Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 8 April

Thought for the Day – 8 April

Many faithful Catholics resisted the French Revolution’s anticlericalism and the destruction of the church.    But perhaps the most outstanding opponent of the Jacobins, and certainly the most unusual, was St. Julie Billiart, for she was paralysed and conducted her defiance from her bed.   Overcoming obstacles seems to be part of the business of holiness and sainthood.  St Julie was not only paralysed and crippled but she suffered complete loss of speech!   Somehow, she managed to lead and inspire others in spite of her infirmities.   Nothing is impossible for those who love and trust God – miracles happen and with God and doing His work, remarkable things are accomplished!   Each of us has limitations but the worst malady any of us can suffer is the spiritual paralysis that keeps us from doing God’s work on earth.   So what is stopping us?

St Julie Billiart, pray for us!

ST JULIE BILLIART PRAY FOR US 2ST JULIE BILLIART - APRIL 8

 

 

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

Quote/s of the Day – 8 April

Quote/s of the Day – 8 April

“Nothing happens by chance;
it is always the disposition of God.”

“Our path has been marked out for us,
let us walk along it bravely,
remembering that Jesus goes before us.”

“How good is the good God who tries us!
If we live by crosses, we shall die of love.”

“Praise be Jesus and His holy cross.
Let us love it, let us carry it .
May this be our happiness
for time and eternity.”

St Julie Billiart (Saint of the Day)

QUOTES OF ST JULIE BILLIART

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

One Minute Reflection – 8 April

One Minute Reflection – 8 April

By his ‘will’, we have been sanctified
through the suffering of the body of
Jesus Christ……….Hebrews 10:10

 

REFLECTION – “God’s infinite power, His profound wisdom and the reign of His justice were known.
However, the dimensions of His clemency were not yet known. Jesus came as interpreter of the Divinity.”……….St Bernard

PRAYER – Merciful Father, let me not spurn Your clemency which You sent us in Jesus Christ. Grant that Christ’s loving sacrifice may bear fruit in me in accord with Your will for me. St Julie Billiart, you carried your crosses always trusting in the clemency of our God and trusted solely in Christ our companion, please pray for us, amen.

HEBREWS 10-10GOD'S INFINIE POWER-ST BERNARDST JULIE BILLIART PRAY FOR US

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS

Our Morning Offering – 8 April

Our Morning Offering – 8 April

PRAYER of ST DOMINIC

May God the Father who made
us bless us.
May God the Son send His
healing among us.
May God the Holy Spirit move
within us
and give us eyes to see with,
ears to hear with,
and hands that Your work might
be done.
May we walk and preach the
word of God to all.
May the angel of peace watch
over us
and lead us at last by God’s
grace to the Kingdom. Amen

PRAYER OF ST DOMINIC

Posted in QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 8 April – St Julie Billiat

Saint of the Day – 8 April – St Julie Billiat (1751-1816 aged 64) Virgin, Teacher and Founder of the   Congregation of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur – Patron against bodiy ills, poverty, and of the sick.

St. Julie Billiart was born in 1751, northern France, as the fifth of seven children.   She was very intellectual and had a great devotion to religious study;  Billiart memorised the catechism by the age of seven.    She was confirmed at the age of nine, four years before her colleagues.    She took a vow of chastity at the age of fourteen and became a teacher two years later.   A failed murder attempt on her father caused great stress for St. Julie. She became paralyzed at the age of 22 and was bed-ridden a few year’s later.   She spent most of her time in contemplation, catechising children and making linens for altars.

card_250_st_Julie_1508-09292010-H-final-front-web

Julie Billiart was a born teacher. Already as a child she liked to teach catechism to her playmates in the village of Cuvilly, Picardy.    When her wealthy family slid into poverty, Julie had to work long hours but she always made time to instruct others in the faith. One day in 1774 someone fired a shot at her father.   The bullet missed, but the traumatic event plunged Julie into a mysterious illness and she was immobilized by a debilitating paralysis. From her bed, however, she continued to catechise the village children.

In 1790 a schismatic priest who had sworn loyalty to the revolution took over the Cuvilly church.   He tried to visit Julie but she refused to admit him.   And singlehandedly the invalid persuaded the entire village to boycott him.   She was very clear that no compromise with the state church was allowable or necessary, as she told a friend:

“You say it seems to you better to be schismatic rather than to be utterly without religion.    But my dear friend, you cannot have weighed the matter.    For, in conscience, we must not leave our brethren in error.    If they go to the instructions of an intruder, they are automatically out of the way of salvation. . . .

All those good people, who find it utterly impossible to get into touch with their legitimate pastors, will not be punished for it.   And it is better for them to remain all their lives without instruction, without Mass. . . .  God will send an angel from heaven to them rather than allow them to perish forever.”

Enraged by Julie’s opposition, revolutionary authorities sought to silence her, so she fled in a hay wagon and went into hiding.   At Amiens she met Frances Blin, a viscountess who became her friend and companion.    The women went to Bettencourt, where they taught catechism classes and restored the entire village to the practice of the faith.    Julie and Frances returned to Amiens where they founded the Institute of Notre Dame, a community of women dedicated mainly to the care and instruction of poor girls.    In 1804 during a novena, a priest exhorted Julie to take a step in faith and on the spot she was miraculously healed.    With her restored strength, Julie together with Frances spent her last years establishing fifteen Notre Dame convents throughout France.

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In 1815, Mother Julie dedicated her time and resources to helping the wounded and starving survivors from the battle of Waterloo.    For the last three months of her life, she again suffered greatly.    She died peacefully on April 8, 1816 at the age of 64.    Julie was beatified on May 13, 1906 and was canonised by Pope Paul VI in 1969.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

SAINTS – 8 April

St Agabus the Prophet
St Amantius of Como
St Asynkritos of Marathon
St Beata of Ribnitz
Bl Clement of Osimo
St Concessa
St Dionysius of Alexandria
St Dionysius of Corinth
Bl Domingo Iturrate Zubero
St Gonzalo Mercador
St Herodion of Patras
St Julia Billiart
Bl Julian of Saint Augustine
Bl Libania of Busano
St Perpetuus of Tours
St Phlegon of Hyrcania
St Redemptus of Ferentini

Martyrs of Africa – 3 saints: A group of African martyrs whose name appears on ancient lists, but about whom nothing is known but their names – Januarius, Macaria and Maxima.Martyrs of Antioch – 4 saints: A group of Christians martyred together for their faith. We know little more than their names – Diogene, Macario, Massimo and Timothy. Antioch, Syria
Martyrs of Seoul – 5 saints: A group laymen who were martyred together in the apostolic vicariate of Korea.
• Augustinus Jeong Yak-jong
• Franciscus Xaverius Hong Gyo-man
• Ioannes Choe Chang-hyeon
• Lucas Hong Nak-min
• Thomas Choe Pil-gong
Died – 8 April 1801 at the Small West Gate, Seoul, South Korea
Beatified – 15 August 2014 by Pope Francis

Posted in LENT, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the CHURCH

LENTEN REFLECTION – The Fifth Week – Friday 7 April 2017

Set us free.
On this Friday before Good Friday,

it might be most appropriate to make the Stations.

Our desire is becoming more focused and more intense.

After our weeks of reflection, we know that our selfishness has placed us in ruts,

has made us slaves to some very unhappy and sometimes death-dealing patterns.

The celebration of our freedom and healing is close at hand.

STATIONS OF THE CROSS TEMPLATE

Jesus carried our sins in his own body on the cross
so that we could die to sin and live in holiness;
by his wounds we have been healed.

The Communion Antiphon – 1 Peter 2:24

st1

1st Station
The First Station:
Jesus Is Condemned To Death

My Jesus, the world still has You on trial.   It keeps asking who You are and why You make the demands You make.   It asks over and over the question, If You are God’s Son, why do You permit the world to be in the state it is in?   Why are You so silent?

Though the arrogance of the world angers me, I must admit that silently, in the depths of my soul, I too have these questions. Your humility frustrates me and makes me uncomfortable.   Your strength before Pilate as You drank deeply from the power of the Father, gives me the answer to my question – The Father’s Will.   The Father permits many sufferings in my life but it is all for my good.   If only I too could be silent in the face of worldly prudence – steadfast in the faith when all seems lost – calm when accused unjustly – free from tyranny of human respect – ready to do the Father’s Will no matter how difficult.

Silent Jesus, give us all the graces we need to stand tall in the face of the ridicule of the world.   Give the poor the strength not to succumb to their privation but to be ever aware of their dignity as sons of God.  Grant that we might not bend to the crippling disease of worldly glory but be willing to be deprived of all things rather than lose Your friendship.   My Jesus, though we are accused daily of being fools, let the vision of Quiet Dignity standing before Monstrous Injustice, give us all the courage to be Your followers.
Amen

st2


The Second Station:
Jesus Carries His Cross

How could any human impose such a burden upon Your torn and bleeding body, Lord Jesus?   Each movement of the cross drove the thorns deeper into Your Head.   How did You keep the hatred from welling up in Your Heart?   How did the injustice of it all not ruffle your peace?  The Father’s Will was hard on You – Why do I complain when it is hard on me?

I see injustice and am frustrated and when my plans to alleviate it seems futile, I despair.   When I see those burdened with poverty suffer ever more and cross is added to cross my heart is far from serene. I utterly fail to see the dignity of the cross as it is carried with love. I would so much rather be without it.

My worldly concept is that suffering, like food, should be shared equally.  How ridiculous I am, dear Lord.   Just as we do not all need the same amount of material food, neither do we need the same amount of spiritual food and that is what the cross is in my life, isn’t it – spiritual food proportional to my needs.
Amen

Stations of the Cross by Mother Angelica


Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 7 April

Thought for the Day – 7 April

St John Baptiste de la Salle stumbled upon his life’s work, quite by accident and had to draw into and upon, all his inner strength to accomplish the mission given to him.   He was faced with something entirely new and had to find new ways to do this work. Discouragement dogged his every step but he carried on knowing that it was not his work but belonged to God.   Faith and boldness go together, faith, courage and strength go together, faith and zeal for the work of God go together – we have only to ask the Lord, in our faith for the boldness, the courage and strength and the zeal!

St John Baptste de la Salle, pray for us!

STJBDELASALLE-PAYFORUS3ST JOHN BAPTISTE DE LA SALLE - APRIL 7

 

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

Quote/s of the Day – 7 April

Quote/s of the Day – 7 April

“We should have frequent recourse to prayer
and persevere a long time in it.
God wishes to be solicited.
He is not weary of hearing us.
The treasure of His graces is infinite.
We can do nothing more pleasing to Him
than to beg incessantly that He bestow them upon us.”

PRAYER - ST J B DE LA SALLE

“Guard your eyes: –
that they may not look
upon anything contrary to purity;
your ears: –
that they may not listen to evil conversation;
your mind: –
by banishing from it all suggestive thoughts;
your heart: –
by stifling impure desires at their very birth.”

GUARD YOUR EYES - ST JBDELASALLE

“Pride makes us forgetful of our eternal interests.
It causes us to neglect totally the care of our soul.”

“Be driven by the love of God because Jesus Christ died for all,
that those who live may live not for themselves but for Him,
who died and rose for them.
Above all, let your charity and zeal show how you love the Church.
Your work is for the Church, which is the body of Christ.”

BE DRIVEN-STJBDELASALLE

St. Jean-Baptiste de la Salle, pray for us!

ST JB DE LA SALLE PRAY FOR US 2

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

One Minute Reflection – 7 April

One Minute Reflection – 7 April

Jesus offered one sacrifice for sins and took his seat forever at the
right hand of God………Hebrews 10:12

REFLECTION – “When you are at Mass, be there as if you were on Calvary.
For it is the same sacrifice and the same Jesus Christ Who is doing for you
what He did on the Cross for all human beings.”………st John Baptiste de la Salle

PRAYER – Jesus, my Redeemer, at each Mass let me thank You for the supreme sacrifice You offered to free me from sin. Help me to be sorry for my sins and to resolve to follow You more closely, to love You more dearly and to keep Your Cross always before my eyes. St John Baptiste de la Salle, pray for us, amen.

WHEN YOU ARE AT MASS- ST J B DE LA SALLEST JOHN BAPTISTE DE LA SALLE PRAY FOR US

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – 7 April

Our Morning Offering – 7 April

La Salle Prayer

My Lord,
let me be the change I want to see
To do with strength and wisdom
All that needs to be done..
And become the hope that I can be.
Set me free from my fears and hesitations
Grant me courage and humility
Fill me with spirit to face the challenge
And start the change I long to see.
Today I start the change I want to see.
Even if I’m not the light
I can be the spark
In faith, service and communion.
Let us start the change we want to see.
The change that begins in me.
Live Jesus in our hearts forever (La Sallian Invocation)
Amen

LA SALLE PRAYER

Posted in QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 7 April – St John Baptiste de la Salle

Saint of the Day – 7 April – St John Baptiste de la Salle – (1651-1719 aged 67) Priest and founder of La Salle Schools and of the Brothers of the Christian Schools/ Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools or FSC (Fratres Scholarum Christianarum) educational reformer and pioneer, founder, writer – Patron of Teachers of Youth, (May 15, 1950, Pius XII), Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, Lasallian educational institutions, educators, school principals, teachers.

De La Salle was born to a wealthy family in Rheims, France on April 29, although some say 30, in 1651. He was the oldest child of Louis de La Salle and Nicolle de Moet de Brouillet. Nicolle’s family was a noble one and ran a successful winery business and she was a relative of Claude Moët, founder of Moët & Chandon

La Salle received the tonsure at age eleven and was named canon of Rheims Cathedral when he was sixteen. He was sent to the College des Bons Enfants, where he pursued higher studies and on July 10, 1669, he took the degree of Master of Arts. When De La Salle had completed his classical, literary and philosophical courses, he was sent to Paris to enter the Seminary of Saint-Sulpice on October 18, 1670. His mother died on July 19, 1671 and on April 9, 1672, his father died. This circumstance obliged him to leave Saint-Sulpice on April 19, 1672. He was now twenty-one, the head of the family and as such had the responsibility of educating his four brothers and two sisters. He completed his theological studies and was ordained to the priesthood at the age of 26 on April 9, 1678 . Two years later he received a Doctorate in Theology.

De La Salle was a man of refined manners, a cultured mind, and great practical ability, in whom personal prosperity was balanced with kindness and affability. In physical appearance he was of commanding presence, somewhat above the medium height. He had large, penetrating blue eyes and a broad forehead.

The Sisters of the Child Jesus were a new religious congregation whose work was the care of the sick and education of poor girls. The young priest had helped them in becoming established and then served as their chaplain and confessor. It was through his work with the Sisters that in 1679, he met Adrian Nyel. What began as a charitable effort to help Adrian Nyel establish a school for the poor in De La Salle’s home town gradually became his life’s work. With De La Salle’s help, a school was soon opened . Shortly thereafter, a wealthy woman in Rheims told Nyel that she also would endow a school but only if La Salle would help.

At that time, most children had little hope for social and economic advancement. Jean Baptiste de la Salle believed that education gave hope and opportunity for people to lead better lives of dignity and freedom.   Moved by the plight of the poor who seemed so “far from salvation” either in this world or the next, he determined to put his own talents and advanced education at the service of the children “often left to themselves and badly brought up”.

La Salle knew that the teachers in Reims were struggling, lacking leadership, purpose, and training and he found himself taking increasingly deliberate steps to help this small group of men with their work.   First, in 1680, he invited them to take their meals in his home, as much to teach them table manners as to inspire and instruct them in their work.   This crossing of social boundaries was one that his relatives found difficult to bear.   In 1681, De La Salle realized that he would have to take a further step – he brought the teachers into his own home to live with him. De La Salle’s relatives were deeply disturbed, his social class was scandalized.   When, a year later, his family home was lost at auction because of a family lawsuit, De La Salle rented a house into which he and the handful of teachers moved.

La Salle decided to resign his canonry to devote his full attention to the establishment of schools and the training of teachers.   He had inherited a considerable fortune and this might have been used to further his aims but on the advice of a Father Barre of Paris, he sold what he had and sent the money to the poor of the province of Champagne, where a famine was causing great hardship.

De La Salle thereby began a new religious institute, the first one with no priests at all among its members: the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, also known as the De La Salle Brothers (in the U.K., Ireland, Malta, Australasia, and Asia) or, most commonly in the United States, the Christian Brothers.   (They are sometimes confused with a different congregation of the same name founded by Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice in Ireland, who are known in the U.S. as the Irish Christian Brothers.)   The De La Salle Brothers were the first Roman Catholic teaching religious institute that did not include any priests.   One decision led to another until De La Salle found himself doing something that he had never anticipated. De La Salle wrote:

“ I had imagined that the care which I assumed of the schools and the masters would amount only to a marginal involvement committing me to no more than providing for the subsistence of the masters and assuring that they acquitted themselves of their tasks with piety and devotedness …… Indeed, if I had ever thought that the care I was taking of the schoolmasters out of pure charity would ever have made it my duty to live with them, I would have dropped the whole project……. God, who guides all things with wisdom and serenity, whose way it is not to force the inclinations of persons, willed to commit me entirely to the development of the schools.   He did this in an imperceptible way and over a long period of time so that one commitment led to another in a way that I did not foresee in the beginning.”

De La Salle’s enterprise met opposition from the ecclesiastical authorities who resisted the creation of a new form of religious life, a community of consecrated laymen to conduct free schools “together and by association”. The educational establishment resented his innovative methods.[6] Nevertheless, De La Salle and his Brothers succeeded in creating a network of quality schools throughout France that featured instruction in the vernacular, students grouped according to ability and achievement, integration of religious instruction with secular subjects, well-prepared teachers with a sense of vocation and mission, and the involvement of parents

In 1685, De La Salle founded what is generally considered the first normal school — that is, a school whose purpose is to train teachers — in Rheims, France.   In addition, De La Salle pioneered in programs for training lay teachers, Sunday courses for working young men, and one of the first institutions in France for the care of delinquents.

Worn out by austerities and exhausting labours, De La Salle died at Saint Yon, near Rouen, early in 1719 on Good Friday, only three weeks before his 68th birthday.

56-deathbed-closeup

St John Baptiste de La Salle was a pioneer in founding training colleges for teachers, reform schools for delinquents, technical schools and secondary schools for modern languages, arts, and sciences.   His work quickly spread through France and, after his death, continued to spread across the globe.   In 1900 John Baptiste de La Salle was declared a Saint.   In 1950, because of his life and inspirational writings, he was made Patron Saint of all those who work in the field of education.   John Baptiste de La Salle inspired others how to teach and care for young people, how to meet failure and frailty with compassion, how to affirm, strengthen and heal.   At the present time there are De La Salle schools in 80 different countries around the globe.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saints – 7 April

St John Baptist de La Salle (Memorial)

St Albert of Tournai
Bl Alexander Rawlins
St Brenach of Carn-Engyle
St Calliopus of Pompeiopolis
Bl Cristoforo Amerio
St Cyriaca of Nicomedia
St Donatus of North Africa
Bl Edward Oldcorne
St Epiphanius the Martyr
St Finian of Kinnitty
St George the Younger
St Gibardus of Luxeuil
St Goran
St Guainerth
St Hegesippus of Jerusalem
St Henry Walpole
Bl Herman Joseph
Bl Mary Assunta
St Peleusius of Alexandria
St Peter Nguyen Van Luu
Bl Ralph Ashley
St Rufinus the Martyr
St Saturninus of Verona
Bl Ursuline of Parma

Martyrs of Pentapolis – 4 saints
Martyrs of Sinope – 200 saints

Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 6 April

Thought for the Day – 6 April

A gracious lovable personality does more than anything else to draw others to holiness.   Some preach by words and some by their whole person.   Blessed Notker Balbulus was one of the latter.   The fact that he was dearly loved by those with whom he lived, is the finest witness to his holiness.   It is not our human looks or physical attributes which draw others to us but a heart of love.

Blessed Notker Balbulus, please pray for us.

BL NOTKER BALBULUS PRAY FOR US

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS

Quote/s of the Day – 6 April

Quote/s of the Day – 6 April

“Does our life become from day to day more painful,
more oppressive, more replete with sufferings?
Blessed be He a thousand times who desires it so.
If life be harder, love makes it also stronger
and only this love, grounded on suffering,
can carry the Cross of my Lord, Jesus Christ.”

Blessed Miguel Pro

DOES OUR LIFE BECOME-BL MIGUEL PRO

 

“Goodness in the face of evil must suffer,
for when love meets sin,
it will be crucified.”

Venerable Fulton J Sheen

goodness in the face of evil must suffer - fulton sheen

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

One Minute Reflection – 6 April

One Minute Reflection – 6 April

Through baptism into (Christ’s) death we were buried him, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead…..we too might live a new life……Romans 6:4

REFLECTION – “Christ is our life.   Let us therefore look to Christ.   He came to suffer in order to merit glory;  to seek contempt in order to be exalted.   He came to die but also to rise again.”……………..St Augustine

PRAYER – Heavenly Father, through my baptism I was buried with Christ and rose to a new life of grace.   Let me so guard that life that I will enjoy it full in heaven with Christ.   Blessed Notker Balbulus, you guarded your life that you lived only for Christ please pray for us all, amen.

ROMANS 6-4CHRIST IS OUR LIFE-ST AUGUSTINE

Posted in JESUIT SJ, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS

Our Morning Offering – 6 April

To The Heart Of Jesus
By Blessed Miguel Pro, S.J.

I believe, O Lord, but strengthen my faith,
Heart of Jesus, I love Thee
but increase my love.
Heart of Jesus, I trust in Thee,
but give greater vigour to my confidence.
Heart of Jesus, I give my heart to Thee,
but so enclose it in Thee
that it may never be separated from Thee.
Heart of Jesus, I am all Thine,
but take care of my promise
so that I may be able
to put it in practice even unto
the complete sacrifice of my life.

Amen

I BELIEVE O LORD BUT STRENGTHEN MY FAITH BY BL MIGUEL PRO

Posted in Against STUTTERING or Stammering, of speech defects or disabilities, Of MUSICIANS, Choristors, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 6 April – Blessed Notker Balbulus

Saint of the Day – 6 April – Blessed Notker Balbulus/Notker the Stammerer/Notker of Saint Gall (c840-912) Benedictine monk. Priest. Poet. Musician. Teacher. Writer. Historian. Hagiographer; wrote a martyrology, a collection of legends and a metrical biography of Saint Gall. Friend of Saint Tutilo – Patronages –  of Musicians and invoked against stuttering/stammering -Representation:  A rod; Benedictine habit; book in one hand and a broken rod in the other with which he strikes the devil, mill wheel, staff.

220px-Notker_Balbulus_2

Notker was the son of noble Swiss parents.   His father and mother sent him, when he was a child, to be educated in the Benedictine Abbey of St. Gall, Switzerland.    In medieval times Benedictine monks often accepted youngsters as boarding students in their monastery schools.    There may have been an additional reason for entrusting Notker to these monks.    He was frail in health and stammered.   (That is the meaning of his nickname “Balbulus”.)

When he was a teenager, Notker decided to stay on at St. Gall as a monk.    Frailty of body did not keep him from becoming a leader in this religious community.    It was later said of him that he was “weakly in body but not in mind, stammering of tongue but not of intellect, pressing forward boldly in things divine–a vessel filled with the Holy Ghost without equal in his time.”    Notker, a brilliant student, was appointed librarian of the monastery in 890 and held the post of guest master in 892 and 894.

But the stammering little monk gained fame mostly through his own literary work. Having been trained by such able monastic scholars as Iso and the musical Irishman Marcellus (Moengal), he himself became a noted teacher in the monastic school.    Notker was probably the anonymous “Monk of St. Gall” who composed the book Gesta Caroli (The Deeds of Charles), a collection of folk stories about the Emperor Charlemagne.   This popular work did much to make Charlemagne a colossal legendary figure among the German peoples.

In addition to prose, Father Notker, a good theologian, also wrote poetry and composed music, with talent and taste.    In fact, he is considered the first musical composer of German stock.    Some of his musical compositions are hymns in honour of saints.    Most of his fame, however, is based on his two-score sequences.

The sequence is a type of liturgical hymn that originated in the ninth century.    It is a hymn sung after that Alleluia of the Latin Rite Mass that comes just before the singing of the Gospel.   ur liturgy used to have many of these sequences but today the Church retains only the Victimae Paschali (Easter);   the Veni Sancte Spiritus (Pentecost);   the Lauda Sion (Corpus Christi);   and the Stabat Mater (Seven Sorrows of Mary).    (A fifth sequence the Dies Irae for funerals was dropped only after Vatican II).    Now, none of these five sequences was written by Notker but the pattern he gave to the format by his own popular compositions was decisive among later composers.

Notker the Stammerer was so much loved by the monks of his abbey that for a long time after his death, they could not speak of him without shedding tears.    They venerated him as a saint. T   he Holy See confirmed this cult of Blessed Notker in 1512 by permitting a Mass to be celebrated in his honour at the Abbey of St. Gall.    The permission was extended to the diocese of Constance in 1513.    His relics were enshrined in the cathedral of Sankt Gallen in 1628 – see below

Blessed Notker has been declared by some to be the greatest poet of the Middle Ages. Being tongue-tied may impair the speech but it cannot inhibit the soaring imagination.

–Father Robert F. McNamara

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saints – 6 April

St Agrarius the Martyr
St Amand of Grisalba
St Berthanc of Kirkwall
St Brychan of Brycheiniog
Bl Catherine of Pallanza
St Diogenes of Philippi
St Elstan of Abingdon
St Galla of Rome
St Gennard
St Irenaeus of Sirmium
Bl Jan Franciszek Czartoryski
St Marcellinus the Martyr
Bl Maria Karlowska
Bl Michele Rua
Bl Notker Balbulus
St Phaolô Lê Bao Tinh
St Philaret of Calabria
Bl Pierina Morosini
St Platonides of Ashkelon
St Prudentius of Troyes
St Pope St. Sixtus I
St Timothy of Philippi
St Ulched
St Urban of Peñalba
St William of Eskilsoe
St Winebald
Bl Zefirino Agostini

Martyrs of Hadiab
Martyrs of Sirmium : 7 saints – A group of fourth century martyrs at Sirmium, Pannonia (modern Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia). We know little more than seven of their names – Florentius, Geminianus, Moderata, Romana, Rufina, Saturus and Secundus.

Martyred in the Spanish Civil War
Enric Gispert Domenech
Josep Gomis Martorell

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS for PRIESTS

What is a Priest?

WHAT IS A PRIEST?

By Servant of God, Catherine Doherty – foundress of Madonna House, Combermere, Ontario, Canada

A PRIEST is a lover of God,
a priest is a lover of men,
a priest is a holy man
because he walks before the face of the All-Holy.

A priest understands all things,
a priest forgives all things,
a priest encompasses all things.

The heart of a priest is pierced, like Christ’s
with the lance of love.

The heart of a priest is open, like Christ’s
for the whole world to walk through.

The heart of a priest is a vessel of compassion,
the heart of a priest is a chalice of love,
the heart of a priest is the trysting place
of human and divine love.

A priest is a man whose goal is to be another Christ;
a priest is a man who lives to serve.

A priest is a man who has crucified himself
so that he too may be lifted up
and draw all things to Christ.

A priest is a man in love with God.
A priest is the gift of God to man
and of man to God.

A priest is the symbol of the word made flesh,
a priest is the naked sword of God’s justice,
a priest is the hand of God’s mercy,
a priest is the reflection of God’s love.

Nothing can be greater in this world than
a priest
Nothing but God Himself.

WHAT IS A PRIEST

LET US PRAY:

Prayer for Priests by Pope Benedict XVI

Lord Jesus Christ, eternal High Priest,
You offered Yourself to the Father
on the altar of the Cross
and through the outpouring of the Holy Spirit
gave Your priestly people
a share in Your redeeming sacrifice.
Hear our prayer for the sanctification
of our priests.
Grant that all who are ordained
to the ministerial priesthood
may be ever more conformed to You,
the divine Master.
May they preach the Gospel
with pure heart and clear conscience.
Let them be shepherds according to Your own Heart,
single-minded in service to You and to the Church
and shining examples of a holy, simple and joyful life.
Through the prayers of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
your Mother and ours,
draw all priests and the flocks entrusted to their care
to the fullness of eternal life where You live and reign
with the Father and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever. Amen

PRAYER FOR PRIESTS-BENEDICT

Posted in LENT, MORNING Prayers

LENTEN REFLECTION – Wednesday of the Fifth Week – 5 April 2017

LENTEN REFLECTION – Wednesday of the Fifth Week – 5 April 2017

The Cross of Christ and Simon of Cyrene

And they compelled a passer-by, Simon of Cyrene, who was coming in from the country, the father of Alexander and Rufus, to carry his cross.Mark 15:21

Our blessed Lord falls again and again beneath the weight of the cross, until it becomes evident to the soldiers that He will never be able to drag it to the place of execution.   They accordingly lay hold of a heathen passing by, Simon the Cyrenian and him they compel to carry the cross.    How little Simon knew the happiness in store for him when those rough soldiers seize him and force him to the ignominious task of carrying for a public criminal the instrument of his punishment!    How often we too fail to recognise in the sudden disagreeables and contradictions we encounter God’s wonderful designs of mercy to us!

Simon at first bore the cross surlily and reluctantly, chafing under the hardship inflicted on him.    But as he carries it, somehow an unaccountable change comes over him.    It has the virtue to change his heart and to make of him a devoted follower of the Crucified, one of the pillars of the Apostolic Church.    Thus many a cross that we carry reluctantly turns out to be really the means of our sanctification and salvation.

Before Simon arrives at the summit of Calvary, the cross has endeared itself to him.    He has recognised that to carry it for Jesus was no hardship but a privilege and a happiness. So too the saints learn to love the cross, to embrace it, to seek it, to carry it with all joy, to be almost discontented if they are without it.    This is the very height of peace and felicity;  for those who find their joy in the cross find everywhere around them cause for rejoicing.

– from The Sacred Passion of Jesus Christ: Short Meditations for Lent, by Father Richard Frederick Clark, S.J.

THE CROSS OF CHRIST AND SIMON OF CYRENE

Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 5 April

Thought for the Day – 5 April

The polarisation in the Church today (but only in certain countries-never forget that the world is a big place and in most places the Church stands united) is a mild breeze compared with the tornado that ripped the Church apart during the lifetime of this saint. If any saint is a patron of reconciliation, Vincent Ferrer is.    The split in the Church at the time of Vincent Ferrer should have been fatal—36 long years of having two “heads.”   We cannot imagine what condition the Church today would be in if that happened today.   It is an ongoing miracle that the Church has not long since been shipwrecked on the rocks of human pride and ignorance, greed and ambition but we must always take into account the fact that the Church is Divine, it is Holy and is the Mystical Body of Christ and not our man-made institution – for that it is NOT – it is true love!   “We believe that “truth is mighty and it shall prevail”—but it sometimes takes a long time.   And so, even if we are wrong, as in St Vincent’s case, we can still become saints.   How great is our God for the “gates of hell shall not prevail.”! (portion of this comment from Fr. Don Miller, OFM)

St Vincent Ferrer, pray for us!

SR V FERRER PRAY FOR US 2

ST V FERRER PRAY FOR US 3

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

Quote/s of the Day – 5 April

Quote/s of the Day – 5 April

“Once humility is acquired, charity will come to life –
a burning flame devouring the corruption of vice and filling
the heart so full that there is no place for vanity.”

“Let devotion accompany your studies:
consult God, the giver of all science and ask Him with humility to make
you understand what you read and learn.
Interrupt your application by short prayers:  never begin or end your studies but by prayer. Learning is a gift of the Father of Lights;   do not, therefore, consider it a fruit of
your own intellect or industry.”

St Vincent Ferrer (Saint of the Day)

ST VINCENT - ONCE HUMILITY IS ACQUIREDLET DEVOTION -ST VINCENT FERRER

Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

One Minute Reflection – 5 April

One Minute Reflection – 5 April

Love the Lord your God with all your heart………
Love your neighbour as yourself……..Mark 12:30-31

REFLECTION – “If you truly want to help the soul of your neighbour, you should pproach God first with all your heart.   Ask Him simply to fill you with charity, the greatest of all virtues;  with it you can accomplishwhat you desire.” …………….St Vincent Ferrer

PRAYER – Heavenly Father, grant me the grace to love You above all things and to do all my actions out of love for You. Help me to love others and to work for their salvation. St Vincent Ferrer, pray for us, amen.

MARK 12 - 30,31IF YOU TRULY - ST V FERRERST V FERRER PRAY FOR US

Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – 5 April

Our Morning Offering – 5 April

Prayer for Proper Affections Toward God
By St Vincent Ferrer

Good Jesus, let me be penetrated with love
to the very marrow of my bones,
with fear and respect toward Thee;
let me burn with zeal for Thy honour,
so that I may resent terribly all the outrages
committed against Thee, especially those
of which I myself have been guilty.
Grant further, O my God, that I may adore
and acknowledge Thee humbly as my Creator
and that, penetrated with gratitude
for all Thy benefits,
I may never cease to render Thee thanks.
Grant that I may bless Thee in all things,
praise and glorify Thee with a heart full of joy
and gladness, and that,
obeying Thee with docility
in every respect, I may one day,
despite my ingratitude and unworthiness,
be seated at Thy table together with Thy holy angels
and apostles to enjoy ineffable delights. Amen

GOOD JESUS LET ME BE PENETRATED...ST VINCENT FERRER

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 5 April – St Vincent Ferrer

Saint of the Day – 5 April – St Vincent Ferrer O.P. (1530-1419 aged 69) Religious Priest, Miracle-worker, Logician, Preacher, Missionary, Confessor, Teacher, Philosopher, Theologian known as the “Angel of the Apocalypse” and the “Mouthpiece of God” – Patron of  brick makers, builders, Calamonaci, Italy, Casteltermini, Agrigento, Italy, construction workers, Leganes, Philippines, Orihuela-Alicante, Spain, diocese of, pavement workers, plumbers, .  tile makers.   Representation: Bible, cardinal’s hat, Dominican preacher with a flame on his hand, Dominican preacher with a flame on his head, Dominican holding an open book while preaching, Dominican with a cardinal’s hat, Dominican with a crucifix, Dominican with a trumpet nearby, often coming down from heaven, referring to his vision, Dominican with wings, referring to his vision as being an ‘angel of the apocalypse’, pulpit, representing his life as a preacher, flame, referring to his gifts from the Holy Spirit.

saint-vincent-ferrer-01

 

Vincent was the fourth child of the nobleman Guillem Ferrer, a notary who came from Palamós and wife, Constança Miquel, apparently from Valencia itself or Girona.   Legends surround his birth.    It was said that his father was told in a dream by a Dominican friar that his son would be famous throughout the world.    His mother is said never to have experienced pain when she gave birth to him.    He was named after St. Vincent Martyr, the patron saint of Valencia.   He would fast on Wednesdays and Fridays and he loved the Passion of Christ very much.    He would help the poor and distribute alms to them.    He began his classical studies at the age of eight, his study of theology and philosophy at fourteen.

Four years later, at the age of nineteen, Ferrer entered the Order of Preachers, commonly called the Dominican Order, in England also known as Blackfriars.    As soon as he had entered the novitiate of the Order, though, he experienced temptations urging him to leave.    Even his parents pleaded with him to do so and become a secular priest. He prayed and practiced penance to overcome these trials.    Thus he succeeded in completing the year of probation and advancing to his profession.

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For a period of three years, he read solely Sacred Scripture and eventually committed it to memory.    He published a treatise on Dialectic Suppositions after his solemn profession, and in 1379 was ordained a Catholic priest at Barcelona.    He eventually became a Master of Sacred Theology and was commissioned by the Order to deliver lectures on philosophy.    He was then sent to Barcelona and eventually to the University of Lleida, where he earned his doctorate in theology.

Vincent Ferrer is described as a man of medium height, with a lofty forehead and very distinct features.    His hair was fair in colour and tonsured.    His eyes were very dark and expressive;   his manner gentle.    Pale was his ordinary colour.    His voice was strong and powerful, at times gentle, resonant and vibrant.

Three men claimed to be pope in the 1300s and 1400s. Kings, princes, priests, and laypeople fought one another to support the different claimants for the Chair of Peter. This chaos led to the Western Schism, and God raised up Vincent Ferrer.

When Vincent joined the Dominicans, he zealously practiced penance, study and prayer. He was a teacher of philosophy and a naturally gifted preacher called the “mouthpiece of God.”  His saintly life was what made his preaching so effective.  Vincent’s subjects were judgment, heaven, hell and the need for repentance.

Even the holiest people can be misled. Pope Urban VI was the real pope and lived in Rome but Vincent and many others thought that Clement VII and his successor Benedict XIII, who lived in Avignon, France, were the true popes. Vincent convinced kings, princes, clergy and almost all of Spain to give loyalty to them.   After Clement VII died, Vincent tried to get both Benedict and the pope in Rome to abdicate so that a new election could be held. It hurt Vincent when Benedict refused.

Vincent came to see the error in Benedict’s claim to the papacy.   Discouraged and ill, Vincent begged Christ to show him the truth.    In a vision, he saw Jesus with Saint Dominic and Saint Francis, commanding him to “go through the world preaching Christ.” For the next 20 years, Vincent spread the Good News throughout Europe.    He fasted, preached, worked miracles and drew many people to become faithful Christians.   Vincent returned to Benedict in Avignon and asked him to resign.    Benedict refused. One day while Benedict was presiding over an enormous assembly, Vincent, though close to death, mounted the pulpit and denounced him as the false pope.    He encouraged everyone to be faithful to the one, true Catholic Church in Rome.    Benedict fled, knowing his supporters had deserted him.   Later, the Council of Constance met to end the Western Schism.

St Vincent always slept on the floor, he had the gift of tongues (he spoke only Spanish but all listeners understood him, he lived in an endless fast, celebrated Mass daily and known as a miracle worker;  he is reported to have brought a murdered man back to life to prove the power of Christianity to the onlookers and he would heal people throughout a hospital just by praying in front of it.   He worked so hard to build up the Church that he became the patron of people in building trades.

Because of the Spanish’s harsh methods of converting Jews at the time, the means which Vincent had at his disposal were either baptism or spoliation.   He won them over by his preaching, estimated at 25,000.   Vincent also attended the Disputation of Tortosa (1413–14), called by Avignon Pope Benedict XIII in an effort to convert Jews to Catholicism after a debate among scholars of both faiths.

Vincent died on 5 April 1419 at Vannes in Brittany, at the age of sixty-nine and was buried in Vannes Cathedral.    He was canonised by Pope Calixtus III on 3 June 1455.  His feast day is celebrated on 5 April.   The Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer, a pontifical religious institute founded in 1979, is named for him.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saints- 5 April

St Vincent Ferrer (Optional Memorial)

St Albert of Montecorvino
Bl Antonius Fuster
St Becan
Bl Blasius of Auvergne
St Claudius of Mesopotamia
St Derferl Gadarn
St Gerald of Sauve-Majeure
St Irene of Thessalonica
St Maria Crescentia Hoss
St Mariano de la Mata Aparicio
St Pausilippus
Bl Peter Cerdan
St Theodore the Martyr
St Zeno the Martyr

Martyrs of Lesbos – 5 saints – Five young Christian women martyred together for their faith. We don’t even know their names. island of Lesbos, Greece
Martyrs of North-West Africa – Large group of Christians murdered while celebrating Easter Mass during the persecutions of Genseric, the Arian king of the Vandals. 459 at Arbal (in modern Algeria)

Posted in LENT, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS

LENTEN REFLECTION – Tuesday of the Fifth Week – 4 April 2017

LENTEN REFLECTION – Tuesday of the Fifth Week – 4 April 2017

Look at the cross of Christ – Blessed John Henry Newman

“Look around, and see what the world presents of high and low.    Go to the court of princes.    See the treasure and skill of all nations brought together to honour a child of man.    Observe the prostration of the many before the few.    Consider the form and ceremonial, the pomp, the state, the circumstance and the vainglory.    Do you wish to know the worth of it all? Look at the cross of Christ.

Go to the political world.    See nation jealous of nation, trade rivalling trade, armies and fleets matched against each other.    Survey the various ranks of the community, its parties and their contests, the strivings of the ambitious, the intrigues of the crafty.    What is the end of all this turmoil – the grave!    What is the measure – the cross.

Go, again, to the world of intellect and science.    Consider the wonderful discoveries which the human mind is making, the variety of arts to which its discoveries give rise, the all but miracles by which it shows its power.    And next, the pride and confidence of reason and the absorbing devotion of thought to transitory objects, which is the consequence.    Would you form a right judgment of all this?    Look at the cross.

Again, look at misery, look at poverty and destitution, look at oppression and captivity. Go where food is scanty, and lodging unhealthy.    Consider pain and suffering, diseases long or violent, all that is frightful and revolting.   Would you know how to rate all these? Gaze upon the cross.

Thus in the cross, and Him who hung upon it, all things meet.    All things subserve it, all things need it.    It is their centre and their interpretation.    For He was lifted up upon it, that He might draw all peoples and all things to himself.

………………..And so, too, as regards this world, with all its enjoyments, yet disappointments, let us not trust it.    Let us not give our hearts to it.    Let us not begin with it.    Let us begin with faith.    Let us begin with Christ.    Let us begin with His cross and the humiliation to which it leads.    Let us first be drawn to Him who is lifted up, that so He may, with Himself, freely give us all things.    Let us “seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness,” and then all those things of this world “will be added to us.”

They alone are able truly to enjoy this world, who begin with the world unseen.    They alone enjoy it, who have first abstained from it.    They alone can truly feast, who have first fasted.    They alone are able to use the world, who have learned not to abuse it. They alone inherit it, who take it as a shadow of the world to come and who for that world to come relinquish it.”

LOOK AT THE CROSS OF CHRIST - NEWMAN

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

Thought for the Day – 4 April

Thought for the Day – 4 April

How amazing it is – what one person can accomplish when he works for God alone!   We all find ourselves in situations of leadership or influence and the good we can do by our labour and our example knows no bounds.    Look around, see the lives you can touch – become a genuine influence and example to others.   We have every tool we need AND we have every reason to work for the glory of the Kingdom!

St Isidore of Seville, pray for us!

ST ISIDORE PRAY FOR US 2ST ISIDORE OF SEVILLE - APRIL 4

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

Quote/s of the Day – 4 April

Quote/s of the Day – 4 April

“Live as if you were to die tomorrow.
Learn as if you were to live forever.”

“Confession heals, confession justifies,
confession grants pardon of sin,
all hope consists in confession;
in confession there is a chance for mercy.”

St Isidore of Seville – Father & Doctor of the Church

QUOTES - ST ISIDORE