Thursday 11 December 2014

Boaz took Ruth and ... bore Obed, the father of Jesse and grandfather of David. (St Ambrose)11th December 2013. below - Saint Daniel the Stylite

11/12/14 Night Office, Patristic Reading, 
[St. Daniel the Stylite ] 
SECOND WEEK OF ADVENT

THURSDAY
Year I
First Reading
Ruth 4:1-22
Responsory      Is 53:3; Ps 89:30
Hear me and come to me; listen, and you will live. + I will make with you an everlasting covenant, I will send the promise given in mercy
to David.
V. I will make his line endure forever, his throne will be as lasting as the heavens. + I will make ...

Second Reading
From a commentary by Saint Ambrose of Milan (In s. Luc III, 31·35: se 45,12124)
A symbolic marriage
When Boaz, the great-grandfather of David, saw Ruth's behaviour, her devotion to her mother-in-law, her loyalty to her dead husband, and her fear of God, he chose her for his wife in accordance with the law of Moses which bade him raise up offspring for his next of kin. That this marriage was symbolic is shown by the blessing given by the elders: May the Lord make this woman who is about to come into your house like Rachel and Leah, who together built up the family of Israel. May she make you powerful in Ephrathah and renowned in Bethlehem. And may your house be like the house of Perez, whom Tamar bore to Judah, through the offspring the Lord gives you by this young woman. And Boaz took Ruth and she became his wife, and she bore Obed, the father of Jesse and grandfather of David.
Saint Matthew did well, then, when about to summon all nations to the Church through the gospel, to recall that the Lord who brings about this gathering of the nations was himself, in his human body, of alien origin. Matthew thus made known that it was from this lineage that he would come who was to summon the nations - he whom we desire to follow, we of alien origin who were gathered together when we left our na­tive land and said to whoever called us to worship the Lord, Paul, for example, or any bishop: Your people shall be my people, and your God my God. So did Ruth,like Leah and Rachel, forget her own peop le and her fa ther' s house and, freeing herself from the fetters of the law, she entered the Church.
What good reason there was for inserting Ruth's name in the lineage of the Lord is shown by the revelation of a still more profound mystery, for in the words: May the Lord give you power in Ephrathah and make your name renowned in Bethlehem it is prophesied that Christ should be her descendant. For what is this power if not that by which the Christ gathered together all the nations of the world? Whence is this renown if not in the fact that Bethlehem became the Lord's hometown when he was born as a man. As the prophecy proclaims: And you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, are by no means least among the towns of Judah, for from you shall come the prince who will rule my people Israel.
Responsory,      Lk 1:31. ...
. . . .
      

Bible Byte Ruth 4

Ian Lynchhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L97U6nBDYMg   

11th December 2013 - Saint Daniel the Stylite - Independent Catholic News
11th December 2013 - Saint Daniel the Stylite
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11th December 2013  - Saint Daniel the Stylite | Saint of the Day, 11th December 2013, 
Saint Daniel the Stylite
Hermit. Daniel was born at Maratha in Mesopotamia in 409. At the age of 12 he decided he wanted to join a monastery. The abbot consulted with his parents and admitted him to the community. Years later he visited St Simeon Stylite, who lived on top of a pillar, and received a blessing from him.
Daniel stayed in the monastery until he was 42, but never forgot his meeting with St Simeon. When the abbot died, his fellow monks asked Daniel to take his place but he refused. Instead he went on a series of pilgrimages and then lived alone in an old temple.
When St Simeon died in 459 Daniel decided to follow the way he had lived. For the next 33 years he lived on top of pillars, refusing to come down even for his own ordination. The Patriarch of Constantinople climbed up to lay his hands on the saint's head.
Thousands of people came to visit St Daniel on his pillar to ask for his advice and prayers. Many healings were attributed to him. He died at the age of 80 in 493 and was buried in a chapel at the foot of his column.

Wednesday 10 December 2014

Dom Raymond Jaconelli, Cistercian monk. Day 03 (Tu 25 May) - Father Simon drops in on the Sancta Maria Abbey, nr...

Interview of Fr. Raymond
Shot on a Sony Ericsson Vivaz mobile phone.
Update 10/12/2014 Youtube.






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Update from 26 May 2010
The Right Reverend Dom Raymond Jaconelli has been a Cistercian monk for over 50 years. He talks to Father Simon about life at the Sancta Maria Abbey, Nunraw, near Haddington in East Lothian. http://www.nunraw.com/

Shot on a Sony Ericsson Vivaz mobile phone.

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We shall see Christ (Augustine), Jesus said to the crowds: “Come to me, (Gospel Mt 11:28), Sr. Wendy 'Come to me'


 Night Office, Patristic Reading, 
WEDNESDAY 10/12/2014    Year I
First Reading
Ruth 3:1-18
Responsory      1 Sm 2:7.8; Lk 1:48
The Lord makes poor and makes rich. He humbles, he also exalts.
+ From the dung-heap he raises the needy to seat them with rulers and give them a throne of glory.
V. He has looked with favor on his lowly servant; from this day all generations shall call me blessed. + From the dung-heap ...

Second Reading
From a sermon by Saint Augustine of Hippo (Sermo 277,15-16: PL 38,1266-1267)

We shall see Christ   
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. Let us make every effort to purify our hearts, exert ourselves to stay alert, and as far as in us lies gain this grace by constant prayer. And if we wonder about external purity, the Lord tells us: Clean the inside, and then the outside will be clean as well.

Some may think that scripture refers to the body as much as to the heart, for it is written: All humankind will see God's salvation. How then can there be any doubt that the sight of God is promised to us, unless there is doubt as to the meaning of God's salvation. But since there is no uncertainty about this, there is no doubt: God's salvation is Christ the Lord. The divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ can be seen by the eyes of the heart when they are pure, perfect, and full of God; and he was seen also in the body according to the text: Afterward he was seen on earth and lived among human beings. Thus the meaning of the text: All hu­mankind will see the salvation of God is clear: let no one doubt that it means that we shall see Christ.

Uncertainty remains, however, as to whether we shall see the Lord Christ in the body, or as the Word who was in the beginning, the Word who was with God and who was God, and into this we must inquire. All humankind will see God's salvation is said to mean that all humankind will see God's Christ. But Christ was also seen in a body that was no longer mortal, a body that had undergone a spiritual transformation. After his resurrection he himself said to those who saw and touched him: Handle and see, for spirit has not flesh and bones as you see that I have. This is how he will be seen: not only how he was seen in the past but how he will be seen in the future. And then surely the words all humankind will be more perfectly fulfilled. For people see him now, but not all people. On the Day of Judgment, however, when he comes with his angels to judge the living and the dead, when all who are in their graves hear his voice and come forth, some rising to life, others to condemnation, they will see the very form which he deigned to assume for our sake. Not only will the righteous see it but also the wicked, both those on the right hand and those on the left, for even those who killed him will see him whom they pierced.

All humankind, then, will see God's salvation. Both those who see and he who is seen will be in the body because it is in his real body that he will come to judge. But to those placed on his right and sent to the kingdom of heaven he will show himself in the way he promised when he was already seen in the body:
Those who love me will be loved by my Father, and I will love them and show myself to them.

Responsory      See [er 31:10; 4:5
Listen to the word of the Lord, all you peoples; proclaim it to the ends of the earth. + Say to the distant islands: Our Saviour is coming.
V. Proclaim the good news, let it be heard; tell it to everyone, shout
it aloud. + Say to the ...


Jesus said to the crowds: “Come to me, all you who labour and are ...
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 11:28-30.

MEDITATION     OF           THE       DAY
Courtesy of MAGNIFICAT com
 
•Sr. Wendy Beckett. (Spiritual Letters)
"Come to me"

... What we cannot accept is that we are the beloved, or to put it more concretely, speaking as Everyman, that I am the beloved. God longs for me, he presses on my heart with a tender, humble hunger for me. He wants to possess me: when I let him, it is prayer. Always his love drives him to possess-one might call this the prayer of living? And when we have time, he enters into his own like a king-what one might call pure prayer. The pain of prayer is frustrating his love, and the joy is assuag­ing it, however feebly. To be so loved and so wanted is so terrifying and so awful that we can see why we shrink from believing it.

Another thing we are chary of believing is that prayer is gift. We don't choose our own prayer (or it might be different!). God is the prayer, the Pray-er. All he wants is that we accept, suffer, be involved, be le


~
SISTER WENDY BECKETT Sister Wendy Beckett is a South African-born British art expert, a consecrated virgin, and contemplative hermit who lives under the protection of a Carmelite monastery in Norfolk, England.



The Secret Paradise of Sancta Maria Abbey. Youtube Kieran Priest




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 Updated from 2 Oct 2011
The Cistercian Abbey of Sancta Maria and historical Nunraw Abbey Guest house, are located in the Lammermuir Hills of East Lothian, Scotland. The community of Monks live a contemplative life of prayer, simple manual labour and works of charity. living harmoniously with one another, as Mahatma Gandhi wrote. (* "The rose transmits its scent without a movement. I have a definite feeling that if you want us to experience the aroma of Christianity you must copy the rose. It irresistibly draws people to itself and the scent remains with them. A rose does not preach ... it simply spreads its fragrance. ) Sancta Maria is the rose in the garden of Eden.
for more information on Sancta Maria Abbey see www.nunraw.com

* According to the Monastic Tradition" Page 1 Introduction. 
by Columban Heaney, ocso. Nunraw Abbey Publications
  • Music

    • "Conditor alme siderum (4e mode)" by Choeur Des Moines De L'Abbaye De Ligugé (Google Play •iTunes • eMusic)
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Monday 8 December 2014

COMMENT: 8th December. Immaculate Conception

UCAN Spirituality Catholic Church News
The Union of Catholic Asian News (UCAN) is the leading independent Catholic news source in Asia.
http://spirituality.ucanews.com/2014/12/08/mary-proto-disciple/ 

Mary: Proto-Disciple
Mary: Proto-Disciple thumbnail
 Kathleen Coyle, S.S.C.
Mary responds to the news of Jesus’ conception with the words: “Here I am, the servant of the Lord, be it done with me according to your word” (Lk 1:38).  To appreciate Luke’s message, we have to see it in the context of another Lukan passage, Lk 8:19-21. This passage is a positive interpretation by Luke of the Markan account in Mk 3:31-35 where Jesus’ mother and brothers are calling for him.  “Then his mother and his brothers came to him, but they could not reach him because of the crowd.  And he was told, ‘Your mother and your brothers are standing outside, wanting to see you.’  But he said to them, ‘My mother and my brothers are those who hear the word of God and do it’” (Lk 8:19-21)…. In the Annunciation story Luke simply transposes these words to the first person and affirms that Jesus’ mother heard the word of God and did it.…
In the Acts of the Apostles Luke places Mary with Jesus’ followers in the upper room in Jerusalem praying and awaiting the coming of the Holy Spirit with the rest of the post-Easter community: … we find Mary with the members of the Jerusalem community, gathered together and awaiting this “power from on high,” the gift of the promised Spirit at Pentecost.  For Luke this last appearance of Mary in the New Testament after the death of Jesus is important.  It was at Pentecost that the Spirit descended upon them, inspiring boldness to preach the gospel, thus initiating a movement that would witness to Jesus’ message of unselfish love.  A commitment to this Jesus movement meant centring one’s life in Christ and his mysteries, and choosing the values of God’s kingdom, for which he lived and died. Mary is the figure standing between the two testaments, sharing and savoring the new liberating experience of her Son’s movement, which offers equal discipleship to men and women….
God’s Spirit comes on Mary as it did upon the community in Acts as an “overshadowing” cloud; an image that points to God’s presence, God’s Shekinah.  According to Luke, what was experienced as the Spirit’s overpowering in the upper room in Jerusalem had already begun thirty years earlier in Nazareth…. Mary allows herself to be moved by the “power of the Most High” … that preserved her radically from sin down to the roots of her existence.
The annunciation story therefore is not about acquiescence but about empowerment.  It is about a young woman in a patriarchal society carrying and bringing her child into the world: “the Lord is with you … you have found favour with God, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son … the Son of the Most High … and of his kingdom there will be no end” (Lk 1:28-33).  It is not a story about a passively perfect woman, overwhelmed by divine duty, but about a “self-possessed, self-focused and self-conscious” poor woman who finds favor with God and is willing to cooperate with a wild plan of salvation.  It is about a woman strong enough to risk believing something incredible about herself – “the Lord is with you.”  She must be envisioned then as an autonomous person, responsive and receptive, courageous and creative, intelligent and apostolic.  An exegesis of the Lukan texts leaves no room for an escape into

Fr. Raymond, 8th December - Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception (2)

Solemnity Community Mass, 
Monday 8 December 2014
Fr. Raymond. Mass Homily


IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
OF MARY

St Bonaventure has a book entitled "The Glories of Mar," and among these glories we should surely count her great Privilege of being conceived immaculate. She never was touched by that original sin that infected the rest of us lesser mortals when we first entered this world. I wonder how many of us, when we first gave some thought to this doctrine, thought it a bit unfair in a way. We could so easily be tempted to think - it's alright for her! She never knew the temptations of the flesh the way we all do. - It's alright for her! She never was stirred by feelings of pride or lust, or envy or impatience or whatever!

But these thoughts are far from doing justice to Mary. Consider for a moment our first parents Adam and Eve. Just like Mary, they too were created immaculate, pure and spotless. It was only when they were put to the test and failed that they fell under the burden of original sin. Would any of us dare to think that, in their circumstances, we might have done better? It's also far from justice to Mary that we should think that she was never put to the test; that life was just a bed of roses for her; that she never had to undergo the every-day troubles and trials of life that the rest of us have to put up with. It's not just because she stood beneath the Cross of her dying Son that she deserves the name of Mother of Sorrows.

We need only think how from the very first moment of the conception of Jesus her trials multiplied. There was, from that very first moment, the agonizing problem of confronting Joseph with the news of her pregnancy. Can anyone imagine a situation more stressful for a young engaged woman than to tell her fiance that she is with child and that the child was not his? Then there followed the edict of Caesar and the forced journey to Bethlehem when her time was near to giving birth. The sheer physical stress of such a situation must have added greatly to the inevitable mental stress. Then there was the desperate search for a decent place for her to give birth; and all this climaxed in her having to give birth in a stable, of all places. You and I can now see what a wonderful and meaningful thing that was. But how did it seem to Mary and Joseph at the  time? Only their great faith and trust in Divine Providence could have saved them from sinking into despair.

Then their joy at the birth of the child was soon overshadowed by the threat to the child's life from Herod; then there was the panic of the flight into Egypt. Then there was the life in exile there, so far from family and friends, and especially with no loving grandparents nearby to dote over the child.

But besides all these great and rather dramatic trials there were the ordinary trials of village life in Nazareth when they eventually did manage to return. She was spared none of them. We can be sure that the devil saw to that! There would be the difficulty of awkward neighbours; the bullying of Jesus by older village boys perhaps. There would be the constant call upon Mary's time and energy by those who recognised a willing spirit. Here was someone unable to say no to any reasonable or even unreasonable request, someone unable to refuse help to anyone in need; not to mention her own spontaneous generosity. She would always be the first to offer her services without even being asked.

Mary's immaculate conception then was no mere honour and sinecure without any responsibilities. Noblesse Oblige, and we can be sure that Mary lived up to and fulfilled that dictum more than any other human being apart from her Son.

8th December - Feast of the Immaculate Conception - Independent Catholic News

8th December - Feast of the Immaculate Conception | Saint of the day, 8th December, Feast of the Immaculate Conception,  St Catherine Laboure
8th December - Feast of the Immaculate Conception - Independent Catholic News 
8th December - Feast of the Immaculate Conception
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The dogma of the Immaculate Conception holds that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was free from Original Sin from the very moment of her conception. The Immaculate Conception of Mary is often confused with the virginal conception of Jesus.

Today's feast was first approved by Pope Sixtus IV in 1476.

In 1830 St Catherine Laboure experienced a vision in which she saw Our Lady standing on a globe with rays of light emanating from her hands. The vision was surrounded by an oval frame on which were the words 'Oh Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to thee.'

In 1854, Pius IX solemnly decreed that 'the most Blessed Virgin Mary was, from the first moment of her conception, by the singular grace and privilege of Almighty God, and in view of the merits of Christ Jesus the Saviour of the human race, preserved immune from all stain of original sin. That is revealed by God and therefore firmly and constantly to be believed by all the faithful.'
Just four years later, in Lourdes, the 14 year old St Bernadette, who had very little education and would have know nothing of papal statements, began to experience a series of apparitions of 'a lady', When she asked her name, the Lady replied: "I am the Immaculate Conception."

Saint Bernard wrote of Mary: "If you follow her you do not stray; if you think of her your mind does not err; if you ask of her, you will not be disappointed; if you cling to her, you will not fall. If she be with you, all is well, and you will realise the truth of the words 'the name of the virgin was Mary.'

Saturday 6 December 2014

Gospel Dec 7, 2014: Second Sunday of Advent

Fr. William Grimm MM
Published on 2 Dec 2014
In Advent we make a bit more effort to welcome the Lord into our lives and into our hearts, so that we can indeed know him as Son of God, as Good News.



Second Sunday of Advent 2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons
 Comment  
   http://www.indcatholicnews.com/news.php?viewStory=26195
 
Second Sunday of Advent  2014 - Reflection with Fr Robin Gibbons | Second Sunday of Advent  2014, Reflection, Fr Robin Gibbons
“Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths” is an acclamation heard so clearly in Isaiah and Mark this Sunday, a cry that resonates in all corners of our problem filled world, which is very much in need of the Lord. There is absolutely no doubt that we are called to ecumenism in the Church of Christ, reaching out across barriers is so much part of the mission Jesus shows us in his teaching and example, a ministry echoed in the great documents of the Second Vatican Council particularly the Decree on Ecumenism. Rooted in these teachings Pope Francis urges us to let go of fear and walk in these visionary roads of the contemporary Church, why? Because this is the way of the Holy Spirit whose gifts, given to us, are for us to prepare the Lord’s way in our society and place!
There is a lot of negativity in the world, as there is in the Church of `God. We see so many fragments and divisions, people are frightened for some reason at varied points of view, fearful of change and transition. Some of this is not actual but fabricated, because for God there is no real opposition between conservative and liberal, left and right, if we look into our hearts and souls, we are really seeking to do what is right. The ecumenism of God is to unite all creation in love, all of us!
The problem is that we are fearful creatures, even those whom we consider strong have their Achilles heel, but our scriptures this second Sunday of Advent call us to breath slowly, relax and re-focus become ecumenical and open.
The gentle voice of the Spirit of God sings a song to us of comfort in words so ancient and so rooted in the faith texts of our family: ‘fear not’ the prophet sings, ‘be comforted ‘ echoes the heavens, Mark proclaims that John in the wilderness ‘prepares the way’ and points to the One who will save us, the one who will come like a thief in the night and catch us unawares, but unlike a robber will not take away possessions but bring love. Let us take that as our comfort, we are held close to God’s heart in the love of Father, Son and Spirit, now and always!
Fr Robin Gibbons is an Eastern Rite Chaplain for the Melkite Greek Catholics in Britain.