Showing posts with label Beatification. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beatification. Show all posts

Monday 3 October 2011

Blessed Columba Marmion OSB Collect 3 October. Pluscarden Blessing of Abbot


Abbot Anselm Atkinson


Abbot Mark, Nunraw, set off early this morning for the drive north to Elgin, for the historic event. 


PLUSCARDEN ABBEY  

Today, 3rd of October 2011,is the occasion of the Abbatial Blessing of Abbot Anselm Atkinson, O.S.B. 

Abbot Anselm has chosen the very fitting  Liturgical feast, that of the Blessed Columba Marmion.

Blessed Columba Marmion  







Bl. Columba Marmion
Collect:
O God, almighty Father, 
who called the blessed abbot Columba to the monastic way of life 
and opened to him the secrets of the mysteries of Christ, 
mercifully grant that, strengthened by his intercession, in the spirit of your adoption as sons, 
we may become a dwelling place worthy of your Wisdom. 
Through the same Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the same Holy Spirit, God, forever and ever.    
Bl. COLUMBA MARMION 
Bl. Columba Marmion was born in Dublin, Ireland, on 1 April 1858 to an Irish father (William Marmion) and a French mother (Herminie Cordier). Given the name Joseph Aloysius at birth, he entered the Dublin diocesan seminary in 1874 and completed his theological studies at the College of the Propagation of the Faith in Rome. He was ordained a priest at St Agatha of the Goths on 16 June 1881.
He dreamed of becoming a missionary monk in Australia, but was won over by the liturgical atmosphere of the newly founded Abbey of Maredsous in Belgium, which he visited on his return to Ireland in 1881. His Bishop asked him to wait and appointed him curate in Dundrum, then professor at the major seminary in Clonliffe (1882-86). As the chaplain at a convent of Redemptorist nuns and at a women's prison, he learned to guide souls, to hear confessions, to counsel and to help the dying.
In 1886 he received his Bishop's permission to become a monk. He voluntarily renounced a promising ecclesiastical career and was welcomed at Maredsous by Abbot Placidus Wolter. His novitiate, under the iron rule of Dom Benoît D'Hondt and among a group of young novices (when he was almost 30), proved all the more difficult because he had to change habits, culture and language. But saying that he had entered the monastery to learn obedience, he let himself be moulded by monastic discipline, community life and choral prayer until his solemn profession on 10 February 1891.
He received his first "obedience" or mission when he was assigned to the small group of monks sent to found the Abbey of Mont César in Louvain. Although it distressed him, he gave his all to it for the sake of obedience. There he was entrusted with the task of Prior beside Abbot de Kerchove, and served as spiritual director and professor to all the young monks studying philosophy or theology in Louvain.
He started to devote more time to preaching retreats in Belgium and in the United Kingdom, and gave spiritual direction to many communities, particularly those of Carmelite nuns. He become the confessor of Mons. Joseph Mercier, the future Cardinal, and the two formed a lasting friendship.
During this period, Maredsous Abbey was governed by Dom Hildebrand de Hemptinne, its second Abbot, who in 1893 would become, at the request of Leo XIII, the first Primate of the Benedictine Confederation. His frequent stays in Rome required that he be replaced as Abbot of Maredsous, and it is Dom Columba Marmion who was elected the third Abbot of Maredsous on 28 September 1909, receiving the abbatial blessing on 3 October. He was placed at the head of a community of more than 100 monks, with a humanities college, a trade school and a farm to run. He also had to maintain a well-established reputation for research on the sources of the faith and to continue editing various publications, including the Revue Bénédictine.
His ongoing care of the community did not stop Dom Marmion from preaching retreats or giving regular spiritual direction. He was asked to help the Anglican monks of Caldey when they wished to convert to Catholicism. His greatest ordeal was the First World War. His decision to send the young monks to Ireland so that they could complete their education in peace led to additional work, dangerous trips and many anxieties. It also caused misunderstandings and conflicts between the two generations within this community shaken by the war. German lay brothers, who had been present since the monastery's foundation by Beuron Abbey, had to be sent home (despite the Benedictine vow of stability) at the outbreak of hostilities. After the war was over, a small group of monks was urgently dispatched to the Monastery of the Dormition in Jerusalem to replace the German monks expelled by the British authorities. Finally, the Belgian monasteries were separated from the Beuron Congregation, and in 1920 the Belgian Congregation of the Annunciation was set up with Maredsous, Mont César and St André of Zevenkerken.
His sole comfort during this period was preaching and giving spiritual direction. His secretary, Dom Raymond Thibaut, prepared his spiritual conferences for publication: Christ the Life of the Soul (1917), Christ in His Mysteries (1919) and Christ the Ideal of the Monk (1922). He was already considered an outstanding Abbot (Queen Elisabeth of Belgium consulted with him at length) and a great spiritual author.
He died during a flu epidemic on 30 January 1923.
From L'Osservatore Romano, Weekly Edition in English 6 September 2000





Sunday 1 May 2011

Pope John Paul II is beatified just six years after his death


Sunday, May 01 2011 12PM

A million pilgrims descend on the Vatican as Pope John Paul II is beatified just six years after his death

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 12:56 PM on 1st May 2011

A million people converged on the Vatican this morning to see the late Pope John Paul II beatified.
Crowds of people, some carrying national flags and singing hymns, moved towards St Peter's Square in the largest gathering since millions turned out for his funeral six years ago.
Many pilgrims camped out overnight and the entire Vatican area was sealed off as stewards marshalled the huge crowd towards the square.


Teeming faithful: A million people are believed to have crammed into the Vatican to watch the beatification of Pope John Paul II


Devout: Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims have gathered in St Peter's Square, the Vatican, for the beatification of Pope John Paul II



Popular: Volunteers help hold back the massive crowd in the Vatican as they throw offerings into the square

Popular: A banner of John Paul is draped from a balcony on St Peter's Basilica
Up to 200,000 people also attended a prayer vigil last night in the Circus Maximums, the huge oval once used by the ancient Romans for chariot races.
Rome churches also threw open their doors all night to allow pilgrims a space to pray.
During the mass, successor Pope Benedict pronounced a Latin formula proclaiming one of the most popular popes in history a 'blessed' of the church.
During his homily, he said: 'He restored to Christianity its true face as a religion of hope.'
A place of honour was reserved for Sister Marie Simon-Pierre Normand, a French nun who suffered from Parkinson's disease but whose inexplicable cure has been attributed to John Paul's intercession with God.
The Vatican will have to attribute another miracle to John Paul's intercession after the beatification in order for him to be declared a saint.
Followers: Members of a delegation wearing Pope John Paul II dresses arrive at St Peter's Square
Faith: Pope Benedict XVI is driven through pilgrims ahead of the mass this morning
Blessed: Pope Benedict presides over the mass in St Peter's Square, which was attended by world leaders and members of European royal families
Dignitaries: Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi talks with guests ahead of the ceremony
Police placed wide swaths of Rome even miles from the Vatican off limits to private cars to ensure security for the estimated 16 heads of state, eight prime ministers and five members of European royal houses attending.
Helicopters flew overhead, police boats patrolled the nearby Tiber River and some 5,000 uniformed troops manned police barricades to ensure priests, official delegations and those with coveted VIP passes could get to their places amid the throngs of pilgrims.
Spain's Crown Prince Felipe and Princess Letizia, wearing a black lace 'mantilla', mingled with Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, Poland's historic Solidarity leader and former President Lech Walesa.
But there was controversy during the ceremony after Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe breached an defied a European travel ban to attend the ceremony.
Pope Benedict said that through John Paul's faith, courage and strength - 'the strength of a titan, a strength which came to him from God' - John Paul had turned back the seemingly 'irreversible' tide of Marxism.
'He rightly reclaimed for Christianity that impulse of hope which had in some sense faltered before Marxism and the ideology of progress,' Benedict said.
Expectant: Thousands of people camped out overnight in the Via della Conciliazione to get a good spot during the service
Expectant: Thousands of people camped out overnight in the Via della Conciliazione to get a good spot during the service
Jumping for joy: A nun leaps over a line in St Peter's Square last night. Pope John Paul will be beatified just six years after his death
Jumping for joy: A nun leaps over a line in St Peter's Square last night. Pope John Paul will be beatified just six years after his death
Followers: Three nuns holding their rosaries wait in the square ahead of the service
Controversial: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe flouted a European travel ban to attend the mass with his wife Grace
Controversial: Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe flouted a European travel ban to attend the mass with his wife Grace
After the nearly three-hour Mass, Benedict prayed before John Paul's coffin inside St. Peter's Basilica, which was expected to stay open through the night and for as long as it takes to accommodate the throngs of faithful who want to pay their respects.
Pope John Paul's coffin was exhumed on Friday from the crypts below St Peter's Basilica and will be placed in front of the main altar.
It will then be moved to a new crypt under an altar in a side chapel near Michelangelo's statue of the Pieta.
The marble slab which covered his first burial place will be sent to Poland.
John Paul's beatification has set a new speed record for modern times, taking place six years and one month after his death on April 2, 2005.
While the overwhelming number of Catholics welcome it, a minority are opposed and say it has taken place too quickly.
Prayers: French nun Marie Simon-Pierre, right, whose unexplained recovery from Parkinson's qualified John Paul for beatification, kisses the casket containing relics from the late pope
Support: Prince Felipe and Princess Letizia of Spain attend the ceremony
Packed: King Albert II and Queen Paola of Belgium were also among the hundreds of thousands at the mass
Liberals within the church say John Paul was too harsh with theological dissenters who wanted to help the poor, particularly in Latin America.
Some also say John Paul should be held ultimately responsible for the sexual abuse scandals because they occurred or came to light while he was in charge.
Ultra-conservatives say he was too open to other religions and he allowed the liturgy to be 'infected' by local cultures, such as African dancing, on his trips abroad.
The Most Rev Vincent Nichols, Archbishop of Westminster, said the ceremony was not a 'medal for good management service', but a declaration of the late pope's closeness to God.
Speaking to BBC radio, he said: 'I think we have to understand that the declaration of somebody being blessed is about their holiness, it is not about their competence at senior management, it is actually about their closeness to God.
'It is not to say he did not make mistakes, saints make loads of mistakes but they are close to God.
'I think that is the only way in which this moment can be really appreciated.'
The Most Rev Nichols added that John Paul was a 'hero' of the 20th century.
He survived an assassination attempt in 1981 and is widely believed to have hastened the collapse of communism in Europe.

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Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1382408/A-million-pilgrims-descend-Vatican-Pope-John-Paul-II-beatified.html#ixzz1L6RzWHyD

Sunday 19 September 2010

Blessed Henry Joh Newman




Cardinal Newman blessed by Benedict XVI with beatification 

Pope Benedict XVI on the altar during the rite of beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman on Sunday
Related articles:
·                              A Marian prayer of Cardinal John Henry Newman
·                              Deacon cured through intervention of Cardinal Newman preaches at Westminster Cathedral
·                              Card. John Newman
·                              Cardinal Ratzinger’s thoughts on John Paul II
  • Birmingham, England, Sep 19, 2010 / 05:56 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Holy Father has declared that John Henry Cardinal Newman will "henceforth be invoked as Blessed." Despite inclement weather, tens of thousands of faithful attended to celebrate the life of Newman, revered for his intellectual contributions to Christianity.
  • Cool weather and sporadic sprinkles of rain were no obstacle to the pilgrims in attendance for the beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman in Birmingham's Cofton Park on Sunday. Multi-colored ponchos and umbrellas peppered the vast 55,000 person crowd who cheered for the Pope upon his arrival and joined in with a massive choir to warm up the atmosphere.
  • Beginning the rite, the Archbishop of Birmingham, Bernard Longley, made the official request of the Pope "that the Venerable John Henry Cardinal Newman be beatified." A short biography was then read by the vice postulator for the Cause for the Canonization of Cardinal Newman, Fr. Richard Duffield
  • Fr. Duffield, also provost of Newman's Birmingham Oratory, read the brief description of the life of the 19th century celebrated Catholic convert from the Anglican Church. He was remembered as a prominent figure in the Church of England, a preacher, theologian and leader of the Oxford movement as an Anglican in the first half of his life.
  • Drawn to full communion with the Catholic Church, he converted at 44 years old. He founded the Oratory of St. Philip Neri in Birmingham in 1847 with encouragement from then-Pope Pius IX. Fr. Duffield summarized his contributions throughout his life, saying, "(h)e was a prolific and influential writer on a variety of subjects, including the development of Christian doctrine, faith and reason, the true nature of conscience and university education."
  • The vice postulator also remembered him as being "(p)raised for his humility, his life of prayer, his unstinting care of souls and contributions to the intellectual life of the Church." He was created cardinal by Pope Leo XIII in 1879 and lived with the oratorians until his death in 1890.
  • "Acceding to the request" of the Archbishop of Birmingham, the bishops and faithful, Pope Benedict XVI declared that "venerable Servant of God John Henry, Cardinal, Newman priest of the Congregation of the Oratory, shall henceforth be invoked as Blessed and that his feast shall be celebrated every year of the ninth of October."
  • At that point an image of the Blessed appeared in the digital altarpiece to the right of the Pope, punctuating the moment, also met by the cheers from the faithful. Following the declaration a song written by Blessed Newman was sung praising "the Holiest in the height" and thanks were given to Benedict XVI for presiding over the celebration, his first beatification ever.
  • The rite concluded with a reliquary procession which included some of Newman's family members and oratorians.
  • Among the many prelates present for the beatification from England, WalesNew York and beyond was Cardinal Edwin Egan, Archbishop-Emeritus of and three other "red berets."