Monday, May 25, 2015

ROMERO:martyr in the true sense

Raised to the altars: one who fell for the poor

A champion of the poor or someone mixed up in politics? A man who died for the faith or because he was a political inconvenience? Archbishop Oscar Romero’s beatification today confirms his stature and illuminates his model of holiness
The beatification of the slain Oscar Romero, Archbishop of San Salvador, in his own city today, moves him one step closer to receiving the title long ago bestowed by the acclamation of his people: “San Romero de los Americas”. The honouring of the man comes 35 years after he was gunned down as he celebrated Mass in the chapel of a hospital, having preached a sermon the day before in which he called upon Salvadorean soldiers, as Christians, to stop carrying out the Government’s repression of the people, and spoken out continuously about the abuse of human rights and the plight of the poor.
As the first bishop murdered at the altar since Thomas Becket in the twelfth century, Archbishop Romero would seem to have an easy claim on most definitions of martyrdom. For Romero, who clearly anticipated his fate, there was never any doubt as to the meaning of such a death. In an interview two weeks before his assassination, he said, “I have frequently been threatened with death … Martyrdom is a great gift from God that I do not believe I have earned. But if God accepts the sacrifice of my life then may my blood be the seed of liberty and a sign of the hope that will soon become a reality … A bishop will die, but the Church of God – the people – will never die.”

There are inevitably symbolic or even political considerations involved in any canonisation, extending beyond the selection of saints to the interpretation of their lives: what is the gospel message that this life proclaims? What significance does it hold for the Church of our time and for the future?
 
Within days of Romero’s death, there were different messages about Romero. The crowd of 250,000 at his funeral was seen by some as a demonstration; Cardinal Ernesto Corripio y Ahumada, the personal delegate of John Paul II, said at the funeral that Romero was a “beloved, peacemaking man of God” and that “his blood will give fruit to brotherhood, love and peace”.
 

No doubt since then there have been expli­citly political considerations at play in the long delay of his beatification. Many influential prelates in Latin America and Rome felt that the canonisation of Romero would be “utilised” by the Left, that he would be the poster boy for liberation theology, and thus promote div­isions in the Church. There were also supporters of the cause who insisted that Romero was wrongly identified with liberation theology, that he was in fact a traditional bishop, a man of prayer, and that these features – and not the circumstances of his death – should be emphasised. But there were also theological issues at stake. These concerned the particular criteria for martyrdom, which indicate that a martyr’s death must be prompted by “hatred of the faith” – odium fidei.
 

This condition served to characterise the martyrs of the English Reformation, as well as victims of persecution in Japan, Vietnam and revolutionary France. It was also applied to the targets of anti-Catholic persecution in Spain, Mexico and various Communist countries. But it is a condition that had not, up to this point, been extended to any of the tens of thousands of Christians – whether priests, nuns, laypeople or bishops – killed by the ­military, death squads or other agents of national security in Latin America during the bloody decades of the 1970s and 1980s. Certainly, there was a willingness, as expressed by Benedict XVI, to recognise in Romero “an important witness of the faith, a man of great Christian virtue”. And yet it is striking, in the case of Romero and all the others he ­represents, how much church officials have seemed to choke over the “M word”.
 

Last autumn, Pope Francis broached this question: “What I would like is a clarification about martyrdom in odium fidei, whether it can occur either for having confessed the Creed or for having done the works which Jesus commands with regard to one’s neighbour.” In fact, there were precedents for enlarging the definition of martyrdom. Pope John Paul II was able to term St Maximilian Kolbe a “martyr for charity” for accepting death in the place of a fellow inmate at Auschwitz. So, in an ­earlier time, St Maria Goretti could be termed a “martyr for chastity”, when she died during an attempted rape. Recently, a Sicilian priest, Pino Puglisi, who was killed for standing up to the Mafia, was beatified by Benedict XVI as a martyr who laid down his life for the ­evangelical virtues of truth and justice.
 

And now, in the case of Romero as well, the question about his martyrdom has apparently been answered. In February of this year Pope Francis, acting on the recommendation of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, authorised a decree of martyrdom for Archbishop Oscar Romero, thus clearing the way for his beatification today. As Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, the postulator for Romero’s cause, observed, his assassination “was not caused by motives that were simply political, but by hatred for a faith that, imbued with charity, would not be silent in the face of the injustices that relentlessly and cruelly slaughtered the poor and their defenders”.

Paglia’s remarks are significant because they address a specific obstacle that had shadowed the cause of Romero: the claim that Romero was not killed “in hatred of the faith”, but because he got himself mixed up in politics. Archbishop Paglia said that the Vatican received “kilos” of letters along these lines. They argued that Romero wasn’t targeted by his killers – presumably self-proclaimed Catholics – because they hated his faith, but because he acted and sounded like a subversive.
 

Of course, in El Salvador in those years, it did not take much to sound like a subversive. Anyone who stood up for human rights or who challenged an unjust social order, was classified as a subversive, and thousands paid the price. As Jesuit Fr Rutilio Grande observed before his own assassination, if “Jesus himself came across the border of Chalatenango, they wouldn’t let him in.” Romero understood what was at stake. As he said, “One who is committed to the poor must risk the same fate as the poor. And in El Salvador we know what the fate of the poor signifies: to disappear, to be tortured, to be captive and to be found dead.”
 

The Vatican might have skirted the question of “politics” by focusing on Romero’s virtues as a pious and holy churchman. And yet that is not what has happened. By the decree of martyrdom the Church has recognised that his death, like that of Jesus, was a consequence of his witness to the Kingdom of God – or, if you will, his faithful proclamation of the Gospel. In El Salvador, an overwhelmingly Catholic country named for the Saviour, Romero and thousands of other martyrs were not killed simply for confessing membership in the Church or for proclaiming the Creed. They died because their understanding of the Gospel put them in solidarity with the oppressed and in opposition to the structures of injustice. And in a society animated by “odium pauperum”, hatred of the poor, such faith caused them, as Romero put it, to take on “the same fate as the poor”.
 

No doubt, in preaching a gospel of justice, peace and solidarity, Romero was regarded by many as a traitor. Among his fellow bishops there were doubtless those who believed that Romero should have preached the Gospel in a way that was less divisive. He might have done this. And thus he might have lived. As Romero noted in an address in Louvain, “Not any and every priest has been persecuted, not any and every institution has been attacked” – only “that part of the Church which has placed itself at the side of the people and has gone to their defence”.
 

Perhaps it is significant that the beatification of Romero, and the recognition of his status as a martyr, has awaited the pontificate of Pope Francis. Thus, his beatification serves a wider vision of renewal and ecclesial conversion. To name and recognise the martyrdom of Romero is not simply to nullify the odium fidei of his killers. To name Romero a martyr, and not simply “a man of great Christian virtue”, is to make a great leap of amor fidei – a love of the faith he embodied, a love for “the Church of God – that is, the people” for which he offered his life. To recognise Romero as a martyr is to embrace his model of holiness and his proclamation of the Gospel without compromise or apologies.
 

We might recall that for Romero a great turning point in his ministry came with the murder of his friend, Rutilio Grande, which occurred shortly after his installation as archbishop. It was in this event, and his choice properly to name, recognise and love Grande’s faithful witness, that Romero embarked on his own road to Calvary. In his beatification, Romero continues to walk ahead of the Church, beckoning us forward on the path to Jerusalem, which is the path of Jesus, clearing the way towards a Church which is, in Pope Francis’ words, “poor and for the poor”.
 


Tuesday, May 19, 2015

PRAYERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS

  • Prayers for All Occasions

Christian Prayers for All Occasions and Specific Needs

These prayers for all occasions and specific needs are designed to help you pray in times of particular need, if you are facing a real problem in your life, or simply to assist you in developing your prayer life. If you don't know where to begin or even how to ask God for help, you can select one of these prayers as a guide to get you started. To learn more about developing a prayer life and what the Bible says about prayer, check out these Basics to Prayer.

Prayers for Specific Needs

Children's Prayers

Prayers for All Occasions

Notable Prayers from the Bible

Member Submitted Prayers

About.com Special Features
In reality, much of what everybody "knows" about Buddhism isn't true. Be your own Buddhism myth buster. More
These Christian prayers can inspire and inform your own conversations with God. More

Monday, May 18, 2015

SWEET MANNA - Edith Stein



Sweet Manna from the Son's Heart
.
Verse by Edith Stein

Who are you, sweet light, that fills me
And illumines the darkness of my heart?
You lead me like a mother's hand,
And should you let go of me,
I would not know how to take another step.
You are the space
That embraces my being and buries it in yourself.
Away from you it sinks into the abyss
Of nothingness, from which you raised it to the light.
You, nearer to me than I to myself
And more interior than my most interior
And still impalpable and intangible
And beyond any name:
Holy Spirit eternal love!Are you not the sweet manna
That from the Son's heart
Overflows into my heart,
The food of angels and the blessed?
He who raised himself from death to life,
He has also awakened me to new life
From the sleep of death.
And he gives me new life from day to day,
And at some time his fullness is to stream through me,
Life of your life indeed, you yourself:
Holy Spirit eternal life!
Are you the ray
That flashes down from the eternal Judge's throne
And breaks into the night of the soul
That had never known itself?
Mercifully relentlessly
It penetrates hidden folds.
Alarmed at seeing itself,
The self makes space for holy fear,
The beginning of that wisdom
That comes from on high
And anchors us firmly in the heights,
Your action,
That creates us anew:
Holy Spirit ray that penetrates everything!
Are you the spirit's fullness and the power
By which the Lamb releases the seal
Of God's eternal decree?
Driven by you
The messengers of judgment ride through the world
And separate with a sharp sword
The kingdom of light from the kingdom of night.
Then heaven becomes new and new the earth,
And all finds its proper place
Through your breath:
Holy Spirit victorious power!
Are you the master who builds the eternal cathedral,
Which towers from the earth through the heavens?
Animated by you, the columns are raised high
And stand immovably firm.
Marked with the eternal name of God,
They stretch up to the light,
Bearing the dome,
Which crowns the holy cathedral,
Your work that encircles the world:
Holy Spirit God's molding hand!
Are you the one who created the unclouded mirror
Next to the Almighty's throne,
Like a crystal sea,
In which Divinity lovingly looks at itself?
You bend over the fairest work of your creation,
And radiantly your own gaze
Is illumined in return.
And of all creatures the pure beauty
Is joined in one in the dear form
Of the Virgin, your immaculate bride:
Holy Spirit Creator of all!
Are you the sweet song of love
And of holy awe
That eternally resounds around the triune throne,
That weds in itself the clear chimes of each and every being?
The harmony,
That joins together the members to the Head,
In which each one
Finds the mysterious meaning of his being blessed
And joyously surges forth,
Freely dissolved in your surging:
Holy Spirit eternal jubilation!



  
  
  
  
  
 

HOLY SPIRIT PRAYERS



First disciples gathered in prayer on the Day of Pentecost
(Acts of the Apostles, Chapter 2)
Come, Holy Spirit
.
a selection of prayers and invocations to the Spirit of God

Intercession for the Feast of Pentecost
prayer from the Taize CommunityO living God, come and make our souls temples of thy Spirit.
Sanctify us, O Lord!
Baptize thy whole Church with fire, that the divisions soon may cease, and that it may stand before the world as a pillar and buttress of thy truth.
Sanctify us, O Lord!
Grant us all the fruits of thy Holy Spirit: brotherly love, joy, peace, patience, goodwill and faithfulness.
Sanctify us, O Lord!
May the Holy Spirit speak by the voice of thy servants, here and everywhere, as they preach thy word.
Sanctify us, O Lord!
Send thy Holy Spirit, the comforter, to all who face adversity, or who are the victims of men's wickedness.
Sanctify us, O Lord!
Preserve all nations and their leaders from hatred and war, and build up a true community among nations, through the power of thy Spirit.
Sanctify us, O Lord!
Holy Spirit, Lord and source of life, giver of the seven gifts,
Sanctify us, O Comforter.
Spirit of wisdom and understanding, Spirit of counsel and strength,
Sanctify us, O Comforter.
Spirit of knowledge and devotion, Spirit of obedience to the Lord.
Sanctify us, O Comforter.


Come, Holy Spirit
prayer for Liturgy of the Hours - Terce, by Ambrose of Milan (339-397 AD)Come, Holy Spirit, who ever One
Are with the Father and the Son,
It is the hour, our souls possess
With your full flood of holiness.
Let flesh, and heart, and lips and mind,
Sound forth our witness to humankind;
And love light up our mortal frame,
Till others catch the living flame.
Grant this, O Father, ever One
With Christ, your sole begotten Son
And Holy Spirit we adore,
Reigning and blest forevermore. Amen.


Prayer of St. Augustine (354-430 AD)Breathe in me, O Holy Spirit, that my thoughts may all be holy. 
Act in me, O Holy Spirit, that my work, too, may be holy. 
Draw my heart, O Holy Spirit, that I love but what is holy. 
Strengthen me, O Holy Spirit, to defend all that is holy. 
Guard me, then, O Holy Spirit, that I always may be holy. Amen.
Prayer for the Indwelling of the Spirit
by Augustine of Hippo (354-430 AD)
Holy Spirit, powerful Consoler, 
sacred Bond of the Father and the Son, 
Hope of the afflicted, 
descend into my heart and establish in it your loving dominion. 
Enkindle in my tepid soul the fire of your Love 
so that I may be wholly subject to you. 
We believe that when you dwell in us, 
you also prepare a dwelling for the Father and the Son. 
Deign, therefore, to come to me, Consoler of abandoned souls, 
and Protector of the needy. 
Help the afflicted, strengthen the weak, a
nd support the wavering. 
Come and purify me. 
Let no evil desire take possession of me. 
You love the humble and resist the proud. 
Come to me, glory of the living, and hope of the dying. 
Lead me by your grace that I may always be pleasing to you. Amen. 


O Heavenly King
a common Orthodox prayer to the Holy Spirit, 
first known use for the service of Pentecost, likely date 8th-9th century Heavenly King, Comforter, Spirit of Truth;
Present everywhere and filling all things.
Treasury of blessings and giver of life,
Come and abide in us.
Cleanse us from every stain
And save our souls, O Good One.

Come Creator Spirit 
hymn attributed to Rabanus Maurus in the 9th century
(Pope John Paul II said this prayer every day) Come, Holy Spirit, Creator blest,
and in our souls take up Thy rest;
come with Thy grace and heavenly aid
to fill the hearts which Thou hast made.
O comforter, to Thee we cry,
O heavenly gift of God Most High,
O fount of life and fire of love,
and sweet anointing from above.
Thou in Thy sevenfold gifts are known;
Thou, finger of God's hand we own;
Thou, promise of the Father, Thou
Who dost the tongue with power imbue.
Kindle our sense from above,
and make our hearts o'erflow with love;
with patience firm and virtue high
the weakness of our flesh supply.
Far from us drive the foe we dread,
and grant us Thy peace instead;
so shall we not, with Thee for guide,
turn from the path of life aside.
Oh, may Thy grace on us bestow
the Father and the Son to know;
and Thee, through endless times confessed,
of both the eternal Spirit blest.
Now to the Father and the Son,
Who rose from death, be glory given,
with Thou, O Holy Comforter,
henceforth by all in earth and heaven. Amen.


Speaking with God from the Depths of the Heart
prayer 34,G from the Armenian Prayer Book of St. Gregory of Narek (951 –1003 AD)We always praise along with the Son and Father, the Holy Spirit,
which is of the same essence,
mighty, true, perfect, and hoily,
wo from nothing brought into existence everything that exists,
who acts through itself and shares rule with the other two,
in the same indestructible, boundless kingdom,
who is the first cause, the awesome Word of his selfhood.
And the same exalted Holy Spirit,
good ruler, who dispenses the gifts of the Father,
in praise of the name and the glory the only begotten Son,
who acted through the Laws and inspired the Prophets,
with the encouragement of your co-equal Son commissioned your apostles.
In the form of a dove you appeared at the River Jordan,
for the greater glory of the one who had come,
shone forth in the writings of the evangelists,
created genius, strengthened the wise,
filled the teachers, blessed the kingdom,
assisted kings, appointed the guardians,
issued the decrees of salvation, granted talents, prepared atonement,
cleansed those baptized into Christ's death that you might dwell in them
a sacrament performed jointly by the Father and Son with the Holy Spirit,
who is God, honored as Lord, in all ways in all things.


Fire of the Spirit
by Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179)Fire of the Spirit, life of the lives of creatures,
spiral of sanctity, bond of all natures,
glow of charity, lights of clarity,
taste of sweetness to sinners--
be with us and hear us.
Composer of all things,
light of all the risen,
key of salvation,
release from the dark prison,
hope of all unions, scope of chastities,
joy in the glory, strong honor--
be with us and hear us.
.