Twentieth Sunday Ordinary Time Mass and Reflections

All the scriptures for today's Mass are here

Reflection on Sunday's Scriptures
here 
and this one here 

 First Reading Proverbs 9 :1-6
Above Image Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit 




 Wisdom has built her house,
she has set up her seven columns;
she has dressed her meat, mixed her wine,
yes, she has spread her table.
She has sent out her maidens; she calls
from the heights out over the city:
"Let whoever is simple turn in here;
To the one who lacks understanding, she says,
Come, eat of my food,
and drink of the wine I have mixed!
Forsake foolishness that you may live;
advance in the way of understanding."


Lady Wisdom and her three daughters Faith, Hope and Love

O Wisdom from the O Antiphons of Advent  

My previous post earlier this week with some music and reflections on this Sunday's themes and Scriptures can be found here

Interesting reflection on Lady Wisdom here 
and here 






The opening lines of the first page of text from Thomas Merton's Hagia Sophia, hand-printed in 1962 by Victor Hammer (using American Uncial, a type he designed) at the Stamperia del Santuccio in Lexington, Kentucky. This is copy 14 from a printing of 69 copies. Image source here.


The complete text of the Hagia Sophia by Thomas Merton can be read  here
and a page by page photos in the edition hand-printed by Victor Hammer in 1962 can be viewed here.

There is an interesting review of the book here.

Another article dealing with similar themes titled "Living our Theology with Merton’s Feminine Image of God

Victor Hammer, an artist born in Vienna in 1882, after moving to the United States became acquainted with Thomas Merton. "On one of Merton's visits to his home, he asked him to identify a painting he had done of a woman with a young boy standing before her, on whom she is placing a crown. He said he had intended a Madonna and child, but he no longer knew who she was. Merton said: 'I know who she is. I have always known her. She is Hagia Sophia.' Later Hammer asked Merton to put in writing what he had said. He did so in the following letter."
          A Life in Letters: The Essential Collection, p. 183-184



May 14, 1959

I have not rushed to reply to your letter-first, because I have been a little busy, and second, because it is most difficult to write anything that really makes sense about this most mysterious reality in the mystery of God-Hagia Sophia (Holy Wisdom).

The first thing to be said, of course, is that Hagia Sophia is God Himself. God is not only a Father but a Mother. He is both at the same time, and it is the "feminine aspect" or "feminine principle" in the divinity that is the Hagia Sophia. But of course as soon as you say this the whole thing becomes misleading: a division of an "abstract" divinity into two abstract principles. Nevertheless, to ignore this distinction is to losetouch with the fullness of God. This is a very ancient intuition of reality which goes back to the oldest Oriental thought...For the "masculine-feminine" relationship is basic in all reality-simply because all reality mirrors the reality of God.

In its most primitive aspect, Hagia Sophia is the dark, nameless Ousia (Being)
 of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost, the incomprehensible, "primordial" darkness which is infinite light. 

The Three Divine Persons, each at the same time, are Sophia and manifest her. 

But where the Sophia of your picture comes in is this: the wisdom of God,
"reaching from end to end mightily" is also the Tao, the nameless pivot
of all being and nature, the center and meaning of all, that which is the smallest and poorest and most humble of all: the "feminine child" playing before God the Creator in His universe, "playing before Him at all times, playing in the world" (Proverbs 8)... 
This feminine principle in the universe is the inexhaustible source of creative realizations of the Father's glory in the world and is in fact the manifestation of His glory. Pushing it further, Sophia in ourselves is the mercy of God, the tenderness which by the infinitely mysterious power of pardon turns darkness of our sins into the light of God's love.

Hence, Sophia is the feminine, dark, yielding, tender counterpart of the power, justice, creative dynamism of the Father.

Now the Blessed Virgin is the one created being who in herself realizes perfectly all that is hidden in Sophia.
She is a kind of personal manifestation of Sophia. She crowns the Second Person of the Trinity with His human nature (with what is weak, able to suffer, able to be defeated) and sends Him forth with His mission of inexpressible mercy, to die for man on the cross, and this death, followed by the Resurrection, is the greatest expression of the "manifold wisdom of God" which unites us all in the mystery of Christ- the Church.

Finally, it is the Church herself, properly understood as the great manifestation of the mercy of God, who is the revelation of Sophia in the sight of the angels.

The key to the whole thing is, of course, mercy and love. In the sense that God is Love, is Mercy, is Humility, is Hiddenness, He shows Himself to us within ourselves as our own poverty, our own nothingness (which Christ took upon Himself, ordained for this by the Incarnation in the womb of the Virgin) (the crowning in your picture), and if we receive the humility of God into our hearts, we become able to accept and embrace and love this very poverty, which is Himself and His Sophia.  

And then the darkness of Wisdom becomes to us  inexpressible light. We pass through the center of our own nothingness into the light of God...

The beauty of all creation is a reflection of Sophia living and hidden in creation. But
 it is only our reflection. 

And the misleading thing about beauty, created beauty, is that we expect Sophia to be simply a more intense and more perfect and more brilliant; unspoiled, spiritual revelation of the same beauty. Whereas to arrive at her beauty we must pass through an apparent negation of created beauty, and to reach her light we must realize that in comparison with created light it is a darkness. 


But this is only because created beauty and light are ugliness and darkness compared with her. Again, the whole thing is in the question of mercy, which cuts across the divisions and passes beyond every philosophical and religious ideal. For  Sophia is not an ideal, not an abstraction, but the highest reality, and the highest reality must manifest herself to us not only in power but also in poverty, otherwise we never see it. 


Sophia is the Lady Poverty  to whom St. Francis was married. And of course she dwelt with the Desert Fathers in their solitude, for it was she who brought them there and  she whom they knew there. It was with her that they conversed all the time in their silence...


                         ~ Thomas Merton


Image and text above from the Blog Ascending the Hills from here.


Odilon Redon (1840-1916)
La Cellule d'Or 1892
"A rendering of the invisible"


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