Friday, 8 July 2011

COMMENT Matt 11:25-30 and Sacra Pagina

9th July Aberdeen Cathedral
It is Our Lady Saturday Memorial.
Any search of special Lady of Aberdeen Collects and Readings has failed so far!


Hi, William,
Thank you for comments.
Thought and reflection on Matt 11:25-30 remains of endless return to the text.
A tantalizing comment with our visit from the Iceland, Fr. Edward OP, is this PP's Homily for the 14th Sunday. See below.
Yours ....
Donald
PS. Edward is on our wave-length. 


----- Forwarded Message ----
From: WILLIAM WARDLE ...
To: Donald ...
Sent: Tue, 5 July, 2011 22:18:33
Subject: Re: [Matt 11:25-30 and Sacra Pagina

Dear Father Donald,
 
Sacra Pagina - Matthew - does not illuminate the fascinating link between vs 25 & 27, but has a very attractive statement on v 27: All things have been handed over to me by my Father; and no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.
 
"In the background of the Father-Son saying in Matt 11:27 is the Jewish (and early Christian) debate about what and where wisdom is. The tradition of wisdom as a (female) person has been well established since Proverbs 8.... Matt 11:27 presents Jesus as divine wisdom incarnate. Those who know him know the Father - which is after all the ultimate in wisdom."  (page 169/170)
Sacra Pagina - John - is similarly non-reflective as I follow 'links' between Matt 11:25-27 and possible parallels / similarities in John's Gospel [Jn 3:35; 6:46; 7:28; 10:15, each picking up on one aspect of Our Lord's words in Matthew's text]. An interesting comment is on John 10:15: just as the Father knows me and I know the Father. 
 
"The theme of "knowledge" has been present throughout.." (page 311) 

This links back to Benedict XVI's superb interpretation: "Only the "Son"knows the Father, and all real knowledge of the Father is a participation in the Son's filial knowledge of him, a revelation that he grants”; to which Benedict XVI adds that it is not only in knowledge that this oneness exists, but also in will: “The will of the Son is one with the will of the Father… the act of uniting and merging the two wills".

 WHAT A BLESSING are the writings of Pope Benedict XVI, both in commentary and in interpretation!

...  in Our Lord,
William
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14 Sunday 2011 Fr Edward Booth OP

               In this Gospel passage from Saint Matthew Our Lord first details some of the relationships between himself and the Father, together with the relationships which are given a kind of primacy between the Father and this world. The Father is "the Lord of Heaven and Earth," but he is behind the inspiration of revelation in the minds of men. Our Lord addresses him saying, "You have hidden these things from the wise and prudent". He knows intimately the minds of the supposed wise and prudent, who have spoilt their relationship between themselves and him, evidently because their knowledge which should have opened them to God, through some impurity in their intention of learning which was based on pride, was not completely open to God in the highest purity of which they were capable. Instead of that, God had revealed depths of wisdom, priceless in themselves, to those who are by comparison "infants".
               So according to Our Lord, not only did the Son, who was His Word, inspire men with true wisdom, and the Holy Spirit, who was the inspirer of men with his gifts and his fruits which included the heights of spiritual joy, but the Father was also active. They were active together, with a suggested slight differentiation. They were all three Divine Persons active in their inspiration of men - and, we could add here, primarily of Jews at this stage. And the knowledge which the Father communicated in his wisdom was communicated as a result of his reflection. He was aware of the spiritual state of men at their deepest and most intimate, being guided by his goodness: "for so it seemed good in your sight".
               From which human communication he passes to the direct communications to Himself from the Father. "All things are delivered to me from my Father". After which he falls into those equalities which are taken up especially in Saint John's Gospel: "All things are delivered to me from my Father;" He as Son is not known adequately to anyone "except the Father". They are both transcendent and are equally transcendent: the Father is not known by any man, but he is known to the Son, because of their equality, but not exactly for that because one meaning of equality is a description of space. But the privileged state of men and the privileged state of divine knowledge makes it possible for the Son to reveal to men the divine Truth which had been communicated to him. The Son has, like the Father, a reflective power such as also guides the Son in his illumination of men. So the Father is also present in the revelation of divine Truth to men. From these statements it becomes clear how the communications to men from the Father and the Son are made with total liberty, by which the truth is revealed with its essential freshness as it was at the moment of their Creation, and so it communicates perfect liberty.
               And the Son, with his personal Mission of revelation has a personal reflectiveness though which by a loving choice of his recipients and of what he wishes to pass on, he fills, easefully, the dry souls of humanity with a connatural food for mind and heart. He is aware of the nature of the hard journey of searching and discovery with the intensity of effort which it requires to extract from what seemed its slight and semi-hidden traces. But he himself will make that discovery of what they were seeking because it will exist in its purest state in his mind and heart. He asks for humility in the face of a truth which is more precious than the truth that is natural to men; this truth has all the fresh vitality of its divine source; it is Wisdom itself in its original divinely Personal nature as it emerges from the Lord who stands behind heaven and earth. It is destined to convey that rest which men need after a long search for spiritual light. Ease of soul is the first gain as men wait for a highly illuminating revelation which opens out the roots and sources of what they are prepared to search out for themselves, with great self-denial. The labour is easeful, which makes what is the highest knowledge in itself to be totally unburdensome. Their vocation to pursue the divine Wisdom is confirmed, and they are communicated with a far higher knowledge than they would have expected. That is a mark of divine favour, introducing them to within the most universal and delicate love in which things now appear within the Tri-une God in their essential timelessness and endlessness. Amen.  
The Parish tower in background,
the FM Franciscan Hospital of 1936
and the modernised hospital in the fore

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