March 12, 2008

April

April 1
O how unhappy are they who forsake Him, and how happy are they who remain in the abyss of that everlasting Sweetness! Sermon II

April 2
Love alone is worth everything; any other virtue without love is worth nothing. Sermon IV

April 3
What does it profit you if you settle other people's quarrels, but not your own? Sermon IV

April 4
What does it profit you if you convince others to overcome their passions, but you do not overcome your own? Sermon IV

April 5
What good is it for you if you spend beautiful words on the subject of perfection, and then, as a hypocrite, you destroy it by your actions? Sermon IV

April 6
Almsgiving, without love, profits nothing, rather it causes harm. Recall what Christ said to those Pharisees who gave out alms while, to attract everybody's attention, had a horn blown. What did Christ say? "Truly you have received your reward" (Matt 6:2) ― a reward that is none other but the glory of men. Sermon IV

April 7
God made him love Himself anew by the sheer force of love. O limitless mercy! O infinite love! God humbled Himself so much in order that man might love Him back, and through this love be saved. Sermon IV

April 8
If eloquence does not profit, if knowledge is of no benefit, if prophecy is of little worth, if working miracles does not make anyone pleasing to God, and if even almsgiving and martyrdom are of no avail without love, if it has been necessary, or most convenient, for the Son of God to come down on earth to show the way of charity and love of God, then the love of God is necessary. Yes, without God's love nothing can be accomplished, whereas everything depends on this love.
Sermon IV

April 9
Everything has been given you in order to lead you to God, that it is imperative for you to go to God by the way of separation, and above of all, separation from lukewarmness, and that it is absolutely necessary for you to refrain from saying: "I do not want to do excessive good." For, by speaking like that, you run the risk of perturbing and reducing to a bare minimum your natural instinct which tends to do as much as it can.” Sermon V

April 10
Now, tell me: do you wish to enjoy good health, entirely or only partially? To get all the goods possible or only some or none of them? To acquire only so much learning and no more? And so on with other desires you may have. Everyone wishes to reach his own end as fully as he can. Now, the end of your will is the good, that is why you desire it with all your heart and without any limit. Sermon IV

April 11
Not to go forward on the way to God, and to stand still, is indeed to go backward. You see, it is like the sea water that is never still, but rather constantly moves, flowing six hours and ebbing six hours. Yes, you cannot say that it is motionless. It is the same with man in his spiritual life: either he grows in virtue or, by not growing in it, he stagnates in vices. In other words he says farewell to virtue and back he goes [to a lukewarm and negligent way of living]. Sermon IV

April 12
God is a long way from our direct experience; God is spirit; God works in an invisible fashion. Thus, His spiritual activity cannot be seen except with the eyes of the mind and of the spirit, which in most people are blind, and in all are wavering and no longer accustomed to seeing. Sermon IV

April 13
God works in persons through persons. God follows this pattern by employing man even when He works miracles. He led the people of Israel by the hand of Moses. And so, any time man wished to move toward God, it was ― as is still now ― necessary for him to go through another man. Sermon IV

April 14
If man is to walk with God and acquire His love, he must purify himself by getting rid of all his passions, which as a whole have their origin in the body and thus need remedies, directions, and stimuli from the body. Sermon IV

April 15
Do not think it sufficient to say that, since God is spirit and man is corporeal, there is no other way to prove our love for God except through man, that God's way to deal with man is through another man, that man is to be healed by what made him ill. Sermon IV

April 16
You can read in all of Scripture that God has made your neighbor the road to reach His Majesty. Sermon IV

April 17
Do you wish to climb the mountain of perfection? Do you wish to get some spiritual gift? Do you wish to love God and be dear to Him and be His good children? Love your neighbor; take your neighbor as your compass; resolve to do good to your neighbor and never to offend him. Sermon IV

April 18
By the fourth commandment God gives an order and establishes a reward as well. He orders you to honor your father, and, if you do that, He promises you a long life. Sermon IV

April 19
The word "father" is also a term for friendship; hence, you owe respect to all people. Indeed, you have to love them all, since they all descend from one and the same origin, through the same generation and all belong to humankind. The Apostle said, "Anticipate each other in showing respect" [Rom 12:10], and, "Owe no one anything, except to love one another" [Rom 13:8]. Now, if everybody is to be loved for being a human creature like you, so much more are those to be loved who are Christians; and still more, those who wish to live a more perfect life and become excellent Christians; and above all others, the members of one's family. Sermon IV

April 20
It is in your power not only to choose evil or good, but also - and this is something greater still - to change evil into something useful and profitable for yourselves. Sermon V

April 21
No one who has common sense and right knowledge can harbor in his mind the thought that God who is Goodness itself would want evil. Sermon V

April 22
Fathers give their children bread, not a stone; fish, not serpents. Would God place the principle of evil in man's heart and, along with it, give him ruin and death? As a matter of fact, God made the heavens and the earth for man. He made man in his own image and likeness. He destined him for eternal life. Most of all, He sent His own Son in the likeness of a slave for man's salvation and gave him up to cruel death in exchange. Sermon V

April 23
Blessed are those who rejoice in their hearts and minds! May God grant you some day to savor this true and interior joy. Sermon V

April 24
So great is the excellence of free will strengthened by God's grace that man can become either a god or a devil according to what he chooses to be. Sermon V

April 25
There is no other way to prove our love for God except through man, that God's way to deal with man is through another man, that man is to be healed by what made him ill, that, furthermore, since passions are bodily, man is to be delivered from them by means of another man, and if these considerations seem insufficient to get you to believe that the love of neighbor both effects the love of God and manifests it, let this fact, at least, convince you: God became man for just this reason. Sermon IV

April 26
O the wonder of the stupendous art God manifests in everything He does! Such is man that by the power of his free will he can change evil into good. It was Paul who told you that “all things work together for the good of those who, according to God's purpose, are saints through His call” (Rom 8:28). Sermon V

April 27
Man... was created and placed on this earth chiefly and exclusively in order to reach God;the rest of creation helps him reach that goal. Sermon VI

April 28
Spiritual creatures, who have been created in order to unite themselves to God, and not to be man's end, are sent by Him to minister to man, it stands all the more to reason that bodily creatures serve man, for that is their end. Sermon VI

April 29
Spiritual writers, in fact, tell us that before man sinned, created things were for him like a Book, a Book well written in beautiful, alive, well shaped, and clearly delineated letters which he should read in order to reach God. Sermon VI


April 30
After sinned, the created things became somewhat distorted and obscure. To be sure, they were by no means erased, but became all faded, hard to read, and almost impossible to see. Sermon VI

April 31
That was when, seeing that man could hardly read that Book of created things and was therefore unable to come to know Him in all truth and often misinterpreted things altogether, God, who does not brood over our malice, intervened. And what do you think He did? In His goodness He wrote another Book ― the Book of Scripture― in which He restored the first one by putting into it all that was good in created things. By showing what is perfect, He taught us how to withdraw from what is imperfect; and by pointing out the necessary things, He eliminated the superfluous ones. Sermon VI

March 10, 2008

A PHYSICIAN'S PRAYER

Composed by Pope Pius XII

O Divine Physician concerned for the welfare of both body and soul, Jesus, our Redeemer, who during Thy life on earth didst manifest a special love for the sick and by Thy almighty power didst restore them to health by the mere touch of Thy hand, we who are called to the arduous tasks of the medical profession adore Thee and acknowledge Thee as our model and firm support.

May our minds, hearts and hands always be guided by Thee so that we may merit the honor and praise which the Holy Spirit pronounces in commendation of our profession (Sir 38: 1-15).
Grant us to realize more fully that we are instruments of Thy mercy, called to cooperate with Thee in the work of safeguarding the welfare of human beings and promoting their development.
Enlighten our understanding, so hard pressed by the innumerable ailments of the human body, in order that, by the right use of modern scientific knowledge in the diagnosis of diseases, we may not be misled by mere symptoms but discover their true causes. We shall then feel safe in prescribing the remedies which Thy Providence has supplied.

Increase Thy love in our hearts so that, seeing Thee in the sick, especially in such as are most for­saken, we may reward their complete confidence in us by exhibiting a continuous and unwearied solicitude for their welfare.

Grant that, following Thy example, we may always show fatherly kindness in our sympathy, sincerity in giving advice, diligence in our attendance, freedom from all practices of deception, and gentleness in breaking the sad news when confronted with the mystery of death. Above all, help us to be firm in upholding Thy law concerning the sacredness of human life against the false dictates of egoism and unregulated lower instincts.

As physicians who take glory in Thy Name, we promise that in all our activity we shall take into account the observance of the moral order and be regulated by its laws.

Grant, finally, that we ourselves, trusting in the protection of ANTHONY MARY ZACCARIA, the holy Physician, our Patron and Protector, by a truly Christian life and by the conscientious fulfillment of the duties of our profession, may merit some day to hear from Thy lips the sentence of beatification promised to all those who visit Thee in the person of Thy sick brethren:
"Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you" (Mt 25:34). Amen.

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Source: The Sacred Congregation of Rites, The Raccolta, 1957

March 8, 2008

TRIDUUM

in honor of St. Anthony Mary Zaccaria
to obtain any favor spiritual or temporal
____________________________________

O most merciful God, Creator and Preserver of the world and Lord of the life and death of all people, hear our humble and confident prayer, and by the mediation of St. Anthony Mary, deign to deliver us speedily from every spiritual and temporal evil.
Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory be …

O most loving God, Author of peace and every consolation, hear our fervent desires and may it please God by the intercession of St. Anthony Mary to console us in every anguish and in all sorrows.
Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory be…

O most Bountiful God, Giver of every gift and of all graces, receive our fervent prayers, and graciously, through the merits of St. Anthony Mary, defend us from every menace and peril and aid us in all our needs.
Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory be…

V:Pray for us, St. Anthony Mary
R:That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

Let us pray: Lord, enable us to grasp in the spirit of St. Paul, the sublime wisdom of Jesus Christ, the wisdom which inspired St. Anthony Mary Zaccaria to preach the message of salvation in your Church. Grant this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever. Amen.

LITANY OF SAINT ANTHONY MARY ZACCARIA


Lord, have mercy
Christ, have mercy
Lord, have mercy

Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us
Holy Apostle Paul, pray for us
Holy Father, Anthony Mary, pray for us

He ran like a madman

Flower of the Lombard land, pray for us
Fruit of a noble tree, pray for us
Offspring of a saintly mother, pray for us

Notable student of philosophy and medicine, pray for us
Remarkable physician of bodies and souls, pray for us
Venerable priest of the Church in Cremona, pray for us

Indefatigable preacher of God’s word, pray for us
Faithful steward of God’s mysteries, pray for us
Wise educator of God’s people, pray for us

Renewer of Christian life, pray for us
Reformer of religious life, pray for us
Restorer of apostolic life, pray for us

Father and founder, pray for us
Father and leader, pray for us
Father and lawgiver, pray for us

Benefactor of the poor, pray for us
Father of the fatherland, pray for us
Mediator of peace, pray for us

Shepherd being all to all, pray for us
Laborer worn out by toil, pray for us
Soldier fallen in battle, pray for us

In Christ’s footsteps, in imitation of great Saints

True friend of God, pray for us
True lover of Christ, pray for us

Imitator and missionary of the Crucified Lord, pray for us
Adorer and apostle of the Holy Eucharist, pray for us
Friend and herald of the Holy Spirit, pray for us

Child consecrated to the Virgin, pray for us
Recruit surrounded by Angels, pray for us
Veteran welcomed among the Apostles, pray for us
Legitimate son of Paul, pray for us
Heir of the Holy Fathers, pray for us
Scholar of the ancient Doctors, pray for us
Pride of outstanding teachers, pray for us

From virtue to virtue toward the reward of the heavenly fatherland

Angel on earth, pray for us
Angel in the flesh, pray for us

Young man blossomed like a lily, pray for us
Rich man stripped of everything, pray for us
Nobleman thirsting for scorn, pray for us

Man adorned with all virtues, pray for us
Man filled with heavenly gifts, pray for us
Man prudent in discerning, pray for us
Man resolute in acting, pray for us
Man ever absorbed in prayer, pray for us
Man inspired by the sublime wisdom of Jesus Christ, pray for us
Man divine and holy, pray for us
Man gentle and humane, pray for us
Man burning with charity, pray for us
Man fervent in spirit, pray for us
Man relentless against lukewarmness, pray for us
Man ruthless against vices, pray for us

Magnanimous hero, you have fought without pay the good fight, pray for us
Exultant champion, you have quickly finished the race, pray for us
Blessed servant, you have remained faithful unto death, pray for us
Victorious captain, you reign forever crowned with glory, pray for us

Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, spare us, O Lord.
Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, graciously hear us, O Lord.
Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, have mercy on us.


V: Pray for us, St. Anthony Mary.
R: That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

Let us pray: Lord, enable us to grasp in the spirit of St. Paul, the sublime wisdom of Jesus Christ, the wisdom which inspired St. Anthony Mary Zaccaria to preach the message of salvation in your Church. Grant this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever. Amen.

February 22, 2008

CORRETE COME MATTI

Hymn in honor of St. Anthony Mary Zaccaria


Era giovane era ricco sai,
Ma questo non bastava
Alla sua vita.
Nel Vangelo che leggeva lui
Il senso ritrovava
Alla sua vita.
E poi un giorno con sua madre
Lui parlò
Con lei comprese
Che esser perfetto
e stare dietro Gesù Cristo fin lassù
Sulla sua croce
Dietro una voce
La sua voce.

A Cremona e a Milano poi
A tutti raccontava
Il Suo vangelo
E ogni cuore tiepido con lui
Di fuoco diventava
La fede cresceva.
E poi un giorno lui san Paolo
Incontrò
Cosi comprese
Che esser perfetto
è diventare un solo Spirito con
Dio Con la sua croce
Qui nel cuore mio.

SI CORRETE COME MATTI
E ANDATE VERSO DIO
E VERSO GLI ALTRI
COME ME
E SIATE VERI E GRANDI SANTI
ANDANDO VERSO DIO
VERSO GLI ALTRI
SIATE SANTI
INSIEME A ME

Sono giovane e anche ricco sai
Ma questo non mi basta
Per la mia vita.
E nel Vangelo che leggeva lui
Voglio ritrovare
Senso alla vita
Cosi un giorno con gli amici
Proverò
Anche a capire
Che essere perfetto
è diventare un solo Spirito con Dio
Con la sua croce
Qui nel cuore mio.

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(M. Brusati, M. Labellate, M. Versaci) Vocal: Massimo Versaci




February 8, 2008

Lukewarmness

In the Book of Revelation we read: "'To the angel of the church in Laodicea, write this: " 'The Amen, the faithful and true witness, the source of God's creation, says this: 'I know your works; I know that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either cold or hot. So, because you are lukewarm, neither hot nor cold, I will spit you out of my mouth'" (NAB, 3:15-16).
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1. Warm is one, once started, who perseveres with fervor in the service of God. Cold is one who never had any fervor or never started in the service of God. Lukewarm is one who, at one time, received gifts and graces from God, and then out of negligence became lax in his devotion and went backward, or started in an imperfect way to serve God, and never changed to a noticeable fervor.

2. The lukewarm person is like water which is barely warm though once exposed to cold it becomes as icy as it seemed to be when it was far away from the cold.

3. Lukewarmness is a heresy which has spread all over the world. It’s not persecuted by inquisitors but is embraced by the Devil.

4. Lukewarmness is a poisonous fruit of self love, destruction of holy customs, foundation of vices, ruin of the world, open door to hell, closed door to heaven, mother of defects.

5. It is no less scandalous for the lukewarm person to speak of the highest perfection than of a heresy.

6. Lukewarmness is a blindness of the mind, because the lukewarm person is always distracted and deprived of interior reflection.

7. Lukewarmness is found more where it should not be; that is, in those who should be true and fervent servants of God.

8. Lukewarm is the one who, with confidence and certainty, rests in the midst of danger and is not afraid to fall where there is a very obvious precipice.


9. A sign of lukewarmness is like having skin of leather, difficult to understand and penetrate to the bone marrow.

10.
You have not yet seen, a lukewarm person who knows what mystical theology is, except very superficially at the exterior. Although he may possess philosophical and legal theology and might debate with arrogance about many things, he lacks experience of knowing Christ and true virtues.

11. The lukewarm one is the ruin of the fervent, cheater of the virtuous, and the welcomer of good comrades. In short, the army of the lukewarm is under the banner of the infernal Devil.

12. In his confusion, the lukewarm one boasts about the crowns of his predecessors. As successor to the death of just ones, he decorates their tombs and he boasts to be their disciple while unworthily enjoying their goods. And doing so, he perpetuates the beliefs of the Scribes and Pharisees who were admonished for this by Christ.

13. For appearances the lukewarm one seems to care for divine worship, but only for the external ceremonies and done routinely.

14. The lukewarm person seems to have zeal for the honor of God, yet it is more than true, that when he sees a truly virtuous person he starts to deride him.

15. The lukewarm one says, “I would endure anything for Christ, provided I would know that I am pleasing to Him.” He does not realize that whatever happens is all His providence.
15. The lukewarm one says, I would endure anything for Christ, provided I know that I am pleasing to Him. He does not realize that whatever happens is all God’s providence.

16. The lukewarm one says, I would endure death for Christ, yet he does not want to suffer a minimal derision, and if somebody should say a wrong word to him, he gets irritated. How then will he endure grave things if he is so irritated by a minor one?

17. We read in Daniel the prophet that iniquity is carried on by the oldest and by those who governed the people. We can say the same of lukewarmness.

18. The lukewarm one delights in games, fables, novels, and vanity. If you should see such a person, run away from him.

19. The mother of lukewarmness is ingratitude toward divine favors. Its companion is sensuality, curiosity, and distraction. The nurse is confidence in divine bounty, through his good deeds with the conviction that this is enough to avoid grave sins, as if lukewarmness was not a grave sin. Its dearest daughter is lady hypocrisy that is covered with the appearance of truth but interiorly is putrid.

20. If you are not quick in getting rid of lukewarmness, you will find it very difficult to return to the first fervor. Lukewarmness, more than all spiritual illnesses, is very far from healing.

21. If you cannot retrieve the lost fervor right away, do not be discouraged. Although the sanctity of the lukewarm one is impossible for man, it is not difficult for God.

22. The fear of God, when it becomes binding and the diffidence for oneself excludes lukewarmness, but the best remedy is to avoid conversation with the lukewarm and converse with the fervent instead.

23. If you want to start to avoid lukewarmness, use the hammer of fear against blind confidence [in yourself]. If you want to see progress in removing it, desire virtue in itself without any consideration for reward, but if you want to kill it completely, desire all insults and evils for the love of Christ.

24. The one who, day by day, does not deliberately try to improve radically should know that he will fall into lukewarmness. He should make a stronger resolution to change.

February 7, 2008

March - meditations on Penance

March 1
There are two kinds of penance, interior and exterior. The first is necessary for all sinners; the second, for some is useful, for others is pernicious.

March 2
Penance is an agreement made with God to forsake evil and do good. In the same manner, before penance, one has abandoned what was good to do evil.

March 3
In the soul which judges and condemns itself without despairing, penance is a continuous refusal of any corporal consolation and mental delights.

March 4
Penance means to abstain from sin, thus one who does not care to give up every defect, but tenaciously lives by it, is not a perfect penitent.

March 5
Penance is measured more by the proportion of true humility than by the diversity and greatness of corporal afflictions.

March 6
Penance is the voluntary endurance of pain, affliction, insult, and all kinds of evil.

March 7
A true penitent has an unquenchable thirst and hunger for justice, derision, and all kinds of suffering.

March 8
A penitent is one who judges and condemns himself from the heart. He regards himself unworthy of pardon while he begs justice with mercy, and so his merit is being forgiven by God.

March 9
If you want to obtain pardon as soon as possible, ask God with heartfelt humility, not so much for justice but for mercy.

March 10
True penance excludes self-love; having no regard of itself, true penance ends in the pure love of God. False penance instead is caused by pain and or fear of death.

March 11
Penance always finds new ways to punish itself, to restrain gluttony and concupiscence, and thus always keeps the soul upright.

March 12
Just as those who are physically ill but of sound mind do not seek compassion from the doctor but a remedy to hasten their cure, a true penitent, in an effort to be healed again, provokes God’s meekness towards himself for healing.

March 13
A true penitent is not satisfied with just being reconciled with God; he seeks to grow more perfectly in virtue so that he might be pleasing to God.

March 14
A true penitent who is aware of having used illicit things abstains himself even from the licit ones.

March 15
Do not believe in such a bad thought that says: this is a little defect or that sin is of little importance, because Christ died for each of the sin we commit.

March 16
A sin which is not cancelled by penance, immediately, as a consequence, draws another sin. Indeed old sin needs greater attention and a persevering penance.

March 17
Christ’s penance, and that of Mary is different from ours, as light is different from darkness.

March 18
A penitent immediately rises from a fall caused by his ignorance or frailty.

March 19
A penitent drags himself too long when he falls out of his own malice and negligence, even though what he did may not be too grave.

March 20
Do not be distressed by useless misery. If you often fall out of your ignorance or frailty, do not despair but stand up, remember that the just does fall seven times a day and rises up.

March 21
The reliance of the one, who says, I will do this sin and then I will repent, is not in penance.

March 22
The true penance which is acceptable to God and fruitful for men is the mortification of the will and of one's passions.

March 23
Interior penance, which in spiritual realm is truly difficult, is more fruitful than exterior penance.

March 24
He who bears the lack of interior consolation from God with a tranquil spirit already practices true penance.

March 25
Sometimes an overwhelming lack of tenderness will be forced upon the one who uses exterior penance without discretion.
March 26
Just as he who gives himself to feeble things cannot be spiritually subtle or refined, so an indiscreet penitent cannot sometimes avoid from falling into serious defects.

March 27

Just as distractions, frequent disorderly movements, and obscurity of the mind accompany immoderation, so integrity of the mind and purity of chastity accompany moderate fasting of the penitent.

March 28
A penance which comes from God and which is accepted willingly, even if it may be something insignificant, is more pleasing to God, and more useful to man than any virtuous thing done.

March 29

He who considers exterior penance as his ultimate aim is similar to one who makes no difference between the end and the means, or between an inn and a home.
Fasting, vigils, and other corporal disciplines are good when the body is afflicted only to the point that it is not impaired from performing necessary activities.


March 30
Just as a sound body may lead us to sin, so a moderately afflicted one may lead us back to truth. Just as we fall from the joys of Heaven through gluttony, so through abstinence shall we return to them.

March 31
Some can endure a fast for two or three days, while others the daily meal is not substantial for them; nevertheless, without a sense of guilt we have to adapt to the age, physique, and habit of an individual. It is important to take care of nature. It would be imprudent not to do so.