Thought for the Day – 11 May – The Imitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary By Thomas à Kempis (1380-1471)
Extracts from The Imitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary By Thomas à Kempis CRSA (1380-1471) Imprimatur 17 February 1947
Chapter III VIRTUES AND TASKS OF A GOOD SERVANT OF MARY
i. Do you always wish to do what is pleasing to Mary? Be humble, patient, chaste, reserved in everything, full of mildness, an interior man, filled with zeal, little versed in exterior matters, recollected. Read often, write often but most often, pray. The service of Mary should seem, neither long nor laborious but, on the contrary always delightful, always full of happiness, always eager. To serve with your heart and mind, such a mistress, is always a work pious and useful for salvation. The most lowly offerings are acceptable to her, as equivalent to the most solemn, when they are proffered with love, with spontaneity and with devotion. She knows how little we are able to give and she requires not the impossible from her children. A merciful sovereign and queen of mildness, she is, above all, a mother. As a mother, she knows only how to be compassionate to the little and the poor, she who has given to the world, Mercy in Jesus.
ii. Learn then to call upon Jesus in everything and you will be aided, both in perils of the soul and of the body. Have Jesus always in your heart, in happiness, and you will never be overcome by human distress. Say the Hail Mary often – you will find joy and peace in it – no prayer is more beautiful than the Our Father – none is sweeter and gentler, than the Hail Mary. Pray as the Angel prayed before Mary – work as a faithful servant works and you shall have, your crown and mansion in Heaven. He who knows how to nourish his soul with prayer, he who knows how to pray with the sacred texts, will never know aridity in devotion. Strive thus constantly, to honour the Names of Jesus and Mary in your heart and with your lips.
III. Wherever you may go, or wherever you may be, implore Jesus and call upon Mary. Have, as a rule of life and, as a help in time ot need, this pious invocation – “Guide, O my Lord, always guide my way in Thy presence.” He who bears Jesus and Mary in his heart, always works well, always conducts himself well. Sing these two Names, sing them in your heart, sing them with your lips, sing them with your hands. Let your looks seek them, let your eyes implore them, let your arms embrace them, let your knees adore them.
iv. Prayer: O Mary, O Mother Full of Mercy,
O Mary, O Mother full of mercy, receive close to thee, thy servant wandering without consolation, in the midst of his trials. Look, O my Queen, look at my affliction and open to me, thine heart full of consolation. Here I am, praying and saying in my distress that I shall not cease, nor leave thee, until thou hast had pity on me. I know, O Mother, thine incomparable sweetness, I know the maternal flame of thy noble heart, I know the fullness of love which fils it and that I may have full hope in thee. I take refuge with thee too, O my Mother, so that in joy as in sorrow, I may receive thy watchful succour and listen to thy maternal consolation.
(Thomas à Kempis, The Valley of Lilies,ChapterXIII)
Quote/s of the Day – 11 May – James 5:16-20, Luke 11:5-13
“Ask and it shall be given you: s seek and you shall find: knock and it shall be opened to you. ”
Luke 11:9
“The more I contemplate God, the more God looks upon me. The more I pray to Him, the more He thinks of me too.”
St Bernard (1090-1153) Father & Mellifluous Doctor of the Church
“By the practice of prayer, we can construct an impregnable citadel, in which we shall be securely protected against all the snares of the enemy.”
St Lawrence Justinian (1381-1455)
“In prayer one must hold fast and never let go, because the one who gives up, loses all. If it seems that no-one is listening to you, then cry out even louder. If you are driven out of one door, go back in by the other.”
One Minute Reflection – 11 May – “The Month of the Blessed Virgin Mary” –Rogation Day – Ferial Day – Jasme 5:16-20 – Luke 11:5-13 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“Ask and it shall be given you: seek and you shall find: knock and it shall be opened to you. ” – Luke 11:9
REFLECTION – “Whatever you shall ask.” Then why do we often see believers asking and not receiving? Perhaps it is that they do not ask correctly. When a person would make a bad use of what he asks for, God in His Mercy, does not grant him it. It is even more the case, that if someone asks what would, if answered, only tend to his injury, there is surely greater cause to fear, in case what God could not withhold with kindness, He should give in His anger. Still, if God even in kindness, often refuses the requests of believers, how are we to understand “Whatever you shall ask in My Name, I will do?” Was this said to the Apostles only? No. He says …, “He who believes in Me, the works that I do he shall do also.” And if we go to the lives of the Apostles themselves, we shall find that he who laboured more than them all, prayed that the messenger of Satan might depart from him but was not granted his request.
Wake up then, believer and note what is stated here: “In My Name.” That [Name] is Christ Jesus. Christ signifies King, Jesus signifies Saviour. Therefore, whatever we ask for that would hinder our salvation, we do not ask in our Saviour’s Name and yet, He is our Saviour, not only when He does what we ask but also, when He does not. When He sees us ask anything to the disadvantage of our salvation, He shows Himself our Saviour by not doing it. The physician knows whether what the sick person asks for, is to the advantage or disadvantage of his health. And [the physician] does not allow what would be harmful to him, although the sick person himself, desires it. But the physician looks to his final cure.
And some things we may even ask in His Name and He will not grant them to us, at the time, although He will sometime. What we ask for is deferred, not denied. He adds, “that the Father may be glorified in the Son.” The Son does not do anything without the Father, inasmuch as He does it, in order that the Father may be glorified in the Son, for the Father and Son are One.” – St Augustine (354-430) Great Western Father and Doctor of Grace of the Church (Tractates on the Gospel of John, 73)
PRAYER – Grant, we beseech Thee, O Almighty God, that we, who in our tribulation are yet of good cheer because of Thy loving-kindness, may find Thee mighty to save from all dangers. Through 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).
Our Morning Offering – 11 May – “The Month of the Blessed Virgin Mary”
Blessed Virgin Mary, Holy Mary! By St Augustine (354-430) Father & Doctor of the Church
Blessed Virgin Mary, who can worthily repay thee with praise and thanksgiving for having rescued a fallen world by thy generous consent! Receive our gratitude and by thy prayers, obtain the pardon of our sins. Take our prayers into the sanctuary of Heaven and enable them to make our peace with God. Holy Mary, help the miserable, strengthen the discouraged, comfort the sorrowful, pray for thy people, plead for the clergy, intercede for all women consecrated to God. May all who venerate thee, feel now, thy help and protection. Be ready to help us when we pray and bring back to us, the answers to our prayers. Make it thy continual concern, to pray for the people of God, for thou were blessed by God and were made worthy to bear the Redeemer of the world, Who lives and reigns forever. Amen
Saint of the Day – 11 May – St Francesco de Girolamo (1642-1716) SJ Priest, Apostolic Missionary of the Society of Jesus, who spent more than 40 years teaching, preaching Naples and its surrounds leading to his being titled “The Apostle of Naples.” His life was one of total service to all in humility and the most zealous care, espeically of the needy, of prisoners, sailors, the youth and women of ill-repute. He was an intellectual giant, scholar and a Miracle-worker. Born on 17 December 1642 at Grottaglie, Apulia, near Taranto, Italy and died on 11 May 1716 at Naples. Also known as – “The Apostle of Naples” Francis di Girolamo, Francis de Geronimo, Francesco de Hieronymo, Franciscus di Hieronymo, Francis Jerome.
The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Grottaglia, in the Diocese of Taranto, St Francesco de Giroliamo, Confessor, of the Society of Jesus, renowned for his zeal for the salvation of souls and for his patience. He was Canonised by Pope Gregory XVI. The day of his death is celebrated with great solemnity in the Church of the Professed House at Naples where his body rests.”
St Francesco was born in Grottaglie (Taranto) on 17 December 1642, the 1st of 11 children, 3 of whom became Priests, to a wealthy family of profound Christian faith.
He was fortunate to find in his native town, a school of letters and piety which benefited him greatly until the age of 17. In fact, at about the age of 10 years, he was entrusted to a Congregation of Priests dedicated to teaching and preaching missions to the faithful.
Young St Francesco, rather than being admitted merely to school, had the privilege of living with these pious Priests, who soon entrusted him with the care of the Church as the Sacristan and the teaching of Catechism to the children. He also sometimes accompanied the Priests on missions, helping them with the instruction of Catechism to the young.
At the age of 16 om 1658, St Francesco was given the first tonsure at the proposal of the same Congregation and at 17 he was received into the Diocesan Seminary in Taranto, to continue his studies, now definitively destined for the Priesthood. He attended courses in rhetoric, science and philosophy at the schools of the Jesuit College, being Ordained Sub-Deacon in 1664 and sometime later Deacon.
In 1665 St Francesco went to Naples, on the advice of his own teachers, to attend courses in civil and canon law, obtaining a Degree in these subjects, apparently in 1668 and in theology.
In order not to be a burden on the family budget, St Francesco requested and obtained, a position as Assistant to the young students at the highest College of the Neapolitan Jesuits. Meanwhile, in 1666, while studying theology, he was Ordained a Priest and in 1670 he became a Jesuit before completing his theological studies. He completed them a few years later in order to take the examination in universa philosophia et theologia, required by the Order’s Constitutions for the solemn Profession of the four vows.
From 1671 to 1674, he served in apostolic ministry in Puglia, particularly in the Diocese of Lecce. Just as his excellent intellectual gifts and virtues had already been demonstrated in his life as a student and Assistant to young people, to the point of being called the ‘holY’ Priest by the young, so too in his apostolic activity his qualities as a zealous apostle and effective preacher, were revealed.
Once he returned to Naples to complete his theological studies, he remained there for his entire life, Assigned to the popular missions which made him an Apostle of Naples and replaced the missions to India and the East which he had insistently requested. He made his solemn Religious Profession (8 December 1682) at the height of his Neapolitan apostolate, having been assigned since 1676 to the Casa Professa del Gesù Nuovo with all the duties inherent to the Office entrusted to him. It was essentially a threefold Office: the missions to the faithful which consisted of sermons held in the squares and along the streets, where large crowds gathered on Feast Days, which were quite numerous; general Communion every 3rd Sunday of the month, also prepared with open-air sermons and with his assistants, led the multitudes to the Church of the Gesù, where numerous Priests were already on standby to hear Confessions and the conversion of women from wicked lives.
This was one aspect of his public missions but what was special about it was that he entered the neighbourhoods where the homes which sheltered the unfortunate, were most numerous and began preaching under their windows.
His biographers recall many cases, sometimes miraculous, of conversions or repentance among these women.
But this threefold role did not exhaust the missionary’s activity, as he extended his apostolate to all those in need, such as ship workers, prisoners, the sick and the men of his congregation of artisans, a kind of Catholic circle or Confraternity which was of invaluable assistance to him in his missions and in organising, as mentioned, the general Communions on the 3rd Sunday of the month.
Although the City of Naples was his missionary field for about forty years, his apostolic zeal did not end there, as he is known to have taken part in missions many times in other regions of the Kingdom of Naples, such as Abruzzo, Puglia, and Sannio . Above all, however, Naples and its surroundings benefited from his work and were strongly influenced by his miracle-working holiness, as demonstrated by the events of 1707, when the Austrian Army occupied Naples, driving out the Spanish under Philip V. As was often the case in similar circumstances, the people gave way to revolts and looting. That time, however, St Francesco’s moral authority succeeded in averting the danger or significantly limiting it. Indeed, it seems that he helped prevent the Spanish barricaded in the fortresses from bombarding the City, acting as a mediator, as the Canonisation processes attests.
Another apostolic activity of St Francesco deserves mention i.e. his spiritual exercises for various classes of the people: Monasteries of nuns, Youth Centres, prisoners and ‘galley slaves.’ Everywhere he carried warm words of faith and love, inflamed as he was with a burning charity, especially toward Jesus Christ in the Eucharist and his most Holy Mother.
Among the devotions St Francesco favoured and spread ,a particular one was to St. Cyrus, Physician and Martyr, whose body rests in the Chapel of the same name in the Church of the Gesù Nuovo in Naples. He carried a Relic of the Saint with him on his missions and attributed to it all the miracles he performed during his sermons, although many contemporary witnesses believe that God worked miracles through our Saints own virtues and that he, in his humility, hid behind the healing power of St Cyrus. This testimony serves to demonstrate the esteem in which his virtues were held by his contemporaries, who, moreover, unanimously affirmed the sanctity of his life in all the Canonisation processes which began just a few years after his death, which occurred in Naples on 11 May 1716.
St Francesco was Beatified by Pope Pius VII on 2 May 1806, when the Jesuits, at the request of King Ferdinand IV of Bourbon, were recognised for the Kingdom of Naples (the Order was restored in 1814).
He was then Canonised by Pope Gregory XVI on 26 May 1839, and his Feast Day was set on the day of his death. His body, transferred to the Chapel named after him in the Church of Gesù Nuovo in Naples which was enriched by the sculptor Jerace with an artistic Statue of the Saint preaching, remained there until after the Second World War, when it was moved to the Jesuit Church in Grottaglie, the Saint’s birthplace.
ROGATION DAY AND today is the Feast Day of the Founder of these Days when we pray the Litanies: St Mamertus (Died c477) Archbishop of Vienne, France, Theologian, Writer, Founder of the introduction of the praying of Litanies prior to Ascension Day, called “Rogation Days.” Rogation days are days of prayer and fasting in the Church. They are observed with processions and the praying of the Litany of the Saints. The major Rogation is held on 25 April, the minor Rogations are held on Monday to Wednesday, preceding Ascension Thursday. The word Rogation comes from the Latin verb rogare, meaning “to ask,” which reflects the beseeching of God, for the appeasement of His anger and for protection from calamities. Rogation St Mammertus: https://anastpaul.com/2019/05/11/saint-of-the-day-11-may-st-mamertus-died-c-475/
St Anastasius of Lérida St Anthimus of Rome St Bassus of Sabina St Bertilla St Criotan of MacReddin Bl Diego of Saldaña St Evellius of Pisa St Fabius of Sabina St Francesco de Girolamo (1642-1716) SJ Priest St Fremund of Dunstable St Gengulphus of Burgundy
St Mozio of Constantinople St Possessor of Verdun St Principia of Rome St Tudy St Vincent L’Hénoret Bl Vivaldus St Walbert of Hainault
Martyrs of Camerino: An imperial Roman official, his wife, their children and servants, all of whom were converts and martyrs: Anastasius, Aradius, Callisto, Eufemia, Evodius, Felice, Primitiva, Theopista.
Martyrs of Carcassona – 14 Beati:
Martyrs of Osimo: Diocletius Florentius Sisinius
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