Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

Monday 13 January 2014

The Octave Of The Epiphany. 13 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.



File:Baptism-of-Christ-xx-Francesco-Alban.JPG

The Baptism of Christ.
Date: 1600s.
Author: Francesco Albani (1578–1660).
(Wikimedia Commons)
17th-Century Baptism of Christ 
is a typical depiction with the sky opening 
and the Holy Spirit descending as a dove.


The thoughts of the Church, today, are fixed on the Baptism of Our Lord in the Jordan, which is the second of the three Mysteries of the Epiphany. The Emmanuel manifested Himself to the Magi, after having shown Himself to the Shepherds; but this manifestation was made within the narrow space of a stable at Bethlehem, and the world knew nothing of it.

In the Mystery of the Jordan, Christ manifested Himself with greater publicity. His coming is proclaimed by the Precursor; the crowd that is flocking to the river for Baptism is witness of what happens; Jesus makes this the beginning of His public life. But who could worthily explain the glorious circumstances of this second Epiphany ?

It resembles the first in this, that it is for the benefit and salvation of the human race. The Star has led the Magi to Christ; they had long waited for His coming, they had hoped for it; now they believe. Faith in the Messias having come into the world is beginning to take root among the Gentiles. But faith is not sufficient for salvation; the stain of sin must be washed away by water. He that believeth and is baptised shall be saved.

The time is come, then, for a new manifestation of the Son of God, whereby there shall be inaugurated the great remedy, which is to give to Faith the power of producing life eternal.


File:Ottavio vannini, san giovanni che indica il Cristo a Sant'Andrea.jpg

English: Jesus (left) is being identified by John the Baptist (in John 1:29).
Italiano: Ottavio vannini, san giovanni che indica il Cristo a Sant'Andrea.
Artist: Vannini.
Date: 17th-Century.
Source: Giovanni Piccirillo (a cura di), La chiesa dei 
Santi Michele e Gaetano, Becocci Editore, Firenze 2006.
Author: sailko.
Permission: pd-old.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Now the decrees of Divine Wisdom had chosen Water as the instrument of this sublime regeneration of the human race. Hence, in the beginning of the world, we find the Spirit of God moving over the Waters, in order that they might "even then conceive a principle of sanctifying power," as the Church expresses it in her Office for Holy Saturday [the Blessing of the Font].

But, before being called to fulfil the designs of God's mercy, this element of Water had to be used by the Divine Justice for the chastisement of a sinful world. With the exception of one family, the whole human race perished, by the terrible judgement of God, in the Waters of the Deluge.

A fresh indication of the future supernatural power of this chosen element was given by the Dove, which Noe sent forth from the Ark; it returned to him, bearing in its beak an Olive-branch, the symbol that peace was given to the Earth by its having been buried in Water. But this was only the announcement of the Mystery; its accomplishment was not to be for long ages to come.

Meanwhile, God spoke to His people by many events, which were figurative of the future Mystery of Baptism. Thus, for example, it was by passing through the waters of the Red Sea that they entered into the Promised Land, and, during the miraculous passage, a pillar of a cloud was seen covering both the Israelites and the Waters to which they owed their deliverance.


File:Baptism of Christ by Tiffany.jpg

The Baptism of Christ, 
Baltimore, United States.
Date: July, 2007(28 September 2007 (original upload date)).
Source: Transferred from en.wikipedia.
(Original text : User:JGHowes).
Author: User:JGHowes, photographer. Original uploader was JGHowes at en.wikipedia.
Attribution: (Original text : © by James G. Howes, July 26, 2007).
(Copyright holder must be properly attributed).
(Wikimedia Commons)


But, in order that Water should have the power to purify man from his sins, it was necessary that it should be brought in contact with the Sacred Body of the Incarnate God. The Eternal Father had sent His Son into the world, not only that He might be its Lawgiver and Redeemer, and the Victim of its salvation, but that He might also be the Sanctifier of Water; and it was in this sacred element that He would divinely bear testimony to His being His Son, and manifest Him to the world a second time.

Jesus, therefore, being now thirty years of age, comes to the Jordan, a river already celebrated for the prophetic miracles which had been wrought in its waters. The Jewish people, roused by the preaching of John the Baptist, were flocking thither in order to receive a Baptism which could indeed excite a sorrow for sin, but could not effect its forgiveness. Our Divine King approaches the river, not, of course, to receive sanctification, for He, Himself, is the author of all Justice — but to impart to Water the power of bringing forth, as the Church expresses the Mystery, a new and Heavenly progeny [The Blessing of the Font].

He goes down into the stream, not, like Josue, to walk dry-shod through its bed, but to let its waters encompass Him, and receive from Him, both for itself and for the Waters of the whole Earth, the sanctifying power which they would retain for ever.

The Saintly Baptist places his trembling hand upon the sacred Head of the Redeemer, and bends it beneath the water; the Sun of Justice vivifies this His creature; He imparts to it the glow of life-giving fruitfulness; and Water thus becomes the prolific source of supernatural life.


File:Abraham Bloemaert - The adoration of the Magi - Google Art Project.jpg

The Adoration of the Magi.
Artist: Abraham Bloemaert (1566 - 1651).
Date: 1624.
Current location: Centraal Museum,
Source/Photographer: NwF4IhKB6EBxaA at 
(Wikimedia Commons)


But in this, the commencement of a new Creation, we look for the intervention of the Three Persons of The Blessed Trinity. All Three are there. The heavens open; the Dove descends, not as a mere symbol, prophetic of some future Grace, but as the sign of the actual presence of the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of Love, who gives peace to men and changes their hearts.

The Dove hovers above the Head of Jesus, overshadowing at one and the same time the Humanity of the Incarnate Word and the water which bathed His Sacred Body.

The manifestation is not complete; the Father's voice is still to be heard speaking over the Water, and moving by its power the entire element throughout the Earth. Then was fulfilled the Prophecy of David: The Voice of the Lord is upon the waters; the God of Majesty hath thundered. The Voice of the Lord breaketh Cedars, that is, the pride of the devils. The Voice of the Lord divideth the flame of fire, that is, the anger of God. The Voice of the Lord shaketh the desert, and maketh the flood to swell, that is, announces a new Deluge, the Deluge of Divine Mercy [Ps. cxxviii 3, 5, 7, 8, 10]. And what says this Voice of the Father ? This is My Beloved Son, in Whom I am well-pleased.

Thus was the Holiness  of Emmanuel manifested by the presence of the Dove and by the Voice of the Father, as His Kingly character had been previously manifested  by the mute testimony of the Star. The Mystery is accomplished, the Waters are invested with a spiritual purifying power, and Jesus comes from the Jordan and ascends the bank, raising up with Himself the world, regenerated and sanctified, with all its crimes and defilements drowned in the stream. Such is the interpretation and language of the Holy Fathers of the Church regarding this great event of Our Lord's Life.


File:C. Van Loo - Adoration des Mages.jpg

The Adoration of the Magi.
Artist: Charles André van Loo.
Date: 1760.
Current location: Los Angeles County Museum of Art,
United States of America.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Feast of the Epiphany celebrates this wonderful Mystery of Jesus' Baptism; and we cannot be surprised at the Eastern Church having selected this day for one of the Solemn administrations of the Sacrament of Baptism. The same custom was observed, as we learn from ancient documents, in certain Churches in the West. John Mosch tells us that, as regards the Oriental Church, the Font was more than once miraculously filled with water on the Feast of the Epiphany, and that immediately after having administered the Sacrament, the people saw the water disappear.

The Roman Church, even so early as the time of Saint Leo, decreed that Easter and Pentecost should be the only two days for the Solemn administration of Baptism; but the custom of Blessing the Baptismal Water with great Solemnity on the Epiphany was still retained, and is observed even now in some parts of the West.

The Eastern Church has always religiously observed it. Amidst all the pomp of Sacred Rites, accompanied by his Priests and Ministers, who are clothed in the richest Vestments, and followed by the whole people, the Bishop repairs to the banks of a river. After reciting certain beautiful Prayers, which we regret not being able to offer to our Readers, the Bishop plunges into the water a Cross richly adorned with precious stones; it represents Our Lord being Baptised by Saint John the Baptist.

At Saint Petersburg, the ceremony takes place on the River Niva, and it is through a hole made on the ice that the Metropolitan dips the Cross into the water. This same ceremony is observed by those Churches in the West which have retained the custom of Blessing the Baptismal Water on this Feast.


File:Adoration of the Magi Tapestry.png

The Adoration of the Magi.
Tapestry, wool and silk on cotton warp.
Manchester Metropolitan University,
Manchester, England.
Designed 1888. Woven 1894.
Scanned from Stephen Wildman, Edward Burne-Jones:
Victorian Artist-Dreamer, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998,
Designed by Edward Burne Jones,
with details by William Morris and John Henry Dearle.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Faithful are very anxious to carry home with them the water of the stream thus sanctified; and Saint John Chrysostom, in his twenty-fourth Homily, on the Baptism of Christ, speaks to his audience of the circumstance, which was well known by all of them, of this water never turning corrupt. The same has been often seen in the Western Church.

Let us honour Our Lord in this second Manifestation of His Divinity, and thank Him, with the Church, for having given us both the Star of Faith which enlightens us, and the Water of Baptism which cleanses us from our iniquities.

Let us lovingly appreciate the humility of Our Jesus, who permits Himself to be weighed down by the hand of a mortal man, in order, as He says Himself, that He might fulfil all justice, for having taken on Himself the likeness of sin, it was requisite that He should bear its humiliation, that so He might raise us from our debasement.

Let us thank Him for this Grace of Baptism, which has opened to us the Gates of the Church, both of Heaven and Earth; and let us renew the engagements we made at the Holy Font, for they were the terms on which we were regenerated to our New Life in God.


File:La adoración de los Reyes Magos (Rubens, Prado).jpg

The Adoration of the Magi.
Artist: Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640).
Date: 1609 / 1628 - 1629.
Current location: Paseo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.
Source/Photographer: http://www.museodelprado.es/
(Wikimedia Commons)


THIS CONCLUDES THE ARTICLE ON THE EPIPHANY.


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)


Feast Of The Holy Family. Sunday Within The Octave Of The Epiphany.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal (1945 Edition),
unless otherwise stated.

Illustrations, unless otherwise stated, from UNA VOCE OF ORANGE COUNTY
(from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal, 1952 Edition), who reproduce them 
with the kind permission of ST. BONAVENTURE PRESS

Feast of The Holy Family.
Sunday within the Octave of The Epiphany.

Greater-Double.
White Vestments.


The Holy Family.



"Is it not fitting," says Pope Leo XIII, "to celebrate the Royal Birth of the Son of the supreme Father, of the House of David and the glorious names of that ancient line" ? Yet it is more consoling for us to call to memory the little house at Nazareth and the humble life lived there; thus celebrating the hidden life of Our Lord.

For there, the Divine Child received His training in Joseph's humble trade; there, hidden and sheltered, He grew up and showed Himself ready to share the toil of a carpenter's life.

Let the moisture," He seemed to say, "trickle over My limbs before they are drenched with the torrent of My Blood, and the pain of this labour shall go to atone for the sins of men."


File:William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905) - The Madonna of the Roses (1903).jpg

The Madonna Of The Roses.
Artist: William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825–1905).
Date: 1903.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:Saint Joseph with the Infant Jesus by Guido Reni, c 1635.jpg

Saint Joseph with the Infant Jesus.
Artist: Guido Reni (1575–1642).
Date: Circa 1635.
Permission: PD-OLD.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Close to the Divine Child is His tender Mother; close to Joseph stands his devoted wife, happy to relieve their toil and suffering by her loving care. O Thou, Who wast not free from toil and care, and Who hast known adversity, come to the aid of the unfortunate, crippled by poverty and struggling against the difficulties of life" (Hymn for Matins).

In this lowly dwelling at Nazareth, by practising the domestic virtues of Charity, Obedience, Mutual Help, and Regard, Jesus, Mary and Joseph, hallowed family life (Collect, Epistle and Gospel). There, too, they constantly found joy and peace in recollection and Prayer in common.

May the great Christian family practise, here on Earth, the virtues of the Holy Family, so meriting a life in their Blessed company in Heaven (Collect).

Pope Benedict XV, being desirous of securing for Souls the Blessings flowing from meditation on the virtues of the Holy Family and from their imitation, extended this Feast to the Universal Church, fixing its observance for the Sunday in the Octave of the Epiphany. When this Feast happens to be the Octave Day of the Epiphany, the Feast is kept on the day before.

When this Feast is observed on a Sunday, every Parish Priest celebrates Mass for the people of his Parish.


File:William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905) - The Madonna of the Roses (1903).jpg

The Madonna Of The Roses.
Artist: William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825–1905).
Date: 1903.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:Saint Joseph with the Infant Jesus by Guido Reni, c 1635.jpg

Saint Joseph with the Infant Jesus.
Artist: Guido Reni (1575–1642).
Date: Circa 1635.
Permission: PD-OLD.
(Wikimedia Commons)


"He was subject to them."

"Who was subject ?", Saint Bernard of Clairvaux asks, "and to whom ?"

A God to men ! Yes, the God Whom the Angels serve, Whom the Principalities and Powers obey. He was subject to Mary, and not to Mary, only, but to Joseph, also, for Mary's sake.

That a God should obey a human creature; here is humility without parallel. That the same human creature should command God; here is a height and depth nowhere else attained. Man, learn to obey. Earth, learn to consent to a low estate. Dust, learn to humble yourself, for the Evangelist says of your Creator: "He was subject to them," and there is no doubt that this means to Mary and Joseph.

Blush then, proud ashes. A God humbles Himself ; while you exalt yourself. A God becomes subject to men, while you, seeking to rule over men, put yourself above your Creator.

O Man, if you will not condescend to follow the example of a man, surely it will not be beneath you to follow your Creator" (Third Nocturn).


Saturday 11 January 2014

The Sixth Day Within The Octave Of The Epiphany. 11 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.



The Magi wonder 
at the emergence
of the bright new Star.


The Magi were not satisfied with paying their adorations to the great King, whom Mary presented to them. After the example of the Queen of Saba, who paid her homage to the Prince of Peace in the person of King Solomon, these three Eastern Kings opened their treasures and presented their offerings to Jesus.

Our Emmanuel graciously accepted these mystic gifts, and suffered them not to leave Him until he had loaded them with gifts infinitely more precious than those He had vouchsafed to receive. The Magi had given Him of the riches which this Earth produces; Jesus repays them with heavenly gifts. He strengthened in their hearts the virtues of Faith, Hope, and Charity; He enriched, in their persons, the Church of which they were the representatives; and the words of the Canticle of Mary were fulfilled in them: He hath filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he hath sent away empty, for the Synagogue refused to follow them in their search after the King of the Jews.

But let us consider the gifts made by the Magi, and let us, together with the Church and the Holy Fathers, acknowledge the Mysteries expressed by them. The gifts were three in number, in order to honour the sacred number of the Person in the Divine Essence, as likewise to express the triple character of Emmanuel.

He had come that He might be King over the whole world; it was fitting that men should offer gold to Him, for it is the emblem of sovereign power. He had come to be High Priest, and, by His mediation, reconcile Earth to Heaven; incense, then, was an appropriate gift, for the Priest uses it when he offers sacrifice.



The Magi follow the Star to Bethlehem.


But, thirdly, it was only by His own death that He was to obtain possession of the throne which was prepared for His glorified Human Nature, and the perpetual Sacrifice of the Divine Lamb was to be inaugurated by this same Death; the gift of Myrrh was expressive of the Death and Burial of an immortal Victim. The Holy Ghost, Who inspired the Prophets, had guided the Magi in their selection of these three gifts. Let us listen to Saint Leo, who, speaking of this Mystery, says with his usual eloquence:

"O admirable Faith, which leads to Knowledge and perfect Knowledge, and which was not taught in the school of Earthly wisdom, but was enlightened by the Holy Ghost, Himself ! For whence had they learnt the supernatural beauty of their three Gifts ?, they that had come straight from their own country, and had not as yet seen Jesus, nor beheld, in His Infant Face, the Light which directed them in the choice of their offerings ?

"Whilst the Star met the gaze of the bodily eye, their hearts were instructed by a stronger light — the ray of Truth. Before setting out on the fatiguing journey, they knew Him, to Whom were due, by Gold, the honours of a King; by Incense, the worship of God; by Myrrh, the faith in his Mortal Nature." [Sermon the Fourth: On the Epiphany.]

But these three gifts, which so sublimely express the three characters of the Man-God, are fraught with instruction for us. They signify three great virtues, which the Divine Infant found in the Souls of the Magi, and to which He added increase by His Grace. Gold signifies Charity, which unites us to God; Frankincense, Prayer, which brings God into man's heart; and Myrrh, self-abnegation, suffering and mortification, whereby we are delivered from the slavery of corrupt nature.


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 3

The Magi follow the Star to Bethlehem.


Find a heart that loves God, that raises herself up to Him by Prayer, that understands and relishes the Power of the Cross — and you have in that heart the worthiest offering which can be made to God, and one which He always accepts.

We, too, O Jesus !, offer Thee our treasure, and our gifts. We confess Thee to be God and Priest and Man. We beseech Thee to accept the desire we have of corresponding to the love Thou showest us by giving Thee our love in return; we love Thee, dear Saviour !, do Thou increase our love. Receive also the gift of our Prayer, for, though of itself it be tepid and poor, yet it is pleasing to Thee because it is united with the Prayer of Thy Church: Teach us how to make it worthy of Thee and how to give it the power of obtaining what Thou desirest to grant: Form within us the gift of Prayer, that it may unceasingly ascend up like sweet Incense in Thy sight.

And, lastly, receive the homage of our contrite and humble hearts, and the resolution we have formed of restraining and purifying our senses by mortification and penance.

The sublime Mysteries, which we are celebrating during this holy season, have taught us the greatness of our own misery, and the immensity of Thy love for us, and we feel more than ever the obligation we are under of fleeing from the world and its concupiscences, and of uniting ourselves to Thee. The Star shall not have shone upon us in vain: It has brought us to Thee, dear King of Bethlehem !, and Thou shalt be King of our hearts.


File:Brooklyn Museum - The Magi Journeying (Les rois mages en voyage) - James Tissot - overall.jpg

English: The Magi Journeying.
Français: Les rois mages en voyage.
Artist: James Tissot (1836–1902).
Date: Between 1886 and 1894.
Current location: Brooklyn Museum, United States.
Credit line: Purchased by public subscription.
Source/Photographer: Online Collection of Brooklyn Museum;
Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 2006, 00.159.30_PS1.jpg.
(Wikimedia Commons)


What have we that we prize and hold dear, which we can hesitate to give Thee in return for the sweet infinite treasure of Thyself, which Thou hast given to us ?

Dear Mother of Our Jesus !, we put these, our offerings, into thy hands. The gifts of the Magi were made through thee, and they were pleasing to thy Son; thou must present ours to him, and He will be pleased with them, in spite of their poverty. Our love is deficient; fill up its measure by uniting it with thine own immense love.

Second our Prayer by thy maternal intercession. Encourage us in our warfare against the world and the flesh. Make sure our perseverance, by obtaining for the Grace of a continual remembrance of the sweet Mysteries which we are now celebrating; pray for us that, after thine own example, we may keep all these things in our hearts. That must be a hard and depraved heart which could offend Jesus in Bethlehem; or refuse Him anything now that He is seated on thy lap, waiting for our offering !

O Mary !, keep us from forgetting that we are the children of the Magi, and that Bethlehem is ever open to receive us.


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 11

The Magi follow the bright
new Star to Bethlehem . . .


Let us borrow the language of the ancient Liturgies, in order to give expression to the sentiments awakened in us by all these ineffable Mysteries. Let us begin with a Hymn on the Nativity of Our Lord, left us by the Saintly Bishop of Poitiers, Venantius Fortunatus, which is followed by an eloquent Prayer from the Mozarabic Breviary.

In addition, there follows a Sequence from the Paris Missal of 1584 and a Hymn by Saint Ephrem, the holy Deacon of Edessa, who continues his admirable dialogue between Mary and the Magi.

Then, we turn to a Hymn from the Greek Church, which we sing to the tender Mother. The Hymn breathes so sweetly the unction and piety of Saint Joseph the Hymnographer.

The Church, today, makes Commemoration of the holy Pope and Martyr, Hyginus. He held the Apostolic Chair under the reign of Antoninus, and closed his four years' Pontificate by Martyrdom.


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 14

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


Pope Saint Hyginus (138 A.D. - 142 A.D.) Pope And Martyr. Feast Day 11 January.


Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.

File:Hyginus.jpg

Pope Saint Hyginus.
(138 A.D. - 142 A.D.)
From an icon inside the 
Rome, Italy.
This File: 14 September 2006.
User: TPM.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Pope Hyginus (died 142 A.D.) was the Bishop of Rome from 138 A.D. to 142 A.D. Tradition holds that during his Papacy he determined the various prerogatives of the Clergy and defined the grades of the Ecclesiastical hierarchy. However, modern scholars tend to doubt this claim and view the governance of the Church of Rome during this period as still more or less collective.

According to the Liber Pontificalis, Hyginus was Greek, born in Athens. The source further states that he previously was a philosopher, probably founded on the similarity of his name with that of two Latin authors.

Irenaeus says that the Gnostic, Valentinus, came to Rome in Hyginus's time, remaining there until Anicetus became Pontiff (Against Heresies, III, iii). Cerdo, another Gnostic, and predecessor of Marcion, also lived at Rome in the reign of Hyginus; by confessing his errors and recanting, he succeeded in obtaining re-admission into the bosom of the Church, but eventually he fell back into the Heresies and was expelled from the Church. How many of these events took place during the time of Hyginus is not known.


File:Hyginus.jpg


The Liber Pontificalis also relates that this Pope organised the hierarchy and established the order of Ecclesiastical precedence (Hic clerum composuit et distribuit gradus). This general observation recurs also in the biography of Pope Hormisdas; it has no historical value, and, according to Duchesne, the writer probably referred to the Lower Orders of the Clergy.

The ancient sources contain no information as to his having died a Martyr. At his death, he was buried on the Vatican Hill, near the tomb of Saint Peter. His Feast is celebrated on 11 January. Three Letters, attributed to him, have survived.

According to Eusebius (Church History, IV, xv.), Hyginus succeeded Telesphorus during the first year of the reign of Emperor Antoninus Pius, i.e. in 138 A.D., or 139 A.D. Eusebius (Church History, IV, xvi) states that Hyginus's Pontificate lasted four years.


File:Hyginus.jpg


The following is taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

"At Rome, the holy death of Saint Hyginus, Pope, who generously suffered Martyrdom during the persecution of Emperor Hadrian" (Roman Martyrology) perhaps about 142 A.D.

If the Feast of Saint Hyginus be kept:

Mass: Státuit.
Red Vestments.


Friday 10 January 2014

The Fifth Day Within The Octave Of The Epiphany. 10 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.



Herrad of Landsberg (1130 - 1195) was a 12th-Century Alsatian Nun and Abbess of Hohenburg Abbey, in the Vosges mountains, France. She is known as the author of the pictorial encyclopaedia Hortus Deliciarum (The Garden of Delights). Herrad of Landsberg was born about 1130 at the Castle of Landsberg, the seat of a noble Alsatian family. She entered Hohenburg Abbey in the Vosges mountains, about fifteen miles from Strasbourg, at an early age. She became Abbess there in 1167 and continued in that Office until her death.
These illustrations are from a reproduction by Christian Maurice Engelhardt, 1818. The original perished in the burning of the Library of Strasbourg during the siege of 1870 in the Franco-Prussian War. The text was copied and published by Straub and Keller, 1879-1899.
Date: 1818.
Author: Made at the Hohenburg Abbey, France, 1185 by Herrad of Landsberg (1130 - 1195) These illustrations are from a reproduction by Christian Maurice Engelhardt, 1818.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Magi have reached Bethlehem; the humble dwelling of the King of the Jews has been thrown open to them; there, says Saint Matthew, they found the Child with Mary His Mother. Falling down, they adore the Divine King they have so fervently sought after, and for whom the whole Earth has been longing.

Here, we have the commencement of the Christian Church. In this humble stable, we have the Son of God made Man, presiding as Head over His mystical body; Mary is present, as the Co-Operatrix in the world's salvation, as as the Mother of Divine Grace; Juda is represented by this Holy Queen and her Spouse, Saint Joseph; the Gentiles are adoring, in the person of the Magi, whose faith is perfect now that they have seen the Child.

It is not a Prophet that they are honouring, nor is it to an Earthly King that they open their treasures; He, before whom they prostrate in adoration, is their God. "See, I pray you," says Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, "and attentively consider how keen is the eye of faith. It recognises the Son of God, whether feeding at his Mother's breast, or hanging on the Cross, or dying in the midst of suffering; for the Good Thief recognises Him on the Cross, and the Magi recognise Him in the stable; he, in spite of the nails which fasten Him, and they, in spite of the clouts [clothing] which swathe Him." [Second Sermon for The Epiphany.]

So that all is consummated, Bethlehem is not merely the birthplace of Our Redeemer; it is the cradle of the Church. Well did the Prophet say of it: And, thou, Bethlehem, art not the least among the princes of Juda [St. Matt. ii 6; Micah v 2].



Alsace, France,
also known as Hohenburg Abbey.
The previous image of The Three Magi (see, above)
was originally created in Hohenburg Abbey.
Photo: 29 June 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Mattana.
(Wikimedia Commons)


We can understand Saint Jerome leaving all the ambitions and comforts of Rome to go and bury himself in the seclusion of this cave, where all these Mysteries were accomplished. Who would not gladly live and die in this privileged place, sanctified as it is by the presence of Our Jesus, embalmed with the fragrance of the Queen of Heaven, filled with the lingering echoes of the songs of Angels, and fresh, even yet, with the memory of those ancestors of our faith, the holy Magi !

These happy Kings are not scandalised at the sight they behold on entering the humble dwelling. They are not disappointed at finding at the end of their long journey a weak Babe, a poor Mother, and a wretched stable. On the contrary, they rightly understand the Mystery. Once believing in the promise that the Infinite God would visit His creature, Man, and show him how He loved him, they are not surprised at seeing Him humble Himself, and take upon Himself all our miseries, that He might be like us in all save sin.

Their own hearts told them that the wound, inflicted on man by pride, was too deep to be healed by anything short of an extreme remedy; so that, to them, these strange humiliations at Bethlehem bespeak the design and action of a God.

Israel, too, is in expectation of the Messias, but he must be mighty and wealthy and exalted above all other kings in Earthly glory; the Magi, on the contrary, see, in the humility and poverty of this weak Babe of Bethlehem, the indications of the true Messias.

The Grace of God has triumphed in these faithful men; they fall down before Him, and, full of admiration and love, they adore Him.



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


Who could describe the sweet conversations they held with His Blessed Mother ? For the King, Himself, of Whom they were come in search, broke not, even for their sakes, the voluntary silence He had imposed on Himself by becoming an Infant. He accepted their homage, He sweetly smiled upon them, He Blessed them; but He would not speak to them; Mary, alone, was to satisfy, by her sublime communications, the holy curiosity of the three Pilgrims, who represented the entire human race. How amply must she not have rewarded their faith and love, by announcing to them the Mystery of that Virginal Birth, which was to bring salvation to the world; by telling them of the joys of her own maternal heart; and by describing to them the sweet perfections of the Divine Child !

They, themselves, would fix their eyes on the Blessed Mother, and listen to her every word with devout attention; and, oh !, how sweetly must not Divine Grace have penetrated their hearts through the words of her whom God, Himself, has chosen as the means to lead men to the knowledge and the love of His sovereign Majesty !

The star which, but an hour ago, had brightly shone for them in the heavens, was replaced by another, of a lovelier light and stronger influence; and it prepared them for the contemplation of that God Who calls Himself the bright and Morning Star ! [Apoc. xxii 16]. The whole world seemed now a mere nothing in their eyes; the stable of Bethlehem held within it all the riches of Heaven and Earth. They had shared in that long expectation of the human race, the expectation of four thousand years — and now it seemed but as a moment, so full and perfect was their joy at having found the God who, alone, can satisfy the desires of man's heart.

They understood and entered into the merciful designs of their Emmanuel; they gratefully and humbly contracted with Him the alliance He so mercifully made, through them, with the human race; they adored the just judgements of God, Who was about to cast off an unbelieving people; they rejoiced at the glories of the Christian Church, which had thus been begun in their persons; they prayed for us, their posterity in that same Church.



English: The Magi Journeying.
Français: Les rois mages en voyage.
Artist: James Tissot (1836–1902).
Date: Between 1886 and 1894.
Current location: Brooklyn Museum, United States.
Credit line: Purchased by public subscription.
Source/Photographer: Online Collection of Brooklyn Museum;
Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 2006, 00.159.30_PS1.jpg.
(Wikimedia Commons)


We, dear Babe of Bethlehem !, — we, the Gentiles, who, by our regeneration, have become the posterity of these first Christians — we adore Thee as they did, Since their entrance into Bethlehem, long ages have passed away; but there has been an unbroken procession of people and nations tending towards Thee under the guidance of the Star of Faith.

We have been made members of Thy Church, and we adore Thee with the Magi. In one thing are we happier than these firstborn of the Church; we have heard Thy sacred words and teachings, we have contemplated Thy sufferings and Thy Cross, we have been witnesses of Thy Resurrection, we have heard the whole Universe, from the rising to the setting of the Sun, hymning Thy Blessed and Glorious Name; well may we adore and love Thee as King of the Earth !

The Sacrifice, whereby all Thy Mysteries are perpetuated and renewed, is now offered up daily in every part of the world; the voice of Thy Church is heard speaking to all men; and all this light and all these graces are ours ! The Church, the ever-enduring Bethlehem, the House of Bread of Life, gives Thee to us: and we are for ever feasting on Thy adorable beauty. Yea, sweet Jesus, we adore Thee with the Magi.

And thou, O Mary !, teach us, as thou didst teach the Magi. Unfold to us, and each year more clearly, the sweet Mystery of thy Jesus, and, at length, win us over unreservedly to His service. Thou are our Mother; watch over us, and suffer us not to lose any of the lessons He teaches us. May Bethlehem, wherein we have entered in company with the holy Magi, work in us the renovation of our whole lives.



Photo: Alexander R. Pruss.
Current location: National Gallery of Art,
Washington, DC. America.
This File: 23 November 2007.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Let us close the day by reciting some of the ancient Hymns written in honour of the Mystery of our New-Born King. Let us begin with the Hymn composed by Saint Ambrose, followed by a Prayer from the Breviary of the Gothic Church in Spain.

In addition, we have a Hymn of the Magi, from the Church of Syria's admirable Poet, Saint Ephrem.

As our offering to Our Lady, we will recite a beautiful Sequence, which our own dear England used to sing in the Middle Ages:

Flos pudicitiae,
Aula munditiae,
Mater misericordiae,
Salve, Virgo serena . . .

O flower of purity !,
Sanctuary of chastity !,
Mother of mercy !,
Hail, gentle Maid !



The Magi wonder at the emergence
of the bright new Star.


Epiphany And The Un-Ordinariness Of Liturgical Time.


Text is taken from RORATE CAELI


File:Brooklyn Museum - The Magi Journeying (Les rois mages en voyage) - James Tissot - overall.jpg

English: The Magi Journeying.
Français: Les rois mages en voyage.
Artist: James Tissot (1836–1902).
Date: Between 1886 and 1894.
Current location: Brooklyn Museum, United States.
Credit line: Purchased by public subscription.
Source/Photographer: Online Collection of Brooklyn Museum;
Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 2006, 00.159.30_PS1.jpg.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Epiphany 
And The Un-Ordinariness 
Of Liturgical Time


One chapter of Dom Gregory Dix’s The Shape of the Liturgy is named “The Sanctification of Time”. This chapter shows how the Liturgical Calendar of the Church sanctifies time. The Liturgical Calendar does not provide merely an overlay of secular time. The Calendar is part of the recognition of the radically irruptive event of the Incarnation that changes time and space and reality forever.

Of course this includes the celebrations of the feasts of the Saints, those specific celebrations of the making real of the grace of God in the lives of those who open themselves up in a total way to this grace. But the foundation of the Liturgical Calendar is the cycles that celebrate the Mysteries of the Birth, Life, Death, Resurrection and Ascension of the Lord Jesus Christ. 

The Christmas cycle, which we are celebrating at this time, gives ultimate meaning to the secular, physical time when the days are becoming longer, a bit more light each day. In the Christmas cycle we celebrate the coming into the world of the Light that shines in the darkness. We celebrate the making flesh of God in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the birth of her child whose name is Jesus — he who comes to save.


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 1

The Magi wonder at the emergence 
of the bright new Star.


The climax of this cycle has always been the Epiphany, a feast older than Christmas, a feast that celebrates the fact that the event and the person of the Incarnation embraces not only time and space but embraces all the peoples of the world. And the feast of the Epiphany proclaims in its three-fold way the answer to the seminal question asked in the Gospels: who is this man Jesus? 

He is the one who is worshipped as God. 

He is the one who is the Son of God in whom his Father is well pleased. 

He is the one who changes water into wine, for he is the Lord of creation itself.

One of the saddest and most deleterious effects of the changes in the structure and content of the Liturgical Calendar in the post-Conciliar reform is the lack of understanding of the sanctification of time by the feasts and fasts of the Church. The introduction, at least in English, of the term, “ordinary time”, contradicts the fact that after the Incarnation there is no "ordinary" time. There is only the extraordinary time that has been brought into being by the insertion of the dagger of the Incarnation into ordinary time. 

Now we know that the term “ordinary time” is a poor translation of the Latin term for “in course”. But even this does not take away from the fact of the impoverishment of the Liturgical Calendar that has been effected by taking away the Sundays after the Epiphany and the Sundays after Pentecost.


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 2

The Magi follow the bright 
new Star to Bethlehem.


The traditional way of naming these Sundays understood that these two feasts, Epiphany and Pentecost, are the climaxes of the Christmas and Easter seasons, the seasons that celebrate the event and meaning of, respectively, the Birth, and the Death and Resurrection of Christ, and therefore these feasts become the touchstone, the source of reality of the Sundays of the Church Year.

One of the marks of the Novus Ordo form and its calendar that is striking evidence of its incapacity to bear the weight of the Catholic Tradition is its source in a committee. Something organic has nothing to do with a liturgical commission or consilium or committee. As soon as one thinks that the Liturgy can be treated as a mere text to be updated, the possibility of worship is severely lessened. 

That is what the Protestant reformers thought. They rewrote their Mass texts to suit their ideology. And, for the most part, liturgical worship died in those churches. And where it did survive, as in Anglicanism, it did so thanks to both an innate conservatism and finally to a revival in the 19th century of a more Catholic understanding of the Eucharist.


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 3

The Magi follow the bright 
new Star to Bethlehem.


The whole question of what happened, and how it happened, with respect to the Novus Ordo rite, vis a vis the imposition of a particular ideology based on the scholarship du jour, and the personal predilections of those in charge of the post-Conciliar reforms, is a conversation that has not been allowed to happen by those “in charge” of such things in Rome. There is no doubt that such a conversation will be had and must be had, for the good of the Church. But that will come inevitably in time.

But, surely, the question of the Liturgical Calendar and the mistakes made in its Novus Ordo formulation can be discussed now. The imposition of a pre-conceived “orderliness” that demands that the Christmas season end with the feast of the Epiphany and with no time for the Octave to reflect on this seminal feast must be revisited. 

This is compounded when the feast of the Epiphany is celebrated on a Sunday. The irony here is that one of the battle cries of the reform of the Calendar was the restoration of the primacy of Sunday in the Liturgical Year. Surely we can now see the foolishness of the possibility of celebrating the Epiphany as early as on January 2, four full days before the actual feast that is celebrated in those parts of the Western Church still on January 6 and celebrated on that day by our Orthodox brethren throughout the world with the solemnity it deserves.


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 11

The Magi follow the bright 
new Star to Bethlehem . . .


It is foolish as well to celebrate this feast after January 6, as if it is irrelevant to the sanctification of time when any feast is celebrated, for the guiding principle in this reform is the convenience of the people: it is more convenient for the people to celebrate the Epiphany on Sunday rather than the interruption of having to go to Mass on a weekday. 

But it is precisely the interruption that is the point. The ir-ruption of the Incarnation demands such an inter-ruption, demands such an “inconvenience”, for it is a reminder of the sanctification of time itself to those of us who forget that time and space, and the world, and our lives, and our future, have been radically changed by the Incarnation of God in Jesus Christ.


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 14

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


It may be too much to hope that a real conversation about the Liturgical Calendar of the Novus Ordo form will take place soon. But surely we can hope that our Bishops will soon see the deleterious effect of moving the Epiphany and other major feasts of our Lord to Sunday and will put an end to this practice. 

For this, let us pray.


Father Richard G. Cipolla.


Thursday 9 January 2014

Dreikönigsfest. The Feast Of The Three Kings. Epiphany Water. Epiphany Chalk.


File:Brooklyn Museum - The Magi Journeying (Les rois mages en voyage) - James Tissot - overall.jpg

English: The Magi Journeying.
Français: Les rois mages en voyage.
Artist: James Tissot (1836–1902).
Date: Between 1886 and 1894.
Current location: Brooklyn Museum, United States.
Credit line: Purchased by public subscription.
Source/Photographer: Online Collection of Brooklyn Museum;
Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 2006, 00.159.30_PS1.jpg.
(Wikimedia Commons)


DREIKÖNIGSFEST.


The following Text is taken from ROMAN CHRISTENDOM

By long tradition, on The Feast of The Epiphany — called Dreikönigsfest (The Feast of The Three Kings) in the lands of the old Holy Roman Empire — the Rector of the Parish (or, in his absence, the father of each family) visits each house with a Cross-Bearer, two Acolytes and three children, dressed as The Kings, one bearing a Censer with lighted Incense.

At each house, a little Ceremony takes place; the house is Blessed with Epiphany Water, and, over the door lintel of the house, the following is inscribed with Blessed Chalk:

20 + C + M + B + 15


In my house, we always perform this traditional ceremony.

This symbolises the present year (2015) and The Blessing of The Three Magi (Caspar, Melchior and Balthazar) upon each home.

The symbols remain all year, or until the weather has washed them away.

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