Update: Prayer A State Of Communion Thoughts From Richard Rohr

Prayer : A State Of Communion
 Some brief but pithy thoughts from Fr Richard Rohr. 
Very Franciscan Lovely !

( An update : Slightly longer article to go with video from Huffington post here)


Groundhog Day, St Brigid's Day, Candlemas Day 2013

This poster image below combines three events celebrated in different parts of the world at the start of February. All bear intimations of the first signs of Spring, the welcome start of visibly lengthening days with stronger light and our hearts eagerly waiting for new life.


  • St Brigid's Day, this Saturday, February 1st, gives us her well to draw from containing some life giving water from the Holy Spirit. 
  • Candlemas Day on Saturday February 2nd, warm our hearts and asking us to share our light of faith with others. Candles that are lit during Candlemas also symbolize Jesus as the “light of the world”.
As the light grows longer
 The cold grows stronger 
 If Candlemas be fair and bright
 Winter will have another flight 
If Candlemas be cloud and rain 
      Winter will be gone and not come again 





This Saturday is also one of my favourite feasts in the liturgical calendar: The Presentation of Jesus, the Lamb of God, to the old man Simeon and Anna the Prophetess in the Temple. 

Candlemas (russian icon)
Candlemas (russian icon) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)








Click here for my post on the Presentation 

and this one on Blessing Candles on the Presentation of our Lord, via
  (interruptingthesilence.com)





One of my favourite flowers that I watch for at this time of year are snowdrops which are also known as Candlemas Bells because they often bloom early in the year, even before Candlemas, and some varieties bloom all winter in the Northern hemisphere.

According to a delightful folk tale, an angel helped these Candlemas bells to bloom and pointed them as a sign of hope to Eve, who wept in repentance and in despair over the cold and death that entered the world. 

Feb 14th One Billion Rising


 It's time to put on your dancing shoes, folks !!


This is an invitation for the world to come together and dance on Feb. 14th St. Valentine's Day, a day intended to celebrate love.

 The One Billion Rising Organisation here is calling for a billion women and men to stand up wherever they and dance together Feb. 14th in a global effort to shake the foundations of the world and stand united against abuse of women.

  The sober truth is that one out of every three women in the world will be raped or beaten in her lifetime. 

That is 1 billion women treated as objects, beaten and bruised, used and exploited sexually without their consent, humiliated and mutilated invisible victims of war. Some are as young as 3 years old.
 Many of them are targeted and attacked in their 70s. 

 Groups can send  videos of to One Billion Rising's website when it's over to become part of the archives of a world that has finally called violence against women what it is: immoral, illegal, unjust and inhuman.
 More information here

Here's the Break The Chain Dance !!




Thanks for The Murmurations

Film maker Neels Castillon was on a commercial shoot a few days ago, waiting to catch a helicopter flying into a sunset, when tens of thousands of starlings unexpectedly swarmed the sky in a dance known as a murmuration.

This is an extraordinarily beautiful video.  

The question of how thousands of birds simultaneously make such dramatic changes in their flight patterns has still not fully been answered. 

Bird Ballet

The Lost Sheep

Spring - Bring it on Lord !! 


The Lost Sheep 

So much in me gets lost, God. 

I run off in other directions
and lose my vision of you,
of you and your Kingdom.

I lose sight of my hopes, 
I forget all your promises.
I get lost in problems, 
I run around in selfishness.

There you are, before me, 
waiting, calling.
There you are, behind me,
following, pursuing.
There you are, beside me, 
caring, loving. 

What is it you’ve placed in this sheep’s heart of mine?
What is it that keeps me bonded to you
in spite of all my arrogance,
in spite of all my independence? 

I feel a new surge today, 
a re-visioning of hope.
I feel as if you’ve lifted me up
and are carrying me home, 
safe and secure on your shoulders, 
or maybe next to your heart. 

O God of lost sheep, my God, 
appeal again and again to all the lostness in me. 
pursue me relentlessly. 
Carry me home. 
O, carry me home.

Joyce Rupp from Fresh Bread
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It's Nearly That Time of Year Again : Lent !!

Hell's teeth . It's almost time for Lent again.

Well. I wonder what sort of experience it will be this year ?
 Forgive me, (see, already I'm practicing repentance and penitence), but I feel the whole of 2013 has had a Lenten quality about it so far.



Is it going to be 40 days and nights of heaping ashes of ignominy and opprobium on myself and the whole wide world, or should I hope for something gentler in keeping with my age as a forest dweller and elder ?


Strohhaufen mit
 Pile of straw with a fir and a witch doll attached to it, for the traditional "Funken" bonfire on the first sunday of lent in Herdwangen, district of Sigmaringen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany (March 9th, 2003). (Photo credit: Wikipedia)



Perhaps I should approach the desert this year more as a journey towards a "Vers Sacrum" : - a Latin phrase I have only just found the meaning of but which appeals to me very much. 

The translation means "Sacred Spring." 

I think we could all manage some of that in our lives. 


Presentation of Jesus in The Temple 2013

Scripture readings for Saturday's Mass are here


Today, the priest blesses candles that will be used throughout the liturgical year during Mass 

A previous reflection on the Gospel from here when it was read during Christmas celebrations.

I've amalgamated a few previous posts this year to save you the bother of looking through the archives for material.



Short video of the scene



The beautiful video below is the Taize chant of Simeon's song 
 also called The Nunc Dimittis from a Christian canticle using the words of Simeon in Luke 2:29-32, beginning "Nunc dimittis servum tuum" 
 " Lord, now let your servant go."

 
 

RELATED PREVIOUS POSTS 

Transcript of James Alison's Talk On The Anatomy of Reconciliation 

Artisans of Peace


 Heart and Hands : Photography by  Stefan Lubo
 Image source

I came across this poem "Artisans" by chance from here today.

It's a beautiful one to reflect on and give thanks for all those people who use their gifts of creativity to make the world a better place.
 
The author Andrew Rudd wrote it whilst at Taize and he describes the inspiration behind the writing of the poem thus :
 "We were singing the Beatitudes in French when I noticed the words for ‘Blessed are the peace-makers’ – in French this is ‘Bienheureux les artisans de paix…’
It suddenly struck me that peace is an art form, it is not just something that happens accidentally at the end of violence or when there is a cease fire. It is something that has to be made or created in our life together. 
Maybe this is the most important kind of creativity, where we make shalom, where we build community. And maybe one of the best things about art – sculpture, painting, music, poetry – is when it helps us to understand each other better, when it opens our awareness, when it makes peace."
 
Artisans
by Andrew Rudd  
More of his poetry here 

‘Bienheureux les artisans de paix…’



Image source
 

Blessed the singers of peace,
lamenting the unfinished business, sorrow
and dream: whose song changes nothing
but opens everything to change. 



Image source

Blessed the potters of peace,
hands in the clay, shaping, smoothing,
reaching for hidden form, braving
the furnace for beauty.


A photo by Aldo Cavini Benedetti modified by Redditor wormslayer to look like the iconic Pink Floyd album cover.

Blessed the embroiderers of peace:
at their needle’s touch, an ordinary surface
shines in a sacrament of colour, angles
softened into treasures of texture.




Image source

  Blessed the sculptors of peace
who look at the intractable
slab, and see marvels within it,
and reach for the chisel. 



 Image source

Blessed the poets of peace
who bear all voices into their emptiness,
settling stresses into speech
which at the last is music.


This is a great gallery of photos by photographer Stefan Lubo that illustrate the theme of Artisans and I have used some to complement the poem.

And lastly some Monday music to soothe the soul.....

Silent, Surrendered

Lyrics

Silent, surrendered, calm and still,
open to the word of God.
Heart humbled to his will,
offered is the servant of God.

  



O Lord, listen to my prayer,
my prayer as I call to You.


O Lord listen to my prayer
my prayer as I call to You 

Text: from Psalm 101 (102)

Margaret Rizza Instrumental only


Memorial of St Thomas Aquinas 2013

Detail from an altarpiece portrait of Thomas Aquinas by Carlo Crivelli. 
Photograph: Interfoto/Alamy

 Scripture Readings For Today's Mass are here

Professor Tina Beattie wrote a series of excellent articles for the UK Guardian newspaper around the time of the Feast of St Thomas of Aquinas last year.

Tina Beattie is a Professor of Catholic Studies at Roehampton University, London, and a frequent contributor to the Catholic weekly, The Tablet and the online journal, Open Democracy.


Click on each of the links below.....


The rest of this post is a repost on St Thomas from previous years.
 
  

Thomas Aquinas was a great scholar of the medieval period. His unfinished Summa Theologica (1266-73) managed to find a way of reconciling Faith, in the form of Christian theology, with Reason, in the form of Aristotelian philosophy.

Faith and Reason had often been considered incompatible but Aquinas argued that all human understanding was ultimately based on what had been revealed by God but that it was necessary for humans to have rational thought in order to understand God's revelations.

He felt reason could lead us to an understanding of God but maintained that this was not the only path. Those who lacked philosophical gifts but were steadfast in their faith could come to understand God's existence through divine revelation.

The greater part of Aquinas' writings are theological, but there are many strictly philosophical works within his corpus, such as On Being and Essence, On the Principles of Nature, On the Eternity of the World and his commentaries on Aristotle.

Aquinas was interested in metaphysics and the study of being. He concluded that although humans could never make a direct study of God, through the simple fact of their being they could deduce, through reason, that there must be a creator who had created them. 


This one may give you a migraine !!


This is a photo of the handwriting of St Thomas Aquinas.


“Indeed, I think there are fewer people now alive who understand argument than there were twenty or thirty years ago; and St Thomas might have preferred the society of the atheists of the early nineteenth century, to that of the blank sceptics of the early twentieth. 

Anyhow, one of the real disadvantages of the great and glorious sport, that is called argument, is its ordinate length. 

If you argue honestly, as St Thomas always did, you will find that the subject sometimes seems as if it would never end…. Being himself resolved to argue, to honestly, to answer everybody, to deal with everything, he produced books enough to sink a ship or stock a library.”

—G. K. Chesterton, St Thomas Aquinas (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1943), p. 100.


And to think this is how we started off ......
     Image above from Onward Bound Humour

Related articles 

This one is a review of a book by Herbert McCabe in which he says :

Thomas Aquinas thought that theologians don’t know what they are talking about,” McCabe says. “He was, I suppose, the most "agnostic" theologian in the Western Christian tradition.” 
Aquinas believed that the foundation of Christian morality is our friendship with God. In turn, human society, when it is functioning rightly, is a community of friends.

McCabe provocatively describes Aquinas as the first Whig (though, knowing McCabe, he might have said Marxist), declaring that he “would undoubtedly have welcomed the welfare state.” 
And how’s this for a great “Did you know?”: “Aquinas says in one place that separation from God by sin has so distorted our emotional life that we do not enjoy sex enough.”


Thomas studied scripture, philosophy, theology, and natural science. He once gave thanks to God that he never read a page he did not understand! His far-reaching thought searched out priniciples and was able to synthesize the thoughts of the ancient Greeks, Muslim and Jewish scholars, and the Fathers of the Church, in the truths that they had discovered. 

Thomas took a "universal" approach to the search for truth. He was not afraid to study the thought of non-Christians and was confident that God would reveal truths to those that earnestly sought them, whether they were Christian or not. This is a refreshing approach compared to many Catholics who have a "ghetto mentality." and are unwilling to admit that anything useful can be learned from non-Catholics.


That certainly was not Thomas's understanding. Not surprisingly, some Catholics in his own day, including a few bishops, condemned him for searching for truth amid the works of Plato, Aristotle, Averroes (Ibn Rushd), Avicenna (Ibn Sina) and Moses Maimonedes. Aquinas was able to discern the truth in aspects of their writings because of his own intense life of prayer in addition to his brilliance.

 Prayer of St Thomas Aquinas
Grant me, O Lord my God,
a mind to know you,
a heart to seek you, 
wisdom to find you, 
conduct pleasing to you,
faithful perseverance in waiting for you, 
and a hope of finally embracing you.

His peers at the University of Paris referred to him as the “dumb ox,” because of his size and meek humbleness to present his knowledge in front of others. However, after a brilliant defence of a difficult thesis in class, his teacher exclaimed, “We call this young man a dumb ox, but his bellowing in doctrine will one day resound throughout the world.”

In many paintings, Thomas has a dove at his ear

This image represents the Holy Spirit talking to Saint Thomas Aquinas as he writes in the Summa Theologica on the existence of God. Saint Thomas Aquinas spent much time praying to be able to hear the Holy Spirit more clearly. 




The following is taken from a short biography of St. Thomas found on the EWTN website. It underscores Thomas's own focus on Jesus as the source and summit of his life and study.

"One night, in the chapel of the Dominican priory in Naples where St.
Thomas was then living, the sacristan concealed himself to watch the
saint at prayer. He saw him lifted into the air, and heard Christ speaking
to him from the crucifix on the chapel wall:

"Thomas, you have written well of me. What reward will you have?"

"Lord, nothing but yourself."

His request was soon answered. On December 6, 1273, St. Thomas
Aquinas was saying Mass for the feast of St. Nicholas in the chapel where
the crucifix had spoken to him.
Some profound experience - spiritual,
mental, and physical suddenly overwhelmed him
.
He showed few external signs of the change at first; but he declared to his long- time secretary that he could write no more.
"All that I have written," he said, "seems like straw to me."

What hope for the rest of us then ?  :-)