Friday, 10 January 2014

Friday of Epiphany, Saint Edith Stein, Night Office Reading




Stein, Edith (1891-1942), born at Breslau, Germany, of Jewish parentage, studied at Gottingen and at Freiburg/Breisgau under Husserl, the leading phenomenologist. She was received into the Catholic Church in 1922, and in the following year entered the Carmelite convent in Cologne where she received the name Sister Teresa Benedicta of the Cross. At the end of 1938 she moved to the convent at Echt on account of the Nazi persecution of the Jews, but during the German occupation of Holland she was arrested, transported to Poland, and killed at Auschwitz. She was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1987 and canonized by him in 2000.

Friday after Epiphany           Year II
Friday, 10 January 2014

First Reading      Baruch 4:5-29.   
          Responsoru           Bar 4:27.29; Ps 96:3
Take courage, my children, and cry out to the Lord; he who has brought this upon you will remember you. + He will give you everlasting joy and salvation.
V. Proclaim to the nations the glory of the Lord and to all peoples his marvellous deeds. t He will give ...

Second Reading
From the writings of Saint Edith Stein (Le Mystere de Noel, 51-60). A Word In Season, 2001edition.

Christ has not left us orphans
God has come to redeem us, to unite us to himself and to each other, to conform our will to his. He knows our nature. He reckons with it, and has therefore given us every help necessary to reach our goal.
The divine child has become a teacher and has told us what to do. In order to penetrate a whole human life with the divine life it is not enough to kneel once a year before the crib and let ourselves be captivated by the charm of the holy night. To achieve this, we must be in daily contact with God, listening to the words he has spoken and which have been transmitted to us, and obeying them. We must, above all, pray as the saviour himself has taught us so insistently. Ask and it shall be given to you. This is the certain promise of being heard. And if we pray every day with all our heart: "Lord, your will be done" we may well trust that we shall not fail to do God's will even when we no longer have subjective certainty.

Christ has not left us orphans. He has sent his Spirit, who teaches us all truth. He has founded his Church which is guided by his Spirit, and has ordained in it his representatives by whose mouth his Spirit speaks to us in human words. In his Church he has united the faithful into one community and wants them to support each other. Thus we are not alone, and if confidence in our own understanding and even in our own prayer fails us, the power of obedience and intercession will assist us.

And the word was made flesh. This became reality in the stable of Bethlehem. But it has also been fulfilled in another form. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life. The Saviour, knowing that we are and remain people who daily have to struggle with our weaknesses, aids our humanity in a manner truly divine. Just as our earthly body needs its daily bread, so the divine life in us must be constantly fed. This is the living bread that came down from heaven. If we make it truly our daily bread, the mystery of Christmas, the incarnation of the Word, will daily be re-enacted in us. And this, it seems, is the surest way to remain in constant union with God, and to grow every day more securely and more deeply into the mystical body of Christ.

If we take part in the daily sacrifice, we shall be drawn quite without effort into the liturgical life. Within the cycle of the Church's year, the prayers and rites of the services present to us the story of our salvation again and again and cause us to penetrate ever more deeply into their meaning. The sacrifice of the Mass impresses on us time and again the central mystery of our faith, the pivot of the world's history, the mystery of the incarnation and redemption.
The Christian mysteries are an indivisible whole. If we become immersed in one, we are led to all the others. Thus the way from Bethlehem leads inevitably to Golgotha, from the crib to the cross. The way of the incarnate Son of God leads through the cross and passion to the glory of the resurrection. In his company the way of everyone of us, indeed of all the human race, leads through suffering and death to this same glorious goal.

          Responsorq           Ti 2:11-12
Begotten before the daystar and before all ages, + our Lord and Saviour has appeared in the world today.
V. The grace of God has appeared for the salvation of all, schooling us to reject all impiety and worldly desires, and to live sober, up­right, and godly lives in this world.+ Our Lord and ...



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