Thursday, January 7, 2010
Ukrainian Christmas - 1st Thursday in Year of Priests - St. Raymond of Penyafort
Last evening the Rector and seminarians of Holy Spirit Ukrainian Catholic Seminary on Ottawa's Baseline Road, hosted clergy, professors, family and friends to a festive reception and dinner followed by Great Complines in the chapel.
Merry Christmas to those who celebrate according to the Julian calendar!
* * * * * *
« Lorsque Notre Seigneur vient habiter une âme, il est content et remplit l’âme de joie et de bonheur, et lui communiqué cet amour généreux de tout faire et souffrir pour lui plaire. » --St. Jean-Marie Vianney, Curé d’Ars
In this Year of Priests, the First Thursday of the Month is a day on which one can obtain for oneself or one of the deceased a plenary indulgence, under the usual conditions (sincere contrition for sin and a resolve to avoid sin in the future, confession and Holy Communion, with prayers for the Holy Father's intentions).
* * * * * *
Today the liturgy permits the memorial of someone who lived a long time for medieval times, close to 100 years:
Saint Raymond of Peñafort lived into his hundredth year and had a chance to do many things.
As a member of the Spanish nobility, he had the resources and the education to get a good start in life. By the time he was 20, he was teaching philosophy. In his early 30s he earned a doctorate in both canon and civil law.
At 41 he became a Dominican. Pope Gregory IX called him to Rome to work for him and to be his confessor. One of the things the pope asked him to do was to gather together all the decrees of popes and councils that had been made in 80 years since a similar collection by Gratian. Raymond compiled five books called the Decretals.
They were looked upon as one of the best organized collections of Church law until the 1917 codification of canon law. Earlier, Raymond had written for confessors a book of cases. It was called Summa de casibus poenitentiae (a summary collection of issues from the confessional).
More than just a list of sins and penances, it discussed pertinent doctrines and laws of the Church that pertained to the problem or case brought to the confessor. His compassion helped many people return to God through Reconciliation - the Sacrament of Confession.
At the age of 60, Raymond was appointed archbishop of Tarragona, the capital of Aragon. He didn’t like the honor at all and ended up getting sick and resigning in two years.
He didn’t get to enjoy his peace long, however, because when he was 63 he was elected by his fellow Dominicans to be the head of the whole Order, the successor of St. Dominic. Raymond worked hard, visited on foot all the Dominicans, reorganized their constitutions and managed to put through a provision that a master general be allowed to resign. When the new constitutions were accepted, Raymond, then 65, resigned.
He still had 35 years to oppose heresy and work for the conversion of the Moors in Spain. He convinced St. Thomas Aquinas to write his work Against the Gentiles, a book to explain the truths of faith in a way nonbelievers could easily understand. He died on January 6, 1275, in Spain of natural causes.
* * * * * *
PERSONAL MILESTONES...
Happy 60th Birthday to Episcopal Vicar Father Joseph Muldoon! Many happy returns...ad multos annos! The feast was anticipated last evening on the vigil....
No comments:
Post a Comment