The Divine Lamp

The unfolding of thy words gives light; it imparts understanding to the simple…Make thy face shine upon thy servant, and teach me thy statutes

Archive for March 12th, 2011

March 12: Lenten Meditation on the Grain of Wheat by St Thomas Aquinas

Posted by Dim Bulb on March 12, 2011

THE GRAIN OF WHEAT
Unless the gram of wheat falling into the ground die, itself remaineth alone. John 12:24.

1.  We use the grain of wheat in two ways, for bread and for seed. Here the word is to be taken in the second sense, grain of wheat meaning seed and not the matter out of which we make bread. For in this sense it never increases so as to bear fruit. When it is said that the grain must die, this does not mean that it loses its value as seed, but that it is changed into another kind of thing. So St. Paul (1 Cor 15:36) says, That which then thou sowest is not quickened, except it die first. The Word of God is a seed in the soul of man, in so far as it is a thing introduced into man’s soul, by words spoken and heard, in order to produce the fruit of good works, The seed is the Word of God (Luke 8:11). So also the Word of God garbed in flesh is a seed placed in the world, a seed from which great crops should grow, whence it is compared in St. Matthew’s Gospel (13:31, 32) to a grain of mustard seed.

Our Lord therefore says to us, “I came as seed, something meant to bear fruit and therefore I say to you, Unless the grain of wheat falling into the ground die, itself remaimth alone,” which is as much as to say, “Unless I die the fruit of the conversion of the Gentiles will not follow.”  He compares himself to a grain of wheat, because he came to nourish and to sustain the minds of men,
and to nourish and sustain are precisely what wheaten bread does for men. In the Psalms it is written, That bread may strengthen man’s heart (Ps 104:14), and in St. John, The bread that I will give is my flesh for the life of the world (John 6:52).

2. But if it die it bringeth forth much fruit (John 12:25). What is here explained is the usefulness of the Passion. It is as though the gospel said, Unless the grain fall into the earth through the humiliations of the Passion, no useful result will follow, for the grain itself remaineth alone. But if it shall die, done to death and slain by the Jews, it bringeth forth much fruit, for example:

(a) The remission of sin. This is the whole fruit, that the sin thereby should be taken away (Isa 27:9). And this is the fruit of the Passion of Christ as is
declared by St. Peter, Christ died once for our sins, the just for the unjust that he might offer us to God (1 Pet 3:18).

(b) The conversion of the Gentiles to God. I have appointed you that you shall go forth and bring forth fruit and that your fruit should remain (John 15:16).  This fruit the Passion of Christ bore, if I be lifted tip from the earth, I will draw all things to myself (John 12:32).

(c) The fruit of Glory. The fruit of good labours is glorious (Wis 3:15). And this fruit also the Passion of Christ brought forth; We have therefore a confidence in the entering into the Holies by the blood of Christ: a new and living way which he hath dedicatedfor us through the veil, that is to say, his flesh (Heb 10:19).

The above meditation was derived from Aquinas’ Lectures on the Gospel of St John and was translated by Fr. Philip Hughes. This meditation in in the public domain. A copyrighted version of Aquinas’ Lecture (Commentary) on the Gospel of St John can be found here.

 

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Homily on the Gospel for the First Sunday of Lent by Pope St Gregory the Great

Posted by Dim Bulb on March 12, 2011

It is often asked by some people what spirit it was by which Jesus was led into the wilderness, on account of the words a little further on: Then the devil took Him into the holy city; and again: The devil took Him up into a very high mountain. But in truth, and without any further searching, we may believe it was the Holy Ghost who led Him up into the wilderness. His own Spirit led Him where the evil spirit found Him to tempt Him. How ever, when it is said that He, God and Man, was taken up by the devil, either into a very high mountain or into the holy city, the mind shrinks from believing, and the ears of man tingle when hearing it. Yet we know that these things are not incredible, when we consider certain other things concerning Him. Indeed, the devil is the head of all the wicked, and every wicked man is a member of that body, of which the devil is the head. Was not Pilate a limb of Satan?  Were not the Jews who persecuted, and the soldiers who crucified Christ, likewise limbs of Satan? Is it then strange that He should allow Himself to be led up into a mountain by the head, Who allowed Himself to be crucified by the members? Therefore it is not unworthy of our Redeemer, Who came to be slain, that He should be willing to be tempted. It was meet that He should thus overcome our temptations by His own, even as He came to overcome our death by His own. We ought to know that temptation works under three forms. There is first the suggestion, then the delectation, or pleasure, and, lastly, the consent. When we are tempted, it often happens that we fall into delectation, and even into consent, because in the sinful flesh of which we are begotten, we carry in ourselves matter to favour the attack. But God, when He took flesh in the womb of the Virgin, and came into the world without sin, did so without having in Himself anything of this lusting of the flesh against the spirit. It was possible, therefore, for Him to be tempted in the first stage, namely, suggestion; but there was nothing in His mind, in which delectation could fix its teeth. Thus all the temptation He endured from the devil was without, and none within Him.

If, now, we consider the order of the temptations attacking the Redeemer of the world, we see with what power our Saviour delivered us from the snares prepared for us by the enemy of our" salvation. For, when the old Serpent rose against the first man, the father of the human race, he attacked him with three kinds of temptations, namely, intemperance, vain-glory and avarice. And being thus tempted, he was overcome by the devil, for he gave his consent. When Satan showed to man the forbidden fruit, and persuaded him to eat of it, he attacked him with the weapon of intemperance; then he tempted him with vain-glory, saying that he would be like to God; lastly, avarice was his weapon, since he assured him that he would possess the knowledge of good and evil. For avarice consists not only in the inordinate love of riches, but also in the desire of exaltation; and we are in reality avaricious, when in an ambitious manner we desire to obtain dignities to which we cannot lay claim. This is also the teaching of St. Paul, who, speaking of Jesus Christ, says: Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal to God; but emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant (Phil 2:6, 7). The devil, therefore, attacked our first parent with the arrows of avarice, for he awakened in him the desire of exalting himself.

But this tempter, the old dragon, who by his artifice had overcome the first man, was in his turn overcome by another Man, with the very same weapons he had used in former times. For our Redeemer, the Man-God, was assailed by the devil in the same manner as our first parent; first, with the sensual appetite, since he said to Him: If thou be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread. Then he tempted Him with vain-glory, asking Him to cast Himself down from a pinnacle of the temple, and so to show that He was the Son of God, saving His life by a miracle. Lastly, he tempted Him with avarice, when he showed Him all the kingdoms of the world, and promised to give them to Him, if falling down He would adore him. But our Saviour overcame this enemy by the same means that He had employed to tempt the father of the human race. And after this defeat he was enchained by our Lord, and forced by Him to go out of our heart by the same door by which he had entered to enslave us. Yet, beloved brethren, there is another lesson contained in this temptation of our Lord. He could cast His tempter into the eternal abyss by one single word, He being the Eternal Word. But He only answered with the commandments contained in Holy Scripture, so as to give us an example of His patience and moderation, instead of a brilliant sign of His almighty power. By this He teaches us that, when our sufferings are caused by the wicked, we should make good use of such persecutions, and be instructed by them, rather than take revenge. But are we not ashamed, when we consider, on one side God’s patience, and on the other our own impatience, when suffering injustice? It often happens, when we are unjustly treated or despised, that anger fills our heart at once. We try to take revenge, as far as lies in our power, and even threaten with a revenge of which we are powerless. Our Lord overcame the temptations of the devil through His patience and meek words. He bore an enemy who deserved the arrows of His justice, and He is thus the more worthy of our admiration and praise, since He was victorious over that enemy by His moderation rather than by the stripes of His anger.

Take notice of the fact that, as soon as the devil left Jesus, Angels came and ministered unto Him. Thereby we are given to understand that there are two natures in Jesus Christ. By the temptation of the devil we know that He was true Man, whilst the coming of the Angels and their ministering to Him, teach us that He is also true God. Let us, then, recognise our own nature in our Saviour, for the devil would not have dared to tempt Him, had he not perceived in Him our humanity. At the same time we bring Him our adorations, for the Angels would not have considered it their duty to minister unto Him, were He not as God exalted over them and all creatures.

This Gospel, calling to our mind the forty days and forty nights of fasting spent by our Lord in the desert, entirely agrees with the fast we observe during this holy season. But why was this number of forty days fasting sanctified? We read in the history of the Israelites that Moses prepared himself for the reception of the Law by fasting forty days; that Elias observed the same fast; that Jesus, before beginning His public life, abstained from food for forty days and forty nights; and lastly, that we also, as far as lies in us, observe this abstinence and fasting during the time of Lent. Though several motives may be set forth to explain this law of the Church, we can say in all truth that, by observing this commandment, we offer to God the tenth part of the year granted to us for satisfying our corporeal necessities. After living solely for ourselves during the course of the year, we now in Lent live for God, offering Him by our abstinence a part of that year. Now, after deducting from the six weeks of Lent the Sundays on which we do not fast, we find that there remain thirty-six days, so to speak, the tenth part of the year that we offer to God. The Lord God, beloved brethen, commands you in the Old Law to offer to Him the tithe (tenth part) of your possessions; it is, therefore, just that you should give Him the tithe of your days. For this reason it is every body s duty to mortify his body, according to his strength, to crucify his desires and subdue his sinful passions, that he may be, as St. Paul says, a living sacrifice (Rom 12:1). For we are a living sacrifice when, as long as we live, we mortify the desires of the flesh. Just as the lust of the flesh led us to commit sin, true penance must bring us back to God. Consider, again, that since by the eating of the forbidden fruit we were shut out of heaven, so we must endeavour to re-enter these gates by that temperance and abstinence which will atone for all the offences against God committed by our intemperance.

Yet, let us not think that our fasting will be sufficient to appease God, if it is not accompanied by the merits of almsgiving; for He said to us: Is not this rather the fast that I have chosen? Loose the bonds of wickedness, undo the bundles that oppress, let them that are broken go free, and break asunder every burden. Deal thy bread to the hungry, and bring the needy and harbourless into thy house; when thou shalt see one naked, cover him, and despise not thy own flesh (Isa 58:6, 7). This testimony teaches us that the fasting most pleasing to God is the one accompanied by alms offered by our hands, that is, by the love for our neighbour, perfected through works of mercy. Of what soever you deprive yourselves, give it to your poor neighbour, to relieve him; and these goods, of which you deprive yourselves by mortifying your appetite, will re joice your neighbour who is in need. Hear the Lord’s complaint: When you fasted and mourned, did you keep a fast unto Me? And when you did eat and drink, did you not eat for yourselves, and drink for yourselves? (Zech 7:5, 6). Now, we eat for ourselves when the needy has no share in the food we are taking, which, being a gift of God, has been created for all men. And he keeps a fast for himself, who, depriving himself for a time of the food he used to take, preserves it to satisfy his desires later on, instead of giving it to the poor. The prophet Joel exhorts us to sanctify a fast (Joel 1:14), teaching us, if we wish to make our abstinence worthy of God the Almighty, to unite the mortification of our flesh with the practice of other virtues; to refrain from anger and banish hatred from our heart. In vain do we chastise our body, if the mind is not subdued by our victory over sinful passions. God Himself declares this through His prophet: Behold, in the day ofyour fast your own will is found, and you exact of all your debtors. Behold, you fast for debates and strife, and strike with the fist wickedly (Isa 58:3, 4). No injustice is committed when you ask your debtors to pay what they owe you. Yet you easily understand that he, who practises penance, will even abstain from exacting that which is owed to him in justice. When he mortifies himself in this manner and feels real sorrow for his sins, then God will be ready to forgive the debts due to His justice, seeing that for His sake the sinner forgives to others what they owe him in justice.

Posted in Bible, Catechetical Resources, Catholic, Christ, Devotional Resources, fathers of the church, Latin Mass Notes, liturgy, Quotes, Scripture, SERMONS | Tagged: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

This Weeks Posts: Sunday, March 6-Saturday, March 13

Posted by Dim Bulb on March 12, 2011

Some posts are scheduled in advance and will not become available until the time indicated. Posts (or links) lacking time indicators are available regardless of when scheduled (the daily readings, for example). The list of available posts under any given day may be updated with new posts in the late afternoon or evening; these will be marked UPDATE.

SUNDAY, MARCH 6
NINTH WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME

Last Weeks Posts.

Resources for Sunday Mass, March 6 (Ordinary and Extraordinary Forms). A weekly feature of this blog. Resources for next Sunday’s Mass, March 14, will be posted on Wednesday.

How We Should Serve God on the Lord’s Day. A meditation based upon an excerpt from St Thomas Aquinas’ famous series of homilies on the Ten Commandments. St Thomas delivered these homilies to lay people so a Ph.D. is not required to understand them.

A Sermon in Preparation for Ash Wednesday.
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MONDAY, MARCH 7
MEMORIAL OF SAINTS PERPETUA AND FELICITY, MARTYRS

Readings.

Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Today’s Gospel (Mark 12:1-12). 12:05 AM EST.

St Augustine on Today’s Psalm (112). 12:10 AM EST.

Pope Benedict XVI on Today’s Psalm. 12:15 AM EST.

Aquinas’ Meditation for the Monday Before Lent.

Part 3: My Notes on the Passion According to John (18:10-12).

Fathers Nolan and Brown on the Passion According to John (18:1-12).

Some Background on Saints Perpetual and Felicity.

Catholic Encyclopedia on Saints Perpetua and Felicity.
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TUESDAY, MARCH 8
NINTH WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME

Readings.

St Augustine on Today’s Psalm (112).

Pope Benedict XVI on Today’s Psalm.

Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Today’s Gospel (Mark 12:13-17). 12:05 AM EST.

Aquinas’ Meditation for Shrove Tuesday. 12:10 AM EST.
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9
ASH WEDNESDAY

Readings.

An Ash Wednesday Meditation. I posted this in 2009.

Note: the following three links to notes of mine on Joel 2:12-18 contain overlapping material, but each also contains “stuff” not found in the others.

Some Rambling Thoughts on Joel 2:12-18. I posted this in 2008.

My Notes on Joel 2:12-18. I wrote and posted this about 3 weeks ago in anticipation of the day.

Some More Notes of Mine on Joel 2:12-18. PDF document. Also written last month. This was prepared as a rough draft for a podcast I had hoped to record; unfortunately, I was unable to find the time to edit or record the text.

My Notes on Matt 6:1-6, 16-18 for Ash Wednesday. Contains a brief introduction on how the Gospel is structured, then presents the structure of the Sermon on the Mount, then the commentary follows.

UPDATE: St Thomas Aquinas: An Ash Wednesday Meditation.

UPDATE: Cornelius a Lapide on 2 Cor 5:20-6:2.

UPDATE: Bernardin de Piconio on 2 Cor 5:20-6:2.

Resources for Sunday Mass. Delayed. Will post Tomorrow morning (Thursday).
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THURSDAY, MARCH 10
THURSDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY

Readings.

Some Church Documents Relating to Today’s First Reading (Deut 30:15-20). 12:05 AM EST.

My Notes on Today’s Psalm (1).

St Thomas Aquinas on Today’s Psalm (1). English and Latin side by side.

A Patristic/Medieval Commentary on Today’s Psalm (1). Compiled from Church Fathers and Medieval writers.

Father Patrick Boylan on Today’s Psalm (1).

A Lectio Divina Commentary on Today’s Psalm (1).

Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Today’s Gospel (Luke 9:22-25).

Meditation for the Thursday After Ash Wednesday by St Thomas Aquinas. 12:10 AM EST.

Mass Resources for the First Sunday of Lent (Ordinary and Extraordinary Forms). 12:15 AM EST.
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FRIDAY, MARCH 11
FRIDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY

Readings.

My Notes on Today’s First Reading (Isaiah 58:1-9a).

Bishop MacEvily on Today’s Gospel (Matt 9:14-15). 12:00 AM EST.

Maldonado on Today’s Gospel (Matt 9:14-15). 12:02 AM EST.

Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Today’s Gospel (Matt 9:14-15). 12:05 AM EST.

Cornelius a Lapide on Today’s Gospel (Matt 9:14-15). 12:10 AM EST.

Meditation on the Crown of Thorns by St Thomas Aquinas. 12:15 AM EST.
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SATURDAY, MARCH 12
SATURDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY

Readings.

Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Today’s Gospel (Luke 5:27-32). 12:05 AM EST.

Pope John Paul II on Today’s Psalm (86). 12:10 AM EST.

 

Posted in BENEDICT XVI CATECHESIS, Bible, Catechetical Resources, Catholic, Christ, Devotional Resources, fathers of the church, John Paul II Catechesis, Latin Mass Notes, liturgy, Meditations, Notes On Joel, Notes on Luke's Gospel, Notes on Mark, Notes on the Gospel of Matthew, Notes on the Lectionary, NOTES ON THE PSALMS, Quotes, Scripture, SERMONS, St Thomas Aquinas | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Resources for Mass for the First Sunday of Lent

Posted by Dim Bulb on March 12, 2011

This post contains resources (mostly biblical) for the Ordinary and Extraordinary Forms of the Roman Rite. It is not yet complete. Additions to the resources will be marked UPDATE. To see all posts from this week go here.

ORDINARY FORM
FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT

Readings.

St Augustine’s Exposition of Psalm 51.

John Paul II on Psalm 51.

St John Fisher on Psalm 51 (Part 1). On verses 1-10. I hope to have part 2 up before Sunday.

Bernardin de Piconio on Romans 5:12-19. Actually, this post includes comments on verses 20-21.

Father Callan on Romans 5:12-19.

St Thomas Aquinas’ Lectures on Romans 5:12-19. PDF docuent. The lecture begins on page 208. Simply type the page number into the box next to the blue arrows and hit the enter key on your keyboard, this will take you to the exact page. Read lectures 3-5.

NOTE: The Gospel Reading this Sunday is identical in both forms. For this reason some of the posts are repeated under the Extraordinary Form heading.

Cornelius a Lapide on Matt 4:1-11.

Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Matt 4:1-11.

Juan de Maldonado on Matt 4:1-11.

UPDATE: Today’s Lenten Meditation by St Thomas Aquinas. Based upon Matt 4:1-11.

Catholic Matters. Readings with brief explanations.

Bible Study. St Charles Borromeo Parish.

Dr. Scott Hahn Podcast. Brief, does a good job of highlighting major theme(s).

St Martha’s Podcast. Looks at all the readings in some detail.

Franciscan Sisters Bible Study Podcast. They usually post the episodes on Thursday.

Father Robert Barron’s Homily. Fr. Barron is a well known and respected theologian and preacher.

Word Sunday:

  • MP3 PODCAST The secret to temptation is distraction. With our modern conveniences, distraction grow more numerous and attractive each day. How can we face these detours and remain faithful to the Lord?
  • FIRST READING Once in a while, we fail, just like Adam and Eve did. The First Reading is story of the Fall recorded in Genesis. The sin of Adam and Eve has been interpreted in many ways, but its theme always returns to one insight. Sin is the attempt by humans to replace God with their own self-image. Sin is playing God. The consequences of this play is always evil, and there doesn’t seem to be a way out.
  • PSALM What happens when we fall into sin? We ask God for mercy. This is the core message of Psalm 51.
  • SECOND READING In the Second Reading, St. Paul recognized that fact; if we try to improve our plight, we just seem to slip further and further into the morass of immorality. But, with God, there is a way out. That way is Jesus Christ.
  • GOSPEL The Gospel from Matthew gives us hope. Satan’s attempts to shift the priorities of Jesus away from the will of the Father fail, simply because Jesus refused to play God. Instead, he clung to the mission of serving God. He inspires us to do the same.
  • CHILDREN’S READINGS The Children’s Readings speak to the consequences of selfishness; Janice broke a statue and a friendship over her selfish desire; Brad sought true friends who would care for him, and not for what he could do for them.
  • CATECHISM LINK In the Catechism Link, temptation is discussed in the light of Original Sin.
  • FAMILY ACTIVITY Tackle temptation head on with a worship basket titled “The Best We Give to God.”

Gospel Meditation.

Lector Notes. Gives brief historical and theological background. Can be printed out and used as bulletin insert.

Thoughts From the Early Church. Excerpt from St Gregory Nazianzen.

Scripture in Depth.

Today’s Good News. Gospel text followed by brief commentary.

THE FOLLOWING 5 LINKS ARE TO ONLINE BOOKS. YOU CAN USE THE SITE’S ZOOM FEATURE (Magnifying glass with + sign) TO INCREASE TEXT SIZE FOR EASIER READING.

UPDATE: On The Necessity and Utility of Fasting. Online book

UPDATE: Jesus Fasts and Overcomes Satan. Online book

UPDATE: The Assaults of Satan and the means of rendering them ineffectual. Online book

UPDATE: What Weapons We Must Use to Overcome Satan. Online Book

UPDATE: The Duty and Value of Fasting. Online book

UPDATE: Pope St Gregory the Great’s Homily on the Gospel.
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EXTRAORDINARY FORM
FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT

NOTE: The Gospel Reading for both forms is identical. For this reason some of the  commentaries and homilies under the Ordinary Form are also listed here. Other Gospel resources can be found above.

Sunday Missal. Contains the readings, prayers, etc.

Cornelius a Lapide on 2 Cor 6:1-10.

Bernardin de Piconio on 2 Cor 6:1-10.

Cornelius a Lapide on Matt 4:1-11.

Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Matt 4:1-11.

Juan de Maldonado on Matt 4:1-11.

UPDATE: Pope St Gregory the Great’s Homily on the Gospel.

UPDATE: On The Necessity and Utility of Fasting. Online book

UPDATE: Jesus Fasts and Overcomes Satan. Online book

UPDATE: The Assaults of Satan and the means of rendering them ineffectual. Online book

UPDATE: What Weapons We Must Use to Overcome Satan. Online Book

UPDATE: The Duty and Value of Fasting. Online book


Posted in Bible, Catechetical Resources, Catholic, Christ, Devotional Resources, fathers of the church, John Paul II Catechesis, Latin Mass Notes, liturgy, Meditations, Morality, Notes on 2 Corinthians, Notes on Romans, Notes on the Gospel of Matthew, Notes on the Lectionary, NOTES ON THE PSALMS, PAPAL COMMENTARY ON THE PSALMS, Quotes, Scripture, SERMONS, St Thomas Aquinas | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Pope John Paul II on Today’s Psalm (86)

Posted by Dim Bulb on March 12, 2011

GENERAL AUDIENCE OF JOHN PAUL II
Wednesday 23 October 2002

Psalm 85 [86]
All nations shall come and adore You, O Lord

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

1. Psalm 85 [86] just recited, which will be the theme of our reflection, offers an impressive description of the Psalmist. He comes before God with these words: I am “your servant” and “the son of your handmaid” (v. 16). Certainly, the expression can belong to the language of court ceremonial, but was used to indicate the servant adopted as a son by the head of a family or tribe. In this light the Psalmist, who defines himself as “the faithful” of the Lord (cf. v. 2), feels he is bound to God by a bond, not just of obedience, but also of familiarity and communion. For this reason his prayer expresses confident abandonment and hope.

Let us now follow this prayer which the Liturgy of Lauds sets out for us at the beginning of a day that will probably bring with it not just work and fatigue, but also misunderstanding and problems.

2. The Psalm begins with an intense appeal which the Psalmist directs to the Lord, trusting in his love (cf. vv. 1-7). At the end he expresses again the certainty that the Lord is a “God of mercy, compassionate, slow to anger, full of love, faithful God” (v. 15; cf. Ex 34,6). The repeated and convinced expressions of confidence reveal a faith that is intact and pure with an act of abandonment to the “Lord, good … full of love to all who call on him” (Ps 85 [86],5).

At the centre of the Psalm, a hymn is sung to the Lord that alternates feelings of thanksgiving with a profession of faith in the works of salvation that God displays before the peoples (cf. vv. 8-13).

3. Against every temptation to idolatry, the Psalmist proclaims the absolute uniqueness of God (cf. v. 8). In the end he expresses the bold hope that one day “all the nations” shall adore the God of Israel (v. 9). This wonderful prospect finds its fulfillment in the Church of Christ because he sent his apostles to teach “all nations” (Mt 28,19). No one but the Lord can offer a full liberation because all depend on him as creatures and all must turn to him in an attitude of adoration (cf. Ps 85 [86],9). In fact, he manifests in the cosmos and in history his wonderful works, that give witness to his absolute lordship (cf. v. 10).

At this point the Psalmist presents himself before God with an intense and pure appeal: “Show me, Lord, your way so that I may walk in your truth; give me a simple heart to fear your name” (v. 11).

The petition to be able to know the will of God is wonderful as is the prayer to obtain the gift of “a simple heart” like that of a child, who without duplicity and calculation entrusts himself fully to the Father to direct him on the path of life.

4. Then, from the lips of the faithful flows praise of the merciful God who does not allow him to fall into despair and death, evil and sin (cf. vv. 12-13; Ps 15,10-11).

Psalm 85 [86] is a prayer that is dear to Judaism, that inserted it into the liturgy of one of the most important solemnities, Yom Kippur or the Day of Atonement. The Book of the Apocalypse, in turn, extracted a verse from it (cf. v. 9), placing it in the glorious heavenly liturgy at the heart of the “song of Moses, the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb”:  “All nations shall come and worship you” and the Apocalypse adds: “for your [just] judgments have been revealed” (Apoc 15,4).

St Augustine dedicated a long and passionate commentary to our psalm in his Expositions on the Psalms transforming it into a song of Christ and of the Christian. The Latin translation, in v. 2, in conformity with the Greek version of the Septuagint instead of the term “faithful” uses the word “holy one”:  “Preserve my life for I am holy”. In reality, only Christ is holy. However, St Augustine reasons, even the Christian can apply these words to himself:  “I am holy for you have sanctified me; because I received, not because I had [it of myself]; because you gave it to me, not because I merited it”. Therefore, “every Christian by himself, therefore also the whole Body of Christ may say it, may cry everywhere, while it bears tribulations, many temptations and offences:  “Preserve my soul because I am holy. Save your servant, my God, who hopes in you’. See, this holy man is not proud since he puts his trust in God” (Esposizioni sui Salmi, vol. II, Rome 1970, p. 1251. For an English translation, cf. Expositions on the Book of Psalms, vol. IV, Oxford 1850, p. 189).

5. The holy Christian opens himself to the universality of the Church and prays with the Psalmist: “All the nations that you have created shall come and adore you, O Lord” (Ps 85 [86],9). Augustine comments: “All the nations in the one Lord are one people, this is true oneness. As there is the Church and churches, and those are churches which are also the Church, so that is a “people’ which was peoples; formerly, peoples, many peoples, now only one people. Why only one people?

Because one faith, one hope, one charity, one expectation. Finally, why one people if only one country? Our country is heavenly, our country is Jerusalem…. This people from east to west, from north to the sea, is extended through the four quarters of the whole world” (ibid., p. 1269).

In this universal light our liturgical prayer is transformed into a breath of praise and a hymn of glory to the Lord in the name of every creature.

Posted in Bible, Catechetical Resources, Catholic, Christ, Devotional Resources, John Paul II Catechesis, liturgy, Notes on the Lectionary, NOTES ON THE PSALMS, PAPAL COMMENTARY ON THE PSALMS, Quotes, Scripture | Tagged: , , , , , | 7 Comments »

March 12: Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Today’s Gospel (Luke 5:27-32)

Posted by Dim Bulb on March 12, 2011

Ver  27. And after these things he went forth, and saw a Publican, named Levi, sitting at the receipt of custom: and he said to him, Follow me.28 And he left all, rose up, and followed him.29 And Levi made him a great feast in his own house: and there was a great company of Publicans and of others that sat down with them.30. But their Scribes and Pharisees murmured against his disciples, saying, Why do you eat and drink with Publicans and sinners?31. And Jesus answering said to them, They that are whole need not a physician; but they that are sick.32. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.

AUG. After the healing of the sick of the palsy, St. Luke goes on to mention the conversion of a publican, saying, And after these things, he went forth, and saw a publican of the name of Levi, sitting at the receipt of custom. This is Matthew, also called Levi.

THEOPHYL; Now Luke and Mark, for the honor of the Evangelist, are silent as to his common name, but Matthew is the first to accuse himself, and gives the name of Matthew and publican, that no one might despair of salvation because of the enormity of his sins, when he himself was changed from a publican to an Apostle.

CYRIL; For Levi had been a publican, a rapacious man, of unbridled desires after vain things, a lover of other men’s goods, for this is the character of the publican, but snatched from the very worship of malice by Christ’s call. Hence it follows, And he said to him, Follow me. He bids him follow Him, not with bodily step, but with the soul’s affections. Matthew therefore, being called by the Word, left his own, who was wont to seize the things of others, as it follows, And having left all, he rose, and followed him.

CHRYS. Here mark both the power of the caller, and the obedience of him that was called. For he neither resisted nor wavered, but forthwith obeyed; and like the fishermen, he did not even wish to go into his own house that he might tell it to his friends.

BASIL; He not only gave up the profits of the customs, but also despised the dangers which might occur to himself and his family from leaving the accounts of the receipts uncompleted.

THEOPHYL. And so from him that received toll from the passers by, Christ received toll, not money, but entire devotion to His company.

CHRYS. But the Lord honored Levi, whom He had called, by immediately going to his feast. For this testified the greater confidence in him. Hence it follows, And Levi made him a great feast in his own house. Nor did He sit down to meat with him alone, but with many, as it follows, And there was a great company of Publicans and others that sat down with them. For the publicans came to Levi as to their colleague, and a man in the same line with themselves, and he too glorying in the presence of Christ, called them all together. For Christ displayed every sort of remedy, and not only by discoursing and displaying cures, or even by rebuking the envious, but also by eating with them, He corrected the faults of some, thereby giving us a lesson, that every time and occasion brings with it its own profit. But He shunned not the company of Publicans, for the sake of the advantage that might ensue, like a physician, who unless he touch the afflicted part cannot cure the disease.

AMBROSE; For by His eating with sinners, He prevents not us also from going to a banquet with the Gentiles.

CHRYS. But nevertheless the Lord was blamed by the Pharisees, who were envious, and wished to separate Christ and His disciples, as it follows, And the Pharisees murmured, saying, Why do you eat with Publicans, &c.

AMBROSE; This was the voice of the Devil. This was the first word the Serpent uttered to Eve, Yea has God said, You shall not eat. So they diffuse the poison of their father.

AUG. Now St. Luke seems to have related this somewhat different from the other Evangelists. For he does not say that to our Lord alone it was objected that He eat and drank with publicans and sinners, but to the disciples also, that the charge might be understood both of Him and them. But the reason that Matthew and Mark related the objection as made concerning Christ to His disciples, was, that seeing the disciples ate with publicans and sinners, it was the rather objected to their Master as Him whom they followed and imitated; the meaning therefore is the same, vet so much the better conveyed, as while still keeping to the truth, it differs in certain words.

CHRYS. But our Lord c refutes all their charges, showing, that so far from its being a fault to mix with sinners, it is but a part of His merciful design, as it follows, And Jesus answering said to them, They that are whole need not a physician; in which He reminds them of their common infirmities, and shows them that they are of the number of the sick, but adds, He is the Physician.

It follows, I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. As if He should say, So far am I from hating sinners, that for their sakes only I came, not that they should remain sinners, but be converted and become righteous.

AUG. Hence He adds, to repentance, which serves well to explain the passage, that no one should suppose that sinners, because they are sinners, are loved by Christ, since that similitude of the sick plainly suggests what our Lord meant by calling sinners, as a Physician, the sick, in order that from iniquity as from sickness they should be saved.

AMBROSE; But how does God love righteousness, and David has never seen the righteous man forsaken, if the righteous are excluded, the sinner called; unless you understand that at He meant by the righteous those who boast of the law, and seek not the grace of the Gospel. Now no one is justified by the law, but redeemed by grace. He therefore calls not those who call themselves righteous, for the claimers to righteousness are not called to grace. For if grace is from repentance, surely he who despises repentance renounces grace.

AMBROSE; But He calls those sinners, who considering their guilt, and feeling that they cannot be justified by the law, submit themselves by repentance to the grace of Christ.

CHRYS. Now He speaks of the righteous ironically, as when He says, Behold Adam is become as one of us. But that there was none righteous upon the earth St. Paul shows, saying, All have sinned, and need the grace of God.

GREG. NYSS. Or, He means that the sound and righteous need no physician, i.e. the angels, but the corrupt and sinners, i. e. ourselves do; since we catch the disease of sin, which is not in heaven.

THEOPHYL; Now by the election of Matthew is signified the faith of the Gentiles, who formerly gasped after worldly pleasures, but now refresh the body of Christ with zealous devotion.

THEOPHYL. Or the publican is he who serves the prince of this world, and is debtor to the flesh, to which the glutton gives his food, the adulterer his pleasure, and another something else. But when the Lord saw him sitting at the receipt of custom, and not stirring himself to greater wickedness, He calls him that he might be snatched from the evil, and follow Jesus, and receive the Lord into the house of his soul.

AMBROSE; But he who receives Christ into his inner chamber, is fed with the greatest delights of overflowing pleasures. The Lord therefore willingly enters, and reposes in his affection; but again the envy of the treacherous is kindled, and the form of their future punishment is prefigured; for while all the faithful are feasting in the kingdom of heaven, the faithless will be cast out hungry. Or, by this is denoted the envy of the Jews, who are afflicted at the salvation of the Gentiles.

AMBROSE; At the same time also is shown the difference between those who are zealous for the law and those who are for grace, that they who follow the law shall suffer eternal hunger of soul, while they who have received the word into the inmost soul, refreshed with abundance of heavenly meat and drink, can neither hunger nor thirst. And so they who fasted in soul murmured.

Posted in Bible, Catholic, Christ, Devotional Resources, fathers of the church, liturgy, Notes on Luke's Gospel, Notes on the Lectionary, Quotes, Scripture, St Thomas Aquinas | Tagged: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

March 12: Aquinas’ Catena Aurea on Today’s Gospel (Luke 5:27-32)

Posted by Dim Bulb on March 12, 2011

Ver  27. And after these things he went forth, and saw a Publican, named Levi, sitting at the receipt of custom: and he said to him, Follow me.28 And he left all, rose up, and followed him.29 And Levi made him a great feast in his own house: and there was a great company of Publicans and of others that sat down with them.30. But their Scribes and Pharisees murmured against his disciples, saying, Why do you eat and drink with Publicans and sinners?31. And Jesus answering said to them, They that are whole need not a physician; but they that are sick.32. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.

AUG. After the healing of the sick of the palsy, St. Luke goes on to mention the conversion of a publican, saying, And after these things, he went forth, and saw a publican of the name of Levi, sitting at the receipt of custom. This is Matthew, also called Levi.

THEOPHYL; Now Luke and Mark, for the honor of the Evangelist, are silent as to his common name, but Matthew is the first to accuse himself, and gives the name of Matthew and publican, that no one might despair of salvation because of the enormity of his sins, when he himself was changed from a publican to an Apostle.

CYRIL; For Levi had been a publican, a rapacious man, of unbridled desires after vain things, a lover of other men’s goods, for this is the character of the publican, but snatched from the very worship of malice by Christ’s call. Hence it follows, And he said to him, Follow me. He bids him follow Him, not with bodily step, but with the soul’s affections. Matthew therefore, being called by the Word, left his own, who was wont to seize the things of others, as it follows, And having left all, he rose, and followed him.

CHRYS. Here mark both the power of the caller, and the obedience of him that was called. For he neither resisted nor wavered, but forthwith obeyed; and like the fishermen, he did not even wish to go into his own house that he might tell it to his friends.

BASIL; He not only gave up the profits of the customs, but also despised the dangers which might occur to himself and his family from leaving the accounts of the receipts uncompleted.

THEOPHYL. And so from him that received toll from the passers by, Christ received toll, not money, but entire devotion to His company.

CHRYS. But the Lord honored Levi, whom He had called, by immediately going to his feast. For this testified the greater confidence in him. Hence it follows, And Levi made him a great feast in his own house. Nor did He sit down to meat with him alone, but with many, as it follows, And there was a great company of Publicans and others that sat down with them. For the publicans came to Levi as to their colleague, and a man in the same line with themselves, and he too glorying in the presence of Christ, called them all together. For Christ displayed every sort of remedy, and not only by discoursing and displaying cures, or even by rebuking the envious, but also by eating with them, He corrected the faults of some, thereby giving us a lesson, that every time and occasion brings with it its own profit. But He shunned not the company of Publicans, for the sake of the advantage that might ensue, like a physician, who unless he touch the afflicted part cannot cure the disease.

AMBROSE; For by His eating with sinners, He prevents not us also from going to a banquet with the Gentiles.

CHRYS. But nevertheless the Lord was blamed by the Pharisees, who were envious, and wished to separate Christ and His disciples, as it follows, And the Pharisees murmured, saying, Why do you eat with Publicans, &c.

AMBROSE; This was the voice of the Devil. This was the first word the Serpent uttered to Eve, Yea has God said, You shall not eat. So they diffuse the poison of their father.

AUG. Now St. Luke seems to have related this somewhat different from the other Evangelists. For he does not say that to our Lord alone it was objected that He eat and drank with publicans and sinners, but to the disciples also, that the charge might be understood both of Him and them. But the reason that Matthew and Mark related the objection as made concerning Christ to His disciples, was, that seeing the disciples ate with publicans and sinners, it was the rather objected to their Master as Him whom they followed and imitated; the meaning therefore is the same, vet so much the better conveyed, as while still keeping to the truth, it differs in certain words.

CHRYS. But our Lord c refutes all their charges, showing, that so far from its being a fault to mix with sinners, it is but a part of His merciful design, as it follows, And Jesus answering said to them, They that are whole need not a physician; in which He reminds them of their common infirmities, and shows them that they are of the number of the sick, but adds, He is the Physician.

It follows, I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. As if He should say, So far am I from hating sinners, that for their sakes only I came, not that they should remain sinners, but be converted and become righteous.

AUG. Hence He adds, to repentance, which serves well to explain the passage, that no one should suppose that sinners, because they are sinners, are loved by Christ, since that similitude of the sick plainly suggests what our Lord meant by calling sinners, as a Physician, the sick, in order that from iniquity as from sickness they should be saved.

AMBROSE; But how does God love righteousness, and David has never seen the righteous man forsaken, if the righteous are excluded, the sinner called; unless you understand that at He meant by the righteous those who boast of the law, and seek not the grace of the Gospel. Now no one is justified by the law, but redeemed by grace. He therefore calls not those who call themselves righteous, for the claimers to righteousness are not called to grace. For if grace is from repentance, surely he who despises repentance renounces grace.

AMBROSE; But He calls those sinners, who considering their guilt, and feeling that they cannot be justified by the law, submit themselves by repentance to the grace of Christ.

CHRYS. Now He speaks of the righteous ironically, as when He says, Behold Adam is become as one of us. But that there was none righteous upon the earth St. Paul shows, saying, All have sinned, and need the grace of God.

GREG. NYSS. Or, He means that the sound and righteous need no physician, i.e. the angels, but the corrupt and sinners, i. e. ourselves do; since we catch the disease of sin, which is not in heaven.

THEOPHYL; Now by the election of Matthew is signified the faith of the Gentiles, who formerly gasped after worldly pleasures, but now refresh the body of Christ with zealous devotion.

THEOPHYL. Or the publican is he who serves the prince of this world, and is debtor to the flesh, to which the glutton gives his food, the adulterer his pleasure, and another something else. But when the Lord saw him sitting at the receipt of custom, and not stirring himself to greater wickedness, He calls him that he might be snatched from the evil, and follow Jesus, and receive the Lord into the house of his soul.

AMBROSE; But he who receives Christ into his inner chamber, is fed with the greatest delights of overflowing pleasures. The Lord therefore willingly enters, and reposes in his affection; but again the envy of the treacherous is kindled, and the form of their future punishment is prefigured; for while all the faithful are feasting in the kingdom of heaven, the faithless will be cast out hungry. Or, by this is denoted the envy of the Jews, who are afflicted at the salvation of the Gentiles.

AMBROSE; At the same time also is shown the difference between those who are zealous for the law and those who are for grace, that they who follow the law shall suffer eternal hunger of soul, while they who have received the word into the inmost soul, refreshed with abundance of heavenly meat and drink, can neither hunger nor thirst. And so they who fasted in soul murmured.

Posted in Bible, Catholic, Christ, Devotional Resources, fathers of the church, liturgy, Notes on Luke's Gospel, Notes on the Lectionary, Quotes, Scripture, St Thomas Aquinas | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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