, the Saviour said to them: With all my heart I have longed to eat this Passover with you. It was not the old Jewish Passover that he desired to share with his disciples, but the new Passover of the new covenant that he was giving to them, and that many prophets and upright people before him had longed to see. He proclaimed his desire for the new Passover which he, the Word himself, in his infinite thirst for the salvation of the whole human race, was establishing as a feast to be celebrated by all peoples everywhere. The Passover of Moses was not for all peoples, indeed it could not be, because the law allowed it to be celebrated only in Jerusalem. Christ's desire, then, must have been not for that old Passover, but for the saving mystery of the new covenant which was for everyone.

And so we too should eat this Passover with Christ. We should cleanse our minds of all the leaven of evil and wickedness and be filled with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth, becoming Jews inwardly, in our souls, where the true circumcision takes place. We should anoint the lintel of our mind with the blood of the Lamb who was sacrificed for us, and so ward off our destroyer. We should do this not only once a year, but every week, continually.

On the day before the Sabbath we fast in memory of our Saviour's passion, as the apostles were the first to do when the bridegroom was taken from them. On the Lord's day we receive life from the sacred body of our saving Passover and our souls are sealed with his precious blood.

Responsory      1 Cor 5:7-8; Heb 10:10
Christ has become our paschal sacrifice. + Let us therefore celebrate the feast not with the old leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth, alleluia.
V. We have been consecrated through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ, once for all. + Let us therefore ...  





Sunday 25th May. John 14:15-21 "he will not leave us orphans. He has asked the Father to give us ‘another Advocate to be with us always, the Spirit of truth’."

Banners of Templars procession
 - St. Andrew, Cistercian

6th Sunday of Easter (A)
Mass Homily,  – Fr. Aelred

In the latter part of Easter Season we move from the accounts of the resurrection appearances to meditation upon the continued presence of the exalted Christ with his Church through the Spirit. In the 1st reading from the Acts of the Apostles we see that the Church is a community in which the Spirit is given and shared! When the Gospel is preached in Samaria it is important that the Samaritans remain in union with the mother Church in Jerusalem where Christ’s Passover was accomplished. And in the Gospel we see that the communion with the risen Christ, and through Him with the Father, is in fact a Trinitarian experience. Sometimes this is an ecstatic experience, though not always; but keeping the commandments is the touchstone of the love of Christ and the indwelling of the Spirit.

The Church makes frequent use of St. John’s Gospel during Eastertide. Nor is this accidental. St. John has been described as ‘he who knows the secrets’. St John seems to penetrate more deeply into the mystery of Jesus than do other parts of Scripture. He tells us that the man Jesus, whom we have seen in the first three Gospels performing miracles and speaking in parables, thereby causing controversy, is at the same tome the very Word of God. Jesus’ divinity is shown more clearly in St. John than elsewhere. Armed with this deeper insight into who Jesus really is we can re-read the other Gospels and indeed the whole of the NT with greater profit and penetration.

St. John tells us that his purpose in writing his Gospel was that his readers might ‘believe that Jesus is the Christ, the, the Son of God, and believing have life in his name’. This purpose is not fundamentally different from that of the other Gospel writers, but many people through the centuries have found in John’s Gospel a favoured means of perceiving the Spirit’s active presence.

In today’s Reading from St. John, Jesus tells us he will not leave us orphans. He has asked the Father to give us ‘another Advocate to be with us always, the Spirit of truth’. Invisible to human eyes, but perceptive with the eyes of faith, the Advocate allows the disciples to believe without having seen. And to recognize that the Lord is in his Father, that we are in him, and he in us.

It is through our life in the same Spirit that we can enter more deeply into the secrets of the Fourth Gospel and live by it’s faith.