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Saint Anthony, Father of monastic life

by VP


Posted on Friday January 17, 2025 at 12:00AM in Quotes


Painting of Saint Anthony, by Piero di Cosimo, c. 1480


"Wrath is about to strike the Church and she is about to be delivered up to men who are like to senseless beasts. For I saw the table of the Lord's house, and mules around it standing on all sides in a ring and kicking up their hoofs at what was within, the same as the kicking you have when a frisking herd runs wild. You surely heard," he said, "how I moaned; I heard a voice saying: "My altar shall be desecrated."

So spoke the old man; and two years later came the present assault of the Arians and the plundering of the churches, when they took the vessels by force and had them carried away by the pagans; when, too, they forced the pagans from the shops to their meetings and in their presence did as they pleased on the sacred table. Then we all realized that the kicking of the mules presaged to Antony what the Arians are now doing like so many senseless beasts.

When he saw this vision, he consoled his companions, saying: "Do not be discouraged, Children, for as the Lord has been angry, so will He bring us recovery later. And the Church will quickly regain the beauty that is hers and shine with her wonted splendor. You will see the persecuted restored and irreligion retreating again to its proper haunts and the true faith asserting itself everywhere with complete freedom. Only, do not defile yourselves with the Arians. This their teaching is not of the Apostles, but of the demons and their father, the Devil. Indeed, it is sterile and unreasonable, and it lacks right sense - like the senselessness of mules."(...)
"He exhorted them "not to grow lax in their efforts nor to lose heart in the practice of the ascetic life, but to live as though dying daily; and, as I have said before, to work hard to guard the soul from filthy thoughts; to emulate holy men. Do not go near the Meletian schismatics, for you know their wicked and unholy teaching. Have nothing to do with the Arians, for the irreligion of these is plain to everyone.And if you should see the judges supporting them, you must not permit yourself to be confused: this will come to an end - it is a phenomenon that is mortal and bound to last for but a short time. Therefore, keep yourselves clean from these and watch over the tradition of the Fathers, and, above all, the orthodox faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, as you have learned it from the Scriptures and as you have often been put in mind of by me."

Source:The Life of Saint Antony, by St. Athanasius


"He was remarkable from his childhood for his temperance, "close attendance on church duties, and punctual obedience to his parents. Having heard these words read in the Gospel: If thou wilt be perfect, go sell what thou hast, and give to the poor, and come, follow me; he understood them as spoken to himself, sold all that he had, and distributed it to the poor. Pray for a like obedience to all the commands of Christ, and that as often as you read the Scripture, it may be with the like fruit to your soul. Pray for poverty of spirit; that your affections being taken off from the things of this world, you may ever be in readiness to forsake all. If you find your heart too eagerly set on anything here, have you not reason to judge yourself unsafe? If forsaking creatures be the way of perfection, must not seeking and loving them be very dangerous ?

St. Antony retired from his father's house into a desert, where he lived in the exercise of prayer, rigorous fasting, and the constant practice of all virtues, to the age of a hundred and five years. He separated himself as much as pos sible from all creatures, that his heart might not be withdrawn from God. Pray for this spirit. Your obligation of seeking and loving God is as great as his; but your difficulty in doing it is so much greater than his, as you are more engaged with creatures than he was. If the life of hermits who had quitted the world, was so mortified, are not greater watchfulness and self-denial necessary for you, who are in much greater danger than they were?

In that retirement, St. Antony was assaulted with much greater temptations than before. But he went on with courage, not fearing what the devil could do. Pray for constancy like his. Be not dejected by the most violent temptations: the devil may terrify, but he cannot hurt you, unless you are willing. If God is pleased thus to exercise you, submit with patience and humility, ever placing your confidence in his assistance. Peaceable devotion is more to your inclination; but a life of greater exercise is also one of greater merit, and if you overcome, will gain you a greater crown." The Catholic Year by Rev. Fr. John Gother

Prayer: " We unite, great Saint, with the universal Church in offering you the homage of our affectionate veneration, and in praising our Emmanuel for the gifts He bestowed on you. How sublime a life was yours, and how rich in fruit were your works! Verily, you are the Father of a great people and one of the most powerful auxiliaries of the Church of God. We beseech you, therefore, pray for the Monastic Order, that it may re-appear in all its ancient fervour, and pray for each member of the great Family. Fevers of the body have been often allayed by your intercession and we beg for a continuance of this your compassionate aid — but the fevers of our soul are more dangerous and we beg your pity and prayers that we may be delivered from them. Watch over us, in the temptations which the enemy is unceasingly putting in our way. Pray for us that we may be vigilant in the combat, prudent in avoiding dangerous occasions, courageous in the trial and humble in our victory.

    The angel of darkness appeared to you in a visible shape, but he hides himself and his plots from us. Here again, we beg your prayers that we be not deceived by his craft. May the fear of God’s judgements and the thought of eternity penetrate into the depth of our souls. May prayer be our refuge in every necessity, and penance our safeguard against sin. But above all, pray that we may have that which you counselled above all —the love of Jesus — of that Jesus who, for love of us, deigned to be born into this world so that He might merit for us the graces with which we might triumph — of that Jesus who humbled Himself even so far as to suffer temptation that so He might show us how we were to resist and fight."

Source: Dom Prosper Gueranger:




Church unity Octave Prayer: January 18th to 25th

by VP


Posted on Friday January 17, 2025 at 12:00AM in From the Past


Church unity Octave.

The Church Unity Octave is observed every year from the feast of St. Peter's Chair, January 18, to that of the conversion of St. Paul, January 25.
It was approved and blessed by the late Pope Pius X in 1909. His Holiness Pope Benedict XV, by a Papal Brief, dated February 15, 1916, extended its observance of the Universal Church enriching it with Indulgences.
(Catholic Missions Vol 13-14 January 1919).


Prayer:

  •    Ant. That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent me.
        ℣. I say to thee, that thou art Peter,
        ℟. And upon this rock I will build my Church.
        Let us pray: Lord Jesus Christ, Who didst say to Thine Apostles: peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you, look not upon my sins, but upon the faith of Thy Church; and vouchsafe unto Her that peace and unity which is agreeable to Thy will: Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.


NB. It is also recommended that one decade of the Rosary (at least) be said for the particular intention of each day; also that Holy Communion be received as often as possible during the Octave, daily if possible, certainly on the First or Last Day of the Octave in order to obtain the Plenary Indulgence. Source: Catholic World, Volume 106 Paulist Fathers, 1918


Traditional Version:
(Father Paul of Graymoor began the Chair of Unity Octave. By 1913 a set of Intentions for each day of the Octave had become fixed)

Jan 18. The return of all the "other sheep" to the one fold of St. Peter, the one Shepherd.
Jan 19. The return of all Oriental Separatists to Communion with the Apostolic See.
Jan 20. The submission of Anglicans to the Authority of the Vicar of Christ.
Jan 21. That the Lutherans and all other Protestants of Continental Europe may find their way "Back to Holy Church."
Jan 22. That Christians in America may become one in Communion with the Chair of St. Peter.
Jan 23. The return to the sacraments of lapsed Catholics.
Jan 24. The Conversion of the Jews.
Jan 25. The Missionary conquest of the world for Christ.

Source: the Living Church Vol 141. 1960

"Peace in Unity

While a great part of mankind looks to its statesmen to devise ways and means by which the diversified and in some instances anti-Christian theories of government of the Allied Nations might be amalgamated and directed towards outlawing future wars, Catholics see in the divinely established unity of the Church the only road by which the concerted action of the true followers of Christ can lead the world to a lasting peace. We possess today a prayer movement for Church Unity, the purpose of which is to gather into the one true Church all those who have unfortunately withdrawn from the Catholic religion and to unite them against the prevailing forces of Liberalism and Materialism. For, as His Holiness Pope Benedict XV remarked in an Apostolic Brief dated Feb. 25, 1916, "in the Unity of Faith the foremost characteristic of the Truth shines forth, and it is thus that the Apostle Paul exhorts the Ephesians to preserve the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, by proclaiming that 'there is one Lord, one Faith, one Baptism."" Noting the approval extended to this Octave of Prayer by the Catholic Hierarchy, he asserted that “with a glad heart, therefore, we have heard from the Society which is called 'of the Atonement,' established in New York, that prayers have been proposed to be recited from the Feast of the Chair of Blessed Peter at Rome to the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul, in order that this aim of Unity might be obtained from the Lord and at the same time we rejoice that these prayers, blessed by Pope Pius the Tenth, of recent memory, and approved by the Bishops of America, have been circulated far and wide through the United States."

At no time in the past nineteen hundred years has the pendulum of history registered such terrible spiritual, moral, and material catastrophe as has befallen mankind in this tragic moment. For as the old world lies in fragments, the future of Christian civilization in Europe and the rest of the world hangs in the balance. Even the joy of hard-won victory, accompanied by the dawning hope of a new day of peace and reconstruction, cannot offset the knowledge that the progress of the human race in the present confusion of ideologies has been a progress without God and even against God; without Christ and even against Christ. If mankind had but listened to the Church, there is little doubt that the chaos of this age, resulting from a weakening of faith in God and in Jesus Christ, and the darkening in men's minds of the light of moral principles, could have been avoided.

Our generation is reaping the woeful consequences of an incredulity which has succeeded in excluding Christ from modern life, especially from public life. The deep spiritual crisis that has overthrown the sound principles of private and public morality is the result of cleavage from the Church in the course of centuries and the divorcing of civil power from every kind of dependence on a Supreme Being. Cut off from the age-old teaching authority of the Catholic Church, many of the separated brethren have gone so far as to overthrow the central dogma of Christianity, the Divinity of the Saviour, and have hastened thereby the advance of spiritual and moral decay.

Now, in this hour of perhaps irrevocable decisions, the Church may well be envisioned as the voice of one crying in the wilderness, appealing to her wandering children to be united with her in the unity of faith and worship, so that their return to the Christian way of life might be a bulwark against the menace of modern pagan teaching. She alone, in the words of St. Augustine, "is the holy Church, the one Church, the true Church, the Church which strives against all heresies." She alone fully recognizes the widespread atheistic and anti-Christian tendency rampant in the world, threatening to destroy all the ancient Christian institutions, the life of which consists in a supernatural principle, and to erect on their ruins and with their remains an illusory millennium of universal happiness, a new order which would rest on the quicksands of changeable and ephemeral standards contingent upon the selfish interests of groups and individuals.

Already, through the mysterious workings of divine Providence, this invitation extended by the Church has received long awaited welcome from many who now perceive the inability of all human efforts to replace the laws of God and the unifying and elevating influence of Christ's love. But this is not enough. For, however much this hour of disillusionment has become an hour of grace, "a passage of the Lord” for some, sincere Catholics must humbly recognize their grave responsibility to work and pray that the tireless and salutary occupation of the Church in the spiritual and religious re-education of mankind might bear fruit in the reestablishment of the Christian heritage over the whole world. On the minds of all those who seek refuge from the vortex of error and anti-Christian movements they should impress the words Our Holy Father addressed to the College of Cardinals on June 2, 1944. “How much more potent and efficacious would be the influence of Christian thought and Christian life on the moral sub-structure of the future plans for peace and social reconstruction, if there were not this vast division and dispersal of religious confessions, that in the course of time have detached themselves from Mother Church! Who, today, can fail to recognize what substance of faith, what a genuine power of resistance to anti-religious influence is lost in so many groups as a result of separation."

As never before, the collaboration of the laity in the Apostolate of the Hierarchy must have as its central theme Christ resplendent in His Divine Kingship, if He is to "grant the gifts of peace and unity to all nations." For “in the recognition of the royal prerogatives of Christ and in the return of individuals and of society to the law of His truth and of His love lies the only way of salvation." If Christian thought is to succeed in maintaining and supporting the work of restoration in individual, social and international life, then all who are working for a plan that does not conflict with the religious and moral content of Christian civilization must acknowledge that the Church which Christ founded on earth is the infallible spokesman on faith and morals for the whole world. For the Catholic Church alone possesses, in her infallible pronouncements, the fullness of the principles of Christian morality in all its ramifications. Because of the special assistance of the Holy Spirit promised to the Apostles and their successors, the episcopate united to the Roman Pontiff, she alone teaches men to observe all things whatsoever Christ has commanded. Further, only the Church possesses, from her very institution, a visible unity in doctrine, government and worship. Therefore, only she can establish an organic unity of all men-a supernatural union based on an all-embracing love deeply felt and practiced, rather than a unity which is exclusively human, external, superficial, and by that very fact, weak.

One of the most efficacious means for assuring a just and lasting peace is a Catholic Unity of all those who, seeking brotherly communion in Christ, humbly submit themselves and obey the Vicar of Christ as teacher and ruler of the Church. That is the end of the Prayer Octave for Church Unity founded by Father Paul James Francis, S.A., in 1908. It seeks to restore to God the honor denied Him for so many centuries and to acquire for men the fullness of the Christian heritage which alone can determine the most firm foundation of true peace, that interior peace which cannot be found except by coming close to the spiritual light of Bethlehem's cave.

Catholics especially must unite with Christ who prayed to His Heavenly Father "that they all may be one, even as thou, Father, in me and I in thee; that they also may be one in us, that the world may believe that thou has sent me." And it is incumbent on them to make known the observance of this Octave to all others who sincerely seek eternal salvation, the promotion of the temporal welfare of peoples, their true prosperity, order, and tranquillity. During this Church Unity Octave, from Jan. 18 to Jan. 25, all should pray especially that God the Father may send His Holy Spirit to direct and guide statesmen, that He might inspire their thoughts, their feelings and deliberations, making them spiritually and materially vigorous and firm against obstacles, mistrust, and peril, so that as a result of their deliberations, a new order under the patronage of Christ the King may be established which will lead many wanderers back to the Unity of supernatural faith and love as found in His Mystical Body. For, says St. Ambrose, "great is the glory of justice; for she, existing rather for the good of others than of self, is an aid to the bond of union and fellowship amongst us. She holds so high a place that she has all things laid under her authority ... but the Church, as it were, is the outward form of Justice, she is the common right of all. For all in common she prays, for all in common she works, in the temptation of all she is tried ... For this reason, Paul has made Christ to be foundation, so that we may build upon Him the works of Justice."

Source: GREGORY FIGUEROA, S.A. Atonement Seminary, Washington, D. C. The American Ecclesiastical Review, Volume 114 Herman Joseph Heuser Catholic University of America Press, 1946



The Angel's Warning

by VP


Posted on Friday January 17, 2025 at 12:00AM in Meditations


"One night when Joseph was peacefully sleeping at Bethlehem, an angel's voice aroused him from his slumbers, and he saw before him one of the messengers of the Most High, who said; "Arise, and take the young Child and His Mother, and fly into the land of Egypt, for Herod will seek the young Child to destroy Him." Hence observe :

1. That God's ways are so different from ours. We should have expected that He would exert His divine power in behalf of His only-begotten Son, and that the soldiers of Herod would be struck with blindness on the road, or would somehow fail to discover where Jesus was, or perhaps would come and fall prostrate at the feet of the new-born King. How different the course enjoined by the angel ! Apparently so clumsy a way of saving Jesus from His enemies! Yet such are God's ways — clumsy in the eyes of men. What strange presumption it is that I should criticize the divine arrangements as I sometimes do !

2. That the conditions of safety seemed so unnecessarily hard. Why to Egypt — a pagan land, the very name of which was a synonym for bondage and misery? Was this the only way to preserve the life of the Son of God? To all this one answer: It was God's will, and that was enough.

3. But after all it was but a vision of the night, perhaps a dream or a mere subjective fancy, could anything so wild and imprudent come from God? To all this one answer: I know the message came from God, and I cannot and will not evade the divine command. "

Meditations for Christmas . By Rev. Richard F. Clarke S.J. The Catholic Truth Society, London 1891


Our Lady of Hope, January 17

by VP


Posted on Friday January 17, 2025 at 12:00AM in Articles


Image result for POntmain Our Lady of Hope











Notre Dame de Pontmain, France

“But pray, my children ; God will hear you soon ; my Son suffers Himself to be moved."


"Mary is in fact the embodiment, the complete personification of Hope. Both humanity and God have had their eyes fixed on her: guilty humanity in order to see the Victim that was to expiate our transgressions, come forth from her maiden-womb : and God, in the impatience of His love, expecting from this chosen woman, the Savior His Son, the great miracle of His mercy. When the first transgression had just been committed, God’s voice was heard, and chilled our first parents with terror. The wrath of God, threatening, chastisements, sufferings, tears, all were falling upon man, and were about to cast him into the most terrible despair. There is but one gleam of hope which will ever continue to grow brighter throughout the ages: it is the woman who is announced as destined to crush the enemy's head. Inimicitias fonam inter te et mulierem, . . . . ifsa conteret caput tuum.—Gen. iii. 15.

“Hope, dear brethren, was born at the instant when that word was pronounced. From that hour the heart of man could hope in the midst of his terrible misfortune; and God himself, God who is a Father before being a Judge, and is only a Judge through our transgression,(as Tertullian says, de nostro justus), God could console His heart, giving to Himself the assurance that He would commission a woman to bring to the fallen world the hope of a glorious restoration.

“Without doubt Jesus Christ is, above all others, the hope of the world. Being God and man, He is the sole mediator by whom humanity has entered into the way of salvation, and it is by His merits alone that it hopes for grace in this world and for glory in the life to come. But, brethren, the miracle of the Incarnation was accomplished by the virtue of the Holy Ghost on the one part, and the co-operation of Mary on the other. We have Jesus Christ therefore from Mary. None has approached nearer to God than she, His highly-privileged creature ; and the part which she took in the work of salvation has been only surpassed by the Redeemer Himself. Salvation was decreed in the counsels of the Eternal, but until the Virgin Mary (to quote the words of a doctor) no human instrument was found to correspond to the divine purposes. And Saint Irenaeus concludes with these words, so glorious for the Holy Virgin : "She has been for all the human race the cause of salvation". Is not the title of Our Lady of Hope a faithful rendering of this admirable doctrine?

“But further, the formal act of the theological virtue of hope consists in the sinner's leaning (as theologians say) on Divine help in order to obtain eternal happiness. Per spem divino auxilio innitimur ad beatitudinem obtinendam. This divine help is Jesus Christ. But do not terrible hours occur in the history of a people or in the history of individuals, when the guilty, amid their remorse and the fear inspired by the gravity of their crimes, suffer themselves to be overwhelmed by the thought that, if Jesus Christ is their Mediator and their Victim, He is also Justice and their Judge?

“What is then to be done? To whom may they have recourse without terror ? How may burdened nature be helped to arise? Under what aspect will hope smile upon so many wretched sinners, and restore strength and confidence to hearts broken by fear? Where may be found the pure and simple personification of mercy, love apart from justice, and hope against hope ?

“In the world of grace, as in the world of nature, this inexhaustible treasure of forgiveness can only be met with in the depths of a mother's heart, and the smile that avails to restore courage can only appear on the lips and the brow of a mother and a virgin. “Ah!’ says Suarez, ‘it is especially when the Majesty of God pierces us with awe that we experience the need of throwing ourselves into His Mother's arms. She intercedes for us, and our unworthiness finds a compensation in her merit.” Not, indeed, brethren, that we would ever despair of God's mercy, but the feeling of our guilt fills us with a shame and a fear that are too profound. Then does the Holy Virgin calm God's wrath and restore hope to the guilty by praying to her Son, and to the Father through her Son (as the great doctor adds) for all things which please God and promote His glory.

“Nothing is more comforting than this doctrine, dear brethren. In troubled times like ours, in these days when the anger of God seems to weigh upon our nation, and souls, discouraged and disheartened, refuse to be comforted, as though all were lost, see how Heaven itself interposes to manifest this teaching to our senses by a prodigy of pity and love.

“On the 17th of January, 1871, the thunder of divine justice was still pealing; France, humbled, bathed in blood, scarce ventured to lift her eyes to heaven; Christ was turned in wrath against His Franks ; it was evident that a victim was becoming necessary to appease the anger of the Most High, and we all felt the want of a divine help, of a special love, to renew hope in the heart of stricken Israel.

“Then appeared the Virgin Mary. Priestess, Mother, Immaculate, she shows herself adorned by the Spirit of God; her robe is blue as a cloudless sky; she is decked with stars, for the star is the sign which brings joy, and announces glad tidings; the crown of command rests on her head, for she is Queen ; and she holds in her arms the great and eternal Victim, as though she would penetrate into the Holy of Holies, and lay it upon the altar, and satisfy justice in order to restore hope to the guilty, and enable him to return free to his duties and his destinies.

“So did she appear at Pontmain. There did children of pure and simple mind see the Virgin Mary grasp the crucifix, red with the blood of her Divine Son, hold it in her two hands as the priest holds the sacred Host, and present it to France, as though she would have said: ‘O beloved people, O faithless people, behold Jesus Christ, thy hope and thy ransom ; renew thy courage; believe once more in a glorious future.” You remember, brethren, the words of the apparition : “But pray, my children ; God will hear you soon ; my Son suffers Himself to be moved.’

“O Virgin O Mother our Hope . Through what save thy prayers has thy Son suffered Himself to be moved? We, alas ! have forgotten, ignored, betrayed Him; we were smitten and stupefied with terror; prayer expired upon our trembling lips. Who then was interceding for us, while we were wholly engrossed in our transgressions and our sorrow ! Who begged for pardon? Who would call herself the Mother of the sinner, and the Mother of the Judge? Who was able with authority and love to remind Sovereign Justice that France would not perish, forasmuch as it is the kingdom of Mary : Regnum Gallia, regnum Maria, nunquam peribit.

“Those words of a great Pope remain as the formula of one of those historical laws on which nations ought to base their hopes. Minds which no longer possess faith, and even Christians who have allowed their faith to grow weak under the influence of the too common naturalism of our days, heedlessly remove God and the supernatural order from the affairs of this world. They attach no value to those great lines which Heaven itself has taken care to imprint on the history of a nation. In their eyes these broad, deep lines are like the characters of an inscription without authority and effaced by time. In their eyes everything is shut within a fatal cycle, in which nations are moved to and fro, undergoing the mournful necessity of growing in order to wither and of coming to an end in the humiliation of an irresistible decay. The thoughts we cherish, brethren, are more sublime and more comforting. True Christians hope in Him who holds the universe in His hand, who rules over all times, who anticipates all councils, who can subdue everything to His will. They see indeed that all things are subjected to a higher power; but they know also that that power is neither deaf nor blind, that it is willing to subject itself to prayer, that it gives to the nation which pleases it sure promises and imperishable resources.”

(...)

To that place for ever hallowed by the presence of God's Mother, and made a fertile source of blessings, you will often resort to pray for yourselves, for your families, for France, for Pius IX. : there you will cast yourselves upon your knees in the earnestness of sacred ardor, and with your hands clasped and your eyes bathed in tears, will cry with us from the bottom of your heart :

“‘O our Lady of Hope, O Immaculate, O Queen, O Mother, O Virgin Priestess, turn thine eyes upon us, upon those who are dear to us, upon France, upon the Church, upon the Vicar of thy Divine Son! We are at thy feet, groaning and entreating ; thou dost present to us the bleeding Host of Calvary: we receive it from thy hands; we press it to our heart: we adore it ; we love it. Ah Mary, through Jesus give us the victory !

Grant us to see souls return to their baptism and to a Christian life! Grant us to see France strong and glorious ! Grant us to see the Church triumphing over the enemies that are savagely bent on her ruin. Grant us to see the Vicar of Jesus Christ seated on the chair of Peter, free, beloved, heard of all ! Grant us to behold the reign of Jesus Christ over the nations which are His heritage! Grant us all, O Mary, to enter with thee into glory ! O our Lady of Pontmain, O our Lady of Hope, spes nostra, save France, save the Church !”

 Jules Denys Le Hardy du Marais, by divine mercy and the authority of the Holy Apostolic See, Bishop of the Church at Laval, to the clergy and faithful of our diocese, health and apostolic benediction in our Lord Jesus Christ. January 6th, 1877.