Monday 26 January 2015

A Reading about the First Cistercians by Thomas Merton.

Saints OCSO, 
Founders ocso Nunraw

Sts Robert, Alberic & Stephen. (26 Jan., 1980)
A Reading about the First Cistercians by Thomas Merton.
The churches and cloisters of abbeys like Fontenay and Thoronet, their mellow stones glowing in a setting of quiet woods, still speak eloquently of the graceful mysticism of twelfth-century Citeaux. It was for the abbot of Fontenay that St Bernard wrote his tract, Degrees of Humility, with its wonderful twelfth chapter on mystical prayer. Fontenay itself represents the direct influence of 5t Bernard and is the precise application of his principles on architecture. I n such settings as these, the purified Liturgy of the Cistercians became a thing of tremendous effect. But their contemplative life implies penance as well as prayer, because in contemplation there are always two aspects: the positive one, by which we are united to God in love, and the negative one, by which we are detached and separated from everything that is not God. Without both these elements there is no real contemplation.
The penance of the Cistercians is essentially the common penance of the whole human race: to "eat your bread in the sweat of your brow" and to "bear one another's burdens." Underlying the Cistercian insistence on manual labour was a powerful element of what some call "social consciousness". The poverty and labour of the early Cistercians had explicit reference to the social situation in which they lived. Besides being a return to St Benedict and the Gospel, their way of life was also a protest against the inordinate wealth of the great feudal abbeys.
One of the strongest criticisms levelled by Citeaux against the Cluniac regime was that it was rooted in social injustice. The Cistercians could not accept the notion of a life of contemplation in which the interior peace and leisure of the contemplative were luxuries purchased by the exploitation of serfs and the taxation of the poor. 5t Benedict had prescribed that the monk was to be the poorest of the poor and live by his own labour.
If the monk has abandoned the cares and distractions and burdens of life in the world, that does not mean he has renounced the society of other men or the responsibility of providing for himself by the labour of his own hands: far from it. I n giving up his possessions, material ambitions, and independence, the monk dedicates his whole life, body and soul, to the service of God in his monastic community. From the moment he makes his vows he gives to God everything that he has and everything that he is or can be. But the gift is not accepted directly by God. God's representative is the abbot of the monastery, and the monk understands, by the terms in which his vows are made, that his gift of himself to
God will consist chiefly in a gift of himself to his abbot and his brothers.
To give up everything and devote your self without compromise to the love of Christ in the common life is to glorify and offer him the worship that most pleases him; it most resembles his own infinite generosity and the gift of himself to us in the incarnate Word. And it enables us to love one another as he has loved us.
The Waters of Siloe, New York 1949, pp. 15-20.

Saints OCSO, Cistercian Founders 26th January


Cistercian Founders    

Monday, 26 January 2015

Community Chapter Sermon - on the eve of the Solemnity, 
Fr. H... launched the theme in mind with the recent Letter from, 
POPE FRANCIS ON THE OCCASION OF THE YEAR OF CONSECRATED LIFE Apostolic Letter...
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Consecrated Life,  
+++++++++++++

The Founders of Cîteaux

Sts Robert, Alberic and Stephen
Saints Robert, Alberic and Stephen founded the reformed monastery of Cîteaux in 1098.
Their aim was to refresh the institutional forms of monastic life and to bring them into closer conformity both with the Rule of Saint Benedict and with the aspirations of the age.
In particular this involved an emphasis on authentic poverty and simplicity even in the liturgy, manual work, non-involvement in secular affairs, and, at the level of the Order, mutual concern and supervision among the different monasteries, as a means of maintaining fervour.
The prime documents of this period are the Exordium Parvum, describing the origins of the reform, and the Charter of Charity, giving its constitutional basis.  (OCSO.org)

++++++++++++++

Dom Donald's Blog: Cistercian Founders 26th January: Solemnity of the Founders of Cistercian Order Saints Robert, Alberic & Stephen Today we are celebratin...

Cistercian Founders 26th January



Solemnity of the Founders of Cistercian Order
Saints Robert, Alberic & Stephen

Today we are celebrating the feast of our three founders, Robert, Alberic and Stephen. Actually there were possibly 21 founders, but we mention only the first three abbots of the new foundation. The Rule of St. Benedict gives a lot of power to the abbot and one of the reasons the twenty-one monks left the Benedictine monastery of Molesme to settle in a place called Citeaux in Burgundy, was because they wanted a stricter interpretation of the Rule of St. Benedict. But it takes more than an abbot to make a monastery. In fact I can think of nothing worse than a monastery full of abbots bossing each other around!
Daily life in a monastery is a complex interchange between authority and obedience and often times it is difficult to know who has which - no matter what the official documents say. Take for instance the job of cantor. Who has more power than the cantor? Who could put a note on the board on a Saturday stating, "The Mass readings for Sunday have been changed from the ones given in our Mass reading booklet!" So, what if the abbot had a homily prepared based on the old readings! So the homily you are about to hear, is based on six scripture readings! It will be twice as long too!
Really, all the Mass readings are concerned with one theme, the call of God.
Our founders, all twenty-one of them, left one monastery to found another based on certain ideals they had about how the monastic life should be lived. It was not a smooth transition. The first abbot, Robert, was ordered back to his original monastery. No one joined the new group for years. They were on the verge of giving up when St. Bernard arrived with a large group and joined. After a lot of trouble they were eventually able to live out their dream.
Pastoral
Now almost a thousand years later, we are celebrating their memory. It is a good occasion to look at our own calling, our own dream. The scripture reading chosen for this celebration gives us a way of evaluating how we are doing.
The first reading, Gen 12:1-4a, is the call of Abraham. The call to leave his country, his relationship with his father's house. Each of us is free to interpret what that means for us. The early desert monks called it the three great renunciations or detachments.
Country meant all the wealth and riches of the world,
to leave your kindred and relationships meant the life of sin and vice that cling to us and become like kindred to us. To leave our father's house means the whole visible world as opposed to the invisible world of the Spirit.
These are radical renunciations just as are the ones in today's Gospel, Mt 19:27-29, and even more so the ones Paul speaks of: 1 Cor 1:26-31,leave our own wisdom and justice, even our own holiness.
What does all this mean? All this renunciation and detachment? I think it means that each of us is called to go out of ourselves, to go beyond ourselves. Take the journey to a new place, an unknown place. In the letter to the Hebrews we read that our ancestors set out on the journey not knowing where they were going. They were living on a promise and they died before the promise was fulfilled.
We too live on a promise. We can demand nothing. Monks have been accused of being Pelagians, making things happen by our own effort. If we fast or get up at 3:00 am, we will become spiritual men. Life is not like that. Life is a great teacher of detachment. We don't set our program and then watch it being fulfilled. We live our life and then come to understand it in the light of scripture. Life is a call to move out of ourselves. As youth gives way to middle age we are challenged to detach from perceived ideals. As middle age gives way to old age we are forced to give up false ambition and pretenses. As old age progresses, we are made to detach from physical health itself, our body. The world we wanted to create is slowly taken from us and something unfamiliar and new replaces it. It slowly dawns on us that God is calling us and leading us on-no matter how dark it seems or how unfamiliar the road. The new self made in this image of Christ is replacing the old self. We leave ourselves to find ourselves again. Are we good monks? Are we following our Founder? Are we good Christians? Who are we to judge? Life is teaching us.
Let us put ourselves in the hands of the Lord of Life.
Fr Brendan ocso (New Melleray) Cistercian Publications is putting out the collection of homilies and chapter talks in April.

   

Stephen Harding: A Biographical Sketch and Texts (Cistercian Studies) Paperback – 1 Dec 2008
  by Claudio Stercal  (Author)
Customer Reviews Amazon.com

5.0 out of 5 stars well done, December 27, 2008
By 
Bjoern Gebert "Student der Geschichte des Mit... (Berlin) This review is from: Stephen Harding: A Biographical Sketch and Texts (Cistercian Studies) (Paperback)
This short book concerning the live of the third abbot of Citeaux provides a lot of reliable information about Stephen Harding and the early years of the later Ordo Cisterciensis. But Claudio Stercal does even more than sifting all the available sources "that can with certainty be attributed to Stephen Harding" and combining them to a short biography with success - he critically reviews quite a lot of the biographical studies on Stephen Harding published in the last centuries.
Besides the "biographical sketch" the author and the translator provide the print of five texts "considered as having been written by Stephen Harding" in latin and english language.
At the end of the book the author gives a list of used sources and a detailed bibliography in chronological order and afterwards in alphabetical order. An index of names (mentioned historical persons and cited historians) completes the book.
Although it does not count more than 158 pages, it is an useful, substantial and stimulating study.        

Dom Donald's Blog: Cistercian Founders 26th January

Community Chapter Sermon - on the eve of the Solemnity Fr. H... launched the theme in mind with the recent Letter from, 
POPE FRANCIS ON THE OCCASION OF THE YEAR OF CONSECRATED LIFE Apostolic Letter...
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Consecrated Life,  
+++++++++++++

The Founders of Cîteaux

Sts Robert, Alberic and StephenSts Robert, Alberic and Stephen
Saints Robert, Alberic and Stephen founded the reformed monastery of Cîteaux in 1098. Their aim was to refresh the institutional forms of monastic life and to bring them into closer conformity both with the Rule of Saint Benedict and with the aspirations of the age. In particular this involved an emphasis on authentic poverty and simplicity even in the liturgy, manual work, non-involvement in secular affairs, and, at the level of the Order, mutual concern and supervision among the different monasteries, as a means of maintaining fervor. The prime documents of this period are the Exordium Parvum, describing the origins of the reform, and the Charter of Charity, giving its constitutional basis.  (OCSO.org)

++++++++++++++

Dom Donald's Blog: Cistercian Founders 26th January: Solemnity of the Founders of Cistercian Order Saints Robert, Alberic & Stephen Today we are celebratin...

Cistercian Founders 26th January



Solemnity of the Founders of Cistercian Order
Saints Robert, Alberic & Stephen

Today we are celebrating the feast of our three founders, Robert, Alberic and Stephen. Actually there were possibly 21 founders, but we mention only the first three abbots of the new foundation. The Rule of St. Benedict gives a lot of power to the abbot and one of the reasons the twenty-one monks left the Benedictine monastery of Molesme to settle in a place called Citeaux in Burgundy, was because they wanted a stricter interpretation of the Rule of St. Benedict. But it takes more than an abbot to make a monastery. In fact I can think of nothing worse than a monastery full of abbots bossing each other around!
Daily life in a monastery is a complex interchange between authority and obedience and often times it is difficult to know who has which - no matter what the official documents say. Take for instance the job of cantor. Who has more power than the cantor? Who could put a note on the board on a Saturday stating, "The Mass readings for Sunday have been changed from the ones given in our Mass reading booklet!" So, what if the abbot had a homily prepared based on the old readings! So the homily you are about to hear, is based on six scripture readings! It will be twice as long too!
Really, all the Mass readings are concerned with one theme, the call of God.
Our founders, all twenty-one of them, left one monastery to found another based on certain ideals they had about how the monastic life should be lived. It was not a smooth transition. The first abbot, Robert, was ordered back to his original monastery. No one joined the new group for years. They were on the verge of giving up when St. Bernard arrived with a large group and joined. After a lot of trouble they were eventually able to live out their dream.
Pastoral
Now almost a thousand years later, we are celebrating their memory. It is a good occasion to look at our own calling, our own dream. The scripture reading chosen for this celebration gives us a way of evaluating how we are doing.
The first reading, Gen 12:1-4a, is the call of Abraham. The call to leave his country, his relationship with his father's house. Each of us is free to interpret what that means for us. The early desert monks called it the three great renunciations or detachments.
Country meant all the wealth and riches of the world,
to leave your kindred and relationships meant the life of sin and vice that cling to us and become like kindred to us. To leave our father's house means the whole visible world as opposed to the invisible world of the Spirit.
These are radical renunciations just as are the ones in today's Gospel, Mt 19:27-29, and even more so the ones Paul speaks of: 1 Cor 1:26-31,leave our own wisdom and justice, even our own holiness.
What does all this mean? All this renunciation and detachment? I think it means that each of us is called to go out of ourselves, to go beyond ourselves. Take the journey to a new place, an unknown place. In the letter to the Hebrews we read that our ancestors set out on the journey not knowing where they were going. They were living on a promise and they died before the promise was fulfilled.
We too live on a promise. We can demand nothing. Monks have been accused of being Pelagians, making things happen by our own effort. If we fast or get up at 3:00 am, we will become spiritual men. Life is not like that. Life is a great teacher of detachment. We don't set our program and then watch it being fulfilled. We live our life and then come to understand it in the light of scripture. Life is a call to move out of ourselves. As youth gives way to middle age we are challenged to detach from perceived ideals. As middle age gives way to old age we are forced to give up false ambition and pretenses. As old age progresses, we are made to detach from physical health itself, our body. The world we wanted to create is slowly taken from us and something unfamiliar and new replaces it. It slowly dawns on us that God is calling us and leading us on-no matter how dark it seems or how unfamiliar the road. The new self made in this image of Christ is replacing the old self. We leave ourselves to find ourselves again. Are we good monks? Are we following our Founder? Are we good Christians? Who are we to judge? Life is teaching us.
Let us put ourselves in the hands of the Lord of Life.
Fr Brendan ocso (New Melleray) Cistercian Publications is putting out the collection of homilies and chapter talks in April.

     
 See this image
Stephen Harding: A Biographical Sketch and Texts (Cistercian Studies) Paperback – 1 Dec 2008
by Claudio Stercal  (Author)
Customer Reviews Amazon.com

5.0 out of 5 stars well done, December 27, 2008
By 
Bjoern Gebert "Student der Geschichte des Mit... (Berlin) This review is from: Stephen Harding: A Biographical Sketch and Texts (Cistercian Studies) (Paperback)
This short book concerning the live of the third abbot of Citeaux provides a lot of reliable information about Stephen Harding and the early years of the later Ordo Cisterciensis. But Claudio Stercal does even more than sifting all the available sources "that can with certainty be attributed to Stephen Harding" and combining them to a short biography with success - he critically reviews quite a lot of the biographical studies on Stephen Harding published in the last centuries.
Besides the "biographical sketch" the author and the translator provide the print of five texts "considered as having been written by Stephen Harding" in latin and english language.
At the end of the book the author gives a list of used sources and a detailed bibliography in chronological order and afterwards in alphabetical order. An index of names (mentioned historical persons and cited historians) completes the book.
Although it does not count more than 158 pages, it is an useful, substantial and stimulating study.        

COMMENT: Email on St. Francis de Salle

COMMENT:
Hi, William,
Your Email on St. Francis de Salle is a splendid commentary, the story of interesting memories. (Donald). 
------------------------------
 Fw: St Francis de Sales
Sancta Maria Abbey: http://www.nunraw.com.uk (Website)  
Blogspot :http://www.nunraw.blogspot.co.uk 
|
domdonald.org.uk 

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William ...
To: Donald@....
Sent: Sunday, 25 January 2015, 13:53
Subject: Re: St Francis de Sales

Dear Father Donald,
I delight in St Francis' feast day, for his writings have had such an influence in my life, and I am so pleased to have the photo you insert of that portrait of him, so much closer-up than the one I have: for in 1984 I wrote to the Monastery of the Visitation, Thurnfeld, Austria to ask if they could send me a photo-card of St Francis' portrait (I must have seen it reproduced in a book), and they kindly did so, a small colour card of that portrait from 1622 that hangs in their monastery, and in my bedroom!
The Anglican clergyman who later gently coaxed me away from Anglican orders to Catholicism, gave me, in 1975, a slim selection of St Francis' letters, in which he wrote, "May the Master of the Spiritual Life be of as much help to you as he had been to 'BSWS' (his customary signing of his name, Benjamin Smith Wignall-Simpson)". Even before the 2nd hand bookshop obtained its grand building and vast stock, I found in its original Dickensian premises, in 1980, a copy published by Rivingtons in 1871 of a larger selection of St Francis' letters (for £1.50!). Attached image: front piece, and wonderful inscription in the book (the evidence of my name tells how I treasured this discovery!).
Thank you for celebrating his feast day with me!
With my love in Our Lord,
William

----Original message----
From : nunrawdonald@.........
Date : 24/01/2015 - 18:48 (GMTST)

Subject : True Devotion

Journalist  St Francis de Sales

Sent from my iPad. 
Saturday 24 January
Saint Francis de Sales
St. Francis de Sales
True Devotion 
  Posted By Blogger to  Dom Donald's Blog on 1/24/2015 05:16:00 pm
 

                                    

Saturday 24 January 2015

EWTN Live - Saint Francis de Sales - Fr Mitch Pacwa, SJ with Fr Thomas D...

Saturday 24 January
Saint Francis de Sales
St. Francis de Sales
True Devotion 
 http://www.ccel.org/download.html?url=/ccel/desales/devout_life.txt  
CHAPTER XVIII. TENTH MEDITATION.

   How the Soul chooses the Devout Life.

   Preparation.

   1. PLACE yourself in the Presence of God.2. Humble yourself before Him,
   and ask His Aid.

   Considerations.

   1. Once more imagine yourself in an open plain, alone with your
   guardian Angel, and represent to yourself on the left hand the Devil
   sitting on a high and mighty throne, surrounded by a vast troop of
   worldly men, who bow bareheaded before him, doing homage to him by the
   various sins they commit. Study the countenances of the miserable
   courtiers of that most abominable king:--some raging with fury, envy
   and passion, some murderous in their hatred;--others pale and haggard
   in their craving after wealth, or madly pursuing every vain and
   profitless pleasure;--others sunk and lost in vile, impure affections.
   See how all alike are hateful, restless, wild: see how they despise one
   another, and only pretend to an unreal self-seeking love. Such is the
   miserable reign of the abhorred Tyrant.

   2. On the other hand, behold Jesus Christ Crucified, calling these
   unhappy wretches to come to Him, and interceding for them with all the
   Love of His Precious Heart. Behold the company of devout souls and
   their guardian Angels, contemplate the beauty of this religious
   Kingdom. What lovelier than the troop of virgin souls, men and women,
   pure as lilies:--widows in their holy desolation and humility; husbands
   and wives living in all tender love and mutual cherishing. See how such
   pious souls know how to combine their exterior and interior duties;--to
   love the earthly spouse without diminishing their devotion to the
   Heavenly Bridegroom. Look around--one and all you will see them with
   loving, holy, gentle countenances listening to the Voice of their Lord,
   all seeking to enthrone Him more and more within their hearts.

   They rejoice, but it is with a peaceful, loving, sober joy; they love,
   but their love is altogether holy and pure. Such among these devout
   ones as have sorrows to bear, are not disheartened thereby, and do not
   grieve overmuch, for their Saviour's Eye is upon them to comfort them,
   and they all seek Him only.

   3. Surely you have altogether renounced Satan with his weary miserable
   troop, by the good resolutions you have made;--but nevertheless you
   have not yet wholly attained to the King Jesus, or altogether joined
   His blessed company of devout ones:--you have hovered betwixt the two.

   4. The Blessed Virgin, S. Joseph, S. Louis, S. Monica, and hundreds of
   thousands more who were once like you, living in the world, call upon
   you and encourage you.

   5. The Crucified King Himself calls you by your own name: "Come, O my
   beloved, come, and let Me crown thee!"

   The Choice.

   1. O world, O vile company, never will I enlist beneath thy banner; for
   ever I have forsaken thy flatteries and deceptions. O proud king,
   monarch of evil, infernal spirit, I renounce thee and all thy hollow
   pomp, I detest thee and all thy works.

   2. And turning to Thee, O Sweet Jesus, King of blessedness and of
   eternal glory, I cleave to Thee with all the powers of my soul, I adore
   Thee with all my heart, I choose Thee now and ever for my King, and
   with inviolable fidelity I would offer my irrevocable service, and
   submit myself to Thy holy laws and ordinances.

   3. O Blessed Virgin Mother of God, you shall be my example, I will
   follow you with all reverence and respect.

   O my good Angel, bring me to this heavenly company, leave me not until
   I have reached them, with whom I will sing for ever, in testimony of my
   choice, "Glory be to Jesus, my Lord!"
     ______________________________
Saturday 24 January
Saint Francis de Sales____________________________________
          

EWTN Live - Saint Francis de Sales - Fr Mitch Pacwa, SJ with Fr Thomas Dailey, OSFS - 04-06-2011