Sunday, 12 January 2014

The Seventh Day Within The Octave Of The Epiphany. 12 January.


Text taken from The Liturgical Year,
by Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.
Translated from the French by Dom Laurence Shepherd, O.S.B.
Volume 3.
Christmas - Book II.



Free Bible images of the Wise Men (Magi) following a new bright star to bring gifts to the new born king. (Matthew 2:1-14): Slide 12

The Magi, 
having followed the Star,
enter Bethlehem,
searching for the Infant . . .


Having laid their offerings at the feet of Jesus, as the sign of the alliance they had, in the name of all mankind, contracted with Him, and laden with His Graces and Blessings, the Magi take their leave of the Divine Babe; for such was His will.

They take their departure from Bethlehem and the rest of the world seems a wilderness to them. Oh, if they might be permitted to fix their abode near the new-born King and His incomparable Mother ! But, no; God's plan for the salvation of the world requires that everything savouring of human pomp and glory should be far from Him Who had come to take upon Himself all our miseries.

Besides, they are to be the first messengers of the Gospel; they must go and tell to the Gentiles that the Mystery of the Salvation has begun, that the Earth is in possession of its Saviour, and that their salvation is at hand. The Star does not return to them; they needed it to find Jesus; but now they have Him in their hearts, and will never lose Him.

These three men are sent back into the midst of the Gentile world, as the leaven of the Gospel, which, notwithstanding its being so little, is to leaven the whole paste. For their sakes, God will Bless the nations of the Earth; from this day forward, infidelity will lose ground, and faith will progress; and when, the Blood of the Lamb having been shed, Baptism shall be promulgated, the Magi shall be, not merely men of desire, but perfect Christians, initiated into all the Mysteries of the Church.


File:Kölner Dom 2013-06-06-01.JPG


English: Cologne Cathedral, 
Germany.
The Mediaeval Shrine of the Magi
is kept in this magnificent Cathedral.
Deutsch: Kölner Dom, Ost-Ansicht.
Photo: 6 June 2013.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)



The ancient tradition, which is quoted by the author of The Imperfect Work On Saint Matthew, which is put in all the editions of Saint John Chrysostom, and was probably written about the close of the 6th-Century, tells us that the three Magi were baptised by Saint Thomas the Apostle, and devoted themselves to the preaching of the Gospel.

But we scarcely need a tradition on such a point as this. The vocation of these three Princes could never be limited to the mere privilege of being the first among the Gentiles to visit the eternal King, who had come down from Heaven to be born on this Earth, and show Himself to His creatures; a second vocation was the consequence of the first, the vocation of preaching Jesus to men.

There are many details relating to the life and actions of the Magi, after they had become Christians, which have been handed down to us; but we refrain from mentioning them, as not being sufficiently ancient or important traditions to have induced the Church to give them place in her Liturgy.

We would make the same observation with regard to the names assigned to them of Melchior, Gaspar, and Balthassar; the custom of thus naming them is to modern to deserve credit; and though it might be indiscreet to deny that these were their true names, it seems very difficult to give proofs of their correctness.


File:Cologne Cathedral Altarpiece of Magi by Stephan Lochner.jpg

Altarpiece of the Magi,
Cologne Cathedral,
Germany.
By Stephan Lochner.
Date: 15th-Century.
Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Author: Stefan Lochner.
Permission: PDArt.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Relics of these Holy Kings were translated from Persia to Constantinople, under the first Christian Emperors, and, for a long time, were kept in the Church of Saint Sophia. At a later period, they were translated to Milan, when Eustorgius was Bishop of that city. There they remained till the 12th-Century, when, through the influence of the Emperor Frederic Barbarossa, they were translated to the Cathedral Church of Cologne by Reynold, Archbishop of that Metropolitan See.

The Relics are in a magnificent Shrine, perhaps the finest specimen now extant of Mediaeval metallic art, and the superb Cathedral, where it is religiously kept, is, by its size and architectural beauty, one of the grandest Churches of the Christian world.

Thus, have we followed you, O Blessed Magi ! Fathers of the Gentile world ! From your first setting out from the East, for Bethlehem, to your return to your own country, and even to your sacred resting-place; which the goodness of God has made to be in this cold West of ours. It was the love of children for their parents that made us thus cling to you. Besides, were we not, ourselves, in search of that dear King Whom you so longed for and found ?

Blessed be those ardent desires of yours, Blessed be your obedience to the guidance of the Star, Blessed be your devotion at the Crib of Jesus, Blessed be the gifts you made Him, which, while they were acceptable to God, were full of instruction to us !


File:Cologne Cathedral Shrine of Magi.jpg

English: Shrine of the Three Magi, 
Cologne Cathedral, Germany.
Deutsch: Dreikönigsschrein im Kölner Dom.
Русский: Рака трёх королей в Кёльнском соборе.
Photo: 26 October 2004.
Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Author: Arminia. Own photo.
Permission: GNU.
(Wikimedia Commons)


We revere you as Prophets, for you foretold the characters of the Messias by the selection of your three gifts. We honour you as Apostles, for your preached, even to Jerusalem, herself, the Birth of the humble Jesus of Bethlehem, of that Jesus, Whom His Disciples preached not till after the triumph of His Resurrection.

We hail you as the Spring Flowers of the Gentile world, but Flowers which produced abundant and rich fruits, for you brought over entire nations and countless people to the service of our Divine King. Watch over us, and protect the Church. Be mindful of those Eastern countries, whence rises to the Earth the light of day, the beautiful image of your own journey towards Bethlehem.

Bless this Western world of ours, which was buried in darkness when you first saw the Star, and is now the favoured portion of God's Earth, and on which the Divine Sun of Justice pours forth His brightest and warmest rays.

Faith has grown weak among us; re-kindle it. Obtain of the Divine Mercy that the West may ever send forth her messengers of salvation to the South and North, and even to that infidel East, where are laid the tents of Sem, and where the light you gave her has been long extinguished by her apostasy. Pray for the Church of Cologne, that illustrious sister of our holiest Churches in the West; may she preserve the faith, may she defend her sacred rights and liberty; may she be the bulwark of Catholic Germany, and be ever Blessed by the protection of her Three Kings, and the patronage of the glorious Ursula, and her virginal army.



. . . and present their gifts
of Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh
to the Infant.


Lastly, we beseech you, O venerable Magi !, to introduce us to the Infant Jesus, and his Blessed Mother; and grant us to go through these forty days, which the Church consecrates to the Mystery of Christmas, with hearts burning with love for the Divine Child, and may that same love abide with us during the pilgrimage of our life on this Earth.

Today, also, we will make use of the formulas employed by the several ancient Churches in honour of the Mystery of the Epiphany. Our first selection is a Hymn, written by the great Fulbert of Chartres. This is followed by two Prayers from the Mozarabic Breviary.

Then comes a Sequence from the ancient Missals of the Churches of Germany, followed by a beautiful Canticle, in honour of the Infant Jesus, from the pen of Saint Ephrem, the sublime bard of the Syrian Church.

The Greek Church contribute, too, with beautiful stanzas in honour of the Holy Mother of God.




Adoration of the Magi.
Artist: Bartolomé Esteban Murillo (1617–1682).
Date: 1655 - 1660.
Current location: Toledo Museum of Art,
Ohio, United States.
(Wikimedia Commons)


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