Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 9 June

Thought for the Day – 9 June

The writings of Saint Ephrem speak volumes about his passion for the truth of the Gospel and his zeal for spreading the Word of God.   We are blessed to have poems, hymns, prayers and writings today, penned nearly 2 centuries ago, reminding us not only of the constancy of the love of the Lord but of the long-standing traditions and teachings of the Church.   As we read the writings of Saint Ephrem, we pray for his zeal for the Lord and the future of His Church on earth.
Before his death, Saint Ephrem reflected on his life, writing in his testament:  “There grew a vine-shoot on my tongue:  and increased and reached unto heaven.   And it yielded fruit without measure:  leaves likewise without number.   It spread, it stretched wide, it bore fruit:  all creation drew near.   And the more they were that gathered,the more its clusters abounded.   These clusters were the Homilies and these leaves the Hymns.   God was the giver of them, glory to Him for His grace!   For He gave to me of His good pleasure, from the storehouse of His treasures.”

St Ephrem, pray for us that we too may grow a vine-shoot on our tongues by the grace of God!

st ephrem pray for us 2

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Quote/s of the Day – 9 June

Quote/s of the Day – 9 June

“Forget not the Holy Spirit
at the moment of your enlightenment;  
He is ready to mark your soul with His seal….
He will give you the heavenly and divine seal
which makes the devil tremble;  
He will arm you for the fight;
He will give you strength.”

FORGET NOT THE HOLY SPIRIT-ST EPHREM

“Glory be to Him,
Who received from us,
that He might give to us;
that through that which is ours,
we might more abundantly receive
of that which is His!”

glory be to him, who received from us-st ephrem

“Virtues are formed by PRAYER.
PRAYER preserves temperance.
PRAYER suppresses anger.
PRAYER prevents emotions of pride and envy.
PRAYER draws into the soul the Holy Spirit
and raises man to Heaven.”

virtures are formed by prayer-st ephrem

“When you begin to read or listen
to the Holy Scriptures, pray to God thus:
“Lord Jesus Christ, open the ears and eyes
of my heart so that I may hear Your words
and understand them
and may fulfill Your will.”
Always pray to God like this,
that He might illumine your mind
and open to you the power of His words.
Many, having trusted in their own reason,
have turned away into deception.”

St Ephrem of Syria

when you begin to read or listen to the Holy Scriptures-st ephrem

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 9 June

One Minute Reflection – 9 June

Be on Guard and pray that you may not undergo the test…………….Matthew 26:41

MATTHEW 26-41

REFLECTION – “Jesus, who feared nothing, experienced fear and asked to be freed from death – although He knew it was impossible.
How much more must we persevere in prayer before temptation assails us – so that we may be freed when the test has come!”…St Ephrem

jesus who feared nothing - st ephrem

 

PRAYER – Heavenly Father, help me to work out my salvation in fear and trembling.  Let me pray daily that I may withstand temptation and carry out Your will in all things.   St Ephrem, please pray for us, that we may withstand the evils which surround us! Amen

st ephrem pray for us

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – 9 June

Our Morning Offering – 9 June

O Lord and Master of my life
By St Ephrem of Syria (306-373) Doctor of the Church

O Lord and Master of my life,
grant not unto me a spirit of idleness,
of discouragement,
of lust for power
and of vain speaking.
But bestow upon me, Your servant,
the spirit of chastity,
of meekness,
of patience
and of love.
Yea, O Lord and King,
grant that I may perceive
my own transgressions
and judge not my brother,
for blessed are You unto ages of ages. Amen

o lord and master of my life - prayer by st ephrem of syria

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 9 June – St Ephrem of Syria (306-373) – Father and Doctor of the Church

Saint of the Day – 9 June – St Ephrem of Syria (306-373) – Father & Doctor of the Church – Also known as:  Ephrem of Edessa, Ephrem the Syrian, Ephraem, Ephraim, Ephraem Syrus, Deacon of Edessa, Harp of the Holy Spirit, Jefrem Sirin, Sun of the Syrians/Venerable Father.  Deacon and Confessor, Exegesist, Writer, Poet, Hymnographer, Theologian, Teacher, Orator, Defender of the Faith – declared Doctor of the Church in 1920 by Pope Benedict XV.    Born – c 306 at Nisibis, Mesopotamia (in modern Syria) – Died on 9 June 373 at Edessa (in modern Iraq) of natural causes.   His tomb is in an Armenian monastery, Der Serkis, west of Edessa.   Patron of Spiritual directors and spiritual leaders.   Attributes –  hermit sitting on a column, deacon’s vestments and thurible, man composing hymns with a lyre, man in a cave with a book, man with a cross on his brow, pointing upwards, vine and scroll.

st ephrem 3

Born in Nisibis, Mesopotamia, he was baptised as a young man and became famous as a teacher in his native city.   When the Christian emperor had to cede Nisibis to the Persians, Ephrem fled as a refugee to Edessa, along with many other Christians.   He is credited with attracting great glory to the biblical school there.   He was ordained a deacon but declined becoming a priest as he felt he was unworthy.

He had a prolific pen and his writings best illumine his holiness.   Although he was not a man of great scholarship, his works reflect deep insight and knowledge of the Scriptures.   In writing about the mysteries of humanity’s redemption, Ephrem reveals a realistic and humanly sympathetic spirit and a great devotion to the humanity of Jesus.   It is said that his poetic account of the Last Judgment inspired Dante.

Over four hundred hymns composed by Ephrem still exist.   Granted that some have been lost, Ephrem’s productivity is not in doubt.   Church historians credit Ephrem with having written over three million lines.ephrem_the_syrian_mosaic_in_nea_moni

The most important of his works are his lyric, teaching hymns.   These hymns are full of rich, poetic imagery drawn from biblical sources, folk tradition and other religions and philosophies.
Particularly influential were his Hymns Against Heresies.   Ephrem used these to warn his flock of the heresies that threatened to divide the early church.   He lamented that the faithful were “tossed to and fro and carried around with every wind of doctrine, by the cunning of men, by their craftiness and deceitful wiles.”   He devised hymns laden with doctrinal details to inoculate right-thinking Christians against heresies such as docetism.   The Hymns Against Heresies employ colourful metaphors to describe the Incarnation of Christ as fully human and divine.   Ephrem asserts that Christ’s unity of humanity and divinity represents peace, perfection and salvation;  in contrast, docetism and other heresies sought to divide or reduce Christ’s nature and, in doing so, rend and devalue Christ’s followers with their false teachings.

Ephrem is popularly believed to have taken legendary journeys.    In one of these he visits St Basil of Caesarea.   This links the Syrian Ephrem with the Cappadocian Fathers and is an important theological bridge between the spiritual view of the two, who held much in common.   Ephrem is also supposed to have visited Saint Pishoy in the monasteries of Scetes in Egypt.    As with the legendary visit with Basil, this visit is a theological bridge between the origins of monasticism and its spread throughout the church.

St Ephrem eventually settled in Edessa (modern Şanlıurfa) in 363.   He was in his late fifties then and in Edessa he applied himself to ministry in his new church and seems to have continued his work as a teacher, perhaps in the School of Edessa.   Edessa had always been at the heart of the Syriac-speaking world and the city was full of rival philosophies and religions.   Ephrem comments that orthodox Nicene Christians were simply called “Palutians” in Edessa, after a former bishop. Arians, Marcionites, Manichees, Bardaisanites and various gnostic sects proclaimed themselves as the true church.   In this confusion, Ephrem wrote a great number of homilies and hymns defending Nicene orthodoxy.   After a ten-year residency in Edessa, in his sixties, Ephrem succumbed to the plague as he ministered to its victims.   The most reliable date for his death is 9 June 373.

John of Damascus, Ephrem the Syrian
With St John Damascne – left
Posted in SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

Saints and Feasts – 9 June

St Ephrem of Syria (Optional Memorial)
Madonna della Fonte Nuova
Mary, Mother of Grace
Mary of the Walnut

Bl Alexander of Kouchta
St Alexander of Prusa
Bl Anne Marie Taigi
St Arnulf of Velseca
St Baithen of Iona
St Columba of Iona
St Comus of Scotland
St Cumian of Bobbio
St Cyrus
Bl Diana d’Andalo
St Diomedes of Tarsus
St Felicianus
Bl Henry the Shoemaker
St Jose de Anchieta
Bl Joseph Imbert
St Julian of Mesopotamia
St Luciano Verdejo Acuña
Bl Luigi Boccardo
St Maximian of Syracuse
St Pelagia of Antioch
St Primus
St Richard of Andria
Bl Robert Salt
Bl Sylvester Ventura
St Valerius of Milan
St Vincent of Agen

Martyrs of Arbil – 5 saints: Five nuns who were martyred together in the persecutions of Tamsabur for refusing to renounce Christianity for sun-worship – Amai, Mariamne, Martha, Mary and Tecla. They were beheaded on 31 May 347 at Arbil, Assyria (in modern Kurdistan, Iraq)

Posted in JESUIT SJ, MORNING Prayers, POETRY

Celebrating GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS SJ – 8 June

Celebrating GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS SJ – 8 June

Gerard Manley Hopkins SJ, one of the leading poets of the nineteenth century, died on this day in Dublin in 1889,   His poetry is strikingly innovative, notable for its vivid imagery and new verse forms at a time when verse mainly followed traditional lines.   He struggled with depression and ill health throughout his short life but his last words at age 44 were “I am so happy, I am so happy.   I loved my life.”

Much of Gerard’s poetry was concerned with the divine presence in the material world, like this, probably one of the most renowned – “God’s Grandeur”

The world is charged with the grandeur of God.
It will flame out, like shining from shook foil;
It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil
Crushed. Why do men then now not reck his rod?
Generations have trod, have trod, have trod;
And all is seared with trade; bleared, smeared with toil;
And wears man’s smudge and shares man’s smell: the soil
Is bare now, nor can foot feel, being shod.

And for all this nature, is never spent;
There lives the dearest freshness deep down things;
And though the last lights off the black West went
Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs—
Because the Holy Ghost over the bent
World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.

god's grandeur-gerard manley hopkins sj

Posted in MORNING Prayers, NOVENAS

St ANTHONY of PADUA NOVENA for all our needs – DAY FIVE – 8 JUNE

St ANTHONY of PADUA NOVENA for all our needs – DAY FIVE – 8 JUNE

day five st anthony novena

DAY FIVE

I salute you, St. Anthony,
lily of purity, ornament and glory of Christianity.
I salute you, great Saint, cherub of wisdom and seraph of divine love.
I rejoice at the favours our Lord has so liberally bestowed upon you.
In humility and confidence I entreat you to help me,
for I know that God has given you charity and pity,
as well as power.
I ask you by the love you did feel toward the Infant Jesus
as you held Him in your arms to tell Him now of the favour I seek
through your intercession in this novena
(State your intention).

One Our Father, one Hail Mary, and Glory Be to the Father, in honour of Saint Anthony.

Saint Anthony, pray for us!

Posted in JESUIT SJ, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 8 June

Thought for the Day – 8 June

May the Holy Spirit help us put into practice the choices of Jacques Berthieu:  his passion for a challenging mission that led him to another country, another language and another culture, his personal attachment to the Lord expressed in  prayer, his pastoral zeal, which was simultaneously a fraternal love of the faithful entrusted to his care and a commitment to lead them higher on the Christian way and finally, a life lived as gift, a choice lived out every day until the death which definitively configured him to Christ.

It is the choice we must all make – let us see our lives too as a missionary, in amongst the daily norms and battles, for viewed through our Christian eyes, our encounters are not that much different to that strange island where St Jacques Berthieu carried out his vocation.

St Jacques Berthieu, pray for us!

ST JACQUES BERTHIEU PRAY FOR US.jpg 2

Posted in EUCHARISTIC Adoration, JESUIT SJ, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Quote/s of the Day – 8 June

Quote/s of the Day – 8 June

“When we go before Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament
we represent the one in the world
who is in most need of God’s Mercy.”
We “Stand in behalf of the one in the world
who does not know Christ and who is farthest away from God
and we bring down upon their soul the Precious Blood of The Lamb.”
– St Pope John Paul

It was said of today’s Saint – Jacques Berthieu, by one of his catechists,
“I have seen no other Father remain so long before the Blessed Sacrament.
Whenever we looked for him, we were sure to find him there.”

when we go before Jesus-st john paul

Posted in JESUIT SJ, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 8 June

One Minute Reflection – 8 June

Let us not grow tired of doing good,
for in due time we shall reap our harvest,
if we do not give up……….Galatians 6:9

REFLECTION – ………“how much I still love the soil of my country and the beloved land of the Auvergne.   And yet God has given me the grace to love even more these uncultivated fields of Madagascar, where I can only catch a few souls for our Lord… The mission progresses, even though the fruit is still a matter of hope in some places and hardly visible in others.   But what does it matter, so long as we are good sowers?   God will give growth when the time comes.” …………………St Jacques Berthieu SJ

the mission progresses even though-st jacques berthieu

PRAYER – Heavenly Father, may the intercession of St Jacques Berthieu help us to recognise the strength that is given to us in our weakness, so that we might live our vocation with fidelity and joy and give ourselves totally to the mission received from Your Divine Son, the Lord!   St Jacques Berthieu, pray for us, amen.

ST JACQUES BERTHIEU PRAY FOR US

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SACRED and IMMACULATE HEARTS

Our Morning Offering – 8 June

Our Morning Offering – 8 June

O make my heart beat with Your Heart!
By Bl Cardinal John Henry Newman

Most Sacred,
most loving Heart of Jesus,
You are concealed in the Holy Eucharist,
And You beat for us still.
Now, as then, You say:
“With desire I have desired.”
I worship You
with all my best love and awe,
With fervent affection,
With my most subdued,
most resolved will.
For a while, You take up Your abode within me.
O make my heart beat with Your Heart!
Purify it of all that is earthly,
All that is proud and sensual,
All that is hard and cruel,
Of all perversity,
Of all disorder,
Of all deadness.
So fill it with You,
That neither the events of the day,
Nor the circumstances of the time,
May have the power to ruffle it;
But that in Your love and Your fear,
It may have peace. Amen

o make my heart beat with your heart!-bl john henry newman

Posted in JESUIT SJ, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 8 June – St Jacques Berthieu SJ (1838-1896) “Martyr of Madasgacar”

Saint of the Day – 8 June – St Jacques Berthieu SJ (1838-1896) – Martyr, Priest, Missionary known as the “Martyr of Madasgacar” (28 November 1838 in Monlogis, Polminhac, Cantal, France – shot on 8 June 1896 in Madagascar by Menalamba rebels for his work in replacing ancestor worship with Christianity, his body was dumped in the Mananara River).   He was declared venerable in 1964, Beatified on 17 October 1965, at Saint Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City by Pope Paul VI and Canonised on 21 October 2012 by Pope Benedict XVI.

St Jacques Berthieu

Jacques Berthieu was born on November 27, 1838, in the area of Montlogis, in Polminhac, in the Auvergne in central France, the son of deeply Christian farmers of modest means.   His childhood was spent working and studying, surrounded by his family.   The early death of an older sister made him the oldest of six children.   He studied at the seminary of Saint-Flour and was ordained to the priesthood for this diocese on May 21, 1864.   His bishop, Monseigneur de Pompignac, named him vicar in Roannes-Saint Mary, where he replaced an ill and aged priest.   He served as a diocesan priest for nine years.   Because of his desire to evangelize distant lands and to ground his spiritual life in the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius, he sought admission to the Society of Jesus and entered the novitiate in Pau on October 31, 1873 at the age of thirty-five.

st jacques berthieu 6

Mission
He sailed from the port of Marseilles in 1875 to two islands in the vicinity of Madagascar that were then under French jurisdiction, Réunion and Sainte-Marie, where he studied Malagasy and prepared himself for the mission.  The beginnings of his missionary life were not easy for this 37-year-old Jesuit.   Climate, language, culture were all totally new things which made him exclaim, “My uselessness and my spiritual misery serve to humiliate me but not to discourage me.   I await the hour when I can do something, with the grace of God”.    Mindful of his farming background, he was happy to cultivate the kitchen garden that supplied the station.   He and two other Jesuits and the Sisters of St. Joseph of Cluny formed a missionary team.   There he was engaged in pastoral work for five years, until March 1880.

Madagascar
In 1881, French legislation closed French territories to Jesuits, a measure which compelled Jacques Berthieu to relocate to the large island of Madagascar, an independent kingdom at that time.   Jacques Berthieu went first to Tamatova and then to Tananarive until his superiors sent him to the far-off mission of Ambohimandroso, near Betsileo.   The outbreak of the first French-Malagasy war in 1883 forced him to depart. From 1886 on, he supervised the mission of Ambositra, 250 km south of Antananarivo. After a stay in Ambositra of five years, he went to Andrainarivo in 1891.   This post was northeast of the capital and had 18 mission-stations to look after, situated in the most remote and inaccessible places.st jacques berthieu-01

Insurrection of 1896
France captured the royal palaces in September 1894 and declared Madagascar its possession, sparking the Menalamba (“red shawl”) revolt against European influence. Europeans and Malagasy Christians were targeted by organized and armed Hova units. Jacques Berthieu sought to place the Christians under the protection of French troops. Deprived of this protection by a French colonel whom Berthieu had chastised for his behaviour with the women of the country, Berthieu led a convoy of Christians towards Antananarivo and stopped in the village of Ambohibemasoandro.   On 8 June 1896, Menalamba fighters entered the village and found Jacques Berthieu hiding in the house of a Protestant friend.   They seized him and stripped him of his cassock.   One of them snatched his crucifix from him, saying: “Is this your amulet? Is it thus that you mislead the people? Will you continue to pray for a long time?”   He responded: “I have to pray until I die.” One of them then struck Berthieu’s forehead with a machete; Berthieu fell to his knees, bleeding profusely. The Menalamba then led him away for what would be a long trek.   After about a ten kilometer march, they reached the village of Ambohitra where the church Berthieu had built was located.   They insisted that it would not be possible for Berthieu to enter the camp because he would desecrate the nearby sampy, the idols held sacred by traditional communities at that time.   They threw a stone at him three times and the third time Berthieu fell prostrate.   Not far from the village, since Berthieu was sweating, a Menalamba took Berthieu’s handkerchief, soaked it in mud and dirty water and tied it around Berthieu’s head, as they jeered at him, shouting: “Behold the king of the Vazaha (Europeans).”   Some then went on to emasculate him, which resulted in a fresh loss of blood that exhausted him._st-berthieu-martyr-de-la-foi

 

Death
As night drew near, in Ambiatibe, a village 50 kilometers north of Antananarivo, after some deliberation, a decision was made to kill Berthieu.   The chief gathered a platoon of six men armed with guns.   At the sight, Jacques Berthieu knelt down.   Two men fired simultaneously at him but missed.   Berthieu made the sign of the cross and bowed his head.   One of the chiefs approached him and said:  “Give up your hateful religion, do not mislead the people anymore and we will make you our counsellor and our chief and we will spare you.”   He replied:  “I cannot consent to this; I prefer to die.”   Two men fired again. Berthieu bowed his head in prayer once more, and they missed him.   Another fired a fifth shot, which hit Berthieu without killing him.   He remained on his knees.   A last shot, fired at close range, finally killed Jacques Berthieu.   His body was dumped into the Mananara River and was never recovered.

 

ST-Jacques-Berthieu-SJ02

As a missionary, Jacques Berthieu described his task thus:  “This is what it means to be a missionary:  to make oneself all things to all people, both interiorly and externally;  to be responsible for  everything, people, animals and things and all this in order to gain souls, with a large and generous heart.”   His many efforts to promote education, to construct buildings, irrigation and gardens and to develop agricultural training all give witness to these words.   He was a tireless catechist.   A young school teacher, who was accompanying him on a journey, noticed that even while on horseback, Berthieu still had his catechism open before him.   The teacher asked him: “Father, why are you still studying the Catechism?” He answered: “My son, the Catechism is a book one can never understand deeply enough, since it contains all of Catholic Doctrine.”   In those days, once on foreign mission, there was no question of returning to one’s country of origin.   “God knows,” Berthieu said, “how much I still love the soil of my country and the beloved land of the Auvergne.   And yet God has given me the grace to love even more these uncultivated fields of Madagascar, where I can only catch a few souls for our Lord…   The mission progresses, even though the fruit is still a matter of hope in some places and hardly visible in others.   But what does it matter, so long as we are good sowers?   God will give growth when the time comes.”

A man of prayer, Jacques Berthieu drew his strength from it.   “Whenever I looked for him,” declared one of the catechists, “I found him almost always on his knees in his room.” Another said:  “I have seen no other Father remain so long before the Blessed Sacrament. Whenever we looked for him, we were sure to find him there.”   A brother of his community also gave this testimony:  “While he was convalescing, each time I entered his room, I found him on his knees, praying.”   His love for God was such that they called him “tia vavaka” (the pious one).   He was always seen with the rosary or the breviary in his hands.   His faith expressed itself in his devotion to the Blessed Sacrament, the Eucharist being the source of his spiritual life.   He also professed a special devotion to the Sacred Heart to which he consecrated himself in Paray-le-Monial before departing for mission and he became the apostle of this devotion among the Malagasy Christians.   A fervent devotee of the Virgin Mary, he went on pilgrimage to Lourdes and the rosary was his favorite prayer;   it was this prayer that he recited while he was being led to his death.   He also venerated Saint Joseph.

As a shepherd, he addressed Christians with the very words of Christ:  “my little children” (Jn 13, 33); as for his executioners, he questioned them with gentleness:  “ry zanako, my children.”   His charity was full of respect for others, even when he had to correct an erring believer.   And yet, he knew how to speak strongly and firmly whenever he judged that the interests of God and of the church were at stake.   He did not hide the demands of Christian life, beginning with the unity and the indissolubility of monogamous marriage.   Polygamy being the usual practice at the time, he denounced the injustice and the abuses it generated, thus creating enemies, especially among the powerful.

On the eve of his death, while he was heading towards the capital with the Christians hunted down by the Menalamba, he was moved with compassion at the sight of a young man with a wounded foot.   Berthieu began looking for carriers, offering a large amount of money for this service but all refused.   Descending from his horse, Berthieu lifted the disabled man onto his mount and despite Berthieu’s own weakness, he himself continued the journey on foot, while pulling the animal by the bridle.  “He was gentle,” declared a witness, “patient, zealous in carrying out his ministry whenever he was called, even when someone called him at midnight or when it was raining heavily.”   In the south of Anjozorofady lived two female lepers.   Whenever he returned from his travels, he would visit them, bring them food and clothes and teach them catechism, until he baptised them.   He considered the accompaniment of the dying in their agony a most important ministry:  “Whether I am eating or sleeping,” he would say, “do not be ashamed to call me, for me there is no stricter obligation than to visit the dying.” … Vatican.va

St Jacques Berthieu, pray for us!

 

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saints’ and Feasts – 8 June

Our Lady of Sunday: Also known as Notre-Dame du Dimanche
About the Apparition: An apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary to Auguste Arnaud on 8 June 1873 and 8 July 1873. Arnaud was married, the father of two, and a winemaker who regularly skipped Sunday Mass to work his vineyards. Our Lady appeared to him in the vineyard on 8 June and reminded him “You must not work on Sundays.” In honour of this blessing, Arnaud placed a cross and a statue of Mary at the site in the field. On 8 July Our Lady appeared again, this time to both Auguste and his neighbors who had gathered there and told them, “You must never work on Sunday! Blessed are those who believe.”
Dates: 8 June and 8 July in 1873
Location: vineyard in Saint-Bauzille-de-la-Sylve, l’Hérault, France
Approval:
1876 by Bishop de Cabrières

St Anne Mary Taigi
St Bron of Cassel
St Calliope
St Clodulf of Metz
Bl Engelbert of Schäftlarn
St Eustadiola of Moyen-Moutier
St Fortunato of Fano
St Gildard of Rouen
Bl Giorgio Porta
Bl Giselbert of Cappenberg
St Heraclius of Sens
Bl István Sándor
St Jacques Berthieu
Bl John Davy
Bl John Rainuzzi
Bl Maddallena of the Conception
Bl Mariam Thresia Chiramel Mankidiyan
St Maximinus of Aix
St Medard of Noyon
St Melania the Elder
St Muirchu
St Pacificus of Cerano
Bl Peter de Amer
Bl Robert of Frassinoro
St Sallustian
St Syra of Troyes
St Victorinus of Camerino
St William of York

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 7 June

Thought for the Day – 7 June

Young Matt Talbot, known as the “saint in overalls,” knelt outside the doors of his church for hours every morning until the doors were opened.
Once inside, he would prostrate himself on the floor in the form of a cross before entering his pew.
Every Sunday, he spent seven hours in Church without moving, (attending all the Masses) – “his arms crossed, his elbows not resting on anything, his body from the knees up as rigid and straight as the candles on the altar,” a biographer writes.   He did this every Sunday for 40 years.
A tremendous son of Our Blessed Mother, in addition to praying the rosary and angelus, one of his favourite little prayers, which he sometimes kept written on his hand, was,
“O Virgin I ask three things from you:
the grace of God,
the presence of God,
the blessing of God”
and
“O blessed Mother, obtain for me from Jesus that I may participate in His folly.”

Most notably, of course, Matt Talbot is known for his total conversion of life away from alcohol addiction, something he described as like “escaping Hell.”
There is evidence that Matt’s first seven years after taking the pledge were especially difficult.   Avoiding his former drinking places was hard.   Only alcoholic men and women who have stopped drinking can fully appreciate how difficult the earliest years of sobriety were for Matt.

He had to take one day at a time.   So do the rest of us BUT as Matt himself said, we can never be lonely on the road for we are not alone!

Venerable Matt Talbot, pray for us.

ven matt talbot pray for us 2

Posted in MORNING Prayers, NOVENAS

St ANTHONY of PADUA NOVENA for all our needs – DAY FOUR – 7 June

St ANTHONY of PADUA NOVENA – DAY FOUR – 7 JUNE

day four st anthony novena

DAY FOUR

I salute and honour you,
O powerful helper, St. Anthony.
The Christian world confidently turns to you
and experiences your tender compassion
and powerful assistance in so many necessities and sufferings
that I am encouraged in my need to seek your help
in obtaining a favourable answer to my request,
for this my special intention in this novena
(State your intention).
O holy St. Anthony, I beseech you,
obtain for me the grace that I desire.

One Our Father, one Hail Mary, and Glory Be to the Father, in honour of Saint Anthony.

Saint Anthony, pray for us!

Posted in EUCHARISTIC Adoration, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Quote/s of the Day – 7 June

Quote/s of the Day – 7 June

“How can anyone be lonely, with Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament?”

how can anyone be lonely - ven matt talbot

“Three things I cannot escape:
the eye of God,
the voice of conscience,
the stroke of death.
In company, guard your tongue.
In your family, guard your temper.
When alone guard your thoughts.”

Venerable Matt Talbot – Memorial today 7 June

three things-ven matt talbot

 

Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 7 June

One Minute Reflection – 7 June

I call heaven and earth today to witness against you: I have set before you life and death, the blessing and the curse.   Choose life, then, that you and your descendants may live by loving the LORD, your God, obeying his voice and holding fast to him…..Deuteronomy 30:19-20

deuteronomy 30 19-20

REFLECTION – “The false gods competing for people’s allegiance today, are associated with the worship of material things, possessive and manipulative forms of love and power.   The cult of material possessions, the cult of possessive love and the cult of power often lead people to attempt to ‘play God,’ to try to seize total control with no regard for the wisdom of the commandments that God has made known to us. This is the path that leads toward death.” …..Pope Benedict XVI whilst visiting a Rehabilitation Centre in 2008

the false gods - pope benedict

PRAYER – Lord, in Your servant, Venerable Matt Talbot you have given us a wonderful example of triumph over addiction, of devotion to duty and charity and commitment to daily prayer. May his life of prayer and penance give us courage to take up our crosses and follow in the footsteps of Our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ. Venerable Matt Talbot please pray for all those who are slaves to addiction and for the whole world, amen.

ven matt talbot pray for us

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SACRED and IMMACULATE HEARTS

Our Morning Offering – 7 June

Our Morning Offering – 7 June

Prayer to the Sacred Heart
by Saint Francis De Sales (1567-1622) Doctor of Charity

May Your heart dwell always in our hearts!
May Your blood ever flow in the veins of our souls!
O sun of our hearts, You give life to all things by the rays of Your goodness!
I will not go, until Your heart has strengthened me, O Lord Jesus!
May the heart of Jesus be the king of my heart!
Blessed be God.  Amen

prayer to the sacred heart by st francis de sales

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 7 June Venerable Matt Talbot OFS

Saint of the Day – 7 June Venerable Matt Talbot OFS (1856 – 1925) (born Matthew Talbot) – Layman, Ascetic, Mystic – known as the “Saint in Overalls” and “the Workers’ Saint”, disciple of Eucharistic Adoration and the Blessed Virgin –  Patron of Struggling and Recovering Addicts and Alcoholics and many addiction treatment programs, retreats and centres throughout the world bear his name.  His grave is at Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Seán McDermott Street, Dublin.

ven matt talbot 6

Ven Matt Talbot lived at an incredibly difficult time.   He and his 13 siblings were born into poverty in Dublin shortly after the Irish Potato Famine.   One million people died from this largely human-made disaster that saw, even while starvation was rampant, the British government’s siphoning off profit from Irish crops and livestock.   Another million people emigrated and alcoholism was rampant among those who stayed behind.

His father beat him, made him change jobs—but nothing could stop Matt’s habit.    After work he and his buddies went straight to the pub.   Matt spent every penny on drink and once pawned his boots for a pint.   Remarkably, his drinking did not prevent his putting in a good day’s work.   And he said that when he was intoxicated he occasionally thought about the Blessed Mother and prayed an off-handed Hail Mary.    Matt believed later that our Holy Mother may have had something to do with his conversion.ven matt talbot and the virgin

One day in 1884, when Matt was 28 years old, an incident occurred that changed his entire life.   For a week he had stayed away from work, drinking heavily.   Saturday found him sober, thirsty and penniless.   But confident that his workmates, for whom he had often bought drink, would come to his assistance, he stood with his brother near O’Meara’s pub on the North Strand to meet his colleagues coming from Pembertons.   The men passed in twos and threes but none stopped to ask the brothers to have a drink. Matt said later that he was “cut to the heart” by this treatment and went home. Mary Andrews, his sister, reported what happened when Matt came home that day:

My mother said, “You’re home early, Matt, and you’re sober!” He replied, “Yes, mother, I am.” After dinner he remained in the house which was not usual, and finally he remarked to my mother. “I’m going to take the pledge.” She smiled and said, “Go, in God’s name, but don’t take it unless you are going to keep it.” He said, “I’ll go, in God’s name.”

As he was going out mother said, “God give you strength to keep it.”   He went to Clonliffe, made his confession, and took the pledge for three months.   He had been a couple of years away from the sacraments then.   Next morning—Sunday—he went to Holy Communion.   On Monday he went to 5 a.m. Mass in Gardiner Street and was at his work as usual at 6 a.m.   This he made a regular practice from that time on.matt talbot young

But after his work, to keep away from his companions, he used to walk to a distant church, either St Joseph’s, Berkeley Road, or St. Peter’s, Phibsboro and remain there until bedtime.

Once or twice—possibly on a Saturday—he went with the men to the public house but he drank only mineral waters and he usually spent Saturday afternoons away from where he might meet his old companions and generally in a church.   He had a bad time of it at first and sometimes said to my mother, that, when the three months were up, he would drink again.

But Matt extended the three months into forty-one years.   His new behaviour flabbergasted everyone.   Matt supported his sobriety with traditional Catholic disciplines such as prayer, frequent communion, weekly confession, spiritual reading, fasting and charitable works.   He also seems to have taken guidance from a wise spiritual director but the person’s name is not known.   In 1891, Matt found community support by joining the Franciscan Third Order.ven matttalbot

Matt often read the Bible and the lives of saints and he also began reading papal encyclicals on social justice and books on the labour movement.   His faith and his concern for the poor led him to action and in 1900 he joined a strike from the Dublin Port & Docks Board to demand a modest raise of sixpence to their daily pay of four and sixpence.   When management refused, he was one of four workers who held out from returning to work while the rest slowly gave in to the financial pressure.

He became a loyal member of Ireland’s Transport and General Workers Union.   When the Dublin Lockout of 1913 led to sympathy strikes throughout the city, Matt consulted a trusted priest as he discerned joining the strike.   The priest encouraged him and Matt joined the strike also came to quote a phrase from a book the priest gave him: “No man has the right to starve a worker into submission.”   During this strike, he refused the strike pay given by the union to ease financial hardship, saying that he had not earned it. Later he accepted the pay but shared it among the other strikers.   Matt was a vocal supporter of James Larkin, a famous union organizer and major figure in Ireland’s labor movement.   One union leader, Stephen McGonagle, described Matt as “a beacon of light to Irish workers.”ven Matt_Talbot_Pray_4ea962f64f642

Prayer and mortification
Matt Talbot mortified himself rigorously.   He slept on a plank bed with a piece of timber for a pillow.   This left his face numb in later years.   He slept in chains which he wore for 14 years before his death, round his leg and on his body.

He prayed each night from 2 to 4 a.m., then dressed and prayed again until it was time to leave for Mass in St. Francis Xavier’s Church.   He would arrive at 5am, if not earlier,and would kneel in prayer at the church’s iron railings, waiting for it to open.   On entering he would kneel and kiss the ground, then make the Stations of the Cross.matt_talbot statue

In 1892 Matt took up employment as a bricklayer’s labourer with the firm of T & C Martin, on the North Wall, where he remained until his death.   He fasted constantly.   His breakfast consisted of cocoa prepared the previous evening by his sister, which he often drank cold.   With this he ate some dry bread.   For his midday meal he had cocoa to which he would add a pinch of tea and again drank cold.   With this he took a slice of bread.   His sister would bring him a small evening meal.   If she brought fish he would insist that she take it home with her and would make do with bread soaked in the fish juice.

On Sundays he remained in the church for every Mass.   Only on returning to his room at about 2 p.m. would he break his fast for the first time since 6.30 p.m. the previous day. The remainder of the day was spent in prayer, reading the Scriptures and the lives of the saints. He gave all his money to neighbours in need and to the missions.POS-F1332_Matt_Talbot_info

Collapsed and died
Matt was on his way to Mass in St Saviour’s on Trinity Sunday, 7 June 1925, when he collapsed and died on Granby Lane.   A paragraph in The Irish Independent of the following day stated, “An elderly man collapsed in Granby Lane yesterday and, on being taken to Jervis Street Hospital, was found to be dead.   He was wearing a tweed suit, but there was nothing to indicate who he was.”

He was buried the following Thursday, the feast of Corpus Christi, in Glasnevin Cemetery.

In 1952 Matt Talbot’s remains were exhumed and transferred to a double coffin bearing the inscription, ‘The Servant of God, Matthew Talbot.’   The coffin was placed in a vault in the central circle of the cemetery to which pilgrims began to flock from all over the world.

In 1972 Matt Talbot’s remains were removed to the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes in Sean McDermott Street.   The tomb has a glass panel through which the coffin may be seen.ven matt talbot coffin

He was declared Venerable by Blessed Pope Paul VI in 1975.

PRAYER for the CANONISATION OF VENERABLE MATT TALBOT

Lord, in your servant, Matt Talbot
you have given us a wonderful example of triumph over addiction,
of devotion to duty and of lifelong reverence of the Holy Sacrament.
May his life of prayer and penance give us courage
to take up our crosses and follow in the footsteps of Our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ.
Father, if it be Your will that Your beloved servant
should be glorified by your Church,
make known by Your heavenly favours
the power he enjoys in your sight.
We ask this through Jesus Christ Our Lord,
in union with the Holy Spirit,
one God forever and ever, Amen.

Anyone who receives a favour through the intercession of Matt Talbot is requested to write to Fr John Flaherty, Vice-Postulator of the Cause, Our Lady 83 Marlborough Street, Dublin 1.shrine ven matt talbot

shrine of matt talbotshrine of matt talbot 1ven matt talbot statue

 

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saints’ Memorials – 7 June

Bl Anne of Saint Bartholomew
St Anthony Mary Gianelli
St Aventinus of Larboust
Bl Basilissa Fernandez
St Colman of Dromore
Bl Demosthenes Ranzi
St Deochar
St Gotteschalk
St Justus of Condat
St Landulf of Yariglia
St Lycarion of Egypt
Venerable Matt Talbot – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PlLa7RqoAIw
St Meriadoc I of Vannes
St Meriadoc II of Vannes
St Odo of Massay
St Potamiaena of Alexandria the Younger
St Quirinus of Cluny
St Robert of Newminster
St Sergius of Cluny
St Vulflagius of Abbeville

Martyrs of Africa – 7 saints: A group of seven Christians who were martyred together. No details about them have survived except the names – Donata, Evasius, Guirillus, Januaria, Privata, Spisinna, Victurus. The precise location in Africa and date are unknown.

Martyred in Córdoba, Spain:
Habentius of Córdoba
Jeremiah of Córdoba
Peter of Córdoba
Sabinian of Córdoba
Wallabonsus of Córdoba
Wistremundus of Córdoba

Posted in ART DEI, EUCHARISTIC Adoration

“Art Dei” Series “The Defenders of the Eucharist” by Peter Paul Rubens, Flemish 1577-1640 Issue 1 – 6 June 2017

Art Dei Series

The Defenders of the Eucharist
by Peter Paul Rubens, Flemish 1577-1640
SN 214 Oil on Canvas c1625

Artist:
Peter Paul Rubens, along with the Italian sculptor Gianlorenzo Bernini, was one of the greatest artists of the 17th century.   His canvases can be said to define the scope and style of high baroque painting through their energy, earthy humanity and inventiveness. A devoutly religious man, a man of learning and a connoisseur of art and antiquities, he was also a man of the world who succeeded not only as an artist but as a respected diplomat in the service of Isabella and Albrecht of the Spanish Netherlands.

Travels to Venice where he studied Titian, Veronese & Tintoretto freed his artistic talent from rigid classicism.   While he did incorporate copies of classical statues in his paintings he always avoided the appearance and coldness of stone.   To the contrary, his nudes, for which he became famous, always depicted an ample female form of vitality and good health as well as of sensuousness.   His mastery of color along with his knowledge of antiquity is seen particularly in his mythological paintings.

As court painter and confidant to the Archduchess Isabella Clara Eugenia, Rubens recognized the role art was to play in the Counter Reformation.   His genius found expression in his designs for the Triumph of the Eucharist tapestries which he and his assistants completed between 1625 and 1628.

Knighted by two monarchs and master of a successful workshop, Rubens became rich and famous in his own time. Having executed over 3,000 paintings, woodcuts and engravings of all types, he died the most respected artist of his time in 1640.

Norbert of Xanten, defender of the Holy Eucharist
The Defenders of the Eucharist
by Peter Paul Rubens, Flemish 1577-1640 Including Sts Jerome, Norbert, Thomas Aquinas, Clare, Gregory the Great, Ambrose, Augustine

Subject:
This painting shows seven saints, all of whom were considered to be defenders of the doctrine of Transubstantiation an integral tenet of the Catholic Church.   From the right the figures represent –

(1) St Jerome, (Feast Day 3 September) noted for his translation of the bible from Hebrew into Latin;  

(2) St Norbert, (Feast Day 6 June) a German archbishop and saint, who preached against dissenters who attacked the Christian sacraments and official clergy;  

(3) St Thomas Aquinas, (Feast Day 28 January) a medieval theologian of the Dominican order, whose writings became the basis for much of the doctrine of the Catholic Church;  

(4) St Clare, (Feast Day 11 August) the founder of the Poor Clares, was a Franciscan heroine who repulsed the Saracens at Assisi by confronting them holding the Host in her hands;

(5) Gregory the Great, (Feast Day 3 September) who established, as Pope, the form of the Roman liturgy;

(6) St Ambrose, (Feast Day 7 December) renowned as both theologian and statesman of the Church, who in an age of controversy, was instrumental in crushing Arianism, a doctrine concerning the relationship of God the Father to Christ which was considered heresy and in direct opposition to orthodox teaching about the Trinity; and

(7) St Augustine, (Feast Day 28 August) perhaps the Church’s most celebrated and influential theologian.

Painting:
Seven Saints, including the four Latin Doctors of the Church, progress with great dignity from right to left, their heads seen in different views in a fashion similar to the heads of the Four Evangelists.   The Dove of the Holy Ghost hovers protectively over the saints in the very center of the composition emitting golden light that illuminates the procession. Above the dove, a putti holds two trumpets to herald the message of the Church Fathers.

Leading the procession are Sts. Ambrose, Augustine and Gregory the Great, all wearing elaborate gold copes.   The first two are crowned with bishop’s mitres, while the third wears the papal tiara.   In the center of the procession, St. Clare carries a monstrance and looks directly out at the viewer. Rubens has shown his patroness, the Archduchess Isabella as St. Clare garbed in the black and white habit of the Discalced Carmalites, clothes she wore at the Convent of the Discalzas Reales in Madrid when she was a girl and later as a widow after her husband the Archduke Albert had died in 1621.

St. Thomas Aquinas follows, a large book under his arm wearing a gold chain from which is hung a blazing sun.   Behind Aquinas is a monk in a white habit who is St. Norbert.   Last in line is St. Jerome the fourth Doctor of the Church dressed in red as a cardinal, intensely reading from a large book.   In the centre of the bottom of the composition, below the apron of the “stage” is a burning lamp (the lamp of truth), open books and writing supplies of ink pots and quill pens, all in reference to the writings of the Church Fathers.

All seven saints were known as defenders of the Eucharist, particularly the Four Doctors of the Church who developed the doctrine of transubstantiation and defended it against heretics.

Historical Context:
The cycle of eleven paintings of The Triumph of the Eucharist was commissioned by the Archduchess Isabella who was the daughter of Philip II of Spain and the Governor of the Spanish Netherlands.  It was planned as a gift for the convent of the Descalzas Reales in Madrid in 1625 where it still hangs today.   This Franciscan Order of Poor Clares was one with which Isabella was closely associated.

The series is a mixture of allegory and religious evangelisation intended to promote the worship of the Eucharist, the bread and wine consecrated as the body and blood of Christ and distributed at communion which had been strengthened recently by the Council of Trent and which constituted an important element in Counter Reformation Catholicism.

This was a time of great concern on the part of the Catholic church as it attempted to correct not only the abuses of the clergy but also to reaffirm its tenets / dogma in the face.

 

Posted in MORNING Prayers, NOVENAS

St Anthony of Padua Novena for all our needs – Day Three 6 June

St Anthony of Padua Novena for all our needs – Day Three 6 June

day three-st anthony novena

DAY THREE

O purest St. Anthony,
who through your angelic virtue
was made worthy to be caressed by the Divine Child Jesus,
to hold him in your arms and press him to your heart.
I entreat you to cast a benevolent glance upon me.
O glorious St. Anthony,
born under the protection of Mary Immaculate,
on the Feast of her Assumption into Heaven
and consecrated to her and now so powerful an intercessor in Heaven,
I beseech you to obtain for me the favour I ask in this novena
(State your intention).
O great wonder-worker, intercede for me that God may grant my request.

One Our Father, one Hail Mary, and Glory Be to the Father, in honour of Saint Anthony.

Saint Anthony, pray for us!

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS for PRIESTS, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Quote of the Day – 6 June

Quote of the Day – 6 June

On the day of his ordination, St Norbert said:

“O Priest! You are not of yourself because you are of God.   You are not of yourself because you are the servant and minister of Christ.
You are not your own because you are the spouse of the Church.
You are not yourself because you are the mediator between God and man.
You are not from yourself because you are nothing.
What then are you? Nothing and everything.
O Priest!   Take care, lest what was said to Christ on the cross be said to you:
‘He saved others, himself he cannot save!”

O Priest! - St Norbert

Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 6 June

Thought for the Day – 6 June

The name of St Norbert’s order is unfamiliar to most but the Premonstratensians are an ancient order, founded in 1121.   His Canons Regular of Premontre made a huge contribution to the religious culture of Europe and athe world and are as active today as they were when they were founded.    One of it’s members, founded and directs the “Church in Need”, which works quietly to assist Catholics in those countries where the faith is suppressed.
St Norbert showed himself to be a forceful reformer and was almost assassinated several times.   He was a friend of, and highly regarded by St Bernard of Clairvaux, who assisted him wherever he could.   Even with the aid of a goodly number of men who joined his Order, he realised that nothing could be effectively done without God’s power.   Finding this help especially in devotion to the Blessed Sacrament, he and his Norbertines praised God for success in converting heretics, reconciling numerous enemies and rebuilding faith in indifferent believers.
St Norbert was 33 years old before he took God seriously and during the next 20 years he made up for lost time.   He did not stop to bewail lost years but gave everything he had to God.   It is never too late to begin and God is always waiting for our service. We do not need a bolt of lightening to get started.
Unswerving loyalty to the Church and fervent devotion to the Eucharist, as practiced by Norbert, will continue immeasurably toward maintaining the people of God in accord with the heart of Christ.

Let us get going!

St Norbert, pray for us.

st norbert pray for us

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 6 June

One Minute Reflection – 6 June

When you have done all you have been commanded to do, say “We are useless servants. We have done no more than our duty.”…………Luke 17:9-10luke-17-9-10.when you have done all you have been - 6 june 2017

 

REFLECTION – “Lord, what do you want me to do?” ……St Norbert

lord what do you want me to do - st norbert

PRAYER – Holy Father, you made the Bishop St Norbert, an outstanding minister of Your Church,
renowned for his preaching and pastoral zeal. for his love of the Blessed Sacrament and for his love of the priesthood. Grant to Your Church faithful shepherds to lead your people to eternal salvation.
St Norbert, help us hear the answer to our prayer “Lord what do you want me to do?” and please pray for us and for the whole Church of our Lord Jesus Christ,amen.

st-norbert-pray-for-us-2-6 JUNE 2017.

Posted in CONSECRATION Prayers, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the CHURCH

Our Morning Offering – 6 June

Our Morning Offering – 6 June

Prayer of Consecration to the Holy Spirit

On my knees before the multitude of heavenly witnesses,
I offer myself, soul and body, to You, eternal Spirit of God.
I adore the brightness of Your purity,
the unerring keeness of Your justice,
and the power of Your love.
You are the strength and light of my soul,
In You I live and move and have my being.
I desire never to grieve You by infidelity to Your grace,
and I pray wholeheartedly to be preserved
from the slightest sin against You.
Make me faithful in my every thought,
and grant that I may always listen to Your voice,
watch for Your light
and follow Your gracious inspirations.
I cling to You
and beg You, in Your compassion,
to watch over me in my weakness.
Holding the pierced feet of Jesus,
gazing as His five wounds,
trusting to His Precious Blood
and adoring His open side and stricken Heart,
I implore You, adorable Spirit,
so to keep me in Your grace
that I may never sin against You.
Grant me the grace,
O Holy Spirit of the Father and the Son,
to say to You always and everywhere:
“Speak, Lord, for Your servant is listening.”
Amen.

consecration-to-the-holy-spirit 6 june 2017

 

Posted in EUCHARISTIC Adoration, Of and For PEACE, PATRONAGE-INFERTILITY & SAFE CHILDBIRTH, PRAYERS for VARIOUS NEEDS, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 6 June – St Norbert (c 1080-1134)”Defender of the Eucharist”

Saint of the Day – 6 June – St Norbert (c 1080-1134) – also known as St Norbert of Xanten – Bishop, Confessor, Founder, “Defender of the Eucharist” and “Apostle of the Eucharist”, Exorcist, Reformer, Preacher – (c1080 at Xanten, Germany – 6 June 1134 at Magdeburg, Germany,  relics in Prague) – Patron for peace, invoked during childbirth for safe delivery, of infertile married couples, Bohemia (Czech Republic), Archdiocese of Magdeburg, Germany – Attributes – monstrance, cross with two cross-bars.St.-Norbertweb

St Norbert was a German from illustrious Frankish and Salic German stock.   Offered as a youth to the collegiate church of St Victor in Xanten, he was educated both in literature and the ways of the court and the world.   At Xanten, he became a Subdeacon and at this period of his life, showed no inclination to pursue the dignity of the Priesthood.   Rather, St Norbert, who was wealthy, handsome, thin and somewhat tall, sought approval in the courts of the great and of the emperor. Known to be an eloquent speaker and possessed of an affability that won him admiration and friendships, St Norbert used these natural gifts, not to seek the glory of God but to gain the love and esteem of men.   His biographer describes him at this period before his conversion as one who “had no time for piety and quiet” and that he “lived his life according to his own desires.”

st norbert 6

But soon life became one of interior strife for St Norbert.   He had witnessed Emperor Henry V’s mistreatment of Pope Paschal II in Rome in 1111, when he travelled there in Frederick of Cologne’s retinue.   These events left St Norbert with a sense of uneasiness he could not dispel.   The man who had been so happy to live at court no longer felt comfortable in that atmosphere of intrigue, where the emperor’s arrogance took the place of law.   He left the court and returned to Xanten, where we find him in 1115.   In late spring of this year, St. Norbert, accompanied by a single servant, was travelling on the road to Freden when a storm suddenly came up.   A bolt of lightning struck the ground before his horse’s feet and he was thrown to the ground.   Shaken, he asked, “Lord what do you want me to do?”   In response, he seemed to hear these words from Psalm 34, “Turn from evil and do good, seek peace and pursue it.”   St Norbert underwent a profound conversion.   Under the influence of grace and led by the Gospel, he became sure of one thing:  he wanted to put on the new man (Eph. 4:24; Col. 3:10) and live a life of perfection in the service of the Church, according to the Gospel of Christ and in the footsteps of the Apostles.

From the beginning of his conversion, St Norbert aimed at a life of priestly perfection through imitation of the Apostles.   He sought ordination to the priesthood and gave his considerable wealth to the poor, in order “that he may follow the naked cross naked”  ( Vita Norberti B, IX 22).   Inflamed with the zeal of divine fervour, St Norbert went about with “no purse, no sandals nor two tunics,” (Mk. 6:8) proclaiming by his words and example the necessity of poverty of spirit in order to enter the kingdom of God.   As Christ had sent out his Apostles not only “to proclaim the message,” but also “to have authority to cast out demons,” (Mk. 3:15)   St Norbert was well known as an exorcist and his biographer records many instances when he was called upon to exercise this office. Regarded as a “minister of peace and concord,” he had the gift of reconciling people and establishing peace between feuding parties.

At the centre of St Norbert’s spiritual life and ministry was the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.   Contrary to custom of his times, he celebrated Mass every day and it was after offering the Eucharistic sacrifice that he loved to preach, while his heart was overflowing with the love he had drawn from intimate contact with Christ.   The Acts of the Apostles record how the first Christians “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers,” (2:42) and that “the whole group of those who believed were of one heart and soul” (4:32).   St Norbert sought to realise the fullness of this Apostolic ideal in the founding of a new religious family.

st norbert 7

In 1121, St Norbert established the first monastery of our Order in Prémontré, France.   He had a great talent to speak to people, to fill people with enthusiasm for the kingdom of God, so much so that in a short period of time he was able to attract many men and women to the Apostolic Life and to start many foundations of religious communities of this “ordo novus”.   Liturgical prayer held a central place in the life of Norbert and his first companions.   The Eucharist, the heart of liturgical prayer occupied such a place at Prémontré and in the life of St Norbert that later tradition made Norbert the Apostle of the Eucharist.   His order, the Premonstratensian or Norbertine Canons and Sisters are today in Europe, the US, Canada, South America, Zaire, South Africa, India and Australia are involved in education, parochial ministry, university chaplaincy and youth work.

Norbert-Tree-768x1022

In 1126, St Norbert was elected archbishop of Magdeburg, Germany.   He worked for the kingdom of God on all levels and ready to commit himself to peace and justice, did not shy away from arguments and conflicts, neither in his own diocese nor in the conflict between emperor and pope, as he courageously defended the rights of the Church.800px-Maria_Anger_-_St.Norbert_2

st norbert Episcopal-Ordination-768x867

St Norbert died on 6 June 1134, the Wednesday after Pentecost.   By order of the emperor, his body was laid at rest in Abbey Church of St. Mary’s at Magdeburg, where he had installed the confreres of his Order.   St Norbert’s body was transferred to the Norbertine Abbey of Strahov in Prague in 1627 after numerous attempts were made over the centuries by the Abbey of Strahov in Prague to retrieve the saint’s body.   Only after several military defeats at the hand of Emperor Ferdinand II was the abbot of Strahov able to claim the body.   On 2 May 1627 the body was finally brought to Prague where it remains to this day, displayed in a glass-fronted tomb in the Royal Canonry of Strahov, Prague and is venerated by his sons and daughters from all over the world.   As mentioned above, St. Norbert is venerated as the “Apostle and Defender of the Eucharist.”   He is usually depicted with a ciborium or monstrance in his hand on account of his extraordinary devotion to the Most Blessed Sacrament.   St Norbert is also a patron of childbirth/expectant mothers, as well as traditionally invoked by married couples who want to conceive a child, with many favours attributed to his intercession.

Death-of-St.-Norbert-edited

376c6683d8f67b7be6126d2db0e60df1
Shrine of St. Norbert, Royal Canonry of Strahov, Prague

Why is St Norbert Patron of Expectant Mothers & Infertile Married Couples?

A pious woman once approached St Norbert asking whether she and her husband ought to separate and enter monasteries because they lived in an infertile marriage.   St Norbert prophesied that they would be blessed with children, the first of whom would be dedicated to God.   This child, Nicholas, did indeed become a Norbertine at Prémontré.    St Norbert is traditionally invoked for a good childbirth. The Norbertine Canonesses at Doksany (Czech Republic) in modern times promote this devotion to St. Norbert as patron of infertile couples or endangered pregnancies and report hundreds of families now blessed with children, the sisters having well over 3,000 spiritual children as of 2012.

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A Prayer to St. Norbert for a Good Childbirth

St. Norbert, great and faithful servant of God!
You venerated the holy and miraculous birth of our Saviour,
Who His Mother, the purest Virgin Mary,
conceived without the loss of her virginity
and gave birth remaining a virgin.
You connected the origin of the Premonstratensian Order
with the day of the birth of Jesus Christ.
I humbly pray to you, St. Norbert,
as a great protector, so that God will give me the grace,
through your intercession,
to give birth to this conceived child.
And so that He will give me also the grace
that this child will join the Church of Christ
through the sacrament of Baptism
and that he/she will serve Him, Our Lord,
the whole of his/her life
so that in the end we both will reach eternal salvation.
Through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Amen.

(Translated from The Little Hours, 1749, by one of our Norbertine Sisters at Doksany)

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saints – 6 June

St Norbert of Magdeburg (Optional Memorial)

St Agobard of Lyon
St Alexander of Fiesole
St Alexander of Noyon
St Amantius of Noyon
St Anoub of Skete
St Artemius of Rome
St Bazalota of Abyssinia
St Bertrand of Aquileia
St Candida of Rome
St Ceratius of Grenoble
St Claudius of Besançon
St Cocca
St Colmán of Orkney
Bl Daniel of Bergamo
St Euphemia of Abyssinia
St Eustorgius II of Milan
Bl Falco of La Cava
Bl Gerard Tintorio
Bl Gilbert of Neufontaines
St Grazia of Germagno
St Gudwall
Bl Gundisalvus of Azebeyro
St Hilarion the Younger
St Jarlath of Tuam
St John of Verona
Bl Józef Wojciech Guz
Bl Lorenzo de Masculis
St Marcelino Champagnat
St Paulina of Rome
St Phêrô Dung
St Phêrô Thuan
St Rafael Guízar y Valencia
St Vincent of Bevagna
St Vinh-Son Duong
Bl William Greenwood

Marytrs of Tarsus: A group of 20 martyrs who were killed together during the persecutions of Diocletian. They were martyred in Tarsus (in modern Turkey).

Posted in MORNING Prayers, NOVENAS

St Anthony of Padua Novena for all our needs – Day Two – 5 June

St Anthony of Padua Novena for all our needs – Day Two – 5 June

day two - st anthony of padua novena

DAY TWO

O miracle-working St. Anthony,
remember that it never has been heard,
that you left without help or relief anyone
who in his need had recourse to you.
Animated now with the most lively confidence,
even with full conviction of not being refused,
I fly for refuge to thee, O most favoured friend of the Infant Jesus.
O eloquent preacher of the divine mercy,
despise not my supplications
but, bringing them before the throne of God,
strengthen them by your intercession
and obtain for me the favour I seek in this novena
(State your intention).

One Our Father, one Hail Mary, and Glory Be to the Father, in honor of Saint Anthony.

Saint Anthony, pray for us!