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John Paul II: “We Acknowledge Ourselves As Sinners”

Posted in Devotions, Liturgical Seasons, Saints, Scripture by Brother Stephen
Feb 16 2010
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As Mardi Gras draws to a close and Ash Wednesday and Lent dawns, I looked for a fulfilling and inspirational commentary on the season. On the ZENIT site, I found this, from John Paul The Great. I think it will set the tone for a fulfilling spiritual journey this Lent, drawing you closer to Christ, and a better understanding of the season and your faith.

“We Acknowledge Ourselves As Sinners,” Says John Paul II

VATICAN CITY, MARCH 5, 2003 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of John Paul II’s address at today’s general audience, which he dedicated to the spirit of Ash Wednesday. Earlier he had proclaimed this a day of prayer and fasting for peace.

* * *

1. Today, Ash Wednesday, the liturgy addresses to all the faithful an intense invitation to conversion with the words of the apostle Paul: “We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God” (2 Corinthians 5:20). Lent is the most propitious time, spiritually, to receive this exhortation, as it is a time of more intense prayer, of penance and of greater attention to the needs of brothers.

With today’s rite of the imposition of ashes, we acknowledge ourselves sinners, invoke the forgiveness of God, manifesting a sincere desire for conversion. Thus we begin an austere ascetic journey, which will lead us to the Easter triduum, heart of the liturgical year.

2. In keeping with the tradition of the Church, all the faithful are obliged today to abstain from meats and to fast, with the sole exception of those who are impeded for reasons of health or age. Fasting has great value in the life of Christians, it is a need of the spirit to relate better to God. In fact, the external aspects of fasting, though important, do not exhaust such a practice. Joined to it is a sincere desire for interior purification, willingness to obey the divine will, and thoughtful solidarity toward brothers, particularly the poorest.

There is, then, a close link between fasting and prayer. To pray is to listen to God and fasting favors this openness of heart.

3. While we enter in the time of Lent, we cannot but be conscious of the present international context, in which threatening tensions of war are agitated. It is necessary that everyone consciously assume responsibility and engage in a common effort to spare humanity another dramatic conflict. For this reason, I wanted today, Ash Wednesday, to be a day of prayer and fasting to implore for peace in the world. Above all, we must ask God for conversion of heart, in which every form of evil and every thrust toward sin is rooted; we must pray and fast for peaceful coexistence among peoples and nations.

At the beginning of our meeting we heard the encouraging words of the Prophet: “One nation shall not raise the sword against another, nor shall they train for war again” (Isaiah 2:4). And again: “They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks” (Ibid.). Above the upheavals of history is the sovereign presence of God, who judges the choices of men. To him [who] “judge[s] between the nations” and “impose[s] terms on many peoples” (Ibid.) we turn our hearts to implore for a future of justice and peace for all. This thought should stimulate each one of us to continue in an incessant prayer and in energetic commitment to construct a world in which egoism gives way to solidarity and love.

4. I also wished to propose again the urgent invitation to conversion, penance and solidarity in the Message for Lent, made known a few days ago, whose theme is the beautiful phrase of the Acts of the Apostles: “It is more blessed to give than to receive” (see 20:35).

In fact, only by converting to this logic can a social order be constructed characterized not by a precarious balance of conflicting interests, but by a just and common search for the common good. Christians, as leaven, are called to live and spread a style of generosity in every realm of life, thus promoting the authentic moral and civil development of society. In this connection, I have written: “To deprive oneself not only of the superfluous, but even of something more to distribute it to those in need, contributes to that denial of self without which there is no authentic practice of Christian life” (No. 4: [daily] L’Osservatore Romano, Feb. 7, 2003, p. 5).

5. May this day of prayer and fasting for peace, with which we begin Lent, be translated in concrete gestures of reconciliation. From the family to the international realm, may each one feel and make himself co-responsible for the construction of peace. And the God of peace, who knows the intentions of the heart and calls his children peacemakers (see Matthew 5:9), will not be lacking in his recompense (see Matthew 6:4,6,18).

We entrust our wishes to the intercession of the Virgin Mary, Queen of the Rosary and Mother of Peace. May she take us by the hand and accompany us during the next 40 days toward Easter, to contemplate the Risen Lord.

I wish everyone a good and fruitful Lent!

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Tagged as: abstinence, Acts of the Apostles, Ash Wednesday, conversion of heart, Easter, Easter triduum, Isaiah, John Paul II, John Paul the Great, Lent, liturgical year, Mardi Gras, Matthew, Mother of Peace, penance, prayer and fasting, Queen of the Rosary, risen Lord, sin, tradition of the Church, Virgin Mary, ZENIT

Wouldn’t This Be The Best Possible Christmas Present?

Posted in Church History, Church News, News And Current Events by Brother Stephen
Dec 02 2009
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Every Sunday at Mass, whether we realize it or not, we pray for the unity of the Church. It’s something we should all keep in mind to do on our own. That, for example, there is a split between the Vatican and the Eastern Orthodox surely brings sadness to the Holy Trinity.

Today, however, brings great news! Although it won’t happen before Christmas, and maybe not for a long time still, a potential breakthrough was made in reunification efforts between Catholics and Orthodox.

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I said the presence of a Vatican delegation in Istanbul, “confirms the desire to eliminate the impediments accumulated in the course of a millennium to attain the fullness of communion.” (ZENIT via Catholic Online.)

Along with Pope Benedict’s recent overture to traditional Episcopal and Anglican churches and dioceses, there is hope that people of great faith, who perhaps because of human failings throughout the ages, manipulated by the circumstances of their day, were split apart, now have re-unification in one Holy Catholic Church within sight.

Just as Angels greeted the shepherds with news of great joy on the day of our Saviour’s birth, we have our own great news in our day. What a perfect and appropriate season to hear it.

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Tagged as: Angels, Catholic Online, Catholics, Christmas, Eastern Orthodox, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, Episcopal and Anglican churches and dioceses, Holy Catholic Church, Istanbul, Pope Benedict, reunification, Saviour's birth, Vatican, ZENIT

Today’s Feast Day: Saint Anselm, Doctor Of The Church

Posted in Church History, Saints by Brother Stephen
Nov 18 2009
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Saint Anselm (b. 1033) could have had the good life. He was born to a noble family and was well educated. He inherited wealth. Yet, he felt the call of the Lord and at 27 years made a commitment to the Benedictine Order. He became a scholar, builder, administrator and a leader of the Church as Archbishop of Canterbury.

Above all, he remained influenced by the formation he received from his mother and in turn was instrumental in the formation of young priests. His was a remarkable life in servitude of the Lord as a teacher, pastor and theologian, for which he is a Doctor of the Church. EWTN has a lengthy biography here.  

However, a modern scholar happened to elaborate on Saint Anselm’s life today, more poignantly and significantly than can an entire catalogue of biographies. Here’s the text of the English translation of Pope Benedict’s General Audience today, courtesy of ZENIT, with an excerpt below:

Anselm

Saint Anselm: Teacher, Pastor, Theologian

St. Anselm was born in 1033 (or the beginning of 1034) in Aosta, the firstborn of a noble family. His father was a crude man, dedicated to the pleasures of life and a spendthrift of his goods; his mother, on the other hand, was a woman of superior customs and profound religiosity (cf. Eadmero, Vita s. Anselmi, PL 159, col 49). It was his mother who took care of the first human and religious formation of her son, whom she later entrusted to the Benedictines of a priory of Aosta. Anselm, who from his childhood — as his biographer recounts — imagined the dwelling of the good God to be among the high and snow clad summits of the Alps, dreamed one night that he was invited to this splendid palace by God himself, who entertained him affably for a good while and at the end offered him to eat “a very white bread” (ibid., col 51).

This dream left him the conviction of being called to fulfill a high mission. At the age of 15, he asked to be admitted to the Benedictine Order, but his father opposed him with all his authority and did not even give in when his son, gravely ill, and sensing he was close to death, implored the religious habit as his last consolation.

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Tagged as: Archbishop of Canterbury, Benedictine order, Doctor of the Church, EWTN, Pastor, Pope Benedict, Saint Anselm, Teacher, theologian, ZENIT

“Come, Follow Me!” Pope Benedict’s Homily At Yesterday’s Solemn Mass Of Canonization

Posted in Catholicism In Culture, Church History, Church News, Saints, Scripture by Brother Stephen
Oct 12 2009
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The Holy Father’s homily yesterday at the canonization of the five saints starts out strong and only gets better — a must read! These are just the first two paragraphs, but you can read it in its entirety, here, courtesy of ZENIT. It’s about 2,000 words.

His emphasis is the example of the saints. “Come, follow me!” They followed Jesus, unlike the rich man in the Gospel. They put themselves aside to serve Jesus, rejected the temptation of a life of self, and rejected cultures that rejected God. It is hard, no question, and requires great humility. But isn’t anything worthwhile hard? Aren’t the greatest reward realized after hard work? Is there a greater reward than Heavenly salvation? 

“What must I do to inherit eternal life?” This is the question that opens the brief dialogue we heard in the Gospel, between a man, identified elsewhere as the rich young man, and Jesus (cf Mk 10:17-30). We do not have very many details about this nameless character: all the same from the little we do have we are able to perceive his sincere desire to attain eternal life by living an honest and virtuous existence on earth. In fact he knows the commandments and has obeyed them since childhood. And yet all of this, while important, is not sufficient — says Jesus — there is one thing missing, but it is an essential thing. Seeing then that he is willing, the Divine Master looks at him with love and proposes the qualitative leap, he calls him to the heroism of sanctity, he asks him to abandon everything and follow him: “Sell what you own and give the money to the poor . . . then come, follow me!” (V. 21).

“Then come, follow me!” This is the Christian vocation that flows from a proposal of love by the Lord, and that can be realized only thanks to our loving reply. Jesus invites his disciples to the total giving of their lives, without calculation or personal gain, with unfailing trust in God. The saints welcome this demanding invitation and set about following the crucified and risen Christ with humble docility. Their perfection, in the logic of a faith that is humanly incomprehensible at times, consists in no longer placing themselves at the center, but choosing to go against the flow and live according to the Gospel. This is what was done by the five saints who today, with great joy, are being put forward for veneration by the universal Church: Zygmunt Szczęsny Feliński, Francisco Coll y Guitart, Jozef Damiaan de Veuster, Rafael Arnáiz Barón, Marie de la Croix (Jeanne) Jugan. In them we can contemplate the realization of the words of the Apostle Peter: “Look, we have left everything and followed you” (V. 28) and the consoling reassurance of Jesus: “There is no one who has left house, brothers, sisters, mother, father, children or land for my sake and for the sake of the gospel who will not receive a hundred times as much…and persecutions too, now in this present time and, in the world to come, eternal life” (VV. 29-30)

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Tagged as: culture, Francisco Coll y Guitart, God, Gospel, Jesus, Jozef Damiaan de Veuster, Marie de la Croix (Jeanne) Jugan, Pope Benedict, Rafael Arnáiz Barón, ZENIT, Zygmunt Szczęsny Feliński

 

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