Sunday 13 November 2011

Remembrance Day November 2011

Remembrance Day
Paying their respects Employees of Lloyds gather
in the companys Underwriting Room for a service

Sunday, 13 November 2011.
33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time
Intro;
For today, is Remembrance Sunday,
- whether Armistice Day
- or Remenbrance Day
- or Poppy Day.
The country remembers all the men and women who were killed during two Worl Wars and other conflicts.

In practice, the POPPY tradition is the charity for  War Veterans.
And in faith we pray for all souls,
- already, for Catholics, in November praying is a special way in the month of Holy Souls.
The Media massive coverage of Remembrance Day reminds of our part.
All that is small compared to the Mass.
As we offer Mass we pray for all souls.
. . .
[The Mail Online illustrates Remembrance Day with the pictorial of striking photos.
Marshall McLuhan coined phrase ‘medium is the message’ and his theme on publicity making the ‘event’, - the digital real.
In the Mass, the divine presence transcends the ethereal/virtual media].

Packed: The service at Lloyd's is observed with the ringing of the Lutine Bell, the laying of wreaths before the Book of Remembrance and a two-minute silence

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2060237/Remembrance-Day-2011-Britain-comes-standstill-Armistice-Day-observe-2-minute-silence.html#ixzz1dbYemt4w  

+ + +    
Bidding Prayer:
Heavenly Father, hear our prayer,
and Mary, conceived immaculate, prayer for us,
who have recourse to you,
pray for us, 
ESPECIALLY  for all of Remembrance Sunday,
Through ...

Thursday 10 November 2011

YouTube IrishTimes FaceBook Vocations

Glencairn Abbey
  


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzDY8qEEi-8 
St. Mary's Abbey
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=_eWu4jQ9RoM 


Behind the convent walls
Sat, Oct 29, 2011
The life of a contemplative nun might seem isolated, but enclosed orders are reaching out to communities online using social-networking sites. ÁINE KERR asks what life is like on the inside.
BEFORE THE DAWN and the chapel bells begin to toll, 16 women in distinctive red habits rise in quiet unison to pray. Their day within the enclosed Monastery of St Alphonsus in Drumcondra, Dublin will bring songful prayers, silent prayers, spiritual readings and labour.
For one technologically savvy Redemptoristine nun from Offaly, Sr Lucy Conway, the day will also involve posting updates to the monastery’s Red Nuns website, writing a new blog entry, checking the nuns’ Facebook messages, replying to emailed prayer requests, and partaking in Skype chats. This is the new generation of monastic nuns, who live life away from the eye of the storm in an enclosed private setting, but reach out in new, evolving ways.
Pope Benedict XVI is among their “friends” on Facebook, as are their nieces and nephews, who they keep a watchful eye on via their own personal social-networking accounts. The time spent online is strictly rationed. It tests their self-discipline. Ever mindful of the need to exist in a deep state of contemplation, Sr Conway recently took what she calls a “sabbatical from Facebook”, but soon returned, given the need to promote one of their upcoming monastic experience weekends.
The work day of the 36 sisters in St Mary’s Abbey in Glencairn, Co Waterford, who rise at the appointed hour of 3.45am, follows a similar beat, carefully juxtaposing prayer with labour.   The sisters at the monastery in the Blackwater Valley might follow the sixth century Rule of Benedict but they also have 520 real-time 21st-century Facebook followers. They take responsibility for farming their 200 acres, making Holy Communion hosts and creating greeting cards, while Sarah Branigan (38) takes charge of the online engine and new vocations. “We’re trying to preserve the integrity of contemplative life but we also know we need a certain level of visibility,” says Sr Branigan.
It’s a curious mix. Orders are removed from the bustling world without, yet use Facebook and other mediums as a distant lens on that world. Each order is quick to insist that nothing, including Facebook, TV, radio and email, will impinge on their life of sanctity and prayer. But they concede they need to reach out to potential new recruits, need to be aware of the world’s problems that form the basis of their hourly prayers, and occasionally keep in contact with family and friends they rarely see.
Vocation weekends, organised three or four times a year, operate an open-door policy. Four or five women who see the Facebook posts, website notices and church leaflets travel to Waterford and stay in the on-site guesthouse, which is normally open to the public, in exchange for a donation of their choice. On vocation weekends, it becomes a place for reflection, outside of the timetabled prayers, gospel readings, meals and power-point presentations.
Sr Sarah Branigan (vocations director)
at St Mary s Abbe.
The hands-on monastic experience is a process of “mutual discernment”, enabling the established nuns to get to know a potential new member, according to Sr Branigan.
     “If we feel the person shows potential for a vocation and is suitable, we encourage them to apply. We get references, a medical cert and a psychological assessment,” she says. Not everyone, however, is accepted. And some have been known to leave.
The vocation process is rigid. Postulancy, or candidacy, lasts eight to 12 months, novitiate lasts two years, first profession takes the vows of obedience, chastity and poverty for three years, and solemn profession requires taking the vows for life.
Sr Katherine Duncan is embracing what she terms a “simpler life” after training as a midwife and maternity nurse, and working for 10 years as a hospital nurse in Tullamore, Co Offaly. A year working in a compound in Saudi Arabia provided the mental preparation for the enclosed monastic setting that would soon become the norm of life.
“I got to a point in life where I needed to take stock . . . seeing so much suffering and pain as a nurse gives you a different perspective on life. You see people without love, you see the rise in suicide, a lot of despair,” says Sr Duncan.
Despite sporadic moments of questioning, Sr Duncan was socialising, networking and enjoying shopping expeditions and twice-annual holidays. Soon, however, she began to question their worth and importance. “I loved the day of shopping but I began to wonder about that, whether it was satisfying me any more, and it felt empty. I just felt there was more to life. These things just didn’t have the same pull,” she says.
World Youth 2000 events and retreats heralded a dawning realisation. Sr Duncan stopped going to pubs and quit the shopping circuit, choosing instead to spend more time in prayer. Having “ignored the call” for some time and fought with traditional “preconceptions” of nuns, she began to ask two fundamental questions: Is there a God; and I do I have a vocation?   
Sr Fiachra Nutty (49) was also what she calls a “late vocation”, having entered Glencairn Abbey six years ago. The co-owner of an award-winning garden centre in Malahide, Co Dublin, she had been in business for 20 years when she started to face up to the “big 40 that was heading my way”.
On approaching that milestone birthday, Sr Nutty was satisfied she had seen the world, having experienced 26 countries. The next major item on the ambitious checklist was a degree, having left school in her mid-teens. It was while studying for a horticulture degree in Writtle College, Essex that the then businesswoman began to consider an extremely different life.
“It was at Writtle, while sharing a hall of residence with 15 other mature students of many faiths and no faith at all, that I first began to question my Catholicity, spurred on by the informal religious discussions which occurred in the common room from time to time,” says Sr Nutty .
Unsure about the next move, she briefly worked in a garden centre near Cambridge, became involved with a vibrant local parish, and came to know a parish sister who was a Brigidine nun from Ireland. After months of daily prayer and daily mass, attendance at a “monastic experience” in a monastery in Kent and a conversation with a nun who suggested the Cistercian life might suit her, Sr Nutty returned to Ireland and entered Glencairn on January 3rd, 2006 for three weeks to experience the daily rhythm of monastic life. “There wasn’t room for God to get a word in edgeways, so it was a dramatic change,” says Sr Nutty of her former busy life as a businesswoman. “Friends would know me as a great talker . . . I’m sure they were saying to themselves ‘I give her three weeks and she’ll be back’.”
Sr Fiachra Nutty in the garden of the Cistercian
monastery for women at Glencairn
The gathering of so many different characters in one community remains an “endless fascination” for her: “Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought I’d be going to bed at half eight, and become a vegetarian.”
Seeing parents just twice a year is the norm. And when a friend’s husband suffered a nervous breakdown and another friend died of cancer, Sr Nutty remained in situ. “You’d love to up sticks . . . it’s terribly hard not to go, but it’s part of life. You knew this when you entered.”
However, when pressed about her former life and the social elements she once loved, Sr Nutty simply insists she was “blessed with a late vocation . . . I saw 26 countries. I would have been a disaster with that sort of wanderlust had I entered when I was younger.” And while other orders have communal recreation time, Glencairn opts for solo time-out, allowing nuns to read and listen to music, sew and paint, check the news headlines while checking their emails. At the moment, they pray for “good leadership” as the Irish presidential elections draw closer.
THE REDEMPTORISTINE nuns in Drumcondra recently stayed up past their usual bedtime to watch the presidential candidates on the Late Late Show . Sr Gabrielle Fox (62) says the community of nuns don’t watch much television, because they simply don’t have the time. “But with something like the presidential elections, we like to inform our consciousness and I would have encouraged the nuns to watch the debate,” says Sr Fox. “I like them to know what’s going on because we are here to pray for the world.”
One of the younger nuns, Sr Monica Boggan (28), believes it’s important for them to know who they are voting for and to take the opportunity to weigh up the best candidate. “Sometimes, you’d have people in the chapel saying ‘we’re lucky to be in here’, but we don’t escape things just because we’re here. We all have our struggles, life isn’t easy.”
Of the 14 nuns in the enclosed order, seven joined in recent years, among them teachers and business women. Two are in their 20s, two in their 30s, one in her 40s, while the rest are aged 50 and over. Unlike other enclosed orders, the Redemptoristine nuns enjoy a later start of 7am. But many of the older nuns, accustomed to a traditional 4am start, still rise early. The younger generation don’t have any appointed time for retiring at night.
Each day, their prayers are guided by emails, messages left in the chapel box and phone calls. And while the nuns live a life of confinement separate to the noisy world outside, a webcam in the chapel enables people to join them online every day for prayer.  
   

Wednesday 9 November 2011

Blessed John Duns Scotus Scotland Tuesday 8 November 2011



ZENIT - On Duns Scotus by Pope Benedict XVI

www.zenit.org/article-29826?l=english

International Centenary Symposium
on the Mariology of Blessed John Duns Scotus.
Cardinal O'Brien,Mgr Henry Docherty and Fr Willie Mc Fadden with the Franciscan's Immaculate at the Statue in Duns.

INTERNATIONAL CENTENARY SYMPOSIUM ON THE MARIOLOGY OF BLESSED JOHN DUNS
SCOTUS

CHURCH OF OUR LADY AND ST MARGARET, DUNS

HOMILY PREACHED BY CARDINAL KEITH PATRICK O’BRIEN

WEDNESDAY 10TH SEPTEMBER 2008

INTRODUCTION:

It gives me very great pleasure to welcome you all here to Duns this
afternoon to our beautiful little church dedicated to Our Lady and St
Margaret.

I know that you have come on pilgrimage here from the International
Symposium being held at Durham University – I would hope a welcome break for
you all in the midst of deep theological lectures on various aspects of the
life and work of Blessed John Duns Scotus. Hopefully here in this beautiful
border country of Scotland where John Duns Scotus was born you will be able
to absorb something of the beauties of nature which affected John as he was
growing up and no doubt had a considerable influence on his thought.

As you know John became a Franciscan; studied at the University of Oxford;
was ordained to the Priesthood on 17th March 1291; and continued his studies
at Oxford before being sent to Paris. He lectured in Oxford and in Paris for
a considerable number of years before he was sent to Cologne where he
lectured for some time before his untimely death on 8th November 1308 at
approximately 43 years of age and at the height of his maturity. It is the
700th anniversary of his death which we are commemorating at this time.

THEOLOGY OF BLESSED JOHN DUNS SCOTUS:

With so many theologians around me I hesitate to try to summarise the
theology of Blessed John Duns Scotus in a few words.

However I quote from the late Father Eric Doyle O.F.M. who wrote in a
pamphlet produced for the 7th centenary of the birth of John Duns Scotus:
“If one were asked to summarise the vast synthesis of truth created by Duns
Scotus, the answer would take no more than a few words – a philosophy of
love and of theology centred on Christ”.

Perhaps in thinking of the theology of John we should emphasise his teaching
on “the uniqueness of each and every individual person”; we should reflect
on his theology of “Christ and his relationship to the world”; and thirdly
of course we should realise the depth of the teaching contained in “his
defence of the Immaculate Conception of our Blessed Lady” almost 600 years
before the Definition of the Dogma by Pope Pius IX in 1854.

Here in this beautiful little parish church his teaching with regard to the
Immaculate Conception is summed up in the stained glass window above my head
with the engraving of the words: “potuit; decuit; ergo fecit”; “it could be
done; it would be fitting if it were done; therefore it was done!”.

SPIRITUALITY OF BLESSED JOHN DUNS SCOTUS:

However it is not because of the depth of his theology that we gather today
for this symposium and in this little church. It is to thank God for the
spirituality of this man.

Even in his own time when preparations were being made for his reception of
his mastership in theology, the Minister General of the Franciscans wrote:
“I authorise to be presented…..the beloved father in Christ... John Scotus.
I am thoroughly informed, partly from my own experience and partly from his
world wide reputation, of his praiseworthy life, his outstanding knowledge,
his most subtle mind, and his other remarkable qualities….” Those words
were written over 700 years ago.

And it was less than 20 years ago that there was promulgated the decree of
the Congregation for the Causes of Saints in the presence of Pope John Paul
II which declared: “The fame of holiness, the virtues, and the cult from
time immemorial, given to the servant of God, John Duns Scotus, professed
priest of the Order of Friars Minor, born in Duns Scotland towards the end
of 1265 and died in Cologne Germany on 8th November 1308”.

Many of us here present, including myself, were in St Peter’s Basilica in
Rome to share in the joy of the promulgation of that decree of our late Holy
Father Pope John Paul II.

CONCLUSION:

As you gather at the Symposium in Durham University and as we gather here
this afternoon perhaps we should give some further thought to the relevance
of Blessed John Duns Scotus in our world of today.

He is indeed what we might describe as a “saint for Europe”; we should
realise how his theological thought can help us in the realisation of the
uniqueness of each one of us as an individual; and we should be led on to
ever deeper thought of our union as human beings in the love of God and of
the role of Our Blessed Lady in our redemption.

Underlying it all however should be the realisation that basic to the depth
of his theology and the ability to teach of this the “subtle Doctor” there
was a good holy man, an exemplary friar, a son of St Francis, a wonderful
priest, born and brought up in this beautiful border country of Scotland who
grew throughout his life in his knowledge and love of Our Lord and in his
desire to serve that same Lord in the simplicity of his life as a
Franciscan. May we be strengthened to serve that same Lord and his people
with something of the wisdom and simplicity of Blessed John Duns Scotus.

                      
Cardinal O'Brien and Fr Mc Fadden with the Statue Gifted to Scotus College by the Franciscans.
                                                                       
Blessed John Duns Scotus.
  
Rector of Scotus College Bearsden  Fr Willie Mc Fadden thanks the Franciscan's for their generosity and accepts the statue on behalf of Scotus College.
    
Cardinal O'Brien,Mgr Docherty and Fr Mc Fadden with the Franciscan's beside the Statue.
The Statue of Blessed John Duns Scotus in Duns.


Sunday 6 November 2011

St. Gertrude of Helfta "the evening of this life has arrived for me", arrange my magnificent nuptials, evening bid a sweet farewell to my body, my spirit, returning to the Lord

COMMENT. I can dwell on these words.
The underlined words make all too vivid the reality of nearing death,
and all the more the sense of the wonder, "Behold, the bridegroom! Come out to meet him!"


----- Forwarded Message -----

From: Fr Donald . . .
Sent: Sunday, 6 November 2011, 13:39
Subject: [Blog] St. Gertrude "Behold, the Groom", Mt. 25:1-13. Parable of the Ten Virgins
O my very gentle evening, when the evening of this life has arrived for me, make me dulcetly lose consciousness in you and experience that most blessed rest which has been prepared in you for your dear ones. Let the exceedingly calm and agreeable regard of your beautiful cherishing-love deign to order and arrange my magnificent nuptials. With the riches of your goodness cover... the poverty and impoverishment of my degenerate life. Let my soul dwell in the delights of your charity with exceeding trust.O love, may you then be for me such an evening that my soul may with gladness and exultation bid a sweet farewell to my body; and may my spirit, returning to the Lord who gave it, already pleasantly at rest in peace beneath your shadow. Then, with your own voice... you will say to me manifestly: «Behold, the bridegroom is coming; now go out to join yourself more closely to him that he may gladden you by the glory of his countenance»...When, oh when will you show yourself to me so that I may see and with merriment draw from you, God, the living fountain (Is 12,3)? Then I will drink and will become inebriated with the sweet plentifulness of the living fountain, which distills the delights of the melllifluous face of him whom my soul desires (Ps 42[41],3). O sweet face, when will you satisfy me with yourself? Then I will go into the place of the wonderful tabernacle even to the very aspect of God (Ps 42[41],5); at its threshold my heart is made to groan because I am delayed by my sojourn here. Oh, when will you fill me with g1adness by your mellifluous face (Ps 16[15],11)? Then I will contemplate and warmly kiss the true spouse of my soul, my Jesus.... there where I may recognize you just as I am recognized (1Cor 13,12) and love you just as I am loved so that forever I may see you, my God, as you really are (1Jn 3,2) in your blessed vision, fruition, and possession.

St. Gertrude "Behold, the Groom", Mt. 25:1-13. Parable of the Ten Virgins

The Commentary, from Daily Gospel today, leads to deeper and deeper reflection on the 'Exercises' of St. Gertrude of Helfta. 
With acknowledgement.
It asks for further Comment.
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: DGO
Sent:
 Saturday, 5 November 2011, 17:03
Subject: The Daily Gospel

Sunday, 06 November 2011

Thirty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time



Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 25:1-13.
Then the kingdom of heaven will be like ten virgins who took their lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom.
Five of them were foolish and five were wise.

Afterwards the other virgins came and said, 'Lord, Lord, open the door for us!'
But he said in reply, 'Amen, I say to you, I do not know you.'
Therefore, stay awake, for you know neither the day nor the hour.

Commentary of the day : 

Saint Gertrude of Helfta (1256-1301), Benedictine/Cistercian nun 
Exercises, no 5 ; SC 127 (©Cistercian publications, 1989) 

"Behold, the bridegroom! Come out to meet him!"

O my very gentle evening, when the evening of this life has arrived for me, make me dulcetly lose consciousness in you and experience that most blessed rest which has been prepared in you for your dear ones. Let the exceedingly calm and agreeable regard of your beautiful cherishing-love deign to order and arrange my magnificent nuptials. With the riches of your goodness cover... the poverty and impoverishment of my degenerate life. Let my soul dwell in the delights of your charity with exceeding trust.

O love, may you then be for me such an evening that my soul may with gladness and exultation bid a sweet farewell to my body; and may my spirit, returning to the Lord who gave it, already pleasantly at rest in peace beneath your shadow. Then, with your own voice... you will say to me manifestly: «Behold, the bridegroom is coming;   now go out to join yourself more closely to him that he may gladden you by the glory of his countenance»...

When, oh when will you show yourself to me so that I may see and with merriment draw from you, God, the living fountain (Is 12,3)? Then I will drink and will become inebriated with the sweet plentifulness of the living fountain, which distills the delights of the melllifluous face of him whom my soul desires (Ps 42[41],3). O sweet face, when will you satisfy me with yourself? Then I will go into the place of the wonderful tabernacle even to the very aspect of God (Ps 42[41],5); at its threshold my heart is made to groan because I am delayed by my sojourn here. Oh, when will you fill me with g1adness by your mellifluous face (Ps 16[15],11)? Then I will contemplate and warmly kiss the true spouse of my soul, my Jesus.... there where I may recognize you just as I am recognized (1Cor 13,12) and love you just as I am loved so that forever I may see you, my God, as you really are (1Jn 3,2) in your blessed vision, fruition, and possession.

Saturday 5 November 2011

Mary Sabbath


Our Lady of Medjugorje
5 November 2011
Votive  Mass of  BVM
“Mary conceive immaculate” -Mary Sabbath
A thought to begin the Mass, reminded me of Saturday in Latroun Abbey. The monastery stands above the busy junction of the Motorway. Everyday we hear the roar of the traffic of buses, trucks, military tanks, cars. On Saturday we open the window of the Infirmary corridor and we hear the great stillness of silence — the silence of the SABBATH.
The Mass, Missa in Sabbato, suggests  being called the “Mary Sabbath”.

The Friends of Our Lady of Medjugorje sent us The Medjugorje Web for November.
“Mary says,  ‘Dear children, the Father has not left you to yourselves’.” Mary speaks of the Father and of the Son and of her Children. Her words are beautifully and so illuminating.
It is not the language of a young parent, not the that of professional theologian or mystic.
Mary speaks simple words to everyone, from children to those overcoming even those impaired by Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Aphasia …

In the Mass Intercessions,
Mary’s Message ends    I am calling you:
pray for your shepherds.



From: Steve and Ana
Sent: 02 November 2011 17:34
Subject: Medjugorje - Our Lady's November 02, 2011 Message
Peace to all! Below please find Our Lady's November 02, 2011 message given to Mirjana.
Our next mailing will be Our Lady's November 25, 2011 message.
God Bless!
Steve and Ana.


The Medjugorje Web
---------------------------------

November 02, 2011

"Dear children, the Father has not left you to yourselves. Immeasurable is
His love, the love that is bringing me to you, to help you to come to know
Him, so that, through my Son, all of you can call Him 'Father' with the
fullness of heart; that you can be one people in God's family. However, my
children, do not forget that you are not in this world only for yourselves,
and that I am not calling you here only for your sake. Those who follow my
Son think of the brother in Christ as of their very selves and they do not
know selfishness. That is why I desire that you be the light of my Son, that
to all those who have not come to know the Father - to all those who wander
in the darkness of sin, despair, pain and loneliness - you may illuminate
the way and that, with your life, you may show them the love of God. I am
with you. If you open your hearts, I will lead you. Again I am calling you:
pray for your shepherds. Thank you. " 
 
_____________________________

Friday 4 November 2011

All Souls Comment

Thanks for Comments.
Reference:  From Purgation and Purgatory  
by Saint Catherine of Genoa   
(Classics of wester» Spirituality, pages 71-72.76.78-79.81-82)
has usefully given us the pages from the Classis Western Spiritualiy.

And I am re-reading with more deep soundings.
Donald
Chili Pines, Sun-Set
----- Forwarded Message -----  
From: Anne Marie  ...
To: Fr Donald ...
Sent: Wednesday, 2 November 2011, 21:10
Subject: Re: [Dom Donald's Blog] All Souls November 2011


I love your photo of the pines.  The sky is Awesome

Sent from my iPhone

AnneMarie


From Purgation and Purgatory by Saint Catherine of Genoa
(Classics of wester» Spirituality, pages 71-72.76.78-79.81-82)




----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Sr.Mary ...>
To: Fr Donald ;...

Sent: Thursday, 3 November 2011, 3:37
Subject: What a beautiful revelation and explanation of Purgatory!
Dear Donald, 
Thank you for all the interesting  Emails. 
I loved the one on the teaching of Catherine of Genoa and had not read it before.

I am awaiting  the November Magnificat but as usual when it will arrive is never fixed. www.magnificat.com

Mary

Wednesday 2 November 2011

All Souls November 2011


Chili Pines, Sun-Set

From Purgation and Purgatory
by Saint Catherine of Genoa
(Classics of wester» Spirituality, pages 71-72.76.78-79.81-82)

The souls in purgatory cannot think,
"I am here, and justly so because of my sins,"
or "I wish I had never committed such sins
for now I would be in paradise,"
or "That person there is leaving before me,"
or "I will leave before that other one."
They cannot remember the good and evil
in their past nor that of others.
Such is their joy in God's will, in his pleasure,
that they have no concern for themselves but
dwell only on their joy in God's ordinance.
They see only the goodness of
God, his mercy toward men.
Should they be aware of other good or evil,
theirs would not be perfect charity.
Only once do they
understand the reason for
their purgatory:
the moment in which they leave this life.
After this moment, that knowledge disappears.
Immersed in charity, incapable of deviating from it,
they can only will or desire pure love.
There is no joy save that in paradise
to be compared with the joy of the souls in purgatory.
As the rust of sin is consumed
the soul is more and more open to God's love.
Just as a covered object left out in the sun
cannot be penetrated by the sun's rays, in the same way,
once the covering of the soul is removed,
the soul opens itself fully to the rays of the sun.
Having become one with God's will,
these souls, to the extent that he grants it to them, see into God.
Joy in God, oneness with him, is the end of these souls,
an instinct implanted in them at their creation.
All that I have said
is as nothing compared to what I feel within,
the witnessed correspondence of love between God and the soul;
for when God sees the soul pure as it was in its origins,
he tugs at it with a glance,
draws it and binds it to himself with a fiery love.
God so transforms the soul in
himself that it knows nothing other than God.
He will not cease
until he has brought the soul to its perfection.
That is why the soul seeks to cast off
any and all impediments, so that it can be lifted up to God;
and such impediments
are the cause of the suffering of the souls in purgatory.
Not that the souls dwell on their suffering;
they dwell rather
on the resistance they feel in themselves
against the will of God,
against his intense and pure love bent on nothing
but drawing them up to him.
And I see rays of lightning
darting from that divine love to the creature,
so intense and fiery as to annihilate not the body alone
but, were it possible, the soul.
The soul becomes like gold
that becomes purer as it is fired, all dross being cast out.
The last stage of love
is that which does its work without human doing.
If humans were to be aware of the many hidden flaws in them
they would despair.
These flaws are burned away in the last stage of love.
God then shows the soul its weakness,
so that the soul may see the workings of God.
If we are to become perfect,
the change must be brought about in us and without us; that is,
the change is to be the work not of human beings but of God.
This, the last stage of love,
is the pure and intense love of God alone.
The overwhelming love of God
gives the soul a joy beyond Awords.
In purgatory great joy and great suffering do not exclude one another.


Holy Isle - Lindisfarne

Tuesday 1 November 2011

OCSO Menology Month of November


Father Ambrose Conway

Fr. Ambrose Roscrea 1946 to join Nunraw

Father Ambrose Conway

Father Ambrose
John Basil Conway


born 13 March 1906
entered Roscrea in 1925
ordained Priest 1933
founder to Nunraw 1946
died 28 November 1986

Memorials


Biography
Community Chronicle
Final Appreciation

 1. Biographical Details . . .


OCSO
Menology
for the
Month
of November

NOVEMBER 1

Guido + c. 1145
St Bernard's eldest brother, he was already married and a man of some importance when Bernard urged him to enter the monastery with his brothers. Since his wife would not give her consent, he resolved to give up his position and lead the laborious life of a peasant. But when his wife was stricken with a grave illness, she sent for Bernard, sought pardon and agreed to let Guido enter Citeaux, while she herself became a nun. Guido died at Pontigny on his way back from founding a new monastery near Bourges.

Spinela
A nun of Arouca, Portugual.

Bernard Rosa + 1696
Abbot of Grussau in Silesia, he was one of the three prominent men who helped preserve the Catholic faith in that region.

NOVEMBER 2

Fulcard  12th century
A lay-brother of Clairvaux, a man of great purity and simplicity, he was herdsman at one of the monastery granges. Once in a dream he saw the Lord Jesus holding a goad in his gentle hand and leading the oxen at the other end of the yoke. This filled him with a great desire to see his fellow-worker in heaven. Soon afterwards he was seized with illness and seven days later his desire was happily realized. After his death, St Bernard confidently declared that he walked with God and that it was truly God who worked through him.


NOVEMBER 3

Anne Van Aelst + 1595
Her father was a Moslem convert who had been made Lord of Alost or Aelst. Anne entered Roosendael and became abbess in 1575. However, the following year her convent was pillaged and the nuns were obliged to flee. They took refuge in Malines where they lived in extreme poverty, but also in fidelity to their religious vocation.

Les Moniales, p. 101

NOVEMBER 4


Esther d'Audibert de Lussan + 1672
Named abbess of Valsauve by Pope Clement VIII in 1605, she governed the abbey for sixty-seven years and completely renewed it, exteriorly and interiorly.

Les Moniales, p. 101

NOVEMBER 5

St Malachy  1095-1148
Born and raised in Armagh, Ireland, he became the disciple of a hermit named Eimar. He was ordained at twenty-five and five years later named bishop of Connor. By his preaching and fostering the saramental life, he was instrumental in turning a heathen people back to a Christian way of life. St Celsus named him his successor as metropolitan of Armagh. However, Malachy met with much opposition, and it was not until 1134 that he could take over the diocese. Here too he restored peace and discipline and furthered the Christian life.
In 1140 he went to Rome to receive the pallium. On his way he visited Clairvaux and began a lasting friendship with St Bernard. Malachy even wished to become a Cistercian, had not the Pope forbidden it. Instead he left four of his disciples to be trained in the Cistercian life and then return to Ireland where they founded the abbey of Mellifont. On a second journey to Rome, Malachy again stopped at Clairvaux. There he became ill and on All Souls' Day he died in the arms of St Bernard and was buried at Clairvaux.

Life by St Bernard, CF 10; MBS, p. 288