Sermons from daily Masses, May 24-28.
Our Lady Help of Christians, St Gregory VII, Corpus Christi, 40 Hours Devotions, Eucharistic Peace.
Saturday, May 28, 2016
Adult Formation on the Divine Comedy: Purgatorio, Part 2 of 6 (Father Ryan Erlenbush, Corpus Christi Parish, Great Falls, MT)
Pope Francis has named the Divine Comedy as the "official book" and "spiritual guide" for the Year of Mercy.
We discuss the opening cantos of the Purgatorio -- "Ante-purgatory" where those who put off conversion must wait before beginning their spiritual ascent.
We discuss the opening cantos of the Purgatorio -- "Ante-purgatory" where those who put off conversion must wait before beginning their spiritual ascent.
Labels:
Daily Sermons,
Father Ryans Sunday Sermons
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
There is no Obedience in the Trinity
This past
Sunday, we celebrated the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity. We consider the
incomprehensible Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity – three Persons in one
God and one God in three Persons. Each wholly and entirely God, and yet not
three Gods, but one God, one divine nature, one divine essence.
Reflecting
upon the unity of the three divine Persons, we will quickly see that there is
no obedience within the Trinity. The Son is not obedient to the Father, neither
is the Holy Spirit obedient to the Father and the Son, but these three are
bound in a perfect mutual enjoyment and love – “And the more love is one, the
more it is love.” (St John of the Cross, Romances
on “In the Beginning was the Word”)
St.
Gregory of Nazianzus has proposed this dogma for our belief: “Above all guard
for me this great deposit of faith for which I live and fight, which I want to
take with me as a companion, and which makes me bear all evils and despise all
pleasures: I mean the profession of faith in the Father and the Son and the
Holy Spirit. I entrust it to you today. By it I am soon going to plunge you
into water and raise you up from it. I give it to you as the companion and
patron of your whole life. I give you but one divinity and power, existing one
in three, and containing the three in a distinct way. Divinity without
disparity of substance or nature, without superior degree that raises up or inferior
degree that casts down. . . the infinite co-naturality of three infinites. Each
person considered in himself is entirely God. . . the three considered
together. . . I have not even begun to think of unity when the Trinity bathes
me in its splendour. I have not even begun to think of the Trinity when unity
grasps me. . .” (Oratio 40,41; CCC 256)
Labels:
Sacred Doctrine
Saturday, May 21, 2016
The Feast of the Most Holy Trinity and the "War-Song of Faith": The Athanasian Creed
It is a psalm or hymn of praise, of
confession, and of profound, self-prostrating homage, parallel to the canticles
of the elect in the Apocalypse. It appeals to the imagination quite as much as
to the intellect. It is the war-song of faith […] For myself, I have ever felt
it as the most simple and sublime, the most devotional formulary to which
Christianity has given birth.
So did
Blessed John Henry Newman describe the Athanasian Creed which, in the Roman Church,
holds a special place on Trinity Sunday. This Creed of St. Athanasius, once
recited by the priests of the Latin Church on each Sunday (or, more recently,
at least on Trinity Sunday), while being one of the most forceful, succinct and
beautiful expressions of our faith in the Trinity and in the Incarnation, has
sadly fallen from the consciousness of nearly all the lay faithful and even of the
vast majority of the clergy in the years since Vatican II. In these
post-Conciliar times, do we not need a “war-song of faith” to call the faithful
to the standard of Christ?
In honor
of the Most Holy Trinity, we reproduce the Athanasian Creed below, together
with a simply commentary on the text.
O Most Holy
Trinity! Undivided Unity! Holy God, Mighty God, God Immortal be adored!
Labels:
Sacred Doctrine
Daily Sermons, May 16-21 (Father Ryan Erlenbush, Corpus Christi Parish)
Daily Sermons, May 16-21.
Octave of Pentecost, The Divine Holy Spirit.
Octave of Pentecost, The Divine Holy Spirit.
Labels:
Daily Sermons
Friday, May 20, 2016
Thursday Adult Formation, May 19 -- The Divine Comedy: Introduction to the Purgatorio (part 1 of 5, Father Ryan Erlenbush)
Part 1 of 5, Dante's Divine Comedy: The Purgatorio
Pope Francis has named the Divine Comedy as the official book of the Year of Mercy. We now begin the second part of the Comedy, the Purgatorio.
Handouts are below:
Pope Francis has named the Divine Comedy as the official book of the Year of Mercy. We now begin the second part of the Comedy, the Purgatorio.
Handouts are below:
Sunday, May 15, 2016
The Gift of Tongues is not Inarticulate Mumbling
Pentecost Sunday - May 15, 2016
And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost:
and they began to speak with divers tongues, according as the Holy Ghost gave
them to speak. (Acts 2:4)
On the
feast of Pentecost, a most wondrous miracle occurred whereby the Apostles were
moved by the Holy Spirit to speak in languages previously unknown to them. This
gift is called “Glossolalia” or “Speaking in tongues”, and contributed to the conversion
of 3,000 in a single day.
“Speaking
in tongues” or “the gift of tongues” is one of the most misunderstood charisms
of the Spirit. In the modern day (sadly, even within the Catholic Church), the
term has been hijacked by some to be used in a manner wholly unknown to the
Apostles, the Scriptures, and the Church. A careful study of this gift in the
Bible and in the Early Church reveals that the “gift of tongues” is not the
mumbling common in Charismatic Prayer groups, but is rather the miracle whereby
one speaks new human languages for the praise of God and the conversion of pagans.
Labels:
Devotion,
Prayer,
Thomistic Scriptural Commentary
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