Tuesday, 30 October 2012

COMMENT: Von Balthaser 'soaring up'. Gabrielle 'upsoaring'


Loch Tummel, Killiecrankie

MAGNIFICANT Tues 30th October 2012. Luke 13:18
MEDITATION      OF THE     DAY
The Mustard Seed
Whoever lives in me, whoever is taken up into me, is taken up in resurrection. I am the transformation
As bread and wine are transformed, so the world is transformed into me. The grain of mustard is tiny, and yet its inner might does not rest until it overshadows all the world's plants
Neither does my Resurrection rest until the grave of the last soul has burst, and my powers have reached even to the furthest-branch of creation. 
You see death; you feel the descent to the end. 
But death is itself a life, perhaps the most living life; it is the darkening depth of my life, and the end is itself the beginning, and the descent is itself the soaring up ... Every horror became for my love a garment in which to conceal itself, a wall through which to walk.

HANS URS VON BALTHASAR
Cardinal von Balthasar (+ 1988) was an eminent Swiss Catholic theologian and co-founder of a religious community. His extensive writings were an important influence on Blessed John Paul II. From ‘Heart of the World’ 1979.





HE AND i, Gabrielle B., 1940



The diary from Gabrielle's "HE ANDi", at the end of October, strikes chords with the Capitulum and Responses of Terce.
End  of October 1940
October -  After Communion. Notre Dame. Nantes.
 "You remember when I called you in C. 's little chapel, 
how you wished that there were a chapel in every house.
You didn't know then that I was in you, that there 
was no sanctuary more secret than that of your heart.
You do not even need to open a door, just a look, 
a longing, and you are at My feet.
There I will tell you, 'Climb higher. Rest on My heart, 
My friend, My chosen one,
and breathe the air of the mountain peaks 
to take strength for a new up soaring,
My frail little child'. "

Monday, 29 October 2012

Fools for God Online - Two Nunraw Chapters on the Cistercians, I c1, V c.8


                      Compline is one of the most lovely offices, thanking God for the day.  
I was paying some attention to it, but mostly allowed the prettiness of the music, 
and the thin, scratchy, weak singing of one of the monks 
whose job it was to sing the solo bits, to wash over me.  
I wanted to try to pin some of the faces in the choir stalls more firmly in my mind.
I can still hear the melodies, and still find singular resonance 
in the words sung each night: 
Keep us, Lord, as the apple of your eye; 
Hide us in the shelter of your wings.
            
FOOLS FOR GOD
by Richard North   
Published by Collins, 1987
   richarddnorth.com/archive/books/downloads/fools4god.htm  

Part I
INTRODUCTORY
Zones of Silence 
In a civilization which is more and more mobile, noisy and talkative, zones of silence and of rest become vitally necessary.  Monasteries - in their original format - have more than ever, therefore, a vocation to remain places of peace and inwardness.  Don't let pressures, either internal or external, affect your traditions and your means of recuperation.  Rather, make yourself educate your guests and retreatants to the virtue of silence.  You will know that I had occasion to remind the participants in the plenary session of the Congregation of Religious, on 7 March last, of the rigorous observance of monastic enclosure.  I remembered the very strong words on this subject of my predecessor Paul VI:
'Enclosure does not isolate contemplative souls from communion of the mystical Body.  More than that, it puts them at the very heart of the Church.'
Love your separation from the world, which is totally comparable to the biblical desert.  Paradoxically, this longing is not for emptiness.  It is there that the Lord speaks to your heart and associates himself closely with his work of salvation.
John Paul II, 1980

Chapter I, pp. 13-20
The Cardinal's Room

The Cardinal's room was light, airy and bare.  There was a wash basin, hospital-style armchair in tubular steel, wooden office armchair, a large table, a public school sort of bed, an incongruous great cupboard, of a seaside boarding house type, a crucifix over the bed with an unmemorable Christ, plastic curtains which rustled at every motion of the wind, swing windows.
A timetable was on the table, as though the landlady of a hotel were advising her guests to be prompt to high tea.  Luckily, I had no idea then that I had been put anywhere quite so grand as the smartest set of rooms in the place, or I might have left there and then.
            The view from the window, in the south side of the modern Nunraw Abbey, looked out to gently sloping hills: conifers, grazing land and ripening corn.  Beyond, the Lammermuirs high moorlands, reservoirs, and winding narrow roads.  It was a stunning evening.  A butterfly wandered in, fluttered around hazardously and found its way out again.
This is a Cistercian monastery, home to thirty- plus Trappist monks - Cistercians of the Strict Observance - sworn to poverty, chastity, obĂ©dience, stabilitĂ©, conversio morum (the continual struggle for personal change).  Famously, the Cistercian is devoted to silence.  The quiet of the place was periodically disturbed by the ringing of a phone or the slamming of a door.  Every sound could swell itself along the bare, wide, high corridors.  It was a hospital kind of noisiness. I sat on the bed and then on a chair at the table. I lay down, stood up, unpacked my toothpaste, thought about writing a letter, opened a book.  There was nothing whatever that I had to do.
            I had arrived down the road at the Old Abbey, now used as a guesthouse, earlier that day.  After tea, a phone call had summoned me to meet the Abbot, up at the purpose-built monastery on the hill. I had given him a shopping list, downstairs in a big meeting room, which appeared to be neutral ground where the monks could meet the outside world.  A few meals in the refectory - would that be possible?  A talk with some of the monks?  Coming to the night offices?  Perhaps an insight into the work that the monks do?  Reading in the library?
He cut me short after these questions and said that naturally I would have to live at the monastery proper if I were to do any of these things easily.  A large, pink man, Abbot Donald McGIyn made any sort of timidity impossible.  When a man reminds one of a farmer going about practical business, and requiring not to,be slowed in it by deferential nonsense, it becomes easy to state what is required, and to accept what is offered without anxiety.
            Faced with something so unknown and unlikely as living with monks, and Trappist monks at that, I went into underdrive.  It may feel like that to be an overweight woman checking into a health clinic: a very pleasurable shedding of responsibility.  There was no point wondering how to pass my tirne with these Trappists: I had, for once, given up directing or pretending to direct - my life.
            Something rather like this may happen to cheerful old recidivists as the doors of Pentonville Prison clang shut behind them on yet another Christrnas Eve, with them safely on the inside, when otherwise they would have to face the perils of a festive season with nothing to celebrate.
            When I had come back from the guesthouse, the Prior (second in command) took a hand in things.  Red-faced, sharp-featured, with razored white hair stubbling his skull, he had a keen look to him.  Rather severe, I thought.  He was wearing the Cistercian uniform: creamy rough wool habit and black scapula.  He took my hand in a solid grip, and gave me a broad, conspiratorial wink.  It seemed almost to be saying that this was an exceedingly rum place, and that he and I were quite probably the only sane people in it.  This was kindly done.  We drove round to the garages behind the monastery: it was slightly odd to find that one could do this so easily.  Where the great whispering gates?  Where the grille with a lurking, half-seen face?
            Nunraw is built like an open prison without the fences.  It is long and low and penitential in its demeanour.  Coming on it from the village, from the north side, it turns out to be in a softly beige stone, rough cut, and a rather good mixture of the airy and the monumental.  In the west side, where the visitors park their cars, there is a scruffy wall where there ought to be a brand new church, and at each end an inconspicuous door.  One leads to the 'temporary' church, and the other to the noman's-land room, and the enclosure beyond.
            A drive swirls round from the western side of the building to the southern.  A small 'Private' sign is all that separates the sacred from the profane. There is a workshop and garage area which might belong to an army camp or a school, and from which runs a path through a little municipal-style lawn and flower beds, to a door which leads into the nether regions of the monastery.     The whole place is perched on the brow of a hill.  It is a very exposed position.
            'Up here, the wind fairly cuts through you in winter', said the Prior, Brother Stephen, as we walked from the car.  He insisted on carrying my suitcase.  His step was lively.  He installed me in my room, and showed me the route to the loos, the church, and the refectory.  The rest, he said, could wait.  The Abbot came and brought me some things to read: well chosen, useful books, and a doctorate thesis devoted to an American Trappist monastery, which had been printed as a kind of brochure.  As I went down to Compline, Brother Stephen found me, and told me he would come and call me at 3.15 the next morning to go to Vigils.  I told him not to bother but he said he had to get everyone up anyway, so it was no trouble.  

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Cistercian "Fools of God" by Richard North


Google 28 Oct 2012
About 1,240 results (0.23 seconds) 

richarddnorth.com/archive/books/downloads/fools4god.htm
The view from the window, in the south side of the modern Nunraw Abbey...... a UN-inspired peace-keeping outfit, and had run up to the monastery because ...... under the heel with fresh denim ('Do you repair your garment with new cloth?

Surfing, above, surfaced Richard North "Fools For God". And thanks to him, the Archive Online version is available in this Link.
His two chapters on the Cistercians at Nunraw show that he has some kind friends.
That was in 1987. Much stream has undergone under bridge in Richard North writing and, in currents, the flow continues on monastic life.
One article is gloriously apt. 'Being a Fly on the Monastery Enclosure'
Our "Fools For GOD" Link opens up a Midas of fruitful associations..


Richard D. North's Fools For God, an account of Christian monasticism (Collins, 1986) is available for free download atwww.richarddnorth.com. More recently Richard D. North is the author of Rich is Beautiful: A Very Personal Defence of Mass Affluence and the just published Scrap the BBC!: Ten Years to Set Broadcasters Free.

North Richard D Environment Social Affairs 
MARCH 09, 2007
Being a fly on the monastery enclosure wall: Into Great Silence - Philip Gröning
Posted by Richard D. North
Into Great Silence
Directed by Philip Gröning
certificate U, 2005/2007
www.diegrossestille.de/english/
At my local art-house, there have been packed audiences for Into Great Silence. It's an exceptional account of life at La Grande Chartreuse, the mother Charterhouse near Grenoble in the French Alps. At two and three quarter hours, its running time alone reminds one of the challenges of asceticism. With no voice-over, no obvious narrative trajectory and vast amounts of silence, the piece is a challenge. 
________________________________________________



Richard D. North asks, could Chris McCandless, a.k.a. Alex Supertramp, have made a good monk? Into the Wild - Sean Penn
Posted by Richard D. North
..........
Spiritual extremism strikes a nerve now as it always has. We have recently had Into Great Silence [see my review: Being a fly on the monastery enclosure wall] the movie about La Grande Chartreuse and it demonstrates that such people still get formed and still greatly pique our curiosity. Indeed, in her book An Infinity of Little Hours: Five young men and their trial of faith, Nancy Klein Maguire has just given a very vivid account of how a handful of young men in the 60s disappeared themselves into the Parkminster charterhouse in England, and in hisFinding Sanctuary, Christopher Jamison, the Abbot of Worth, tells us that Parkminster is full of monks, right now.
..............

Bartimiaeus 30th Sunday Year B



27 Oct 2009
[CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA (c.150-215) was born at Athens of pagan parents. Nothing is known of his early life nor of the reasons for his conversion. He was the pupil and the assistant of Pantaenus, the director of the ...



COMMENT:                  

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William .....
Sent: Sunday, 28 October 2012, 11:40
Subject: Re: [Blog] Blind Bartimaeus

Dear Father Donald,
 
I so well remember a homily on today's Gospel when attending a Mass the year we became, ..., thirty years ago - which says a great deal regarding the effectiveness of the homily presentation! The priest spoke for less than five minutes each Sunday. He began today's homily with a chuckle followed by, "What a question to ask a blind man!" He concluded the homily by enquiring of each of us what obvious question Jesus might have addressed to us, or rather, be addressing to us!
 
Pithy stuff! terse and vigorously expressive!
 
With my love in Our Lord,
William


Saturday, 27 October 2012

Nunraw Monastery refurbishing 'United Nations task-force'


COMMENT:  re Clock  back one hour. saved!  
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Anne Marie . . . 
||
Sent: Sunday, 28 October 2012, 10:04
Subject: Re: [Dom Donald's Blog] Nunraw Monastery refurbishing 'United Nations task-force'

Well, well,well.  You will be snoozing rather than praying in that cosy spot.  Your sacristan duties will include waking your brothers up.

Sent from my iPad
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     
  Progress is underway with the new style monastery refurbishing, installing double glaze windows in the Church. The main winter winds, the north westerlies penetrate ten un-sheltered eight windows.







 Foreman, Alec, called us, "the United Nations task-force of the workers, 2 Poles, 1 Dutchman and the other Scots." 





At this point the workers are under pressure for the use of the Church for the Sunday Mass.







The question came to me, after Compline, (transferred to the Oratory), and I went to the Church to check the number of WINDOWS IN THE CHURCH. 
In fact, there are eleven windows.  After all the years it seems as I am no different from the story about Saint Bernard, "He also tells of St. Bernard, that he practiced custody of the eyes to such a degree that after a year's novitiate he did not know how the ceiling of his cell was made, whether it was arched or flat; that he always believed there was one window in the church, while there were three; that he walked, one day, with his companions on the short of a lake, without knowing it was there, so that when they were speaking of the lake in the evening, he asked where they had seen it."



The construction firm is from Musselburgh.
The double-glaze windows produced from Norway

COMMENT:

Herd at refectory window

Saturday, 27 October 2012

Our Lady Saturday Memorial     








From a Sermon by Saint Aelred, abbot
(Sermo 20, in Nativitate beatae Mariae: PL 195, 322-324)
Mary our mother

Our Lady Saturday Memorial


Our Lady - Doorway of Faith

 
http://www.ibreviary.com/m/preghiere.php?tipo=Preghiera&id=243#oor

From a Sermon by Saint Aelred, abbot
(Sermo 20, in Nativitate beatae Mariae: PL 195, 322-324)

Mary our mother

Let us come to his bride, his mother, his perfect handmaid, for the blessed Mary is all of this.

But what are we to do for her? What kind of gifts shall we offer her? Would that we could at least return what we are in duty bound to do, for we owe her honor and service, we owe her love and praise. We owe her honor, for she is the mother of our Lord. He who fails to honor the mother clearly dishonors the son. Also, Scripture says: Honor you father and your mother.

What then, my brothers, shall we say? Is she not our mother? Yes, my brothers, she is indeed our mother, for through her we have been born, not for the world but for God.

Once we all lay in death, as you know and believe, in sin, in darkness, in misery. In death, because we had lost the Lord; in sin, because of our corruption; in darkness, for we were without the light of wisdom, and thus had perished utterly.

But then we were born, far better than through Eve, through Mary the blessed, because Christ was born of her. We have recovered new life in place of sin, immortality instead of mortality, light in place of darkness.

She is our mother—the mother of our life, the mother of our incarnation, the mother of our light. As the Apostle says of our Lord, he became for us by God’s power our wisdom and justice, and holiness and redemption.

She then, as mother of Christ, is the mother of our wisdom and justice, of our holiness and redemption. She is more our mother than the mother of our flesh. Our birth from her is better, for from her is born our holiness, our wisdom, our justice, our sanctification, our redemption.

Praise the Lord in his holy ones, say the Scriptures. If our Lord is to be praised in those holy ones through whom he brings to being deeds of power and miracles, how much more is he to be praised in her in whom he fashioned himself, who is wonderful beyond all wonders.

RESPONSORY

Happy are you, holy Virgin Mary, and most worthy of all praise;
 from your womb Christ the Sun of Justice has risen.
Through him we have salvation and deliverance.

Let us celebrate with joy this feast in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
 From your womb Christ the Sun of Justice has risen.
Through him we have salvation and deliverance.

Friday, 26 October 2012

COMMENT: The 'missing verse' in Sirach 24:18/24.

Christ_Hagia_Sofia
COMMENTS:                       
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William W. . .
To: Donald  . . .
Subject: Re:
Knox translation & Sirach verse

Dear Father Donald,

...............
The 'missing verse' in Sirach 24: 18 / 24 has indeed held my interest!
The NRSV Study edition has the comment: "Other ancient authorities add as verse 18, I am the mother of beautiful love, of fear, of knowledge, and of holy hope; being eternal, I am given to all my children, to those who are named by him"; and
   
The NJB Study edition adds: "Gk 248 and Lat. add 18 I am the mother of pure love, of fear, of knowledge and of worthy hope, and Gk 248 I am bestowed on all my children, from all eternity on those appointed by him. In place of the last phrase the Latin reads, In me is all grace of way and of truth, in me all hope of life and of strength, a Christian gloss alluding to John 14:6 and based on the identification of Wisdom with Christ"; and
The NAB Study edition describes 24:1-27 "In this chapter Wisdom speaks in the first person, describing her origin, her dwelling place in Israel, and the reward she gives her followers. As in Proverbs 8, Wisdom is described as a being who comes from God and is distinct from him. While we do not say with certainty that this description applies to a personal being, it does foreshadow the beautiful doctrine of the Word of God later developed in St. John's Gospel (Jn 1:1-14). In the liturgy this chapter is applied to the Blessed Virgin because of her constant and intimate association with Christ, the Incarnate Wisdom".
Such a beautiful theme must indeed be woven into our every thought of the nature of Sophia.
What a beautiful truth upon which to retire for the night!
With my love in Our Lord,
William

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Donald . .
To: William W. . .
Subject: Re:
Knox translation - 

Dear William,
. . . . .   

Problem with the Sirac Quote.
The DRM (Douai Rheims) is glorious as in the Vulgate.
Sir 24:24  I am the mother of fair love, and of fear, and of knowledge, and of holy hope. (DRB)
I think I had the actual verses appear elsewhere in Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Wisdom  or Apocrypha?
Especially nice to find it in Knox Bible if possible.
Here I am on a wild goose chase.
Also on chase of your snow as leaves in Carlisle.
God bless.
Donald


Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Our Lady, Medjugorji "God's city, mother of all nations." Psalm 86

Dear Sr. Maria,

Thank you for the Message from Medjugorje.
Our Lady's Message from October seems to give a special re-echo from the Vigil Office in the Psalm 86.
This is from our Liturgical reciting of the Grail Psalter version, - see below.
God Bless.
fr. Donald.
Youth at Medjugorji 
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Sr Maria - - -
Cc: ...........
Sent: Tuesday, 23 October 2012, 20:35
Subject: FW:
 Medjugorje - Our Lady's October 02, 2012 Message to Mirjana


October 02, 2012 message to Mirjana

"Dear children; I am calling you and am coming among you because I need you.
I need apostles with a pure heart. I am praying, and you should also pray,
that the Holy Spirit may enable and lead you, that He may illuminate you and
fill you with love and humility. Pray that He may fill you with grace and
mercy. Only then will you understand me, my children. Only then will you
understand my pain because of those who have not come to know the love of
God. Then you will be able to help me. You will be my light-bearers of God's
love. You will illuminate the way for those who have been given eyes but do
not want to see. I desire for all of my children to see my Son. I desire for
all of my children to experience His Kingdom. Again I call you and implore
you to pray for those whom my Son has called. Thank you."
______________________

Jerusalem Old City aerial from sw
   
Echoes from Psalm 86, Vigil of Wednesday - accents in reciting of the Grail Psalter.

Psalm 86  Jerusalem, Mother of all nations.

On the holy mĂłuntain is his cĂ­ty
  chĂ©rished by the LĂłrd.
The Lord prefers the gátes of Síon
  to all Jácob’s dwĂ©llings.
Of you are told glĂłrious thĂ­ngs,
  O cĂ­ty of GĂłd.

‘Babylon and Egypt I will cĂłunt
  among those who knĂłw me;
Philistia, Tyre, Ethiopia,
  these will bĂ© her chĂ­ldren.
And Sion sháll be called “MĂłther” 
  for all shall bĂ© her chĂ­ldren.’

It is he, the LĂłrd most HĂ­gh,
  who gives Ă©ach his pláce.
In his register of péoples he wrítes:
  ‘ThĂ©se are her chĂ­ldren.’
And while they dance they will sing:
  “in you all find their home.”

Antiphon:   Of you are told glorious things.

Tuesday, 23 October 2012

Go deep into the inner stillness (HE AND i)

HE AND i, Gabriells B.


1936 October 24 -  Montreal. (In such a gentle voice)
"When you don't go deep into the inner stillness you deprive Me. "
[Lui: "Quand tu ne te recuelles pas, c'est Moi que tu prives" (d'une voix si delicate)].