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Christmas: January 7th

Optional Memorial of St. Raymond of Penafort, priest; St. Andre Bessette, religious (Can)

MASS READINGS

January 07, 2017 (Readings on USCCB website)

COLLECT PRAYER

O God, who adorned the Priest Saint Raymond with the virtue of outstanding mercy and compassion for sinners and for captives, grant us, through his intercession, that, released from slavery to sin, we may carry out in freedom of spirit what is pleasing to you. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

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Old Calendar: Feria

Born in Barcelona, Spain, St. Raymond of Penafort was the third Superior-General of the Domincan Order. He is famous for his work in the freeing of slaves. He wrote five books of Decretals which are now a valuable part of the Canon Law of the Church. The Summa Casuum, which is about the correct and fruitful administration of the Sacrament of Penance, is the most notable of his works. In the 1962 Extraordinary Form Calendar, St. Raymond's feast is January 23.

The Church in Canada celebrates the feast of St. Andre Bessette today rather than on January 6 as in the United States.

The Fourteenth Day of Christmas


St. Raymond of Penafort
The blessed Raymond was born at Barcelona, of the noble family of Penafort. Having been imbued with the rudiments of the Christian faith, the admirable gifts he had received, both of mind and body, were such that even when quite a boy he seemed to promise great things in his later life.

Whilst still young, he taught humanities in Barcelona. Later on, he went to Bologna, where he applied himself with much diligence to the exercises of a virtuous life, and to the study of canon and civil law. He there received the Doctor's cap, and interpreted the sacred canons so ably that he was the admiration of his hearers. The holiness of his life becoming known far and wide, Berengarius, the Bishop of Barcelona, when returning to his diocese from Rome, visited Bologna in order to see him; and after most earnest entreaties, induced Raymond to accompany him to Barcelona. He was shortly after made Canon and Provost of that Church, and became a model to the clergy and people by his uprightness, modesty, learning and meekness. His tender devotion to the Holy Mother of God was extraordinary, and he never neglected an opportunity of zealously promoting the devotion and honor which are due to her.

When he was about forty-five years of age, he made his solemn profession in the Order of the Friars Preachers. He then, as a soldier but just entered into service, devoted himself to the exercise of every virtue, but above all to charity to the poor, and this mainly to the captives who had been taken by the infidels. It was by his exhortation that St Peter Nolasco (who was his penitent) was induced to devote all his riches to this work of most meritorious charity. The Blessed Virgin appeared to Peter, as also to blessed Raymond and to James the First, King of Aragon, telling them that it would be exceedingly pleasing to herself and her divine Child, if an Order of Religious men were instituted whose mission it should be to deliver captives from the tyranny of infidels. Whereupon, after deliberating together, they founded the Order of our Lady of Mercy for the Ransom of Captives; and blessed Raymond drew up certain rules of life, which were admirably adapted to the spirit and vocation of the said Order. Some years after, he obtained their approbation from Gregory the Ninth, and made St Peter Nolasco, to whom he gave the habit with his own hands, first General of the Order.

Raymond was called to Rome by the same Pope, who appointed him to be his Chaplain, Penitentiary, and Confessor. It was by Gregory's order that he collected together, in the volume called the Decretals, the Decrees of the Roman Pontiffs, which were to be found separately in the various Councils and Letters. He was most resolute in refusing the Archbishopric of Tarragona, which the same Pontiff offered to him, and, of his own accord resigned the Generalship of the Dominican Order, which office he had discharged in a most holy manner for the space of two years. He persuaded James the King of Aragon to establish in his dominions the Holy Office of the Inquisition. He worked many miracles; among which is that most celebrated one of his having, when returning to Barcelona from the island of Majorca, spread his cloak upon the sea, and sailed upon it, in the space of six hours, the distance of a hundred and sixty miles, and having reached his convent, entered it through the closed doors. At length, when he had almost reached the hundredth year of his age, and was full of virtue and merit, he slept in the Lord, in the year of the Incarnation 1275. He was canonized by Pope Clement the Eighth.

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32 posted on 01/07/2017 5:12:00 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
The Word Among Us

Meditation: John 2:1-11

Saint Raymond of Penyafort, Priest (Optional Memorial)

Jesus did this as the beginning of his signs . . . and so revealed his glory. (John 2:11)

Here it was, the first of Jesus’ “signs,” the first time he had revealed his glory. And what exactly did he reveal? Well, he didn’t come right out and say he was the Messiah. Rather, he changed the simple hydrogen and oxygen molecules in water into something far more complex and delicious: choice wine, abundantly more than was necessary. That is the nature of Jesus’ glory: it is miraculously transforming, excellent, and abundant.

Few of us have seen water transformed into wine, the blind receive sight, or the dead raised to life. That would be amazing, wouldn’t it? But let’s be careful not to minimize the more hidden works God does within the human heart. It is every bit as miraculous when a person learns to hear God in prayer, when bonds of shame and guilt are broken through repentance, or when a wounded heart is healed through forgiveness.

St. Paul has told us that beholding the glory of the Lord changes us into his likeness, one degree at a time (2 Corinthians 3:18). This means that when you read Scripture and are filled with hope or moved to let go of sin, you are being changed. It means that when you meditate on the Rosary or the Stations of the Cross, you are being transformed. Just as the water was changed into wine and just as the disciples were gradually changed as they witnessed Jesus’ glory, you, too, are being changed!

Of course, your transformation may not be immediately evident, but know this: you are becoming “good wine” (John 2:10). All that the Lord accomplishes is good. Tell yourself that every time you notice that something in you has changed. Refuse to entertain any conversations (so many of which go on between our ears) that would tell you otherwise. Jesus made excellent wine for the wedding guests, and he will make excellent changes in you too.

Every day, Jesus is changing you—not all at once, but at the right time, in the right order—all because he loves you! Remind yourself of his love and power often throughout the day. Ask him to change the water of your life into fine wine. He will do it—abundantly too.

“Jesus, change my ordinary life into something excellent and extraordinary, so that it overflows with your life and love.”

1 John 5:14-21
Psalm 149:1-6, 9

33 posted on 01/07/2017 5:15:08 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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