Showing posts with label Liturgy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liturgy. Show all posts

Sunday 6 October 2013

John H. Newman, Bl., 9th October, Liturgy Office

Monday 1 April 2013

In His own raiment clad. The Story of the Cross

Good Friday Liturgy is due.
Will come back to  'The Story of the Cross',...
_ _ _

See COMMENT below;
The next stanza delivers two powerful allusions to Scripture. Isaiah says of the Suffering Servant, "He hath no form or comeliness; and when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we should desire him" (53:2). Spiritual beauty, Francois Mauriac wrote, attracts one man irresistibly, while others don't notice it, or are repelled by it: as to some people the countenance of the aged Mother Teresa was only withered and ugly.
Mathew 27:31



















See, they are travelling on the same road;
Simon is sharing with him the load.
Follow to Calvary, tread where he trod,
He who for ever is Son of God.

You that would love him, stand, gaze on his face;
Pause for a while in your earthly race.
Is there no beauty to you that pass by
in that lone figure against the sky?

On that cross lifted up, your face we scan,
bearing that cross for us, Son of Man. ,
Thorns are your diadem, rough wood your throne;
for us your blood is shed, us alone.

We see your title, Lord, inscribed above:
'Jesus of Nazareth', King of Love.
Faithful to that love may we ever be,
and live with you in eternity.
_____________________________

Other adaptations;

In His own raiment clad, with His blood dyed;
Women walk sorrowing by His side.
Heavy that cross to Him, weary the weight;
One who will help Him waits at the gate.
See! they are traveling on the same road;
Simon is sharing with Him the load.
O whither wandering bear they that tree?
He who first carries it, who is He?
Follow to Calvary; tread where He trod,
He who for ever was Son of God.
You who would love Him stand, gaze at His face:
Tarry a while on your earthy race.
As the swift moments fly, through the blest week,
Read the great story the cross will teach.
Is there no beauty to you who pass by,
In that lone figure which marks that sky?
On the cross lifted Thy face we scan,
Bearing that cross for us, Son of Man.
Thorns form Thy diadem, rough wood Thy throne;
For us Thy blood is shed, us alone.
No pillow under Thee to rest Thy head;
Only the splintered cross is Thy bed.
Nails pierced Thy hands and feet, Thy side the spear;
No voice is nigh to say help is near.
Shadows of midnight fall, though it is day:
Thy friends and kinsfolk stand far away.
Loud is Thy bitter cry; sunk on Thy breast
Hangeth Thy bleeding head without rest.
Loud scoffs the dying thief, who mocks at Thee;
Can it, my Savior, be all for me?
Gazing, afar from Thee, silent and lone,
Stand those few weepers Thou callest Thine own.
I see Thy title, Lord, inscribed above;
Jesus of Nazareth, King of Love.
What, O my Savior, here didst Thou see,
Which made Thee suffer and die for me?
“Child of My grief and pain, watched by My love;
I came to call thee to realms above.
I saw thee wandering far off from Me:
In love I seek for Thee; do not flee.
For thee My blood I shed, for thee alone;
I came to purchase thee, for Mine own.
Weep thou not for My grief, child of My love:
Strive to be with Me in Heaven above.
O I will follow Thee, Star of my soul,
Through the deep shades of life to the goal.
Yea, let Thy cross be borne each day by me;
Mind not how heavy, if but with Thee.
Lord, if Thou only wilt, make us Thine own,
Give no companion, save Thee alone.
Grant through each day of life to stand by Thee;
With Thee, when morning breaks, ever to be.
Words: Ed­ward Mon­ro   (d.1866).  
http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/m/o/n/monro_e.htm 

Music: Sto­ry of the Cross, Artur Brown(1830-1926)
22 March 2013, 1:34 pm
My poem of the week has been Edward Monro’s “The Story of the Cross.” I discovered this poem reading Anthony Esolen’s recent column at Touchstone Magazine. I appreciated the meditation on Jesus’ cross work, enhanced by Esolen’s comments,  and hope you will as well. In His own raiment clad, with His blood dyed; Women walk [...]


Anthony Esolenis Professor of English at Providence College in Providence, Rhode Island, and the author ofThe Ironies of Faith(ISI Books),The Politically Incorrect Guide to Western Civilization(Regnery), andTen Ways to Destroy the Imagination of Your Child(ISI Books). He has also translated Tasso'sGerusalemme liberata(Johns Hopkins Press) and Dante'sThe Divine Comedy(Random House). He is a senior editor ofTouchstone.
Letters Welcome:One of the reasonsTouchstoneexists is to encourage conversation among Christians, so we welcome letters responding to articles or raising matters of interest to our readers. However, because the space is limited, please keep your letters under 400 words. All letters may be edited for space and clarity when necessary.letters@touchstonemag.com   
Read more:http://www.touchstonemag.com/archives/article.php?id=26-02-014-c#continue#ixzz2PEk86yyK

This is the printer-friendly layout. Click here to find the online format.
ILLUMINATIONS

At the Cross of Jesus

At the end of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, the good Gawain approaches the Green Chapel, where he is certain he must die. It's New Year's Day, the snow lies deep, and a grindstone hums nearby. As far as Sir Gawain knows, it's sharpening the ax that will shear off his head. "I'll be with you right away," calls the demonic Green Knight from behind the chapel. That chapel is a place of foreboding. There is no cross.
I've been to a chapel without a cross. It was converted from an old factory. The windowless inner "worship room" boasted electronic equipment for music and videos, but no cross. I felt, there, a little like Gawain. There's something wrong, in the sense of being crooked, bent, about a chapel without a cross. It cannot lead to good.
The Question of Christianity
Quite different is the wisdom of a remarkable five-part hymn by one Edward Monro: "The Story of the Cross"(1864). The first part is The Question:
See Him in raiment rent,
With His blood dyed:
Women walk sorrowing
        By His side.
Heavy that Cross to Him,
Weary the weight:
One who will help Him stands
        At the gate.
Multitudes hurrying
Pass on the road:
Simon is sharing with
        Him the load.
Who is this travelling
With the curst tree—
This weary prisoner—
        Who is He?
The terse meter provides, at the end of each stanza, a moment of extraordinary pathos. For the last line is "missing" its first syllable. It begins on a strong beat, set apart from the meter of the rest of the stanza. The women walk in sorrow, where? By His side. Who is this weary prisoner? Who is He? That is the question of Christianity, right there.

Son of God
The second part is The Answer:
Follow to Calvary,
Tread where He trod;
This is the Lord of life—
        Son of God.
Is there no loveliness—
You who pass by—
In that lone Figure which
        Marks the sky?
You who would love Him, stand,
Gaze at His face;
Tarry awhile in your
        Worldly race.
As the swift moments fly
Through the blest week,
Jesus, in penitence,
        Let us seek.
This is poetry worthy of Emily Dickinson; spare, laconic, immensely suggestive. The pronoun this, from The Question, is supplied in The Answer. If you want to know who this weary prisoner is, you must follow in his steps, up the bitter mountain. Then you will learn what seems impossible to the world. This weary prisoner, this man, battered and despised, is the Lord of life—Son of God, as the centurion professed.How powerful is the break in the sentence, and the omission of the definite article! It's as if the reply comes with a clutch in the throat: this is what it means to be Son of God.
The next stanza delivers two powerful allusions to Scripture. Isaiah says of the Suffering Servant, "He hath no form or comeliness; and when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we should desire him" (53:2). Spiritual beauty, Francois Mauriac wrote, attracts one man irresistibly, while others don't notice it, or are repelled by it: as to some people the countenance of the aged Mother Teresa was only withered and ugly. The poet begs us to find the beauty of Jesus, not simply to pass him by. He alludes to the Lamentations of Jeremiah, after the destruction of Jerusalem; the text foretells the suffering of the Messiah: "It is nothing to you, all ye who pass by? Behold, and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow" (1:12). Why do the people pass by? The worldly race preoccupies them.
The world races to dissolution, and people race to attain things that perish. In this blest week at least, we should leave that race, and tarry awhile, to gaze upon the countenance of Jesus, seeking him in penitence, and finding in him our salvation.
Motifs of the Crucifixion
In the third part of the poem, we address the Lord personally:
On the Cross lifted up,
Thy face I scan,
Scarred by that agony—
        Son of Man.
Thorns form Thy diadem,
Rough wood Thy throne,
To Thee Thy outstretched arms
        Draw Thine own.
Nails hold Thy hands and feet,
While on Thy breast
Sinketh Thy bleeding head
        Sore opprest.
Loud is Thy bitter cry,
Rending the night,
As to Thy darkened eyes
        Fails the light.
Shadows of midnight fall,
Though it is day;
Friends and disciples stand
        Far away.
Loud scoffs the dying thief,
Mocking Thy woe;
Can this my Savior be
        Brought so low?
Yes, see the title clear,
Written above,
'Jesus of Nazareth'—
        Name of love!
What, O my Savior dear,
What didst Thou see,
That made Thee suffer and
        Die for me?
The poet combines motifs from the Crucifixion with those that look forward to it and those that recall it. "When ye have lifted up the Son of man," said Jesus to the Pharisees, "then shall ye know that I am he" (John 8:28). That elevation is to the throne of the Cross, with the crown of thorns as his diadem, fulfilling the prophecy of Daniel: "Behold, one like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and they brought him near before him. And there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom" (7:13–14). "And I," said Jesus, "if I be lifted up from the earth"—he is speaking about both the Crucifixion and his ascension to the Father—"will draw all men unto me" (John 12:32). Those arms are flung wide to embrace all who would come to him.
Munro tells the story of the Crucifixion with great skill: the nails, the cry of desolation, the darkness, the jeering thief, the sign nailed to the top of the cross. Friends and disciples stand—where? Alas, far away. Can this man lifted high on the cross be the Savior—brought so low? Yes, there is the sign: 'Jesus of Nazareth.' What does that mean? Love. What, from your exalted vantage, Jesus, did you see that moved you to grant me the greatest gift of your love, to die for me?
The Way for Thee
In the fourth part the Lord responds:
Child of my grief and pain!
From realms above,
I came to lead thee to
        Life and love.
For thee my blood I shed,
For thee I died;
Safe in thy faithfulness
        Now abide.
I saw thee wandering,
Weak and at strife;
I am the Way for thee,
        Truth and Life.
Follow my path of pain,
Tread where I trod:
This is the way of peace
        Up to God.
Jesus came for the speaker, for each of us, because he saw us wandering, weak and at strife. Again and again, he uses the personal pronoun thee; he does not save a generalized mankind; he saves us. Hence the emphatic reversal: For thee my blood I shed, / For thee I died. Hence the insertion of the pronoun into the famous verse: I am the way for thee: I am the way you must go.
What is that way? It is the road to Calvary. It is the way of love, even in suffering, even unto death. Only at the side of the pierced Lord do we find peace.
Star of My Soul
So in the final part of the poem, the speaker replies to Jesus with eager love:
O I will follow Thee,
Star of my soul!
Through the great dark I press
        To the goal.
Yea, let me know Thy grief,
Carry Thy cross,
Share in Thy sacrifice,
        Gain Thy loss.
Daily I'll prove my love
Through joy and woe;
Where Thy hands point the way,
        There I go.
Lead me on year by year,
Safe to the end,
Jesus, my Lord, my Life,
        King and Friend.
Not one word is idle. The auxiliary will is emphatic: I will follow, I am resolved. The verb follow, appearing for the third time, echoes the words of Jesus, and is the touchstone of the poem. Jesus is the star of my soul, the polestar, fixed in place, the star to sail by, in the darkness of this life. If we die with him, shall we not also rise? •

Copyright © 2013 the Fellowship of St. James. All rights reserved.


Tuesday 8 January 2013

January 9 - Christmas Weekday - Reflections on the Liturgy




 
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January 9, Christmas Weekday
St. Francis initiated the beautiful practice of displaying a Christmas crib or creche. He built it in a cave on a bleak mountain near the village of Greccio. News of what he was doing spread all over the countryside and a steady stream of men, women and chldren came by night carrying torches and candles to light their way.
Christmas Creche
"It seemed like midday," wrote someone who was there, "during that midnight filled with gladness for man and beast, and the crowds drawing near, so happy to be present for the renewal of the eternal mystery." Francis himself sang the Gospel story in a voice which was "strong and sweet and clear," says the observer. "Then he preached to the people, most movingly, about the birth of the poor King in little Bethlehem." — Excerpted from Christmas
  • Day Sixteen activity (St. Francis and the Creche)
    _________________________________________________
    Reflections on the Sacred Liturgy
    http://reflectionsonthesacredliturgy.blogspot.co.uk/2013/01/january-9-christmas-weekday.html 

    January 9 - Christmas Weekday

    Christmas Weekday
    1 John 4:11-18  +  Psalm 72  +  Mark 6:45-52
    January 9, 2013

    “Lord, every nation on earth will adore you.” [Psalm 72:11]

    In his account of the “Wise Men from the East” who visit the Holy Family and present gifts to the baby Jesus, St. Matthew the Evangelist alludes to today’s Responsorial Psalm.  In fact, the same psalm was proclaimed this past Sunday on the Solemnity of the Epiphany. and out of the six “weekday Masses” this year between the Epiphany and the Baptism of the Lord,  three of them proclaim this same Psalm 72  for their Responsorial.
    We might first think that the connection between Psalm 72 and the Epiphany is the psalm’s reference to kings bringing “tribute” and “gifts” to the king of Israel.  But that would be putting the cart before the horse.  The larger truth to which this psalm points is the universality of the king of Israel’s reign, and through this, the reign of Christ the King.
    On the more practical level of your own spiritual life, the universality of Jesus’ kingdom might provoke certain questions for reflection.  “Do I ever consider anyone outside the reach of God’s love?  Would I be happy for some particular person to be excluded by God from His merciful embrace?  Do I forgive those who trespass against me in the same way that I hope the Father will forgive me?”




Tuesday 4 September 2012

Saint Cuthbert of Channelkirk

COMMENT: Cuthbert of Channelkirk.  

The Day of  St. Cuthbert, 4th September.
At Eucharist Community, the Bidding Prayers included for the families at Channelkirk.

Interesting LINK: and the LINKAGE may follow Candlekirk, Childrenkirk and the Church history and Liturgy of Candlemass.

Looking for NEWS on the St. Cuthbert Way, the walk between Melrose and Lindisfarne.


Lauderdale Settlements
http://oxtonchannelkirk.com/village-history/lauderdale-settlements/  
The quiet village of Oxton lies to the north of Lauder. The surrounding area is rich in historical interest. Lauderdale was on the Roman route north from the fortress at York. The remains of a Roman encampment exists at Kirktonhill. Lauderdale’s mother church at Channelkirk (1817), above Oxton stands on a site where traditionally people have been meeting to worship since 800A.D.


St Cuthbert, the shepherd boy who was born in Channelkirk in 635A.D., went on to become the Bishop of Lindesfarne. To mark the significance of the association between the young St Cuthbert and Channelkirk a suitable inscribed stone slab stands near to the Holy Water Cleuch (spring) perhaps used by St Cuthbert to baptise his early converts and since then in the christening of children born in Channelkirk. Cuthbert spent his youth tending his sheep in the surrounding Lammermuir hills, where in 651A.D., he saw in a vision the soul of Bishop Aiden of Lindesfarne ascending to heaven. This led him to seek instruction in the Christian faith from the monks at Melrose and to devote his life to preaching the gospel among heathen folk living in the glens of Northumbria. He became a ‘Monk in Mailros’.
A chapel at Glengelt and another at Carfrae, both apparently domestic chapels, were then under Channelkirk. The Holy Water Cleuch, a little to the west and mentioned in 1588, is believed to have been connected with the now obliterated Roman fort for sacred purpose.
Acknowledgements to The Parish of Channelkirk and Lauder


Saturday 18 February 2012

Liturgy

Fr. Z's Blog – What Does The Prayer Really Say?

http://wdtprs.com/blog/2011/02/wdtprs-7th-sunday-of-ordinary-time-be-all-that-you-can-be/ 

Very rich from Fr. Z.
Just added to our Liturgy in Folder  from Favourites.
"The excellent Lewis & Short Dictionary shows that rationabilis is an adjective meaning “reasonable, rational”. I make a choice for “rational” here, partly because of an association I make between this prayer and another I know. But first, a Biblical connection.- - -.




In John 8,28-29 Jesus gives a warning to unbelieving Jews:

So Jesus said, “When you have lifted up the Son of man, then you will know that I am he, and that I do nothing on my own authority but speak thus as the Father taught me. And he who sent me is with me; he has not left me alone, for I always do what is pleasing to him (quae placita sunt ei, facio semper).


Now for the connection I mentioned above.
When I was studying philosophy, at the beginning of all the classes, we would always recite a prayer of St. Thomas Aquinas (+1274):

Concede mihi, miséricors
Deus, quae tibi sunt plácita,
ardenter concupíscere, prudenter 
investigáre, veráciter agnóscere,
et perfecte adimplére ad laudem 
et gloriam Nominis tui. Amen.

Grant me, O merciful God,
to desire eagerly, to investigate 
prudently, to acknowledge 
sincerely, and perfectly to fulfill
those things which are pleasing to 
Thee, to the praise and glory of
Thy Name. Amen.

Students and parents of home-schoolers… you might want to jot down that prayer and use it.



RIGHT: Our Lady of Lourdes

Our Lady of Lourdes is depicted in a modern painting by Stephen B. Whatley,
an expressionist artist based in London.
The feast of Our Lady of Lourdes is Feb. 11,
marking Mary’s first appearance to St. Bernadette Soubirous
in the small town in southwest France.

CNS photo/Stephen B Whatley






Tuesday 29 June 2010

Peter & Paul



29th June SAINTS PETER AND PAUL

Gospel Mt. 16: 13-19

Introduction to the Mass:

The Gospel (Mt. 16-19) makes the Primacy of Peter is prominent but, in fact, Jesus makes the small word (Kago) ‘ALSO’ focal. Mat 16:18 - And I also say unto thee (k'agō de soi legō). “The emphasis is not on ‘Thou art Peter’ over against ‘Thou art the Christ,’ but on Kagō: ‘The Father hath revealed to thee one truth, and I also tell you another” (McNeile).

Jesus, But who do you say that I am?

Then Peter uttered that theological pronouncement:


The Night Reading was put it very elegantly:

“You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.

What was the Saviour's reply? Blessed are you, Simon bar Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you. In other words, "It was not by remaining in your body of flesh and blood that you received this revelation about me; you had to be entirely outside the world of the senses to be initiated into the divine mysteries."

Bishop Theophane twins Peter here with in these words:

“In the same way, when Paul said that he had been raised to the third heaven and had heard words too sacred to tell, he had no need of bodily awareness when contemplating spiritual truths. As he himself declared: Whether in the body or out of the body I do not know.”

It is a fine lesson to us to keep on the same spiritual focus, as we begin the Mass.

+ + + + + + + + + +

Night Reading:

From a homily by Theophanes Cerameus (Horn. LV: PG 132,960-965)

Theophane Cerameus (12thcent), comes from the ancient colonies Greek colonies of Sicily and Southern Italy. He was Archbishop of Rossano Southern Italy from 1129-1152. His sermons written in Greek were outstanding for the time, being remarkable especially for their simplicity and oratorical skill. (A Word in Season, Monastic Lectionary, 3 contributionsin this ‘anthology’, §65, §100 §150,).

But who do you say that I am? It is as though the Lord said: "The general opinion is clearly much divided and uncertain, but since you have known me for such a long time, what is your judgment in the matter?" The rest of the disciples were lost for an answer; some perhaps were undecided, while others feared to seem rash. It was Peter, their leader, who became the spokesman for his companions. Transcending in thought the world of perception, he flew through the air to the heavens above, leaving the stars behind him and reaching further than the highest sphere. So he arrived in the spirit world, crossed the fiery rivers of the seraphim, and was taught by the Father about the nobility of his only-begotten Son. Then he uttered that theological pronouncement: You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.

What was the Saviour's reply? Blessed are you, Simon bar Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you. In other words, "It was not by remaining in your body of flesh and blood that you received this revelation about me; you had to be entirely outside the world of the senses to be initiated into the divine mysteries." In the same way, when Paul said that he had been raised to the third heaven and had heard words too sacred to tell, he had no need of bodily awareness when contemplating spiritual truths. As he himself declared: Whether in the body or out of the body I do not know.

And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my Church. "Because you are Peter," our Lord said, "you will be­come the rock of faith, the foundation stone of the Church, and the principal means for its spiritual construction. On this confession of yours that I am both Son of God and Son of Man the Church's foundation stone will be laid; for such a foundation provides a secure basis on which to build the remaining doctrines."

And the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. The gates of hell which will not prevail against the Church are no doubt the tyrants who persecute it, and the founders of heresies. They are called the gates of hell figuratively because they drag their followers toward the snares of hell.

And I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven. The Lord did not say "I give you now," but "I will give you," foretelling what would happen after the resurrection. It was then that he granted Peter the grace of the Holy Spirit and the power of binding and loosing, and appointed him to be shepherd of his human flock. But what are the keys, and of what kind of door is Peter appointed the guardian? Christ is the door, as he himself declared; and the key to that door is faith, the faith which he entrusted to his chief disciple.

The Lord has given the keys to Peter and his successors, then, to keep the door to the kingdom of heaven inaccessible to heretics and impenetrable by them, but easy for the faithful to enter, thus confirming his declaration: Without being born of water and the Spirit no one can enter the kingdom of heaven. The opponents and enemies of the faith are called the gates of hell, but the Lord Emmanuel is called the door and gateway to the kingdom of heaven, and he eagerly calls out to everyone:

Whoever enters through me will be saved and Enter through the narrow gate and shun the wide streets that lead to hell.


Thursday 24 June 2010

John the Baptist

Thursday, 24 June 2010

The Nativity of St. John the Baptist

Mass: Last evening in the Sermon for the Solemnity we heard about St John of the Baptist according to the definition of the “Greatest of the Prophets”, lighting up the awareness of the john of the Scriptures.

At the Night Office St Augustine was on a different wavelength from the beginning of the Precursor already before birth, and then moves into the Bible Theology of the Incarnation, leading into mysticism of the Eternal Word.

The Liturgy provides a super-abundance of vision and vistas beyond our grasp.

Our prayer can be corresponding simplicity in a balance of head and heart and hands.


"I have proposed some matters for inquiry, and listed in advance some things that need to be discussed. I have introduced these points even if we are not up to examining all the twists and turns of such a great mystery, either for lack of capacity or for lack of time. You will be taught much better by the one who speaks in you even when I am not here; the one about whom you think loving thoughts, the one whom you have taken into your hearts and whose temple you have become." Augustine.


John Brown of Haddington


Thursday, 24 June 2010

The Nativity of St. John the Baptist

Community Chapter Sermon (Fr. Donald)

for the Solemnity of the Nativity of Saint John Baptist.

The Baptist: Nativity, John in the Desert, Beheading, Precursor, Herald, Great of all the Prophets.

John’s Dad, Zachary, already was an expert in the Scriptures. How much was John the Baptist to learn of the Scriptures? Where are his writings? Were any scrolls or manuscripts to find in his cave in the wilderness?

This morning I checked our Library (or making of a Library) and found at least two copies of the large bible of John Brown of Haddington

The story of John Brown of Haddington is told to students by Greek grammarian A. T. Robertson.

“At the age of sixteen John Brown, of Haddington, startled a bookseller by asking for a copy of the Greek Testament. He was barefooted and clad in ragged homespun clothes. He was a shepherd boy from the hills of Scotland. "What would you do with that book?" a professor scornfully asked. "I'll try to read it," the lad replied, and proceeded to read off a passage

in the Gospel of John. He went off in triumph with the coveted prize, but the story spread that he was a wizard and had learned Greek by the black art. He was actually arraigned for witchcraft, but in 1746 the elders and deacons at Abernethy gave him a vote of acquittal, although the minister would not sign it. His letter of defence, Sir W. Robertson Nicoll says (The British Weekly, Oct. 3, 1918), "deserves to be reckoned among the memorable letters of the world." John Brown became a divinity student and finally professor of divinity. He had taught himself Greek while herding his sheep, and he did it without a grammar. Surely young John Brown of Haddington should forever put to shame those theological students and busy pastors who neglect the Greek Testament, though teacher, grammar, lexicon are at their disposal.

This story is quoted from one of countless Online digital accessible sites – very strong in courses on Bible and Bible Greek.

Come back to John the Baptist, we certainly know that John was articulate, he was passionate, he was eloquent. But there is no word of John, just as no word from Jesus, is known of their writing down. Yet we now have the boundless resources on the Scriptures.

To take a very small example of something very usable. To hand, is an Online New Testament HARMONY.

A quick glance shows the HARMONY as of rows and columns. Roughly speaking there is a large section of the Synoptic Gospels in common. In contrast the Infancy in St Luke is mostly on its own column. On the other hand, St John finds himself in his own column.

Now hardly scratching the surface of available digital assets.

From that view of point, the HARMONY gives us the amazing bedspread patchwork of openings, clues, cues, quotes, references of Jesus and also of John the Baptist (even if more brief).

The immersion experience in the Scriptures of Jesus and John Baptist transforms the opposite, to the un-immersion, to the emergence of deepest grasp of the Jesus links, and like those of John Baptist.

Familiarity of the Gospels is described as the balance and competence of Scriptures in Head, Heart and Hands:

- the HEAD of study and learning of the Sacred Books,

- the HEART responding to the Holy Spirit,

- - the HANDS applied to life and action.

Does that not sound like the LECTIO VINA of monastic daily practice.

May the Solemnity of John Baptist today serve as the springboard of head and heart and hands in the spirit of John the Baptist, head of prophet preaching, heart of passionate loving, hands in baptising.

Icons are the popular subject of Icons of the Birth, Baptising and Beheading of the Baptist and are more as caricatures of single channel sight than the word.

It is very different to go with the flowing of the word in the Scriptures. John’s conversation and teaching was the first formation of his disciples. Herod is known to go down to the jail to quiz John in that kind of exchange about theScriptures. John’s life and vocation fills more complete Videos and Audios of the Greatest of the Prophets – by definition his life is prophecy.

More specifically, regarding the Nativity of Saint John of the Baptist.

The interesting fact is that this Feast is one of only three Feasts that commemorate birthdays, the other two being the birthday of Jesus on 25 December, and that of Our Lady on 8 September.

And what do all three have in common? They were all three born without original sin! Our Lord and Lady were both, of course, conceived without sin, but St. John the Baptist, though not conceived in this way, was filled with grace in the womb of his mother, the aged and barren Elizabeth, and so was born without original sin. This is evident by his recognizing the Savior even in the womb, and by the Angel's words to his father, the priest Zachary (Zacharias) who went to the Temple to pray that his wife should conceive:

Luke 1:13-15

But the angel said to him: Fear not, Zachary, for thy prayer is heard: and thy wife Elizabeth shall bear thee a son. And thou shalt call his name John. And thou shalt have joy and gladness: and many shall rejoice in his nativity. For he shall be great before the Lord and shall drink no wine nor strong drink: and he shall be filled with the Holy Ghost, even from his mother's womb.

Earlier, Mary; (Luke 1:26, 28, 31, 36, 39-41, 56, 57 ...And it came to pass that when Elizabeth heard the salutation of Mary, the infant leaped in her womb.)

This Feast follows the Feast of the Annunciation by 3 months and precedes the birth of Christ by six months. It is providential that the Feast of "the Forerunner, "the greatest of all Prophets, should fall at Midsummer, around the Summer Solstice when the days become shorter, because of his words in John 3:30, "He must increase, but I must decrease." It is the longest day of the year, and from here on out, the days grow shorter and shorter. Conversely, Our Lord, the "Radiant Dawn," was born at the Winter Solstice, when the days were becoming longer!

If you listened so far there may seem some problem. In fact the question arises – at least to my mind.

An article had this note
"A Voice Crying Out in the Widerness

June 24 is the Feast of the Birth of John the Baptist, the cousin of Christ who leapt in his mother Elizabeth's womb when the Virgin Mary came to visit her. Traditionally, Catholics have seen John the Baptist's leap as a type of Baptism, and thus believe that he is one of only three people born without Original Sin--Christ Himself and the Blessed Virgin being the other two.

Among Comments

June 23, 2009 at 3:09 pm

(3) Tina says:

I have never heard that Catholic dogma includes John the Baptist as being free from original sin – can you provide any authority for that?

Reply: June 23, 2009 at 3:14 pm

(4) Scott P. … says:

Tina, check the article on John the Baptist in the Catholic Encyclopedia. Here’s the relevant section:

Now during the sixth month, the Annunciation had taken place, and, as Mary had heard from the angel the fact of her cousin’s conceiving, she went “with haste” to congratulate her. “And it came to pass, that when Elizabeth heard the salutation of Mary, the infant” — filled, like the mother, with the Holy Ghost — “leaped for joy in her womb”, as if to acknowledge the presence of his Lord. Then was accomplished the prophetic utterance of the angel that the child should “be filled with the Holy Ghost even from his mother’s womb”. Now as the presence of any sin whatever is incompatible with the indwelling of the Holy Ghost in the soul, it follows that at this moment John was cleansed from the stain of original sin.

It’s important to note that he wasn’t “free of original sin” in the sense that Mary and Jesus were. He wasn’t conceived without Original Sin; rather, he was cleansed of Original Sin before his birth.

Later: June 27, 2009 at 8:12 am

(5) Maureen says:

I don’t understand original sin. Didn’t Jesus die for all of our sins?

A couple dropped in this evening and posed the question. The woman, a senior Hospital Nurse, thought about it and shed light on it so brightly on the truth of the Sacrament of Baptism cleanses us of Original Sin. That kind of reminder is not unlike the shock of John Baptist’s leap in the womb.

Just looking for the Mass tomorrow I was surprised to find out that it is the name of John of the Baptist is at the top of the second list of Saints in the Roman Eucharistic Canon. In fact in the old Andrew Missal says “John, Stephen, Matthew, Barnabas etc.

Everyone else seems to know but I don’t’ remember adverting to John the Baptist. The Vat II Missal now makes it clear.

At this Mass I will be fully mindful of Saint John the Baptist.