Saturday, 25 August 2012

Fr. Edward - "God himself praised himself, and because he could well praise himself, man therefore learned how he could praise him.”

Sacristan - Altar flowers.
Dear Fr. Edward, 
Thank you for your Email "Subject: Some more lines."
At Vespers the first  Psalm was from “Exaltabo te. Deus meus Rex” (Psalm 144)    
And hence our astonishment from your "lines of contemplation".

In our background back home
It was the day of the Garvald Village FLOWER SHOW.
The weather was of dense fog, the worst known in early morning.
The Abbot attended.
Later, some of the benefits from the Show added to the tea time of the monks.
Of most interest to the Sacristan was the bouquet of PRIZE ROSES from good friend Dorothy. 
Some pictures fill up wheels turning in our hearts.
In Dno.
Donald
+ + +


----- Forwarded Message -----
From: edward b...
To: Donald ... 
Sent: Saturday, 25 August 2012, 15:39
Subject: Some more lines
Dear Father Donald,
I do not know whether this will interest you at all. 
I was   very struck with the idea of God praising God!
What insight! 
What purity of soul to perceive this! 
And please a copy for H ...
Blessings  in Domino
fr Edward O.P.


“Exaltabo te. Deus meus Rex” (Psalm 144)

Like a privileged man fresh from the experience
of being elevated, concentrated, purged,
into a contemplation of exceptional intensity
and transforming purity,
Augustine begins his sermon
with a power to convince without effort or questioning
his congregation:
“I have dared to praise the Lord with you;”
he finds in himself the urge to concentrate his spirit
in all his hearers in the sure trust
that his received fire will communicate itself to them.
So experiencing in the act of communicating it
he offers it with a safeguard:
“and since [the Lord] deigns to concede this
so that the praise which we are going to offer him
might have an ordering
lest there be something offensive to the one who praises,
it is better that we seek a way of praising
from the Scriptures of God
so that we do not stray from the path
to the right or left.
For I have the boldness to say to your collective charity,
so that God may be appropriately praised by man
God himself praised himself,
and because he could well praise himself,
man therefore learned how he could praise him.”

This passage I learned from the opening of an Apostolic Constitution
of Pope Saint Pius X.    
The quotation was among others equally authoritative, offering encouragement,
from the beginning of his Apostolic Constitution, Divino Afflatu, of 1911.
This was the true divine wisdom of the Pope acknowledged in his Collect.
It raises him from the secular encirclement of the Vatican
left by Garibaldi and Cavour.
from the disappointment of others at his election Conclave,
from the tiresomeness of irrelevant “modernism”
which time's progress soon ages
with its pressure of pastness,
from the march to Europe's brutal “civil war” of three years later.

A part of a group of gestures to give the Church a higher and purer worship
aligned with the profundity and reach of the Fathers
and later theologians.
A gesture of profound defiance aimed at the Godlessness
of the revolution begun in France
ending in the tyranny of Napoleon,
backed up by deceptive, never universally defined reason:
too prone to use the argument of bloodshed charged with envy.

These words can be applied at two depth-levels.

The first insight, deep-rooted in Christian culture, of the union in the Triune God
of the total and equal praise of
equal totally self-communicating Persons
offered to and from each,
timelessly, spacelessly,
beyond space-time,
where no relational opposition reigns.
An eternal lynch-pin where creation's all is
contained by a timeless, spaceless
self-balance of totality in a unity-totality
as one in se,
if distinguishable within this unity-totality
by Personal proceedings, yet all-containing and self-containing in identity;
participated by the angelic spirits as invisible and powerful,
as also by material's lower status, its equivalence with electro-magnetic energy
established a hundred years ago,
before atomic and sub-atomic force-bearers were located and identified.
In this space-time worship persists, when man can embrace the appearance
of configurations of matter-energy,
what his spirit demands – its guarantee of order, no matter what the depth.
His presence to self-praise and in self-praise of God
cannot be rejected by an act of human will;
it retains the cosmic all in a totality of changing equilibrium.
Essential stability and serial instances:
the former measured by self-authenticating theophany: 
Nature's highest because divine which shows itself in worship-cultus as realest, prompting the human mind to rise in humility and always to return.

Self-knowing is not high enough, nor tight enough to satisfy the capacity of man.
Self-praise in the divine alone is great enough and pure enough.
Not the all.
But what contains the all –
as one great timelessness and spacelessness.
Why do we resist what's most natural?
Stykkishólmur
21 August 2012


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