Monday, 5 May 2014

Emmaus disciples Cliophas & Simeon

Below: William's attached pictures.
South Cloister sunset Silhouette
Leon Augustin Lhermitte - Supper at Emmaus
Emmaus disciples Cliophas & Simeon.
Dear William,
Thank you for reviewing  the 'research' of the Emmaus Sunday Blogspot. We are learning more of the Disciples walking to Emmaus.
I felt belonging at the Emmaus next door to Latroun Abbey when on Sabbatical months there. I recall the Chapel of Sts Cliophas & Simeon but did not have a photo for it. A friend, Peter, will again be at Latroun and hope he will bring  pictures. In the Refectory also, an Israeli artist made a special painting or etching, and again hoping for photo. 

The friend's suggestion to do Blogging makes, as always, the incisive COMMENT and very humorous. "That is my joy. I am a sea snail, living in my shell on the shores of time, emerging excitedly when a wave of thought sweeps over me!"  - beautiful!
Eastertide blessing.
fr. Donald 
Email from: William ...
Emmaus Sunday (2)
Dear Father Donald,

I love the sanctuary at Emmaus El Qubeibeh that you depict! A beautiful Eucharistic sculpture presiding over the Tabernacle and the Altar; and also the windows of the side Chapel in Latroun monastery, edit: El Qubeibeh. What wonderful memories you will treasure from your sabbatical!

Happy discovery in a little second hand bookshop, 'In search of the Holy Land', extracts from H V Morton's text 1937 with photographs 1963 by Rene Burri - the old classic that I love so much replete with glorious illustrations! (Hard back £4 - perhaps cheaper hard backed copies on Amazon, but when Providence places a treasure before you...)

Your research has been wide reaching on the two companions on the Emmaus road, intriguing! I am delighting in the family connections to St Joseph and of the family's apostles, which makes one feel that one can identify more directly with them. How enriching,  I shall note these down in the margin of my annotated study bible to 'picture' the relationships as I read the Scriptures.

I found a 'modern'-ish painting of the Emmaus encounter which, although I didn't use it, keeps returning to my mind's eye (attached).

... The photo collection that I have saved from your blog is such a joy for me to browse, 162 of the Brethren, 340 of the New Abbey  - my screen-saver is the second photo attached - it greets me whenever I return to my desk = return to Nunraw on retreat, the door / my heart opening to this view!

... Andy's suggestion of a blog for me... no, no! my delight is of receiving your blog posts and of responding, sharing and commenting to you in my delight! That is my joy. I am a sea snail, living in my shell on the shores of time, emerging excitedly when a wave of thought sweeps over me!

Thank you for the happiness you share with me.

With my love in the Risen Lord,
William

 Emmaus El Qubeibeh windows, disciples Cliophas & Simeon

Mane nobiscum

Latroun Abbey, St Cleophas
& companion (Simeon?), side Chapel
Chronicle and Blog
 Incidentally, St. Cleophas’s companion is not left anonymous in the Liturgy of the Holy Land, - The name of St. Simeon appears on the stage at this point in the prayers. When it is said to be apocryphal I begin to see that the word is not entirely negative. Taken in the technical sense of an Apocryphal source it can be understood among other respected traditions.   

Simeon, the son of Cleopas, as the 'unnamed' disciple of Emmaus. Origen tells that Simeon was the youngest of the four sons of Cleopas, who was the uncle of Jesus. This Simeon succeeded his brother James the Less, after his death about 62. This 'unnamed' disciple of Emmaus (the companion of Cleopas) is represented as a bishop with stola in the right nave of the Franciscan shrine at Emmaus. His father, Cleopas, has his statue in the left nave. The Melkite liturgy mentions Simeon, relative of the Lord, on April 27. The Roman Martyrology has his feast on Feb 18.

St Cleophas: Christ’s Uncle and also the Father and Grandfather of 4 Apostles
Christ, St Cleophas, and an Unnamed Disciple, Lk 24. Saint Luke records that there were two men on the road to Emmaus on that first Easter Sunday when Christ appeared to them and made Himself known in the “breaking of the bread.” One of them is identified as “Cleophas.” Here’s the Scripture from Luke 24:
13. And behold, two of them went, the same day, to a town which was sixty furlongs from Jerusalem, named Emmaus.
14. And they talked together of all these things which had happened.
15. And it came to pass that while they talked and reasoned with themselves, Jesus himself also, drawing near, went with them.
16. But their eyes were held, that they should not know him.
17. And he said to them: What are these discourses that you hold one with another as you walk and are sad?
18. And the one of them, whose name was Cleophas, answering, said to him: Art thou only a stranger in Jerusalem, and hast not known the things that have been done there in these days? 
Who was this Cleophas? Cornelius a Lapide, drawing on St Jerome, reports that Cleophas was “the brother of S. Joseph the husband of the Blessed Virgin, the father of S. James the less, and S. Jude, and the grandfather of S. James the greater and S. John, who were the sons of Salome the daughter of Cleophas.”
Let’s break that down:
Cleophas was the brother of St Joseph and the brother-in-law of the Holy Mother of God (so says St Jerome).
Cleophas was the father of St James the Less, St Jude, and Mary Salome (one of the three Marys at the empty tomb).
Cleophas was the grandfather of St James the Greater and St John since Cleophas’ daughter Mary Salome was the mother of St James the Greater and St John.
This would make Cleophas the father of two Apostles and the grandfather of two Apostles. This would also entail that James the Less and Jude were the uncles of James the Greater and John.
The martyrology of the Catholic Church identifies the date of the martyrdom of Cleophas as September 25th. He was martyred at the hands of Jewish authorities in Judea.
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The other Emmaus..........

The name of one of the disciples going to Emmaus was Cleopas, (Luke xxiv. 18.) Many identify him with Cleophas, Clopas, or Alphaeus, the husband of Mary. It is most probable that he was a different person. The name of the other disciple is not given. Lightfoot supposes him to have been Peter himself; and it was early a very common opinion that he was Luke, and that the Evangelist through modesty did not mention his own name. Wieseler, (431,) who makes Cleopas to have been Alphaeus, makes the other the apostle James, his son.


www.custodia.org/default.asp?id=1889

The tradition accepted and followed by the Franciscans of the Holy Land ... It should be noted that the name of the site corresponds, but not the type and the ...
Emmaus El Qubeibeh-church-inside
The tradition accepted and followed by the Franciscans of the Holy Land identifies this sanctuary with the memory of the appearance of the Resurrected Lord to the two disciples of Emmaus, Cleopas and Simeon.



"Were not our hearts burning (within us) while he spoke to us on the way and opened the scriptures to us?" 
Luke 24:13-35

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