Posted in GOD ALONE!, QUOTES on HEAVEN, QUOTES on Lukewarmness, QUOTES on SANCTITY, QUOTES on SLOTH, QUOTES on THE WORLD

Thought for the Day –30 December – Dissipation

Thought for the Day –30 December – Meditations with Antonio Cardinal Bacci (1881-1971)

Dissipation

“Imagine the death of the dissipated man.
When he reaches the end of his earthly journey, it will seem to him as if he has awakened from a dream.
Everything is over now.
Gone forever are the objects of desire which he exerted himself so feverishly to acquire.
He is alone before God.
Money, ease and pleasure, have vanished, like snow melting in the sun.

Please God, we shall never experience this fearful re-awakening.
Let us rouse ourselves now, from our spiritual torpor, while there is still time, .
May God be our first thought and our first desire.
May constant prayer, detachment from the world and steady progress in perfection, win for us the everlasting happiness of Heaven.

Antonio Cardinal Bacci

PART ONE:
https://anastpaul.com/2021/12/30/thought-for-the-day-30-december-dissipation/
PART TWO:
https://anastpaul.com/2022/12/30/thought-for-the-day-30-december-dissipation-2/

Posted in CHRIST the LIGHT, CHRIST the SUN of JUSTICE, CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, CHRIST, the WAY,TRUTH,LIFE, CHRISTMAS Prayers & Hymns, CHRISTMAS Quotes, DECEMBER - The DIVINE INFANCY and The IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, QUOTES on DEATH, QUOTES on ETERNAL LIFE, QUOTES on GRACE, QUOTES on JOY, QUOTES on PEACE, Quotes on SALVATION, QUOTES on UNITY/with GOD, The DIVINE INFANT, The HEART

Quote/s of the Day – 30 December – Our only Light – Deo Gratias!

Quote/s of the Day – 30 December – The Sixth Day Within the Octave of the Nativity of our Lord

With hearts truly grateful,
Come, all ye faithful,
To Jesus, to Jesus in Bethlehem;
See Christ your Saviour,
Heaven’s greatest favour.
Let us hasten to adore Him;
Our God and King.

DEO GRATIAS!

Open wide your door to the One who comes.
Open your soul,
throw open the depths of your heart
to see the riches of simplicity,
the treasures of peace,
the sweetness of grace.
Open your heart
and run to meet
the Sun of Eternal Light
Who illuminates all men.

St Ambrose (340-397)
Father and Doctor of the Church

Listen! the reason He is called Saviour
is because, for all those
to whom He is united,
He gains salvation.
Now salvation means,
to be delivered from all ills and,
at the same time,
to find all blessings forever –
Life instead of death,
Light in place of darkness
and, instead of the slavery
of the passions and unworthy deeds,
the complete freedom granted
to all those, who are united to Christ,
Saviour of all beings.
Thus they will possess,
without being able to lose it,
all joy, all happiness, all blessedness …
that that none can ever know,
or conceive, or see,
if not sincerely and ardently
attached to Christ.”

St Symeon the New Theologian (c 949-1022)

Taking up the newborn Emmanuel,
Mary beheld a Light incomparably fairer
than the sun and saw a Fire
that water cannot quench.
She received, in the covering of flesh
Whom she had borne,
the Light Who enlightens all things
and she was worthy,
to carry in her arms,
the Word Who carries the universe!
” ”

St Amadeus of Lausanne (1108-1159)
Bishop, Cistercian Monk

(Homilies in praise of the Blessed Virgin Mary IV SC 72)

Posted in CHRIST the LIGHT, CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, CHRISTMAS Quotes, franciscan OFM, ONE Minute REFLECTION, The NATIVITY of JESUS, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 30 December – Saint Francis and the first Christmas Crib at Greccio in 1223

One Minute Reflection – 30 December – “The Month of the Divine Infancy and the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary” – The Sixth Day Within the Octave of the Nativity of our Lord – Titus 3:4-7, Luke 2:15-20 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/

And they came with haste and they found, Mary and Joseph and the Infant lying in the manger. ” – Luke 2:16

REFLECTION – “About two weeks before Christmas, Francis said: … “I wish to call to mind, the Child Who was born at Bethlehem and all the sufferings He endured, from His childhood … I wish to see Him with the eyes of my flesh, just as He was, laid in a manger and sleeping on the hay between an ox and an ass”…

The joyful day arrived … The Friars from several Convents thereabouts were gathered together. In festive spirit the people round about, both men and women, all according to their means, made torches and candles ready with which to illuminate the night which saw the bright star arise, to light up all the ages!
When he arrived the Saint saw that all was ready and rejoiced greatly. A manger and some straw had been brought; an ass and an ox had been led along. Truly, simplicity held the place of honour there; it was the triumph of poverty and best lesson in humility. Greccio had become a new Bethlehem! Night had been rendered as bright as day and as delightful for the animals, as for the people. Crowds had hastened along and this re-enactment of the Mystery re-animated their joy. The woods resounded with songs and the mountains threw back their echoes. The brethren sang the Lord’s praises and the whole night was spent in rejoicing. The Saint passed the night watch standing before the crib, broken with compassion, filled with inexpressible happiness. Finally, Mass was celebrated on the manger as on an Altar and the Priest experienced fervour of a kind he had never felt before.

Francis had put on his Dalmatic, for he was a Deacon and he sang the Gospel with resonant voice … Then he preached to the people, finding words as sweet as honey, to speak of the birth of the poor King and the little Town of Bethlehem.” – Servant of God Thomas of Celano OFM (c1185-1260) Biographer of Saint Francis and Saint Clare (The First Life of Saint Francis, #84-86).

PRAYER – Grant, we beseech Thee, Almighty God that the new birth, in the flesh, of Thine Only-begotten Son, may deliver us, whom the bondage of old keeps under the yoke of sin. Through the same Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, Who lives and reigns with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end. Amen (Collect).

Posted in CHRISTMAS Prayers & Hymns, DECEMBER - The DIVINE INFANCY and The IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, FATHERS of the Church, HYMNS, Our MORNING Offering, POETRY, The DIVINE INFANT

Our Morning Offering – 30 December – Afar from Where the Sun Doth Rise – A Solis Ortus Cardine

Our Morning Offering – 30 December – “The Month of the Divine Infancy and the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary” –The Sixth Day Within the Christmas Octave

Afar from Where the Sun Doth Rise
A Solis Ortus Cardine
By Coelius Sedulius (Died c 450)

Trans Msgr Ronald A Knox (1888-1957)

Afar from where the sun doth rise
To lands beneath the western skies,
Homage to Christ our King we pay,
Born of a Virgin’s womb this day

Blessed Creator, Thou didst take__
A servant’s likeness for our sake,
And didst in flesh our flesh restore
To bid Thy creature live once more.

Chaste was the womb where Thou didst dwell,
Of heavenly grace the hidden cell;
Nor might the blessed Maid proclaim
Whence her dread Guest in secret came.

Down from on high God came to rest__
His glory in a sinless breast;
Obedience at His word believed,
And virgin innocence conceived.

Ere long, that holy child she bore
By Gabriel’s message named before,
Whom yet unborn, with eager pride,
The swift forerunner prophesied.

Fast doth He sleep, where straw doth spread,
A humble manger for His bed.
A Mother’s milk that strength renewed,
Which gives the birds of heaven their food.

Glory to God, the angels cry;
Earth hears the echo from on high;
Mankind’s true Shepherd and it’s Lord
By shepherd hearts is first adored.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 30 December – Saint Raoul of Vaucelles O.Cist. (Died 1152)

Saint of the Day – 30 December – Saint Raoul of Vaucelles O.Cist. (Died 1152) Cistercian Priest, Abbot and Founder of Vaucelles Abbey under the instruction of St Bernard (1090-1153) the Doctor of Clairvaux. Born in Sussex, England and died in 1152 of natural causes at the Monastery which he had founded in France. Also known as – Radulphe, Ralph, Raul. There are sadly no available images of our Saint.

Cistercian Monks

The Abbey, whose foundation was desired by St Bernard himself, included within its walls, the largest Cistercian Abbey Church in the world, is located in the Municipality of Rues-des-Vignes, was suppressed along with all other Catholic Churches, Monasteries and Convents) during the French Revolution.

Saint Raoul, who is believed to have been born in Merston, Sussex in England, was a Priest, who had been entrusted with a Parish in his own Country. Returning from a trip to Italy, Raoul stopped at the Clairvaux Abbey, and was fortunate enough to meet St Bernard along with the Monks of his community.

Raoul became deeply enthusiastic about this way of living his religious calling and he decided not to return to England and asked to become a Novice in that very Monastery.

In 1132, shortly after having pronounced his vows, he was sent by St Bernard together St Richard (Died 1169 – Feast day 28 January), another English Priest who had followed him in entering the Order,and with other Monk, to found the Abbey of Vaucelles, in the Diocese of Cambrai. Raoul was the main protagonist in the construction of the Abbey, whose Church was Consecrated in 1149 by Samson, the Bishop of Reims.

Cistercians at work in a detail from the Life of St Bernard

Saint Raoul was considered a model for his Monks as he personally trained them with the word and with the example of an upright religious life. He also had the temporal well-being of the Abbey under his care and at heart, so much so, that during his governance, the community began to prosper rapidly.

The story of the miracle of the endless wheat is also handed down about our Saint. During a severe famine, Raoul managed to guarantee the subsistence of a large number of poor people. And even when the grain diminished rapidly and he was advised to be prudent in his donations, he replied that as long as there was grain in the Monastery, he would feed all the unfortunate people who came along and, if the grain was not enough, he would also feed the hungry with the livestock of the Abbey.

We know that when he died, after twenty years of his Abbacy, his community was made up of over two hundred Monks.

Saint Raoul was buried in the chapter hall of the Monastery.
After the Lateran Council, his body together with that of St Richard the second Abbot and that of Nicholas the third Abbot, was moved to the cloister near the door of the Abbey by Abbot Adelgo, who governed the fate of the Monastery between 1166 and 1181.

The Feast day for St Raoul, in the Cistercian Menologium, was set for today, 30 December.

Monastery of Vaucelles
Posted in ART DEI, MARIAN TITLES, SAINT of the DAY

The Sixth Day of the Octave of Christmas, Madonna of San Luca / Our Lady of Saint Luke of La Guardia, Italy (433) and Memorials of the Saints – 30 December

The Sixth Day of the Octave of Christmas

St Anysia of Thessalonica
St Anysius of Thessalonica

St Elias of Conques
St Eugene of Milan
St Geremarus

St Hermes of Moesia
St Jucundus of Aosta
St Liberius of Ravenna

St Perpetuus of Tours
St Raoul of Vaucelles O.Cist. (Died 1152) Abbot

St Richard of Wedinghausen
St Ruggero of Canne
St Sebastian of Esztergom