Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Ordinary Time Resumes - Décès de Mgr René Audet

Ordinary Time
Yesterday, the Church resumed Ordinary Time, an "ordered" series of weeks that lies outside the major liturgical seasons. Ordinary Time helps disciples relate all their days and activities to the sovereignty of Christ Jesus, our Lord, the Lord of History. 

Accordingly, we are now in the 11th Week in Ordinary Time; hence this week's prayer is offered below.




Our Canadian Liturgical Ordo and the Publication Living with Christ prefer to alternate the prayers for the 34 weeks of Ordinary Time, while other missalette booklets (such as Magnificat) stick with the given week's prayer several times in the course of a week (saints days, when they occur, add sufficient variety in most weeks). 

Such repetition helps shape those participating in the liturgy within the spirit of a particular prayer whose depths one can gradually plumb as it is prayer repeatedly.

Here are some further notes on Ordinary Time from cyberfaith.com.

 
The term "Ordinary Time" may be misleading. In the context of the liturgical year the term "ordinary" does not mean "usual or average." Ordinary here means "not seasonal."

Ordinary Time is that part of the Liturgical Year that lies outside the seasons of Lent-Easter and Advent-Christmas.

In Ordinary Time, the Church celebrates the mystery of Christ not in one specific aspect but in all its aspects. The readings during the liturgies of Ordinary Time help to instruct us on how to live out our Christian faith in our daily lives.

For Ordinary Time, readings for the Liturgy of the Word have been chosen for thirty-four Sundays and the weeks following them.

However, some years have only thirty-three weeks of Ordinary Time.

Further, since the Christmas Season ends on a Sunday with the Baptism of the Lord, and the Easter Season ends with Pentecost Sunday, two weeks in Ordinary Time do not have a corresponding Sunday.

In addition, some Sundays of Ordinary Time are superceded by a solemnity that coincides with a Sunday, e.g., The Most Holy Trinity or Christ the King, the last Sunday of the liturgical year.

Ordinary Time in the Church's year occurs in two sections.

The first part begins on the Monday following the Christmas season, which ends with the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord on the Sunday following January 6.

It lasts through the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday, the beginning of the Lenten season.

Ordinary Time resumes after the Easter Season, on the Monday after Pentecost, and continues until evening prayer on the Saturday before the First Sunday of Advent.

* * * * * *

Collect for the
Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time
O God, from whom all good things come, grant that we who call on you in our need may at your prompting discern what is right, and by your guidance do it. Through our Lord.

* * * * * *

LATE BISHOP AUDET OF JOLIETTE
HAD BEEN OTTAWA AUXILIARY

Bishop Audet, left, with his successor, Joliette Bishop Gilles Lussier

The Most Reverend René Audet, Bishop Emeritus of Joliette, died on Sunday, June 12, 2011, at the age of 91. Born in Montreal, he was ordained priest on May 30, 1948.

Consecrated Auxiliary Bishop of Ottawa on July 31, 1963, he was named on January 3, 1968, Fourth Bishop of Joliette , where he served until his retirement in October 1990.

During his episcopal ministry, he served as a member of several CCCB ad hoc Committees and Commissions, including the then French Sector Commission for Christian Education.

Visitation will be at the Cathedral of Joliette, Monday June 20, at 10:00 am; followed by the funeral at 2:00 pm, presided by Bishop Gilles Lussier.

As well as his diocesan family, Bishop Audet leaves his brother Maurice, a priest in the Archdiocese of Montreal.

* * *

Décès de Mgr René Audet,
autrefois évêque auxiliaire d’Ottawa


Mgr René Audet est décédé dimanche, le 12 juin 2011. Le quatrième évêque du diocèse de Joliette est né en 1920 à Montréal. Il y sera ordonné prêtre en 1948 par Mgr Joseph Charbonneau pour ensuite entreprendre son ministère à Rouyn-Noranda à titre de vicaire paroissial, aumônier auprès des malades et conseiller moral des syndicats de mineurs.

Nomme évêque auxiliaire d’Ottawa le 21 mai 1963, il était vicaire général du diocèse d'Ottawa depuis quatre ans et demi lorsque le Vatican l'a nommé évêque du diocèse de Joliette en janvier 1968.

Membre de plusieurs commissions et comités au sein de la Conférence des évêques catholiques du Canada, Mgr Audet a été, bien malgré lui, témoin de l'ouverture généralisée des commerces le dimanche.

Celui-ci estimait que le dimanche devait être un jour privilégié, un temps d'arrêt, pour permettre aux couples et aux familles de relaxer et de se ressourcer.

Homme aussi généreux que réservé, Mgr Audet a laissé son nom à un HLM de la paroisse Sainte-Thérèse.

Les Lanaudois se souviendront qu'il prenait soin de sa santé par de longues marches dans la paroisse Cathédrale. De sa retraite, en 1990, jusqu'en 2000, Mgr Audet résidait à l'évêché de la rue Saint-Charles-Borromée.

Outre sa grande famille diocésaine, le défunt laisse dans le deuil un frère, Maurice, prêtre du diocèse de Montréal.

Un communiqué signale que la dépouille mortelle sera exposée en chapelle ardente en la Cathédrale de Joliette, le lundi 20 juin, à compter de 10 heures. Les funérailles y seront célébrées à 14 heures par son successeur, Mgr Gilles Lussier. Inhumation au cimetière de Joliette.

R.I.P.

Monday, June 13, 2011

St. Anthony of Padua, Confessor & Doctor of the Church - Perpetual Help Devotions

Veronese, St. Anthony Preaching to the Fish

The gospel call to leave everything and follow Christ was the rule of Anthony’s life. Over and over again God called him to something new in his plan. Every time Anthony responded with renewed zeal and self-sacrificing to serve his Lord Jesus more completely.

His journey as the servant of God began as a very young man when he decided to join the Augustinians in Lisbon, giving up a future of wealth and power to be a servant of God. Later, when the bodies of the first Franciscan martyrs went through the Portuguese city where he was stationed, he was again filled with an intense longing to be one of those closest to Jesus himself: those who die for the Good News.

So Anthony entered the Franciscan Order and set out to preach to the Moors. But an illness prevented him from achieving that goal. He went to Italy and was stationed in a small hermitage where he spent most of his time praying, reading the Scriptures and doing menial tasks.

The call of God came again at an ordination where no one was prepared to speak. The humble and obedient Anthony hesitantly accepted the task. The years of searching for Jesus in prayer, of reading sacred Scripture and of serving him in poverty, chastity and obedience had prepared Anthony to allow the Spirit to use his talents. Anthony’s sermon was astounding to those who expected an unprepared speech and knew not the Spirit’s power to give people words.

Recognized as a great man of prayer and a great Scripture and theology scholar, Anthony became the first friar to teach theology to the other friars. Soon he was called from that post to preach to the Albigensians in France, using his profound knowledge of Scripture and theology to convert and reassure those who had been misled.

After he led the friars in northern Italy for three years, he made his headquarters in the city of Padua. He resumed his preaching and began wrtiting sermon notes to help other preachers (www.americancatholic.org/saintoftheday).


* * * 

Saint Anthony of Padua
Priest and Doctor of the Church

Almighty everlasting God, who gave Saint Anthony of Padua to your people as an outstanding preacher and an intercessor in their need, grant that, with his assistance, as we follow the teachings of the Christian life, we may know your help in every trial.

* * * * * *
 
ANNUAL MASS IN HONOUR OF
OUR MOTHER OF PERPETUAL HELP
 
Last Wednesday, I presided at Mass marking the 73rd year of the Mother of Perpetual Help devotion at St. Patrick's Basilica. Though it was muggy and that powerful wind-storm took place during the Mass, a large number of the faithful attended.  
 
Here are a couple of photos taken by Father Larry McCormick after the celebration (in the church and at the reception in the Scavi [parish hall]: 
 
 



Sunday, June 12, 2011

Pentecost Sunday - Images of the Diocesan Church and Its Feast

Collect for Pentecost Sunday




O God, who by the mystery of today’s great feast sanctify your whole Church in every people and nation, pour out, we pray, the gifts of the Holy Spirit across the face of the earth and, with the divine grace that was at work when the Gospel was first proclaimed, fill now once more the hearts of believers. Through our Lord.

* * * * * *

THE BIRTHDAY OF THE CHURCH

Pentecost has often been called the "Birthday of the Church", both universal and particular.  Here on this auspicious day, when I will confirm more than 100 adult Catholics at the noon (English) and 5:15 (French) Masses at the cathedral, are some photos of last Thursday evening's Diocesan Feast as we marked not only the 164th anniversary of the foundation of the diocese in June 1847, but also the 125th of the elevation of Ottawa to the status of an Archdiocese.

To symbolize the vitality and beauty of our local church, two representatives of each parish brought a single rose to form a harmonious and beautiful bouquet, symbolizing our past and present reality, but also our hope for the future.  At the close of Mass, close to seventy individuals were honoured for their contribution to the archdiocesan church, through devotion to their parish or in some other way.

Photos of this festive Mass, taken by Bob DuBroy follow:




















 









Saturday, June 11, 2011

St. Barnabé, fils de consolation - Feast of St. Barnabas - Saturday before Pentecost


St Barnabé - comme on dit en français - ou St Barnabas fut un Apôtre particulièrement important dans l'histoire de l'Église.
Dans la Légende dorée qui raconte la vie des saints on peut lire cette introduction de la vie de St Barnabé :

"Barnabé veut dire fils de celui qui vient, ou bien fils de consolation, ou fils de prophète, ou fils qui, enserre. Quatre fois il a le titre de fils pour quatre sortes de filiation. L'écriture donne ce nom de fils, en raison de la génération, de l’instruction, de l’imitation, et de l’adoption. Or, il fut régénéré par J.-C. dans le baptême, il fut instruit dans l’Evangile, il imita le Seigneur par son martyre, et il en fut adopté par la récompense céleste. Voilà pour ce qui le regarde lui-même. Voici maintenant ce qui le concerne quant aux autres : il fut arrivant, consolant, prophétisant et enserrant. Il fut arrivant, parce qu'il alla prêcher partout : ceci est clair, puisqu'il fut le compagnon de saint Paul. Il consola les pauvres et les affligés, les premiers en leur portant des aumônes, les seconds en leur adressant des lettres de la part des apôtres : Il prophétisa puisqu'il fut illustre en annonçant les choses à venir; il fut enserrant, c'est-à-dire qu'il réunit et rassembla dans la foi une multitude de personnes; la preuve en est dans sa mission à Antioche. Ces quatre qualités sont indiquées dans le livre des Actes (XI). C'était un homme, mais un homme de courage, ce qui a trait à la première qualité, bon, c'est pour la seconde, plein du Saint-Esprit, voilà pour la troisième, et fidèle ou plein de foi, ceci regarde la quatrième qualité."


Voici tous les extraits des Écritures où on peut voir citer son nom, (ce n'est pas rien !) :




1er Voygage de Paul (avec Barnabé)

Actes 4:36 Joseph, surnommé par les apôtres Barnabas, ce qui signifie fils d’exhortation [ou de consolation], Lévite, originaire de Chypre,

Actes 9:27 Alors Barnabas, l’ayant pris avec lui, le conduisit vers les apôtres, et leur raconta comment sur le chemin Saul avait vu le Seigneur, qui lui avait parlé, et comment à Damas il avait prêché franchement au nom de Jésus.

Actes 11:22 Le bruit en parvint aux oreilles des membres de l’Eglise de Jérusalem, et ils envoyèrent Barnabas jusqu’à Antioche.

Actes 11:25 Barnabas se rendit ensuite à Tarse, pour chercher Saul;

Actes 11:30 Ils le firent parvenir aux anciens par les mains de Barnabas et de Saul.

Actes 12:25 Barnabas et Saul, après s’être acquittés de leur message, s’en retournèrent de Jérusalem, emmenant avec eux Jean, surnommé Marc.

Actes 13:1 Il y avait dans l’Eglise d’Antioche des prophètes et des docteurs: Barnabas, Siméon appelé Niger, Lucius de Cyrène, Manahen, qui avait été élevé avec Hérode le tétrarque, et Saul.

Actes 13:2 Pendant qu’ils servaient le Seigneur dans leur ministère et qu’ils jeûnaient, le Saint-Esprit dit: Mettez-moi à part Barnabas et Saul pour l’oeuvre à laquelle je les ai appelés.

Actes 13:4 Barnabas et Saul, envoyés par le Saint-Esprit, descendirent à Séleucie, et de là ils s’embarquèrent pour l’île de Chypre.

Actes 13:7 qui était avec le proconsul Sergius Paulus, homme intelligent. Ce dernier fit appeler Barnabas et Saul, et manifesta le désir d’entendre la parole de Dieu.

Actes 13:43 et, à l’issue de l’assemblée, beaucoup de Juifs et de prosélytes pieux suivirent Paul et Barnabas, qui s’entretinrent avec eux, et les exhortèrent à rester attachés à la grâce de Dieu.

Actes 13:46 Paul et Barnabas leur dirent avec assurance: C’est à vous premièrement que la parole de Dieu devait être annoncée; mais, puisque vous la repoussez, et que vous vous jugez vous-mêmes indignes de la vie éternelle, voici, nous nous tournons vers les païens.

Actes 13:50 Mais les Juifs excitèrent les femmes dévotes de distinction et les principaux de la ville; ils provoquèrent une persécution contre Paul et Barnabas, et ils les chassèrent de leur territoire.

Actes 13:51 Paul et Barnabas secouèrent contre eux la poussière de leurs pieds, et allèrent à Icone,

Actes 14:1 A Icone, Paul et Barnabas entrèrent ensemble dans la synagogue des Juifs, et ils parlèrent de telle manière qu’une grande multitude de Juifs et de Grecs crurent.

Actes 14:6 Paul et Barnabas, en ayant eu connaissance, se réfugièrent dans les villes de la Lycaonie, à Lystre et à Derbe, et dans la contrée d’alentour.

Actes 14:12 Ils appelaient Barnabas Jupiter, et Paul Mercure, parce que c’était lui qui portait la parole.

Actes 14:14 Les apôtres Barnabas et Paul, ayant appris cela, déchirèrent leurs vêtements, et se précipitèrent au milieu de la foule,

Actes 14:20 Mais, les disciples l’ayant entouré, il se leva, et entra dans la ville. Le lendemain, il partit pour Derbe avec Barnabas.

Actes 15:2 Paul et Barnabas eurent avec eux un débat et une vive discussion; et les frères décidèrent que Paul et Barnabas, et quelques-uns des leurs, monteraient à Jérusalem vers les apôtres et les anciens, pour traiter cette question.

Actes 15:12 Toute l’assemblée garda le silence, et l’on écouta Barnabas et Paul, qui racontèrent tous les miracles et les prodiges que Dieu avait faits par eux au milieu des païens.

Actes 15:22 Alors il parut bon aux apôtres et aux anciens, et à toute l’Eglise, de choisir parmi eux et d’envoyer à Antioche, avec Paul et Barnabas, Jude appelé Barsabas et Silas, hommes considérés entre les frères.

Actes 15:25 nous avons jugé à propos, après nous être réunis tous ensemble, de choisir des délégués et de vous les envoyer avec nos bien-aimés Barnabas et Paul,

Actes 15:35 Paul et Barnabas demeurèrent à Antioche, enseignant et annonçant, avec plusieurs autres, la bonne nouvelle de la parole du Seigneur.

Actes 15:36 Quelques jours s’écoulèrent, après lesquels Paul dit à Barnabas: Retournons visiter les frères dans toutes les villes où nous avons annoncé la parole du Seigneur, pour voir en quel état ils sont.

Actes 15:37 Barnabas voulait emmener aussi Jean, surnommé Marc;

Actes 15:39 Ce dissentiment fut assez vif pour être cause qu’ils se séparèrent l’un de l’autre. Et Barnabas, prenant Marc avec lui, s’embarqua pour l’île de Chypre.

1 Corinthiens 9:6 Ou bien, est-ce que moi seul et Barnabas nous n’avons pas le droit de ne point travailler?

Galates 2:1 Quatorze ans après, je montai de nouveau à Jérusalem avec Barnabas, ayant aussi pris Tite avec moi;

Galates 2:9 et ayant reconnu la grâce qui m’avait été accordée, Jacques, Céphas et Jean, qui sont regardés comme des colonnes, me donnèrent, à moi et à Barnabas, la main d’association, afin que nous allassions, nous vers les païens, et eux vers les circoncis.

Galates 2:13 Avec lui les autres Juifs usèrent aussi de dissimulation, en sorte que Barnabas même fut entraîné par leur hypocrisie.

Colossiens 4:10 Aristarque, mon compagnon de captivité, vous salue, ainsi que Marc, le cousin de Barnabas, au sujet duquel vous avez reçu des ordres s’il va chez vous, accueillez-le.

* * * * * *

Saint Barnabas Apostle

O God, who decreed that Saint Barnabas, a man filled with faith and the Holy Spirit, should be set apart to convert the Gentiles, grant that the Gospel of Christ, which he strenuously preached, may be proclaimed faithfully by word and by deed. Through our Lord.

* * * * * *

Collect for the
Saturday before Pentecost






Grant, we pray, almighty God, that we who have celebrated the paschal festivities may by your gift hold fast to them in the way that we live our lives. Through our Lord.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Friday before Pentecost - Priestly Ordinations


Friday after the Seventh Sunday of Easter

O God, who by the glorification of your Christ, and the light of the Holy Spirit have unlocked for us the gates of eternity, grant, we pray, that, partaking of so great a gift, our devotion may grow deeper and our faith be strengthened. Through our Lord.


* * * * * *

SEASON OF
PRIESTLY ORDINATIONS



Last Saturday, I ordained two confreres to the Priesthood at Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Toronto. 

This is the report in this week's Catholic Register.

Jesuits Welcome Two New Priests
by Michael Swan

TORONTO - When Canada’s first Jesuits, Frs. Pierre Biard and Ennemond Massé, arrived 400 years ago, the ship they were sailing was called the Grace of God. As William Mbugua and Michael Knox were ordained by Ottawa’s Jesuit Archbishop Terrence Prendergast June 4, the two new Jesuit priests found themselves in the same boat.

Prendergast called the two young priests “Fresh hope for the mission of the Jesuits today.”

With dozens of Jesuits present from all over North America, Knox and Mbugua stood up and lay down for the same ordination. But they came from vastly different starting places.

Toronto boy Knox entered the novitiate in 1997 at 18, straight out of Cardinal Carter Academy for the Arts. Mbugua started off in small-town Kenya and worked his way to the University of Manitoba where his encounter with Canadian Jesuits changed his life.

Mbugua’s family descended on Toronto’s Our Lady of Lourdes parish from Kenya in crowds and showed the Canadians what real celebration looks and sounds like as Mbugua’s sisters, cousins and aunts danced the gifts up to the altar to the sound of drums.

A special place was given to the mothers.

“You have given us and given the Church a great gift in your sons,” Regis College rector Fr. Bert Foliot told the women.


* * *


COMPANIONS OF THE CROSS




This Saturday morning at 10 o'clock, I will preside at the priestly ordination of James Lowe of the Companions of the Cross at Ottawa's Notre Dame Cathedral Basilica. 

All are most welcome.

* * *

PRIESTLY ANNIVERSARY

Thirty-nine years ago today, the late Bishop Thomas B. Fulton, then auxiliary bishop of Toronto and later Bishop of St. Catharines, ordained three other Canadian Jesuits (R. Frank Obrigewitsch and the late Ronald Barnes and the late Brian Massie) and me to Christ's priesthood. 

Please pray for our priests--the newly ordained and their elders--and give thanks to the Lord with Father Frank and me for the graces of these years of priestly life and ministry.

* * * * * *

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Saint Ephrem, Deacon and Doctor of the Church - Thursday after the Ascension - Closing Mass NET Canada/Les Equipes NET

On November 28, 2007, Pope Benedict XVI spoke at length on the "The Harp of the Holy Spirit", the saint whose optional memorial may be celebrated in today's liturgy:




Common opinion today supposes Christianity to be a European religion which subsequently exported the culture of this Continent to other countries. But the reality is far more complex since the roots of the Christian religion are found in the Old Testament, hence, in Jerusalem and the Semitic world. Christianity is still nourished by these Old Testament roots.

Furthermore, its expansion in the first centuries was both towards the West - towards the Greco-Latin world, where it later inspired European culture - and in the direction of the East, as far as Persia and India. It thus contributed to creating a specific culture in Semitic languages with an identity of its own.

To demonstrate this cultural pluralism of the one Christian faith in its origins, I spoke in my Catechesis last Wednesday of a representative of this other Christianity who is almost unknown to us: Aphraates, the Persian sage.

Today, along the same lines, I would like to talk about St Ephrem the Syrian, who was born into a Christian family in Nisibis in about 306 A.D. He was Christianity's most important Syriac-speaking representative and uniquely succeeded in reconciling the vocations of theologian and poet. He was educated and grew up beside James, Bishop of Nisibis (303-338), and with him founded the theological school in his city.

St. Ephrem was ordained a deacon and was intensely active in local Christian community life until 363, the year when Nisibis fell into Persian hands. Ephrem then emigrated to Edessa, where he continued his activity as a preacher. He died in this city in 373, a victim of the disease he contracted while caring for those infected with the plague. It is not known for certain whether he was a monk, but we can be sure in any case that he remained a deacon throughout his life and embraced virginity and poverty.

Thus, the common and fundamental Christian identity appears in the specificity of his own cultural expression: faith, hope - the hope which makes it possible to live poor and chaste in this world, placing every expectation in the Lord - and lastly, charity, to the point of giving his life through nursing those sick with the plague.


St Ephrem has left us an important theological inheritance. His substantial opus can be divided into four categories: works written in ordinary prose (his polemic works or biblical commentaries); works written in poetic prose; homilies in verse; and lastly, hymns, undoubtedly Ephrem's most abundant production. He is a rich and interesting author in many ways, but especially from the theological point of view.

It is the fact that theology and poetry converge in his work which makes it so special. If we desire to approach his doctrine, we must insist on this from the outset: namely, on the fact that he produces theology in poetical form. Poetry enabled him to deepen his theological reflection through paradoxes and images. At the same time, his theology became liturgy, became music; indeed, he was a great composer, a musician.

Theology, reflection on the faith, poetry, song and praise of God go together; and it is precisely in this liturgical character that the divine truth emerges clearly in Ephrem's theology. In his search for God, in his theological activity, he employed the way of paradoxes and symbols. He made ample use of contrasting images because they served to emphasize the mystery of God.

I cannot present much of his writing here, partly because his poetry is difficult to translate, but to give at least some idea of his poetical theology I would like to cite a part of two hymns. First of all, and also with a view to the approach of Advent, I shall propose to you several splendid images taken from his hymns On the Nativity of Christ. Ephrem expressed his wonder before the Virgin in inspired tones:

"The Lord entered her and became a servant; the Word entered her, and became silent within her; thunder entered her and his voice was still; the Shepherd of all entered her; he became a Lamb in her, and came forth bleating.

"The belly of your Mother changed the order of things, O you who order all! Rich he went in, he came out poor: the High One went into her [Mary], he came out lowly. Brightness went into her and clothed himself, and came forth a despised form....

"He that gives food to all went in, and knew hunger. He who gives drink to all went in, and knew thirst. Naked and bare came forth from her the Clother of all things [in beauty]"  (Hymn De Nativitate 11: 6-8).

To express the mystery of Christ, Ephrem uses a broad range of topics, expressions and images. In one of his hymns he effectively links Adam (in Paradise) to Christ (in the Eucharist):

"It was by closing with the sword of the cherub that the path to the tree of life was closed. But for the peoples, the Lord of this tree gave himself as food in his (Eucharistic) oblation.

"The trees of the Garden of Eden were given as food to the first Adam. For us, the gardener of the Garden in person made himself food for our souls. Indeed, we had all left Paradise together with Adam, who left it behind him.

"Now that the sword has been removed here below (on the Cross), replaced by the spear, we can return to it" (Hymn 49: 9-11).

To speak of the Eucharist, Ephrem used two images, embers or burning coal and the pearl. The burning coal theme was taken from the Prophet Isaiah (cf. 6: 6). It is the image of one of the seraphim who picks up a burning coal with tongs and simply touches the lips of the Prophet with it in order to purify them; the Christian, on the other hand, touches and consumes the Burning Coal which is Christ himself:

"In your bread hides the Spirit who cannot be consumed; in your wine is the fire that cannot be swallowed. The Spirit in your bread, fire in your wine: behold a wonder heard from our lips.

"The seraph could not bring himself to touch the glowing coal with his fingers, it was Isaiah's mouth alone that it touched; neither did the fingers grasp it nor the mouth swallow it; but the Lord has granted us to do both these things.

"The fire came down with anger to destroy sinners, but the fire of grace descends on the bread and settles in it. Instead of the fire that destroyed man, we have consumed the fire in the bread and have been invigorated" (Hymn De Fide 10: 8-10).

Here again is a final example of St Ephrem's hymns, where he speaks of the pearl as a symbol of the riches and beauty of faith:

"I placed (the pearl), my brothers, on the palm of my hand, to be able to examine it. I began to look at it from one side and from the other: it looked the same from all sides. (Thus) is the search for the Son inscrutable, because it is all light. In its clarity I saw the Clear One who does not grow opaque; and in his purity, the great symbol of the Body of Our Lord, which is pure. In his indivisibility I saw the truth which is indivisible" (Hymn On the Pearl 1: 2-3).

The figure of Ephrem is still absolutely timely for the life of the various Christian Churches. We discover him in the first place as a theologian who reflects poetically, on the basis of Holy Scripture, on the mystery of man's redemption brought about by Christ, the Word of God incarnate.



His is a theological reflection expressed in images and symbols taken from nature, daily life and the Bible. Ephrem gives his poetry and liturgical hymns a didactic and catechetical character: they are theological hymns yet at the same time suitable for recitation or liturgical song. On the occasion of liturgical feasts, Ephrem made use of these hymns to spread Church doctrine. Time has proven them to be an extremely effective catechetical instrument for the Christian community.

Ephrem's reflection on the theme of God the Creator is important: nothing in creation is isolated and the world, next to Sacred Scripture, is a Bible of God. By using his freedom wrongly, man upsets the cosmic order. The role of women was important to Ephrem. The way he spoke of them was always inspired with sensitivity and respect: the dwelling place of Jesus in Mary's womb greatly increased women's dignity. Ephrem held that just as there is no Redemption without Jesus, there is no Incarnation without Mary.

The divine and human dimensions of the mystery of our redemption can already be found in Ephrem's texts; poetically and with fundamentally scriptural images, he anticipated the theological background and in some way the very language of the great Christological definitions of the fifth-century Councils.

Ephrem, honoured by Christian tradition with the title "Harp of the Holy Spirit", remained a deacon of the Church throughout his life. It was a crucial and emblematic decision: he was a deacon, a servant, in his liturgical ministry, and more radically, in his love for Christ, whose praises he sang in an unparalleled way, and also in his love for his brethren, whom he introduced with rare skill to the knowledge of divine Revelation.

* * *

Pour into our hearts O Lord, we pray, the Holy Spirit, at whose prompting the Deacon Saint Ephrem exulted in singing of your mysteries and from whom he received the strength to sere you alone. Through our Lord.

* * *

Prière de Saint-Éphrem
au Très Saint-Esprit




Ô Seigneur, Roi Céleste, Consolateur, Esprit de Vérité, aie compassion et pitié de Ton serviteur pécheur et pardonne mon indignité, et pardonne-moi aussi tous les péchés que j'ai humainement commis aujourd'hui, et non seulement humainement, mais d'une manière pire que celle des bêtes ; mes péchés volontaires, connus ou inconnus commis depuis ma jeunesse et ceux venant de suggestions malignes ou de mon impudence et de mon ennui.

Si j'ai juré par Ton Nom ou blasphémé en pensées, si j'ai blâmé quelqu'un ou lui ai fait des reproches, si ma colère a porté atteinte à quelqu'un, l'a calomnié ou blessé, si je me suis mis en colère à propos de quelque chose, si j'ai dit un mensonge, si j'ai dormi sans nécessité, si un mendiant est venu vers moi et que je l'ai méprisé ou ignoré, si j'ai troublé mon frère ou me suis disputé avec lui, si j'ai condamné quiconque, si je me suis vanté, si j'ai été orgueilleux, si j'ai perdu mon calme avec quiconque, si, lors de la prière, mon esprit a été distrait par l'attrait de ce monde, si j'ai eu des pensées dépravées, si j'ai trop mangé ou bien bu à l'excès ou ri d'une manière frivole, si j'ai pensé au mal, si j'ai été attiré par quelqu'un et que cela m'ait blessé dans mon coeur, si j'ai dit des choses indécentes, si je me suis moqué du péché de mon frère quand mes propres fautes sont innombrables, si j'ai été négligent dans la prière, si j'ai commis quelque tort dont je ne puis me souvenir ; car j'ai commis tout cela et plus encore, aie pitié Ô mon Seigneur et Créateur, de moi Ton mauvais et inutile serviteur et absous, pardonne et délivre-moi dans Ta bonté et Ton Amour pour les hommes afin que, sensuel, pécheur et mauvais que je suis, je puisse m'étendre pour dormir et me reposer en paix.

Et je vénère, je loue et glorifie Ton Nom très Honorable avec le Père et Son Fils Unique, maintenant et toujours et aux siècles des siècles. Amen !

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Thursday after the Ascension

May your Spirit, O Lord, we pray, imbue us powerfully with spiritual gifts, that he may give us a mind pleasing to you, and graciously conform us to your will. Through our Lord.

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NET CANADA/LES EQUIPES NET





On the weekend, all the young men and women who had served on NET Canada evangelizing teams travelling across the country or in several parishes, came to home base Ottawa to reflect on the experience of the past year, give credit to benefactors, NET staff, family and friends for all that they had been privileged to experience.

And they gave thanks to God in song and prayer at the Closing NET Mass in Notre Dame Cathedral Basilica where they had been commissioned to go forth and share the Good News in early October.

Though I was not able to attend the wrap-up sessions, I joined in their joy at the closing liturgy. Here are some photos (courtesy of Kevin Prada):














Wednesday, June 8, 2011

125th Anniversary of the Archdiocese of Ottawa - Preparing for Pentecost - Visit to Blessed Sacrament Parish




Wednesday after the Ascension

Grant graciously to your Church, O merciful God, that gathered by the Holy Spirit, she may be devoted to you with all her heart and united in purity of intent. Through our Lord.

* * * * * *
OTTAWA BECOMES
AN ARCHDIOCESE
ON JUNE 8, 1886

One hundred and twenty-five years ago today, the Holy See raised the Diocese of Ottawa to the status of an Archdiocese.

This year, the Diocesan Feast will be observed with an anniversary Mass tomorrow evening, at the close which more than seventy members of our local church will be presented with a special commemorative 125th Anniversary Certificate of Merit

The bilingual Mass, which begins at 7:30PM tomorrow evening, will be taped for broadcast on the Sunday morning Radio-Canada program "Jour du Seigneur" on Trinity Sunday, June 19 at 10AM.


This striking angel holds the coat-of-arms of Ottawa's 2nd bishop and 1st Archbishop,
Mgr Thomas Duhamel

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VISIT TO BLESSED SACRAMENT CHURCH





On Sunday, I presided and preached at the 9:30 and 11:00 o'clock as the parish begins to cope with the departure of Father Joe Leclair, praying for his time away on a renewal program, and preparing for the new pastor, Father Randall Hendricks, C.C., who will begin his new duties on July 1.  Father Francis Donnelly, C.C. will continue as pro-tem pastor until then.

Some photos:





















This couple was celebrating their wedding anniversary

 
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Pentecost Sunday (Year “A”) – June 12, 2011 - CHRISTIANS WERE MADE TO DRINK OF THE ONE SPIRIT [Texts: Acts 2.1-11 [Psalm 104]; 1 Corinthians 12.3b-7, 12-13; John 20.19-23]


In travelling to celebrations of Confirmation in my diocese, I have noted that today's second reading (in a slightly longer version that includes mention of the gifts bestowed by the Spirit) is frequently chosen for the liturgy.

A key theme in this passage (and its parallel in Romans 12.4-8) is the way each person's spiritual gifts benefit the community (“to each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good”). This assertion is meaningful even if the gifts Paul mentioned are harder to identify with today (the utterance of wisdom, the utterance of knowledge, faith to work miracles, gifts of healing, prophecy, the discernment of spirits and the interpretation of tongues).

Another strong emphasis in Paul's writing is the notion of the members of the church forming the Body of Christ. Paul says that race or religious distinctions (“Jews or Greeks”) no longer count. Nor do social or economic divisions (“slaves or free”). In Galatians 3.28, Paul said that even sex and gender distinctions are overcome (“there is no longer male and female”).

Naturally, people still are either male or female, belong to different races, share in a variety of ethnic backgrounds, cultural spheres and social classes. But in Christ these no longer have any import. Now, all believers have become members of one entity. They form the Body of Christ.

We might have expected Paul to say, that “just as the body is one and has many members...so it is with the Church”. Instead, Paul moved beyond analogy to suggest an equation between the Church and Christ.

Some have asked whether the identification of the Church with Christ is a metaphor or a mystical union. Clearly, the term “Body of Christ” is a metaphor. But it illumines the underlying truth that Christians who make up the Church are united with and participate in Christ's life.

While the visible Church bears the marks of a human organization, this should not cloud the more important truth that the Church is brought into being by the activity of the Holy Spirit. The indwelling Spirit binds believing disciples who make up the Church into a living union with Jesus, their crucified and risen Lord.

In recalling for the Corinthians the basis of their unity in Christ, Paul uses two symbols: “in the one Spirit we were all baptized into one body” and “we were all made to drink of one Spirit”. The Spirit is the element into which the newly converted were immersed. It is as if they were plunged into the world of the Spirit, drenched like plants in the Spirit.

“Drinking the Spirit” is a curious yet powerful image. It suggests that the Spirit who makes believers one has been given in overflowing abundance to Christians. In John's Gospel, Jesus used a similar image to invoke the Spirit: “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me, and let the one who believes in me drink. As the Scripture has said, ‘Out of the believer's heart shall flow rivers of living water’”.

In speaking of baptism and drinking deeply of the Spirit, Paul speaks of the experience of conversion in terms of its most crucial ingredient, the receiving of the Spirit. And conversion, as Christians learn, must be ongoing.

After their first enthusiasm at having received spiritual gifts in service to the community, it seems that members of the Corinthian Church began wrangling about which gift (and which person, therefore) was the most important. The gifts which had been intended by God to foster the unity of the Body of Christ became, instead, the occasion of its being torn apart.

Paul, however, never became discouraged no matter how petty the arguments among the disciples. For he knew that it was God who had begun the good work among the Corinthians; and he trusted that God would faithfully see them through blameless to the end (cf. 1 Corinthians 1.4-9).

Christian experience of the Holy Spirit requires becoming attuned to the Spirit's presence, discerning where the Spirit is leading. Members of the Church need to make wide-open spaces in their hearts so that the Spirit can enter and renew daily life. “Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful; and kindle in them the fire of your love”.