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June 1, 2008

World Youth Day 2008!!!

Check out this video for World Youth Day 2008 which is being held in Sydney, Australia





(From wyd2008.org)
 

Ten inspirational saints and blesseds have been named the official patrons for WYD08.

A tradition of each World Youth Day, the 10 patrons have been chosen by the organisers and approved by the Vatican. An Australian artist, Richard de Stoop was commissioned to recreate their images.

"When deciding who should be the patrons, we focus on who would inspire young people," said Bishop Anthony Fisher OP, Coordinator WYD08.

"Not only do we look to saints, but those who are waiting to become saints - blesseds - and those who have had a particular influence on Australia's and Oceania's history.

"We ask everyone to learn their stories, and understand that ordinary people can do extraordinary things through the Spirit of Christ.

"We particularly urge young people to get to know and pray with our patrons," he said.

Here is a list of the ten Saints:

-St. Maria Goretti
- St. Therese of Lisieux (pictured above)
- St. Peter Chanel
- St. Faustina Kowalska
- Pope John Paul II
- Blessed Peter To Rot
- Blessed Teresa of Calcutta
- Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati
- Blessed Mary MacKillop


May 30, 2008

Sacred Heart Act of Consecration Prayer


Sacred Heart Act of Consecration Prayer by Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque


I, ( your name. . .), give myself and consecrate to the Sacred Heart of our Lord Jesus Christ my person and my life, my actions, pains, and sufferings, so that I may be unwilling to make use of any part of my being save to honor, love, and glorify the Sacred Heart.

This is my unchanging purpose, namely, to be all His, and to do all things for the love of Him, at the same time renouncing with all my heart whatever is displeasing to Him.

I therefore take Thee, O Sacred Heart, to be the only object of my love, the guardian of my life, my assurance of salvation, the remedy of my weakness and inconstancy, the atonement for all the faults of my life and my sure refuge at the hour of death.

Be then, O Heart of goodness, my justification before God Thy Father, and turn away from me the strokes of His righteous anger. O Heart of love, I put all my confidence in Thee, for I fear everything from my own wickedness and frailty; but I hope for all things from Thy goodness and bounty.

Do Thou consume in me all that can displease Thee or resist Thy holy will. Let Thy pure love imprint Thee so deeply upon my heart that I shall nevermore be able to forget Thee or to be separated from Thee. May I obtain from all Thy loving kindness the grace of having my name written in Thee, for in Thee I desire to place all my happiness and all my glory, living and dying in true bondage to Thee.

May 24, 2008

Nice Clip!!!

Check out this great clip on our community which was done as a video project (just about 3 years ago) by our Br. Maximilian Maxwell, O.S.B. while studying in our college.

"The Great Monk Is Still a True Teacher"

VATICAN CITY, APRIL 9, 2008
Zenit
Here is a translation of the address Pope Benedict XVI gave April 9, 2008 at the general audience in St. Peter's Square. This is a great read for all men and women conversing with the Lord about the possibility of a religious vocation.

* * *

Dear brothers and sisters,

Today I would like to talk about St. Benedict, the father of Western monasticism, and also the patron saint of my papacy. I will begin with a few words from Pope St. Gregory the Great who wrote the following about St. Benedict: “The man of God who shone on this earth with so many miracles does not shine any less for the eloquence with which he knew how to present his teaching” (Dial. II, 36).

The Great Pope wrote these words in the year 592: The holy monk had died barely 50 years earlier and was still alive in the memories of the people and above all in the blossoming religious order he founded. St. Benedict, through his life and work, had a fundamental influence on the development of European civilization and culture.

The most important source of information on his life is the second book of the Dialogues by Pope St. Gregory the Great. It is not a biography as such. According to the ideas of the time, he wanted to demonstrate by using a real person -- St. Benedict -- how someone who abandons himself to God can reach the heights of contemplation. He offers us a model of human life characterized as an ascent toward the peak of perfection.

Pope St. Gregory the Great tells us in the book of the Dialogues about the many miracles performed by the saint. Here too he did not want to simply recount a strange event, but rather demonstrate how God, by warning, helping and even punishing, intervenes in real situations in the life of man. He wanted to show that God is not a distant hypothesis situated at the beginning of the world, but rather that he is present in the life of man, of all men.

This perspective of the "biography" is also explained in the light of the general context of the times: Between the fifth and sixth centuries the world suffered a terrible crisis in values and institutions, caused by the collapse of the Roman Empire, the invasion of new people and the decline of customs. By presenting St. Benedict as a "shining light," Gregory wanted to show the way out of “this dark night of history” (cfr. John Paul II, Teachings, II/1, 1979, p. 1158), the terrible situation here in the city of Rome.

In fact, the work of St. Benedict and his Rule in particular are bearers of a genuine spiritual turmoil, which changed the face of Europe over the centuries and whose effects were felt way beyond his time and the borders of his own country. Following the collapse of the political unity created by the Roman Empire, it revived a new spiritual and cultural unity -- that of Christian faith, shared among the people of the Continent. This is how the Europe we know today was born.

The birth of St. Benedict is dated around the year 480. He was born, according to Pope St. Gregory, “ex provincia Nursiae” -- in the region of Norcia. His parents were well off and sent him to be educated in Rome. He did not stay long in the eternal city however. Pope St. Gregory offers a very likely explanation for this. He points out that the young Benedict was disgusted by the way of life of many of his fellow students who led unprincipled lives and he did not want to fall into the same trap. He wanted only to please God “soli Deo placere desiderans” (II Dial., Prol 1).

Therefore, even before he completed his studies, Benedict left Rome and withdrew to the solitude of the mountains east of Rome. Initially he stayed in the village of Effide (now: Affile), where for some time he affiliated himself with a "religious community" of monks, and then became a hermit living in Subiaco, which was close by. For three years he lived completely alone in a cave there. In the High Middle Ages, this cave became the "heart" of a Benedictine monastery called "Sacro Speco." His time in Subiaco was a period of solitude spent with God and was for Benedict a time in which he matured.

Here he endured and overcame the three fundamental human temptations: the temptation of self-assertion and the desire to place oneself at the center of things; the temptation of the senses; and finally, the temptation of anger and revenge.

Benedict firmly believed that only after conquering these temptations would he be able to say anything useful to others in need. And so, having pacified his soul, he was fully able to control the drive to put oneself first, and so became a creator of peace. Only then did he decide to found his first monasteries in the valley of Anio, near Subiaco.

In the year 529 he left Subiaco to establish himself in Montecassino. Some have explained this move as a flight from the interference of a jealous local clergyman, but this is not likely, as the priest's sudden death did not lead Benedict to move back again (II Dial. 8). In truth, he took this decision because he had entered into a new phase of monastic experience and personal maturity.

According to Gregory the Great his exodus from the remote valley of Anio to Mount Cassio -- which dominates the vast planes around it -- is symbolic of his character. A monastic life of isolation has it's place, but a monastery also has a public aim in the life of the Church and society as a whole. It must serve to make faith visible as a force of life. In fact, when Benedict died on March 21, 547, through his Rule and the Benedictine order that he founded, he left us a legacy that bore fruit all over the world in the subsequent centuries, and continues to do so today.

In the whole of the second book of the Dialogues, Gregory shows us how the life of St. Benedict was immersed in an atmosphere of prayer, the foundation of his existence. Without prayer you cannot experience God. Benedict's spirituality was not cut off from reality. In the turmoil and confusion of the times, Benedict lived under the gaze of God. He never lost sight of the duties of everyday life and of man and his necessities. In seeing God he understood the reality of man and his mission. In his Rule he explains monastic life as “a school at the service of the Lord” (Prol. 45), and he asks his monks "not to place anything ahead of the work of God" (that is, the Divine Office and the Liturgy of the Hours)(43,3). He underlines, however, that the act of prayer is in the first instance the act of listening (Prol. 9-11), which is then translated into concrete action. “Every day the Lord expects us to respond to his holy teaching with action” (Prol. 35).

The life of a monk therefore becomes a fruitful symbiosis of action and contemplation, “so that God is glorified in everything” (57,9). In contrast to an egocentric and easy self-fulfillment, often extolled today, the first and irrefutable duty of a disciple of St. Benedict is a sincere search for God (58,7) on the road traced by a humble and obedient Christ (5,13), the love of whom nothing should be allowed to stand in the way (4,21; 72,11).

It is in this way, in serving others, that Benedict becomes a man of service and peace. By showing obedience through his actions with a faith driven by love (5,2), the monk acquires humility (5,1), to which the Rule dedicates a whole chapter (7). In this way man becomes more like Christ and attains true self-fulfillment as a creature in God's own image.

The obedience of the disciple must be matched by the wisdom of the Abbot, who “takes the place of Christ” (2,2; 63,13) in a monastery. His role, outlined mainly in the second chapter of the Rule, with a description of spiritual beauty and demanding commitment, can be considered a self-portrait of Benedict, since, as Gregory the Great writes, “the Saint could not teach what he himself had not lived” (Dial. II, 36). The Abbot must be both a loving father and a strict teacher (2,24), a true educator.

Inflexible when it comes to vices, he is called upon to imitate the tenderness of the Good Shepherd (27,8) to “assist rather than dominate” (64,8), to “point out more with actions than words all that is good and holy,” and to “ illustrate the divine commandments by setting an example” (2,12).

In order to be capable of making responsible decisions, the Abbot must also be someone who listens to “the advice of his brothers” (3,2), because “God often reveals the most apt solution to the youngest person” (3,3). This attitude makes the Rule, written almost 15 centuries ago very current! A man with public responsibility, even in small circles, must always be a man who knows how to listen and to learn from what he hears.

Benedict describes the Rule as “minimal, just an initial outline” (73,8); in reality, however, it offers useful advice not only to monks, but to anyone looking for guidance on the path to God. Through his capacity, his humanity, and his sober ability to discern between what is essential and what is secondary in the spiritual life, he is still a guiding light today.

Paul VI, by proclaiming St. Benedict the patron saint of Europe on October 24, 1964, recognized the wonderful work accomplished by the saint through the Rule toward creating the civilization and culture of Europe.

Today, Europe -- deeply wounded during the last century by two world wars and the collapse of great ideologies now revealed as tragic utopias -- is searching for it's own identity. A strong political, economic and legal framework is undoubtedly important in creating a new, unified and lasting state, but we also need to renew ethical and spiritual values that draw on the Christian roots of the Continent, otherwise we cannot construct a new Europe.

Without this vital lifeblood, man remains exposed to the ancient temptation of self-redemption -- a utopia, which caused in various ways in 20th-century Europe, as pointed out by Pope John Paul II, “an unprecedented regression in the tormented history of humanity” (Teachings, XIII/1, 1990, p. 58).

In the search for true progress, let us listen to the Rule of St. Benedict and see it as a guiding light for our journey. The great monk is still a true teacher in whose school we can learn the art of living a true humanism.

May 22, 2008

Reflections from the Novitiate (by Br. Gabriel Myriam)


The following is a reflection by one of our novices (Br. Gabriel Myriam Kurzawski) given to his classmates concerning Chapter 58 of the Holy Rule. Please look for more articles like this from the Novices in the next couple of days.

A few weeks ago, I spoke with a good friend of mine who I met almost 5 years ago while attending a “Come and See Weekend” with a missionary religious order based in Queens, NY. Little did we know, at the time, that we would both eventually join this order, spend over 2 years developing our prayer life and friendship within this order, and later leave this order in order to follow Christ even more closely, myself as a Benedictine monk and my friend as a diocesan seminarian. Yet, we remain united to each other by our love for Jesus Christ and His Holy Catholic Church. He jokingly remarked that we had both DISCERNED to leave this order and follow the Lord on a similar but different road. For one reason or another the word my friend used “discern” stuck with me. For days I just kept thinking about what does it mean to truly follow the Lord? How can one "discern" not to follow a Divine calling? Since we are free people, how could God call some and not others as I am so accustomed to hear in our modern Catholic lingo? To answer these questions I decided to start with the trusty Novitiate Webster’s Dictionary.…The dictionary states that to discern is, “to know or recognize mentally” while the act of discernment is, “the quality of being able to grasp and comprehend what is obscure.” I must state that as an individual that has always admired St. Anselm’s argument for the existence of God, “I believe because it is absurd” the dictionaries definitions did not resonate well with me, not so much as a thinker, but a spiritual being, a being thirsting for truth, and a being who has come to realize that my thirst can only be quenched with the spiritual waters of faith in Jesus Christ, who, as we know, is beyond comprehension. As I internalized and processed the word (discern) and how the dictionary explained its meaning I came to the concluded that discernment is probably one of the most overly used and misunderstood words we as Catholics through around on a day to day basis to the point where often times it seems as though one needs to contact the local vocation director in order to choose or, for the sake of this reflection, (discern) whether or not we should purchase the steak or the salad. For me, the word “discern” and my understanding of the what the word means just did not seem to add up with why I am here at St. Vincent, why I am preparing to take Monastic Vows, why I feel God is calling me to serve Him and His Church as a monk. This being stated, one might be wondering why I have been hung up on the word “discernment” for the past few weeks and what does this have to do with Chapter 58 of the Holy Rule. Well, to answer this question I feel it would be accurate for me at least to admit that I have not been able to grasp or comprehend what the dictionary calls “obscure,” of course I am referring to grasping or comprehending the monastic vocation. Therefore, I wish to dive into Chapter 58 of the Holy Rule, which describes, as you know, the process of entering the monastery and the Novitiate.

Two days ago, my classmate commented that, “it seems as though what brought us to the monastery is certainly not what keeps us here.” I think that is why St. Benedict was and is opposed to the usual nice and opened armed Benedictine welcome for all who come to his door seeking the life of the monk, for as we have all seen during our various experiences here at St. Vincent, Monastic Life is not always internally what it appears to be externally (nor is the human being) and therefore if a man is not at least willing to open his heart, his soul, his entire self to the will of the Father then he will only progress as far as he selfishly and foolishly limits himself in his search for God’s holy truth. Today this tradition of not allowing the newcomer and easy entry is on full-display each time a potential candidate for the Novitiate sits before the Abbot, the prior, the Novice or Junior Master, or the Vocation Director. Each of these men within our community are, as the Holy Rule instructs, testing the spirits to see if they are from God. But I must caution you and myself that this “spirit testing” is not something we in the Monastic Life need to be concerned of only at the time of our entry, for as we have learned during the Novitiate, the life of the monk is a continual interaction with the Father (or as the Holy Rule states, “a continuous Lent”) and therefore, we, as true seekers of the will of God must make prayer, spiritual direction, and the celebration of the sacraments the focal point of our monastic existence in order that we are constantly testing our own spirits to see if what we seek is from God.


Looking back on our Novitiate year and more specifically on our study of Chapter 58, I feel that it is safe to state that the contents of this chapter are just as relevant to the monk with the jubilee cain as they are to the unhooded newby. Each of us, no matter where we are at on our Monastic journey, our walking with Christ, and are bound to face hardships along the way, but as Vs. 8 states, these are “hardships and difficulties that will lead him (the monk) to God.” Therefore, there is much to be joyful about in the monastery for each of us, that is if we truly believe in the words of our Holy Father St. Benedict, and thus the words of Christ, which assure us that if we persevere in the monastery living faithfully to the best of our ability the vows which we professed, then we are guaranteed eternal happiness with Christ the High Priest. For this reason I finally understand why an old man once told me that there is nothing sadder in the world than a miserable monk.
As you, my brothers can attest to, we have heard the term, “living word” many times throughout this year to accurately describe the Book that the Lord has given us, the Holy Bible. Yet as monks, I wish to make the argument that indeed we have been doublely blessed with another living and breathing book, that being St. Benedict’s Holy Rule. The Rule not only speaks to us through its rich and carefully selected instructions on who, what, and how the monastery is to be run, but also for the monk, the Holy Rule speaks to the inmost segments of the human heart, calling the follower to “listen carefully…to the master’s instructions, and to attend to them with,” (not just with ones mouth or hands or mind, but even deeper than that, with ones heart) the organism that gives us life! For this reason, one can see why St. Benedict wishes the newcomer not to receive an easy welcome, for, our Holy Father is not just concerned with the affairs of the community but rather with the state of the spirit, the state of the soul of the newcomer in order that he may progress on the ladder which leads to salvation faithfully bearing all trials and tribulations that are bound to occur as one follows the Lord in the monastery. As I have often thought, “for a full dose of reality I will have a day in the monastery please!!!

This leads me back to my to the definition of discernment, the “grasp(ing) and comprehend(ing) of what is obscure” and a few final points concerning Chapter 58. Point blank, I can honestly say that in no way have I, or will I ever be able to “grasp and comprehend” why the Lord has allowed me this amazing opportunity to serve Him here at St. Vincent nor, I would argue, can a married couple fully grasp and comprehend how the Lord guided them faithfully and lovingly into each others lives and, quite honestly, I am really not to concerned with trying to figure it out. Simply put, we are not called to discern, to grasp, to comprehend the vocation that we have freely chosen in this life (and I must make the point to follow up an early statement I made, that the Lord calls each of us to Him daily… truly to serve Him is to Love Him as He himself is the servant to the servants, the model of priesthood, the one who laid down his life for His friends) this is important because as we continue to knock on the monastic door, asking the Lord, to take us deeper into His house, we know in advance that our Lord has given us a 24/7 365 day invitation to not just visit but to stay. Yet, it is our choice to either accept or deny His invitation. Either way, He will continue to call us back to Him faithfully.
To conclude, Chapter 58 of the Holy Rule provides us with not just the tools for allowing a man to enter into this monastic way of life but for me it provides a wonderful opportunity not to discern (to comprehend) why God has brought me here, it provides me with the opportunity to just be, to be joyful, to be hopeful, to be thankful that the Lord has allowed me to follow Him in this vocation that I have chosen in life in order to serve not just myself, but with His blessing, His people. “Receive me, Lord as you have promised, and I shall live; and do not disappoint me in my hope. Amen

Pax et Gaudium

O.S.B. Vocation Awareness

O.S.B. Vocation Awareness