THE OLD ROMAN Vol. II Issue XVII W/C 27th December 2020
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WELCOME to this seventeenth edition of Volume II of “The Old Roman” a weekly dissemination of news, views and information for and from around the world reflecting the experience and life of 21C “Old Romans” i.e. western Orthodox Catholics across the globe.
CONTRIBUTIONS… news items, magazine, devotional or theological articles, prayer requests, features about apostolates and parish mission life are ALL welcome and may be submitted via email. Submissions should be sent by Friday for publication the following Sunday.
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IN THIS WEEK'S EDITION...
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A Pastoral Epistle for Christmas - +Jerome of Selsey
THE LITURGY
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WISHING ALL READERS OF
"THE OLD ROMAN"
A VERY BLESSED CHRISTMAS
& HAPPY NEW YEAR
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HE The Most Revd Jerome Lloyd OSJV
Titular Archbishop of Selsey
THE PRIMUS
Carissimi
Irrespective of any pandemic, the commemoration of the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ is still a powerful force for hope in our world. The ramifications of that event some 2’000 years ago still touches the lives of millions of people around the world.
It’s quite possible that many of us this year will not be able to celebrate Christmas in the usual way. Restrictions and limitations on movement, travel, even company and a variety of other factors may preclude us from being able to keep Christmas as we might otherwise prefer. Yet one thing will remain the same, just as it always has throughout the centuries and despite the varying fortunes of humanity in any given age since the first Christmas; the incarnation of Jesus Christ will still become a present reality as well as a remembered history. How? By Christians manifesting in themselves, in their words, in their actions and in their lives, their Hope through His glory.
On Christmas Day the beginning of St John's Gospel is usually read and we hear the Word described as the light that illuminates every person [John 1:9]; that this light is God and was sent from God and is life-giving [John 1:4]. In order for this light to give eternal life however, it must be recognized [John 1:12], acknowledged [John 1:13] and accepted. "And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us" St John 1:14. There is nothing abstract about the Christian faith! Our God came to live among us, as one of us and desires us to become like Him!
The passage from St John's Gospel continues: "And we beheld His glory". In Hebrew the word for glory is kabôd and it refers to the weight or value of something. To contemplate the glory of God is to recognize His true worth. Sometimes we see the genuine glory i.e. worth of a person - not in moments of success or triumph - but in difficult and challenging moments in response to adversity. Later in the Gospel, we discover that this glory of God in Christ was manifested on the Cross and in the Resurrection. In the Nativity we see God’s glory already in the fact that He willingly chose these most humble of circumstances for our benefit.
This is real glory, the glory of the utter renunciation of oneself for others.
“God has chosen to make known among the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory.” Colossians 1:27 These words of St Paul ought to resonate with every Christian today in these difficult and confusing times. “When I am in the world, I am the Light of the World.” John 9:5 We are to make known to the world the presence of Christ in us, through we who are called to bring “light to the world” and who must “let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.” [Matthew 5:14-16]
The fact that Jesus became flesh shows that our existence is not one that must be rescued from the flesh, but rather that through baptism our flesh itself has been redeemed. Our flesh has become through baptism the temple of the Holy Spirit, the place in which we have the potential to live the complete form of humanity that Jesus, in His incarnation became and revealed. Every baptized Christian has been made a new creation in Christ [c2 Corinthians 5:17] a child of God [John 1:13], whose identity is in Christ [Galations 2:20] and in whom the glory - kabôd - of God can be revealed.
Just as Christians throughout the pandemic through their acts of charity have been manifesting God’s glory in Christ by their faith. So too can the meaning of Christmas, the significance and hope of the Incarnation, continue to be made known through YOU! Emmanuel – God with US!
Oremus pro invicem!
May the Christ-child dwell in your hearts that you may shew forth His love to the world!
✠Jerome Seleisi
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ORDO w/c Sunday 27th December 2020
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OFFICE |
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N.B. |
27.12 |
S |
St John, Apostle & Evangelist
Com. Octave of the Nativity
Com. Octave of St Stephen
(W) Missa “In medio ecclesiae” |
dii |
2a) Oct.Nat.
3a) Oct.Stephen
Gl.Cr.Pref.Nativity
Communicantes.Nat. |
28.12 |
M |
Feast of the Holy Innocents
Com. Octave of the Nativity
Com. Octave of St Stephen
Com. Octave of St John
(V) Missa “Ex ore infantium”
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dii |
2a) Oct.Nat.
3a) Oct.Stephen
4a) Oct.StJohn
noGl.Tract.noAlleluia
Cr.Pref.Nativity
Communicantes.Nat.BD |
29.12 |
T |
St Thomas of Canterbury BM
Com. Octave of the Nativity
Com. Octave of St Stephen
Com. Octave of St John
Com. Octave of H.Innocents
(R) Missa “Gaudeamus omnes” |
di |
2a) Oct.Nat.
3a) Oct.Stephen
4a) Oct.StJohn
5a) Oct.H.Innocents
Gl.Cr.Pref.Nativity
Communicantes.Nat. |
30.12 |
W |
Sixth Day in the Octave of the Nativity
Com. Octave of the Nativity
Com. Octave of St Stephen
Com. Octave of St John
Com. Octave of H.Innocents
Com. Octave of St Thomas
(W) Missa “Dum medium” (see notes) |
sd |
2a) Oct. Nativity
3a) Oct.St Stephen
4a) Oct.St John
5a) Oct.H,Innocents
6a) Oct.St Thomas
Gl.Cr.Pref.Nativity
Communicantes.Nat. |
31.12 |
T |
St Sylvester of Rome BC
Com. Octave of the Nativity
Com. Octave of St Stephen
Com. Octave of St John
Com. Octave of H.Innocents
Com. Octave of St Thomas
(W) Missa “Sacerdotes tui” |
d |
2a) Oct. Nativity
3a) Oct.St Stephen
4a) Oct.St John
5a) Oct.H,Innocents
6a) Oct.St Thomas
Gl.Cr.Pref.Nativity
Communicantes.Nat. |
01.01 |
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THE CIRCUMCISION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST
The Octave Day of the Nativity
(W) Missa “Puer natus” |
dii |
Gl. Cr. Pref. Nativity
Communicantes.Nat. |
02.12 |
S |
Octave Day of St Stephen
Com. Octave of St John
Com. Octave of H.Innocents
Com. Octave of St Thomas
(R) Missa “Sederunt” |
sd
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2a) Oct.St John
3a) Oct.H.Innocents
4a) Oct.St Thomas
Gl.Pref.Common |
03.12 |
S |
Octave Day of St John
Com. Octave of H.Innocents
Com. Octave of St Thomas
(W) Missa “In medio ecclesiae” (see notes) |
sd |
2a) Oct.H.Innocents
3a) Oct.St Thomas
Gl.Cr.Pref.Apostles |
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Nota Bene
a) When the 30th of December does not fall on a Sunday, it is called “the Sixth Day within the Octave,” and the 3rd Mass of Christmas Day is repeated; excepting only the Epistle and Gospel, which are taken from the 2nd Mass.
b) The Feast of the Holy Name is celebrated traditionally on the second Sunday after Epiphany NOT on the Sunday following the Circumcision.
RITUAL NOTES
- In the Octave of Christmas, each of the feasts following Christmas Day has an Octave which is commemorated at each subsequent Mass.
- On the Feast of Holy Innocents the colour of the Mass is violet and penitential in character thus the Alleluia, Gloria etc is not said (the reverse i.e. red vestments and festive Propers are used on the Octave day).
- No votive Requiems are permitted during the Christmas Octave inclusive; but obsequies if required are of course permitted.
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KEY: A=Abbot A cunctis=of the Saints B=Bishop BD=Benedicamus Domino BVM=Blessed Virgin Mary C=Confessor Com=Commemoration Cr=Creed D=Doctor d=double d.i/ii=double of the 1st/2nd Class E=Evangelist F=Feria Gl=Gloria gr.d=greater-double (G)=Green H=Holy Heb.=Hedomadam (week) K=King M=Martyr mpal=missae pro aliquibus locis Mm=Martyrs Pent=Pentecost P=Priest PP/PostPent=Post Pentecost PLG=Proper Last Gospel Pref=Preface ProEccl=for the Church (R)=Red (Rc)=Rose-coloured s=simple s-d=semi-double Co=Companions V1=1st Vespers V=Virgin v=votive (V)=violet W=Widow (W)=white *Ob.=Obligation 2a=second oration 3a=third oration |
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Join Archbishop Jerome of Selsey as he explores and explains the mysteries of the Sacred Liturgies of Christmastide from Advent through to Candlemas.
Monday's 6.45pm GMT
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THE LITURGICAL YEAR
by Abbot Gueranger
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Within the Octave of Christmas
When the 30th of December does not fall on a Sunday, it is called “the Sixth Day within the Octave,” and the 3rd Mass of Christmas Day is repeated; excepting only the Epistle and Gospel, which are taken from the 2nd Mass.
This is the only day within the Christmas Octave which is not a Saint’s Feast. During the Octaves of the Epiphany, Easter, and Pentecost, the Church is so absorbed in the respective mysteries that she puts off everything that could share her attention; whereas during this of Christmas, there is only one day which does not celebrate the memory of some glorious Saint, and our Infant Jesus is surrounded by a choir of heroes who loved and served him. Thus, the Church—or, more correctly, God, for God is the first author of the Cycle of the Year—shows us how the Incarnate Word, who came to save mankind, desires to give mankind confidence by this his adorable familiarity.
We have already shown that the Birth of our Lord took place on a Sunday, the Day on which, in the beginning of the world, God created Light. We shall find, later on, that his Resurrection also was on a Sunday. This the first day of creation and the first day of the week was consecrated, by the old Pagans, to the Sun: with us Christians, it is most sacred and holy, on account of the two risings of our divine Sun of Justice—his Birth and his Resurrection. While the solemnity of Easter is always kept on a Sunday, that of Christmas falls, by turns, on each of the days of the week—we have already had this difference explained to us by the Holy Fathers: but the mystery of Jesus’ Birth is more aptly and strongly expressed when its anniversary falls on a Sunday. Other years, when the coincidence does not happen, the Faithful will at least be led by their Christian instincts to give especial honor to the Day within the Octave, which falls on the Sunday. The Church has honored it with a proper Mass and Office, and we of course insert them.
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St John the Evangelist, Apostle; Within the Octave of the Nativity: Missa “In medio Ecclesiae”
Saint John, brother of Saint James the Greater, the Apostle of Spain, is the beloved disciple. He was privileged, with his brother and Saint Peter, to behold Our Lord raise up a dead child to life, then saw Him transfigured on the mountaintop; he alone reposed his head on His breast at the Last Supper. After the crucifixion it is he who, with Saint Peter, hastened to the empty tomb on the morning of the Resurrection. Standing beside Mary at the Cross, he had heard his Master confide that Blessed Mother to him to be henceforth his Mother also. He took his precious treasure for refuge to Ephesus when the persecution of the Jerusalem Christians became too intense; and from there he went out to evangelize Asia Minor, of which he became the first Archbishop. He was later exiled to the Island of Patmos, where he wrote the Apocalypse, but afterwards returned to Ephesus.
Compared with an eagle by his flights of elevated contemplation, Saint John is the supreme Doctor of the Divinity of Jesus of Nazareth. Endowed with an astounding memory, he was able even in his later years, to reproduce the discourses of Christ in such a way as to make the reader experience their power and impact on their audiences as if present to hear them. He is the author of five books of the New Testament, his Gospel, three Epistles, and the last canonical prophecy, the Apocalypse or Revelation of Saint John — all of which were composed after the ruin of Jerusalem in 70 A.D.
In his extreme old age he continued to visit the churches of Asia, and Saint Jerome relates that when age and weakness grew upon him so that he was no longer able to preach to the people, he would be carried to the assembly of the faithful by his disciples, with great difficulty; and every time said to his flock only these words: “My dear children, love one another.”
Saint John died in peace at Ephesus in the third year of Trajan, that is, the hundredth of the Christian era, or the sixty-sixth from the crucifixion of Christ, Saint John then being about ninety-four years old, according to Saint Epiphanus.
The Feast of St. John is the only feast of an apostle now remaining in the Christmas cycle. The station is at St. Mary Major, dedicated to the Savior; this basilica seemed the most suitable place for the celebration of the Christmas station in honor of St. John to whom the Blessed Virgin had been entrusted, both on account of the Savior’s crib there preserved, and of the mosaics of Pope Sixtus III commemorating the Council of Ephesus, held near the tomb of the Evangelist. The Gradual Is drawn from that passage of St. John’s Gospel in which reference is made to the popular belief current in the first generation of Christians in Asia that the beloved disciple should not die before the parousia or last coming of Christ. The advanced age of the Apostle, on the other hand, seemed to lend credit to this opinion. So St. John, in the very last chapter of his Gospel, desired -as a sort of final postscript- to rectify this erroneous interpretation of the Savior’s words. “So I will have him to remain till I come, what is it to thee?” The words were uttered by Our Lord merely as an hypothesis. “So (if) I will”; but in the several oral versions of the episode the conditional and hypothetical particle “If” was easily passed over; hence St. John felt the necessity of explaining the misunderstanding and setting the matter right.
INTROIT Ecclesiasticus 15: 5
In the midst of the Church the Lord opened his mouth: and filled him with the spirit of wisdom and understanding: He clothed him with a robe of glory.. (Ps. 91: 2) It is good to give praise to the Lord: and to sing to Thy Name, O Most High. v. Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost, as it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without end. Amen. Repeat In the midst of the Church…
COLLECT
Of Thy goodness, O Lord, shine upon Thy Church, that, enlightened by the teachings of blessed John, Thy Apostle and Evangelist, she may attain to everlasting gifts. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.
Commemoration of Christmas Collect:
Grant, we beseech Thee, almighty God, that the new birth of Thine only-begotten Son in the flesh may set us free, who are held by the old bondage under the yoke of sin. Through the same Lord.
EPISTLE Ecclesiasticus 15: 1-6
Lesson from the Book of Wisdom. He that feareth God will do good: and he that possesseth justice shall lay hold on her, and she will meet him as an honorable mother. With the bread of life and understanding she shall feed him and give him the water of wholesome wisdom to drink: and she shall be made strong in him, and he shall not be moved: and she shall hold him fast, and he shall not be confounded: and she shall exalt him among his neighbors, and in the midst of the Church she shall open his mouth, and shall fill him with the spirit of wisdom and understanding, and shall clothe him with a robe of glory. The Lord our God shall heap upon him a treasure of joy and gladness, and shall cause him to inherit an everlasting name.
GRADUAL/ALLELUIA John 21: 23, 19
This saying therefore went abroad among the brethren, that that disciple should not die. And Jesus did not say: He should not die. V. But: So I will have him to remain until I come: follow thou Me.
Alleluia, alleluia. V. (John 21: 24) This is that disciple who giveth testimony of these things: and we know that his testimony is true. Alleluia.
GOSPEL John 21: 19-24
At that time Jesus said to Peter: Follow Me. Peter turning about saw that disciple whom Jesus loved following, who also leaned on His breast at supper and said: Lord, who is he that shall betray Thee? Him therefore when Peter had seen, he saith to Jesus: Lord, and what shall this man do? Jesus saith to him: So I will have him to remain till I come, what is it to thee? Follow thou Me. This saying therefore went abroad among the brethren, that that disciple should not die. And Jesus did not say to him: He should not die; but: So I will have him to remain till I come: what is it to thee? This is that disciple who giveth testimony of these things, and hath written these things: and we know that he testimony is true.
OFFERTORY ANTIPHON Psalm 92: 15
The just shall flourish like the palm tree: he shall be multiplied like the cedar that is in Libanus.
SECRET
Receive, O Lord, the gifts we bring to Thee on the feast of him, by whose pleading we hope to be delivered. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one God Forever and ever. R.Amen.
Commemoration of the Nativity
Sanctify, O Lord, the gifts offered to Thee, by the new birth of Thine Only-begotten Son: and cleanse us from the stains of our sins. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one God Forever and ever. R.Amen.
PREFACE of the Nativity
It is truly meet and just, right and for our salvation, that we should at all times and in all places, give thanks unto Thee, O holy Lord, Father almighty, everlasting God, for through the Mystery of the Word made flesh, the new light of Thy glory hath shone upon the eyes of our mind, so that while we acknowledge God in visible form, we may through Him be drawn to the love things invisible. And therefore with Angels and Archangels, with Thrones and Dominations, and with all the hosts of the heavenly army, we sing the hymn of The glory, evermore saying:
HOLY, HOLY, HOLY…
COMMUNICANTES For the Nativity of Our Lord
Communicating, and keeping this most holy day, on which the spotless virginity of blessed Mary brought forth a Savior to this world; and also reverencing the memory first of the same glorious Mary, ever Virgin, Mother of the same our God and Lord Jesus Christ: as also of the blessed Apostles and Martyrs Peter and Paul, Andrew, James, John, Thomas, James, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Simon, and Thaddeus; Linus, Cletus, Clement, Xystus, Cornelius, Cyprian, Lawrence, Chrysogonus, John and Paul, Cosmas and Damian, and of all Thy Saints, through whose merits and prayers, grant that we may in all things be defended by the help of Thy protection. Through the same Christ our Lord. Amen.
COMMUNION ANTIPHON John 21: 23
This saying therefore went abroad among the brethren, that that disciple should not die. And Jesus did not say: He should not die; but: So I will have him to remain until I come.
POSTCOMMUNION
We who have been refreshed by heavenly food and drink, humbly entreat Thee, O our God, that we may be strengthened also by the prayers of him, in whose commemoration we have received them. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one God Forever and ever. R. Amen.
Commemoration of the Nativity
Grant, we beseech Thee, almighty God, that as the Savior of the world, born on this day, is the Author of our heavenly birth, so He may also be to us the Giver of immortality. Through the same Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one God Forever and ever. R. Amen.
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How are Old Roman vocations to the Sacred Ministry discerned, formed and realised? If you are discerning a vocation to the Sacred Ministry and are considering exploring the possibility of realising your vocation as an Old Roman or transferring your discernment, this is the programme for you!
Questions are welcome and may be sent in advance to vocations@secret.fyi anonymity is assured.
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MEDITATIONS FOR EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR
BY BISHOP CHALLONER
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Richard Challoner (1691–1781) was an English Roman Catholic bishop, a leading figure of English Catholicism during the greater part of the 18th century. The titular Bishop of Doberus, he is perhaps most famous for his revision of the Douay–Rheims translation of the Bible.
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ON ST. JOHN THE APOSTLE AND EVANGELIST
Consider first, upon how many accounts we ought to honour St. John, the beloved disciple of the Son of God; and to glorify God in him, for the extraordinary gifts and graces bestowed upon him. He was called in his youth, whilst he was as yet innocent and pure, to follow our Lord Jesus; and he readily obeyed the call, and left both his parents and all things else for the sake of Christ. His zeal and fortitude in the cause of his master procured him the name of Boanerges, or a son of thunder. The purity of his soul and body made him a special favourite of his Lord; who therefore admitted him to lean upon his bosom at his last supper, and to draw from that sacred fountain of life the heavenly waters of grace and truth; and on the following day, when he was dying upon the cross, he recommended his virgin mother to his care, that she might be his mother, and he might be her son. O blessed saint, great favourite both of Jesus and Mary, introduce us also, by the interest thou hast now in heaven, into some share in their favour, by procuring for us, by thy prayers, the grace to imitate thy purity.
Consider 2ndly, to what a height St. John was raised by divine grace. He was made an apostle, and one of the chiefest of the apostles; even one of the three that were chosen by our Lord to be witness both of his glory on Mount Thabor, and of is anguish and agony on Mount Oliver. he was also an Evangelist or writer of the gospel, (which none of the other apostles were, except St. Matthew,) and amongst the four Evangelists is compared to the eagle, (which flies high, and looks upon the sun with a steadfast eye,) because of his sublime beginning, by taking his first flight up to the eternal Word, by whom all things were made; and his following throughout his whole gospel the same sublime course, with his eye still fixed on this great sun of justice, and the immense light of his divinity. St. John was also a martyr, by drinking of the chalice of his Lord, (as he had foretold him,) by a long course of sufferings; and by being at length sentenced to death by the tyrant Domitian, and cast into a vessel of boiling oil, from whence he was delivered by an evident miracle. In fine, he was a prophet, to whom our Lord revealed an infinity of heavenly secrets and mysteries relating to latter times, which we find recorded in his Apocalypse, written during his banishment in the isle of Patmos. See then, my soul how many titles this great saint has to our veneration. But remember, at the same time, that the veneration which will please him best, will be a love and imitation of his virtues.
Consider 3rdly, that the writings of St. John recommend nothing so much as charity and verity, love and truth, These they continually inculcate: charity, because God is charity; he is all love, he has died for love; 'Let us therefore love God,' saith he, 'because God first hath loved us.' 'But then this,' saith he, 'is the love of God, this is the Charity we owe him, to keep his commandments. and this commandment we have from God, (the favourite commandment indeed of the Son of God,) that we should love one another.' This love for one another all his epistles are full of; they all breathe this sweet odour; with this they join verity or truth; loving in truth, walking in truth, for the sake of truth, which abideth in us, and shall be with us for ever. And what is this truth, and the life? Such was always the doctrine of St. John: this he perpetually preached, both by word and writing: such was the spirit of this disciple of love.
Conclude to embrace, with all thy soul, this charity and verity, this love and truth so much recommended by St. John, or rather by the spirit of God, through him. Keep close to this charity and verity here, and it will abide with thee for ever hereafter, and will make thee happy for endless ages.
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A SERMON FOR SUNDAY
Revd Dr Robert Wilson PhD
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St. John Apostle and Evangelist
This is that disciple who giveth testimony of these things and hath written these things: and we know that his testimony is true.
Today we celebrate the great feast of St. John the Apostle and Evangelist. It is especially appropriate that this feast falls within the Octave of Christmas for it is St. John’s Gospel that bears witness to the central message of Christmas, that the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us. But St. John’s Gospel is not simply a theological treatise. It claims specifically to rest on eyewitness testimony, and indeed in the closing words of the Gospel it is claimed that the Beloved Disciple himself wrote the Gospel. In making this claim it is unique among the Gospels. Neither St. Mark nor St. Luke professed to be an eyewitness of the ministry of Jesus. They based their accounts on traditions that had been handed on to them by those who were from the beginning eyewitnesses and ministers of the word. Though St. Matthew was an eyewitness, his Gospel does not make the same personal appeal to eyewitness testimony as St. John’s Gospel. St. John’s Gospel specifically claims to be the work of one who knew Jesus and was loved by him.
Who was the Beloved Disciple? Christian tradition affirms him to be none other than John, son of Zebedee, brother of James and one who, alongside St. Peter, formed the inner core of Jesus’ disciples. St. Irenaeus claimed that St. John himself published his Gospel at Ephesus and that he was the last of the apostles to die, surviving to the reign of Trajan at the end of the first century. St. Irenaeus is a good source in this matter for in his youth he had been a disciple of St. Polycarp, and recalled how St. Polycarp could himself recall his own earlier discipleship of St. John. The internal evidence of the Gospel also supports St. Irenaeus’ testimony. Though the Beloved Disciple is never named he appears alongside St. Peter at the Last Supper (John 13), in the race to the tomb on the first Easter morning (John 20), and in Jesus’ resurrection appearance to the disciples by the Sea of Galilee (John 21). It is also probable that the unnamed disciple who followed Jesus’ alongside Peter and Andrew in the first chapter of the Gospel was St. John, and that he was also the disciple known to the high priest who was able to gain access alongside St. Peter at the time of Jesus’ trial before the Jewish authorities (John 18). Since the sons of Zebedee are otherwise unaccountably missing from the Gospel, (apart from being mentioned at the resurrection appearance by the sea of Galilee at the close of the Gospel), and the beloved disciple must have been a man of real authority in the Church, with a status not unlike St. Peter, it is reasonable to infer that he was St. John. It is also the case that in the earliest days of the Church in the Acts of the Apostles St. John appears alongside St. Peter in preaching the Gospel in Jerusalem and in Samaria. It is significant that St. John’s Gospel is especially focused on Jerusalem and also includes the story of Jesus’ encounter with the Samaritan woman. St. John’s Gospel is especially written to show that Jesus is the fulfilment of the hopes of Israel and that the true Israelites are those who follow Jesus. St. Paul, in the Epistle to the Galatians, recalls that at the Apostolic Council in Jerusalem he had agreed with St. Peter, St. James and St. John that he would focus especially on mission to the Gentiles and they would focus especially on mission to the Jews. At some stage this missionary work must have led St. John to settle in Ephesus where he published his Gospel. Exactly when St. John settled in Ephesus and when the Gospel was written is unknown (most probably it was written in stages over an extended period of time), though we do know that St. John was the last of the Apostles to survive and he lived until the reign of Trajan at the end of the first century.
It is often correctly observed that St. John’s Gospel provides the key that unlocks the significance of the other three theologically. What is less commonly recognised is the fact that it also provides the key that unlocks the significance of the other three historically as well. The other three Gospels tell of Jesus’ final journey to Jerusalem with the prospect of certain death before him. Up until that point they speak only of a ministry in Galilee and yet they also show that Jesus already has friends and acquaintances in Jerusalem, a man who provided a donkey for the triumphal entry into Jerusalem, the man with the pitcher of water who provided an Upper Room for the last supper, and Joseph of Arimathea, who provided a tomb for Jesus’ burial. They also recall how Jesus wept over Jerusalem as he made his final journey into Jerusalem. It would be strange if he wept over a city that he had not sought to win over.
St. John’s Gospel unlocks the key to this otherwise unaccountable mystery. It shows that Jesus undertook an extensive ministry in Jerusalem and Judea as well as in Galilee. It tells of how Jesus’ first disciples were previously disciples of St. John the Baptist and that Jesus, on gathering these first disciples ministered in Jerusalem, where he cleansed the temple as an act of prophetic symbolism in judgement upon the Jewish nation, and ministered in Judea alongside St. John the Baptist (John 1-3). All this took place before the imprisonment of St. John the Baptist by Herod Antipas. It was only after John’s imprisonment that Jesus began his Galilean ministry. He is only in Galilee at all because he faced opposition in Judea and Jerusalem. It was precisely because those first disciples had already been followers of St. John the Baptist and had followed Jesus in his first Judean ministry that they subsequently gave up all and followed him in Galilee when they were called to be fishers of men.
Though St. John largely omits most of Jesus’ ministry of seeking and saving the lost in Galilee (which is reported in the other Gospels) it provides the key to understanding the climax of the Galilean ministry at the Feeding of the Five Thousand when it recalls how the crowd, when they witnessed the miracle which recalled the giving of manna through Moses in the wilderness, sought to make him king by force (John 6). Jesus therefore had to educate his disciples on the true nature of his ministry as one who was the Suffering Servant of Isaiah who would give his own life for the life of the world. Many of his disciples found this a hard saying and ceased to follow him, but Jesus’ inner circle remained faithful and from that time on in all the gospels it is intimated that he must go to Jerusalem where he will face certain death.
It is here that St. John again provides more detailed information, for he not only recalls the last week in Jerusalem but also a final ministry in Jerusalem at the Feast of Tabernacles and at the Feast of Dedication, as well as ministry in the country beyond the Jordan where John had first baptised (John 7-10). It is after the furore provoked by the raising of Lazarus that a meeting of the Sanhedrin takes place during which the high priest Caiaphas utters the fateful words that it is expedient that one should die for the people lest the whole nation perish, and the Sanhedrin resolve to put Jesus to death (John 11). This crucial event (which is reported only in St. John) provides the key to understanding the whole subsequent passion narrative and the collaboration between the Jewish and Roman authorities. It shows that the decision by the Jewish authorities to hand Jesus over to the Roman governor Pontius Pilate and to put him to death had been made in advance. It was only the carrying out of the plan (assisted by the unexpected windfall of Judas’ offer) that needed to be done.
Thus, St. John is not only the most theological of the Gospels, it is also (as the work of an eyewitness) in many ways the most historically valuable in terms of the detailed precision which it shows in describing the topography of Palestine and the chronological sequence of the events of Jesus’ life. In affirming this we can join with the testimony of those who in St. John’s presence affirmed that we know that his witness is true. It is in truth the witness of one who beheld his glory in the days of his earthly life.
Do thou, O Lord, in thy goodness shine upon thy Church: that being enlightened by the doctrine of blessed John thine Apostle and Evangelist, she may attain to everlasting life, through Jesus Christ our Lord, who livest and reignest with thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.
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THIS WEEK'S FEASTS
& COMMEMORATIONS
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Saint John
December 27 Apostle, Evangelist, and Prophet
(† 103)
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Saint John, brother of Saint James the Greater, the Apostle of Spain, is the beloved disciple. He was privileged, with his brother and Saint Peter, to behold the Saviour raise up a dead child to life, then saw Him transfigured on the mountaintop; he alone reposed his head on His breast at the Last Supper. After the crucifixion it is he who, with Saint Peter, hastened to the empty tomb on the morning of the Resurrection. Standing beside Mary at the Cross, he had heard his Master confide that Blessed Mother to him to be henceforth his Mother also. He took his precious treasure for refuge to Ephesus when the persecution of the Jerusalem Christians became too intense; and from there he went out to evangelize Asia Minor, of which he became the first Archbishop. He was later exiled to the Island of Patmos, where he wrote the Apocalypse, but afterwards returned to Ephesus.
Compared with an eagle by his flights of elevated contemplation, Saint John is the supreme Doctor of the Divinity of Jesus of Nazareth. Endowed with an astounding memory, he was able even in his later years, to reproduce the discourses of Christ in such a way as to make the reader experience their power and impact on their audiences as if present to hear them. He is the author of five books of the New Testament, his Gospel, three Epistles, and the last canonical prophecy, the Apocalypse or Revelation of Saint John — all of which were composed after the ruin of Jerusalem in 70 A.D.
In his extreme old age he continued to visit the churches of Asia, and Saint Jerome relates that when age and weakness grew upon him so that he was no longer able to preach to the people, he would be carried to the assembly of the faithful by his disciples, with great difficulty; and every time said to his flock only these words: My dear children, love one another.
Saint John died in peace at Ephesus in the third year of Trajan, that is, the hundredth of the Christian era, or the sixty-sixth from the crucifixion of Christ, Saint John then being about ninety-four years old, according to Saint Epiphanus.
Reflection: Saint John is a living proof of Our Lord's beatitude: Blessed are the pure of heart, for they shall see God. (Matthew 5:8)
The New Testament: Acts of the Apostles; Heavenly Friends, by Rosalie M. Levy (St. Paul: Boston, 1958).
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The Holy Innocents
December 28 Martyrs at the time of the Nativity of Our Lord
(†1 A.D.)
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The wily king Herod, who was reigning in Judea at the time of the birth of Our Saviour, learned from three Wise Men from the East that they had come to Jerusalem, advised by a star in the heavens, in search of the newborn King of the Jews. Herod's superstitious fear of losing his throne was awakened, and he grew troubled. He called together the chief priests, questioned them, and learned from them that the awaited Messiah was to be born in Bethlehem, the city of David. He said to the strangers: When you have found Him, bring me word, that I too may go and adore Him.
The star which had guided the Magi re-appeared over Bethlehem, and they found the Infant and adored Him, and offered Him their royal gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh, recognizing by these His perfect Divinity, His royalty, and His prophesied sufferings. God warned them in a dream afterwards not to go back to Herod, and they returned to their lands, rejoicing, by a different route. Saint Joseph, too, was warned during his sleep by an Angel to take the Child and His Mother and flee into Egypt, for Herod will seek the life of the Infant.
When Herod realized that the Wise Men would not return, he was furious, and in his rage ordered that every male child in Bethlehem and its vicinity, of the age of two years or less, be slain. These innocent victims were the flowers and first-fruits of the Saviour's legions of martyrs; they triumphed over the world without having ever known it or experienced its dangers.
Reflection: That the Holy Innocents may be invoked to be preserved from illusion is the Church's belief. Herod's illusion of threat from the newborn King cost their lives... How few, perhaps, of these innocent little ones, if they had lived, would have escaped the dangers of the world! From what snares, what sins, what miseries were they preserved! Surely they rejoice now in their fate. We often lament, as misfortunes, many accidents which in the designs of Heaven are the greatest mercies.
The New Testament: Acts of the Apostles; Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler's Lives of the Saints and other sources, by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894).
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Saint Thomas Becket
December 29 Archbishop of Canterbury, Martyr
(1117-1170)
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Saint Thomas, son of an English nobleman, Gilbert Becket, was born on the day consecrated to the memory of Saint Thomas the Apostle, December 21, 1117, in Southwark, England. He was endowed by both nature and grace with gifts recommending him to his fellow men; and his father, certain he would one day be a great servant of Christ, confided his education to a monastery. His first employment was in the government of the London police. There he was obliged to learn the various rights of the Church and of the secular arm, but already he saw so many injustices imposed upon the clergy that he preferred to leave that employment rather than to participate in iniquity. He was perfectly chaste and truthful, and no snares could cause to waver his hatred for any form of covert action.
He was employed then by the Archbishop of Canterbury, who sent him on missions to Rome and permitted him to study civil law at the University of Bologna (Italy) for an entire year. After a few years, witnessing his perfect service, he made him his Archdeacon and endowed him with several benefices. The young cleric's virtue and force soon recommended him also to the king, who made of him his Lord Chancellor. In that high office, while inflexible in the rendition of justice, he was generous and solicitous for the relief of misery. He was severe towards himself, spending the better part of every night in prayer. He often employed a discipline, to be less subject to the revolts of the flesh against the spirit. In a war with France he won the respect of his enemies, including that of the young king Louis VII. To Saint Thomas, his own sovereign, Henry II, confided the education of the crown prince. Of the formation of the future king and the young lords who composed his suite, the Chancellor took extreme care, knowing well that the strength of a State depends largely on the early impressions received by the elite of its youth.
When Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury died, the king insisted on the consecration of Saint Thomas in his stead. Saint Thomas at first declined, warning the king that from that hour their friendship would be threatened by his own obligations to uphold the rights of the Church against infringement by the sovereign, whose tendencies were not different from those of his predecessors. In the end he was obliged by obedience to yield. The inevitable conflict was not long in coming. Saint Thomas resisted when the king's courtiers drew up a list of royal customs at Clarendon, where the parliament of the king was assembled, and Henry obliged all the bishops as well as the lords to sign a promise to uphold these without permitting any restrictions whatsoever. Many of these pretended customs violated the liberties of the Church, and some were even invented for the occasion. Saint Thomas, obliged in conscience to resist, was soon the object of persecution, not only from the irritated king but by all who had sworn loyalty to his nefarious doings.
Saint Thomas took refuge in France under the protection of the generous Louis VII, who resisted successfully the repeated efforts of Henry to turn away his favor from the Archbishop. The Pope at that time was in France, and he, too, was besieged by Henry's emissaries, but knew well how to pacify minds and protect the defender of the Church. Thomas retired to a Benedictine monastery for two years, and when Henry wrote a threatening letter to its abbot, moved to another. After six years, his office restored as the Pope's apostolic legate, a title which Henry had wrested from him for a time, he returned to England, to preach again and enforce order in his see. He knew well that it was to martyrdom that he was destined; it is related that the Mother of God appeared to him in France to foretell it to him, and that She presented him for that intention with a red chasuble. By this time the persecuted Archbishop's case was known to all of Christian Europe, which sympathized with him and elicited from king Henry an appearance of conciliation.
A few words which the capricious Henry spoke to certain courtiers who hated Thomas, sufficed for the latter to decide to do away with the prelate who contravened all their unchristian doings. They violated a monastic cloister and chapel to enter there while he was assisting at Vespers; the Saint himself prevented the monks from resisting the assassins at the door. Refusing to flee the church as the assassins summoned him to do, he was slain before the altar, by cruel and murderous repeated blows on the head. He died, saying: I die willingly, for the name of Jesus and for the defense of the Church.
The actions of the Pope in this conflict make clear what all of history teaches: the lives of the Church's Saints themselves comprise the history of the world. The humility of Thomas had prompted him, after a moment of weakness he had manifested in a difficult situation, to judge himself unfit for his office and offer his resignation as Archbishop. The Pope did not hesitate a moment in refusing his resignation. He judged with apostolic wisdom that if Thomas should be deprived of his rank for having opposed the unjust pretensions of the English royalty, no bishop would ever dare oppose the impingements of iniquity on the Church's rights, and the Spouse of Christ would be no longer sustained by marble columns, but by reeds bending in the wind.
The martyred Archbishop was canonized by Pope Alexander III on Ash Wednesday, 1173, not yet three years after his death on December 29, 1170, to the edification of the entire Church.
Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 14
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Saint Sabinus & his Companions
December 30 Bishop of Spoleto and his Companions Martyrs
(† 303)
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When the cruel edicts of Diocletian and Maximin Hercules were published against the Christians in the year 303, it required more than ordinary force in the bishops and clergy, to encourage the people to undergo martyrdom rather than apostatize. All were forbidden even to draw water or grind wheat, if they would not first incense idols placed for that purpose in the markets and on street corners.
Saint Sabinus, Bishop of Spoleto, with Marcellus and Exuperantius, his deacons, and several other members of his clergy who were worthy of their sacred mandate, were apprehended in Assisi for revolt and thrown into prison by Venustianus, Governor of Etruria and Umbria. He summoned them before him a few days later and required that they adore his idol of Jupiter, richly adorned with gold. The holy bishop took up the idol and threw it down, breaking it in pieces. The prefect, furious, had his hands cut off and his deacons tortured on the rack and burnt with torches until they expired.
Saint Sabinus was put back into prison for a time. He was aided there by a Christian widow of rank, who brought her blind nephew to him there to be cured. Fifteen prisoners who witnessed this splendid miracle were converted to the Faith. The prefect left the bishop in peace for a month, because he himself was suffering from a painful eye ailment. He heard of the miracle and came to the bishop in prison with his wife and two sons, to ask him for help in his affliction. Saint Sabinus answered that if Venustianus would believe in Jesus Christ and be baptized with his wife and children, he would obtain that grace for him. The officer consented, they were baptized, and he threw into the river the pieces of his broken statue. Soon all the new converts gave their lives for having confessed the Gospel, sentenced by Lucius, whom Maximus Hercules sent to Spoleto after hearing of their decision, to judge and condemn them.
As for Saint Sabinus, he was beaten so cruelly that on December 7, 303, he expired under the blows. The charitable widow, Serena, after seeing to his honorable burial near the city, was also crowned with martyrdom. A basilica was later built at the site of the bishop's tomb, and a number of monasteries in Italy were consecrated under his illustrious name.
Reflection: How powerfully do the martyrs cry out to us by their example, exhorting us to detach from a false and wicked world!
Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 14
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Saint Sylvester
December 31 Pope and Confessor
(280-335)
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Saint Sylvester was born in Rome. When he reached the age to dispose of his fortune, he took pleasure in giving hospitality to Christians passing through the city. He would take them with him, wash their feet, serve them at table, and in sum give them in the name of Christ, all the care that the most sincere charity inspired. One day Timothy of Antioch, an illustrious confessor of the Faith, arrived in Rome. No one dared receive him, but Sylvester considered it an honor. For a year Timothy, preaching Jesus Christ with unflagging zeal, received at Sylvester's dwelling the most generous hospitality. When this heroic man had won the palm of martyrdom, Sylvester took up his precious remains and buried them during the night. But he himself was soon denounced to the prefect and accused of having hidden the martyr's treasures. He replied, Timothy left to me only the heritage of his faith and courage. The governor threatened him with death and had him imprisoned, but Sylvester said to him, Senseless one, this very night it is you who will render an account to God. And the persecutor that evening swallowed a fish bone, and died in fact that night.
Fear of heavenly chastisements softened the guardians, and the brave young man was set at liberty. Sylvester's courageous acts became known to Saint Melchiad, Pope, who elevated him to the diaconate. He was a young priest when persecution of the Christians grew worse under the tyrant Diocletian. Idols were erected at the street corners, in the market-places, and over the public fountains, so that it was scarcely possible for a Christian to go abroad without being put to the test of offering sacrifice, with the alternative of apostasy or death. During this fiery trial, Sylvester strengthened the confessors and martyrs, and God preserved his life from many dangers. It was indeed he who was destined to succeed the Pope who had recognized his virtues.
His long pontificate of twenty-one years, famous for several reasons, is remembered in particular for the Council of Nicea, the Baptism of Constantine, and the triumph of the Church. Some authors would place Constantine's Baptism later, but there are numerous and serious testimonies which fix the emperor's reception into the Church under the reign of Saint Sylvester, and the Roman Breviary confirms that opinion. Constantine, while still pagan and little concerned for the Christians, whose doctrine was entirely unknown to him, was attacked by a kind of leprosy which soon covered his entire body. One night Saint Peter and Saint Paul, shining with light, appeared to him and commanded him to call for Pope Sylvester, who would cure him by giving him Baptism. In effect, the Pope instructed the royal neophyte and baptized him. Thus began the social reign of Jesus Christ: Constantine's conversion, culminating in the Edict of Milan in 313, had as its happy consequence that of the known world.
Reflection: Never forget to thank God daily for having made you a member of His indefectible Church, and grow daily in your attachment, devotion, and loyalty to the Vicar of Christ. Ubi Petrus, ibi ecclesia: Where Peter is, there the Church is.
Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 14; Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler's Lives of the Saints and other sources, by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894)
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The Circumcision of Our Lord
January 1st
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Circumcision was a sacrament of the Old Law, and the first legal observance required of the descendants of Abraham by Almighty God. It was a sacrament of initiation in the service of God, and a promise, an engagement, to believe and act as He had revealed and directed. The law of circumcision continued in force until the death of Christ. Our Saviour having thus been born under the law, it became Him who came to teach mankind obedience to the law of God,to fulfill all justice, and to submit to it. He was circumcised that He might redeem those who were under the law, by freeing them from the servitude of it, and that those who were formerly in the condition of servants might be set at liberty and receive the adoption of sons in Baptism, which, by Christ's institution, succeeded to circumcision. (Cf. Gal. 4:5)
On the day when the divine Infant was circumcised, He received the name of JESUS, which was assigned to Him by the Angel before He was conceived, and which signifies SAVIOUR. That name, so beautiful, so glorious, the divine Child does not wish to bear for one moment without fulfilling its meaning. Even at the moment of His circumcision He showed Himself a SAVIOUR by shedding for us that blood of which a single drop is more than sufficient for the ransom and salvation of the whole world.
Reflection. Let us profit by the circumstance of the New Year, and of the wonderful renewal wrought in the world by the great mystery of this day, to renew in our hearts an increase of fervor and of generosity in the service of God. May this year be one of fervor and of progress! It will go by rapidly, like the one which has just ended. If God permits us to see its end, how happy we shall be to have passed it in a holy manner!
Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler's Lives of the Saints and other sources by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894)
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Saint Fulgentius
January 2 Doctor of the Church, Bishop
(468-533)
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Born in Africa of illustrious and Catholic parents, Fulgentius was an excellent student of languages and of various other practical disciplines. His father had died while still young, and Fulgentius soon became the support of his mother and younger brother. He was appointed at an early age procurator of his province at Carthage; but this elevation in the world's esteem was distasteful to him, and he was enlightened by the Spirit of God to see the vanity of the world.
At the age of twenty-two, having read Saint Augustine's treatise on the Psalms, he resolved to embrace monastic life, and began to prepare for it by mental prayer, fasting, and other penances practiced in secret. When he was accepted into a monastery by a holy bishop named Faustus, his mother hoped to change his mind; but when she arrived he remained firm and did not accept to see her. Such are the austerities of the Saints, called to accomplish much for God. He later renounced all his goods on behalf of his mother and younger brother.
After six years of peace, his monastery was attacked by Arian heretics, and Faustus, Fulgentius and the other monks were driven out, destitute, into the desert. Fulgentius entered another monastery on his Superior's advice, and there he shared the duties of the Superior, to the latter's great consolation, until that house was attacked by barbarians. In the refuge to which he then repaired he was persecuted, held captive, and tortured by an Arian priest, but sought no vengeance when authorities offered him support if he would enter a complaint. Fulgentius and his Superior, who was with him, decided to build another monastery in the province they had abandoned.
For a time Fulgentius remained there, but he desired solitude and set out on a journey to the holy places of Rome. There the imperial splendors he beheld spoke to him of the greater glory of the heavenly Jerusalem, his final goal. And at the first lull in the persecution, he returned to his African cell in the year 500.
Elected bishop of Ruspe in 508, he was summoned to face new dangers, and was shortly afterwards banished by the Arian king, with some sixty other Catholic prelates, to Sardinia. Though the youngest of the exiles, he became the spokesman of his brethren and the support of their orphaned flocks. By his books and letters, which are still extant, he confounded both Pelagian and Arian heresiarchs, and strengthened the Catholics in Africa and Gaul. He prayed for all his compatriots in exile: You know, Lord, what is most expedient for the salvation of our souls; assist us in our corporal necessities, that we may not lose the spiritual goods. On the death of the Arian king, the bishops returned to their flocks. Saint Fulgentius was welcomed amid the greatest joy, after eighteen years of exile. He labored with his fellow bishops in the synods as their chosen leader, and re-established discipline. When he felt his end was near, he retired to an island monastery, where after a year's preparation he called for his clergy and religious, and with their aid distributed all his goods to the poor. He died in peace in the year 533.
Reflection. Each year may bring us new changes and trials; let us learn from Saint Fulgentius to receive all that happens as appointed for our salvation, and from the hand of God.
Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 1; Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler's Lives of the Saints and other sources by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894)
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Links to Government websites; remember these are being updated regularly as new information and changes in statuses develop:
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For the ORC Policy Document click below
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