Friday, 1 November 2013

All Saints (C) – Homily of Fr. Aelred.

Friday if First of November

   All Saints: First Friday of the Month.
On the first attempt with CanCord, it back fired that the inner memory was full, and could not record. Hope to lerarn more.
D.
All Saints (C) – Homily of Fr. Aelred.
Intro   Today is the Solemnity of All  Saints, when we celebrate the canonised saints and those saints known to God alone.

Homily In the saints the Church presents the heroes and heroines of Christianity as models and intercessors. Although the saints had their personal failings, they still provide us with admirable examples at divine power at work in human beings. Alban Butler wrote in the 18th century: “The lives of the saints furnish the Christian with a daily spiritual entertainment, which is not less agreeable than affecting and instructive”. And speaking of the saints Vatican II said, “ To look on the lives of those who have faithfully followed Christ is to be inspired with a new reason for seeking the city which is to come … God shows us in a vivid way his presence and his presence and his face in the lives of those companions of ours who are more perfectly transformed into the image of Christ”.
Like St. Paul the saints can say, “I live, not now I, but Christ lives in me”” Therefore honour given to the saints is given to Christ.
The 1st  Reading from the Book of the Apocalypse shows us in heavenly symbolic fashion the saints around the throne in heaven. These have the seal of the living God on their foreheads. This divine signet ring is like of an orients monarch which marked  and sealed as his property. The sealing of God’s servants does not symbolize protection from tribulation and death but means being sustained in and through tribulation.  These martyrs have won their victory by suffering death, like Christ himself, not by inflicting hurt. A glorious destiny awaits the saints, and us too, but precisely as faithful followers of the suffering Christ. “Was it not necessary that Christ should suffer and so enter into his glory.” This is the divine pattern.

According to St. Paul the more excellent way of following Christ is through the exercise of agape, love. It is the highest of the divine gifts, and its acquisition was the foremost aim of all the saints. St. John of the Cross said, “At the evening of life, we shall be judged by our love”. And another great Catholic sage, Jaque Maritain, said, “In the evening of life there is no greater than to have loved Jesus Christ”.

Prayer Lord God, grant us, with all the saints, the peace and joy of heaven. We ask this thro’ Christ our Lord.

Note:
The Monastic Night Office Second Reading, Anastasius of Sinai (PC 89, 1192-1193) 

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