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SECULAR CONSECRATION: Section Two - Chapter One
SECULAR CONSECRATION: Section Two - Chapter One We now come to the heart of what membership in a secular Institute entails, what distinguishes it from other associations of the faithful. It is the full profession of the evangelical councils of celibate chastity, poverty and obedience. Secular institutes are parallel to Religious institutes such as Jesuits and Franciscans in that both profess the evangelical counsels and are recognized by the Church. Other associations may live in the “spirit” of the counsels such as “Third Orders” (often now called “secular orders”) which often creates confusion between them and secular institutes but there are key differences. Third orders do not profess vows and do not commit themselves to lives of celibate chastity. It is the commitment to perpetual celibate chastity that distinguishes Religious or Secular Institutes from of groupings of Christians. Secular and Religious Institutes make vows or similar promises that are morally binding. They place themselves under the Superiors of these Institutes who have real authority over their members that are morally binding. The Code on Canon Law dealing with secular Institutes state that the profession of the counsels in a secular Institute may be made by vow, oath or another recognized expression of consecration. All members of secular institutes must make a binding profession by vow or oath to celibate chastity and make vows or binding promises of poverty and obedience. While not trying to appear excessively juridical it is important to understand that profession in a secular institute entails a full, total and complete consecration of self no less than in vowed Religious life. -
Life and Works of Saint Bernard, Abbot of Clairvaux
J&t. itfetnatto. LIFE AND WORKS OF SAINT BERNARD, ABBOT OF CLA1RVAUX. EDITED BY DOM. JOHN MABILLON, Presbyter and Monk of the Benedictine Congregation of S. Maur. Translated and Edited with Additional Notes, BY SAMUEL J. EALES, M.A., D.C.L., Sometime Principal of S. Boniface College, Warminster. SECOND EDITION. VOL. I. LONDON: BURNS & OATES LIMITED. NEW YORK, CINCINNATI & CHICAGO: BENZIGER BROTHERS. EMMANUBi A $ t fo je s : SOUTH COUNTIES PRESS LIMITED. .NOV 20 1350 CONTENTS. I. PREFACE TO ENGLISH EDITION II. GENERAL PREFACE... ... i III. BERNARDINE CHRONOLOGY ... 76 IV. LIST WITH DATES OF S. BERNARD S LETTERS... gi V. LETTERS No. I. TO No. CXLV ... ... 107 PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. THERE are so many things to be said respecting the career and the writings of S. Bernard of Clairvaux, and so high are view of his the praises which must, on any just character, be considered his due, that an eloquence not less than his own would be needed to give adequate expression to them. and able labourer He was an untiring transcendently ; and that in many fields. In all his manifold activities are manifest an intellect vigorous and splendid, and a character which never magnetic attractiveness of personal failed to influence and win over others to his views. His entire disinterestedness, his remarkable industry, the soul- have been subduing eloquence which seems to equally effective in France and in Italy, over the sturdy burghers of and above of Liege and the turbulent population Milan, the all the wonderful piety and saintliness which formed these noblest and the most engaging of his gifts qualities, and the actions which came out of them, rendered him the ornament, as he was more than any other man, the have drawn him the leader, of his own time, and upon admiration of succeeding ages. -
The First Life of Bernard of Clairvaux
CISTERCIAN FATHERS SERIES: NUMBER SEVENTY-SIX THE FIRST LIFE OF BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX CISTERCIAN FATHERS SERIES: NUMBER SEVENTY-SIX The First Life of Bernard of Clairvaux by William of Saint-Thierry, Arnold of Bonneval, and Geoffrey of Auxerre Translated by Hilary Costello, OCSO Cistercian Publications www.cistercianpublications.org LITURGICAL PRESS Collegeville, Minnesota www.litpress.org A Cistercian Publications title published by Liturgical Press Cistercian Publications Editorial Offices 161 Grosvenor Street Athens, Ohio 45701 www.cistercianpublications.org In the absence of a critical edition of Recension B of the Vita Prima Sancti Bernardi, this translation is based on Mount Saint Bernard MS 1, with section numbers inserted from the critical edition of Recension A (Vita Prima Sancti Bernardi Claraevallis Abbatis, Liber Primus, ed. Paul Verdeyen, CCCM 89B [Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2011]). Scripture texts in this work are translated by the translator of the text. The image of Saint Bernard on the cover is a miniature from Mount Saint Bernard Abbey, fol. 1, reprinted with permission from Mount Saint Bernard Abbey. © 2015 by Order of Saint Benedict, Collegeville, Minnesota. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, microfilm, microfiche, mechanical recording, photocopying, translation, or any other means, known or yet unknown, for any purpose except brief quotations in reviews, without the previous written permission of Liturgical Press, Saint John’s Abbey, PO Box 7500, College- ville, Minnesota 56321-7500. Printed in the United States of America. 123456789 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Vita prima Sancti Bernardi. English The first life of Bernard of Clairvaux / by William of Saint-Thierry, Arnold of Bonneval, and Geoffrey of Auxerre ; translated by Hilary Costello, OCSO. -
The Church Impotent, by Leon J Podles, 6
6 The Foundations of Feminization EN AND WOMEN, as far as we can tell, participated equally in Christianity until about the thirteenth century. If anything, men were more prominent in the Church not Monly in clerical positions, which were restricted to men, but in religious life, which was open to both men and women. Only around the time of Bernard, Dominic, and Francis did gender differences emerge, and these differences can be seen both in demographics and in the quality of spirituality. Because these changes occurred rapidly and only in the Latin church, innate or quasi- innate differences between the sexes cannot by themselves account for the increase in women’s interest in Christian- ity or the decrease in men’s interest. In fact, the medieval feminization of Christianity followed on three movements in the Church which had just begun at the time: the preaching of a new affective spirituality and bridal mysticism by Bernard of Clairvaux;1 a Frauenbewegung, a kind of women’s movement; and Scholasticism, a school of theology. This concurrence of trends caused the Western church to become a difficult place for men. Bernard of Clairvaux and Bridal Mysticism Like the light pouring through the great windows of Chartres, the 02 The Foundations of Feminization 03 brilliance of the High Middle Ages is colored by the personality of Bernard of Clairvaux. Like many great men, Bernard contained multitudes. As a monastic who united prayer and theology, he looked back to the patristic era, especially to Augustine. A monk who renounced the world, he set in motion the Crusades, whose effects are still felt in the geopolitics of Europe and the Middle East. -
The Evangelical Counsels and the Total Gift of Self
THE EVANGELICAL COUNSELS AND THE TOTAL GIFT OF SELF • Jacques Servais • “Gospel obedience, which is the interior form of the counsels, because it is the essential and decisive act of the gift of self, in effect conforms the consecrated person to the obedience of Christ who redeems the world.” 1. Obedience: the constitutive element of the evangelical counsels As St. Thomas Aquinas affirms, and with him the entire tradition, obedience is first among the three evangelical counsels. These counsels, of course, constitute an organic whole; it is impossible to separate them one from another. Like faith, hope, and love, they reciprocally complete each other in the one and multifaceted grace of the imitation of Christ. However, just as of the three that “abide,” “the greatest is love” (1 Cor 13:13), so too does obedience have pride of place among the counsels. Arranging them schematically, we could say that the question of marriage or virginity should be clarified before a person enters the novitiate, and the question of holding onto or freely renouncing one’s goods arises and finds its response as a rule at the moment of the profession. But it is the question of one’s free submission to Christ—who is known, loved, and followed in an obedience that is not only spiritual but also “carnal” (Péguy!)— which in a very special Communio 31 (Fall 2004). © 2004 by Communio: International Catholic Review The Evangelical Counsels and the Total Gift of Self 363 way will accompany the consecrated person through to the end of his life. As the initial counsel, virginity1 is also the most natural thing in the state of the counsels, and if one were to have difficulties in this area, it would be a sign that one is not really called to this state: for far from being something that needs to be cultivated for its own sake, virginity has no other meaning than to fix one’s attention on the Lord, as one chooses to be like him a “eunuch for the kingdom of heaven” (Mt 19:12), in an attitude of humility that forbids any self-regard. -
Celebration for the Year of Consecrated Life – 2015 Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary October 7, 2015 Acts 2:42-47; Matthew 5:13-16
Celebration for the Year of Consecrated Life – 2015 Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary October 7, 2015 Acts 2:42-47; Matthew 5:13-16 When Pope Francis announced that the special year for Consecrated Life would begin in December and continue through this year, it seemed a little senseless to try to gather a large group of people during the winter even though many dioceses honored members of consecrated life on February 2, which is the annual occasion to remember the gift that is consecrated life in the Church. We decided to wait until winter was over and the weather would be nice. No ice, no snow. From all appearances we are getting this in just in time. (Well, maybe it will be another month before we see snow.) “You are the salt of the earth. You are the light of the world.” Jesus encourages his disciples to be what he calls them to be. We celebrate today, in consecrated life, the fact that so many, including you who come together today, have chosen to strive with the commitment of your lives to follow him in living out those words. It is a wonderful thing to be with you for this celebration of the Year of Consecrated Life here in our diocese. We gather in the glow of the memory of Pope Francis’ visit to us in our country. We are blessed in the diocese with a richness of forms of consecration, of people who live the evangelical counsels and point us beyond ourselves to the love of God. -
Solemnity of Mary and Simple Profession of Br. Bernard Marra
SOLEMNITY OF MARY, 2014 AND SIMPLE PROFESSION OF BR. BERNARD MARRA Since the liturgy is so much a part of the Benedictine life to which you, Br. Bernard, are making profession this morning, I would like to begin this homily with a few comments about the history of today’s feast. Younger Catholics today know it only as the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, for this has been its designation for the past 45 years, ever since the revision of the liturgical calendar by Pope Paul VI in 1969, but for the seven years before that it was called simply the Octave Day of Christmas, while from 1570 until 1962 it was the feast of Christ’s circumcision, and in still earlier times the first day of January was celebrated in Rome as a feast of Mary. The most recent change is therefore a revival of what had been Roman liturgical practice from the seventh century until the late Middle Ages. This is exactly the point that Pope Paul made in naming the octave day of Christmas the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God. He wrote: In the revised ordering of the Christmas period … the attention of all should be directed towards the restored Solemnity of Mary, the holy Mother of God. This celebration, placed on January 1 in conformity with the ancient … liturgy of the city of Rome, is meant to commemorate the part played by Mary in this mystery of salvation.1 What Pope Paul there referred to as “the part played by Mary” could hardly be overemphasized. -
St. Francis of Assisi St. Bernard of Clairvaux
St. Bernard of Clairvaux St. Francis of Assisi Our Mother of Perpetual Help (A Secondary Mission Church) ST. BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX CHURCH SEPTEMBERBRADFORD, 5, 2021 PA We may ask - what is the beauty of the Letter from Saint James? The answer is its simplicity and straightforwardness. The letter offers very practical lessons on how to live out our daily life as a Catholic Christian. From the reading today, we hear him talking about a common fault that we all have - that is to merely judge on outward appearances. You may ask yourself, why do we do this? The answer is quite simple. Because then you don’t have to get to know the per- son or even try to understand where that person is coming from. Let us hear the words from Saint James: “For if a man with gold rings and fine clothes comes into the assembly, and a poor person in shabby clothes also comes in, and you pay attention to the one who is wearing fine clothes and say, ‘Sit here, please,’ while you say to the poor one, ‘Stand there,’ or ‘Sit at my feet,’ have you not made distinctions among yourselves and become judges with evil designs?” I like the letter of Saint James because he gives a simple and practical way to live out our faith on a daily basis. He does not go off on heavy theological discussions. Much like Joe Friday from the old TV series, Dragnet, who always started off his in- terviews with this line: “Just the facts Mam, just the facts.” Saint James tells us much the same thing. -
Embracing Absence: a Trinitarian Spirituality of Consecrated Celibacy
Embracing Absence: A Trinitarian Spirituality of Consecrated Celibacy In his letter for the Year of Consecrated Life, Pope Francis invites religious to “live the mysticism of encounter…live in the light of the loving relationships of the three divine Persons.”1 Lived mysticism suggests a spirituality. Since religious life “expresses in a particularly vivid way the Trinitarian nature of Christian life and it anticipates in a certain way that eschatological fulfillment towards which the whole Church is tending,” 2 a spirituality of the evangelical counsels would have Trinitarian and eschatological dimensions. I propose that in this Year of Consecrated Life, religious try to develop a Trinitarian spirituality of the evangelical counsels, not as a way to better understand their function, but to appropriate our lived experience of them. While all of the vows are experienced in unique and challenging ways, I believe that consecrated celibacy presents the most significant challenge at the affective and existential levels of our humanity. After all, intimate sexual relations are not “purely biological, but [it] concerns the innermost being of the human person as such.”3 Thus, consecrated celibacy touches us at our “innermost being” and understood within a Trinitarian and eschatological framework leaves us yearning for something that will not be fulfilled in this life. Consecrated Celibacy: A Challenge from Within Certain challenges to living consecrated celibacy will remain in every era: psychosexual immaturity, a lack of commitment, poor community life, etc. However, three contemporary factors affect our experience and understanding of chastity. First, we live in a hyper-sexualized society. Excessive concern and indulgence in forms of sexual expression is evidenced in advertising, on the internet, and in increased numbers of sexual addictions. -
Universities of Leeds, Sheffield and York
promoting access to White Rose research papers Universities of Leeds, Sheffield and York http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/ This is an author produced version of a paper published in The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/10455 Published paper Thompson, K. (2009) The other Saint Bernard: The 'troubled and varied career' of Bernard of Abbeville, Abbot of Tiron, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 60 (4), pp. 657-672 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0022046909990042 White Rose Research Online [email protected] The Other Saint Bernard: the ‘troubled and varied career’ of Bernard of Abbeville, Abbot of Tiron ‘A troubled and varied career.’1 Such is David Knowles’ assessment of Bernard of Abbeville, founder of the abbey of Tiron, which lies in the wooded landscape of the Perche region between Alençon and Chartres in western France.2 Bernard’s career is conventionally coupled with those of Robert of Arbrissel and Vitalis of Mortain, all of them important figures in the ascetic revival in monasticism which gripped western Europe in the late eleventh and early twelfth centuries.3 Yet while the Fontevraudine and Savignac affiliations that derived from Robert and Vitalis’s activities have been much discussed, there is no major history of the abbey of Tiron. The rigour of Bernard’s approach to monastic life, however, was much admired by contemporaries, including the kings, Henry I of England, David I of Scotland and Louis VI of France. His abbey of Tiron was the source for over a hundred communities throughout France and perhaps surprisingly in Scotland, Wales and England.4 The speed with which these daughter houses were established over such a broad area was remarkable, but the impetus was not sustained, and the so-called ‘Order of Tiron’ had ceased to be an influential force within the western monastic tradition by the beginning of the thirteenth century. -
The Book of Saints Is Designed for Meditation and Reflection and Includes Prayers and Biblical Readings That Stir the Heart As They Instruct the Mind.” —Robert L
THE BOOK OF SAINTS OF THE BOOK “The Book of Saints is designed for meditation and reflection and includes prayers and biblical readings that stir the heart as they instruct the mind.” —Robert L. Wilken, PhD Professor of the History of Christianity Emeritus University of Virginia Christ-followers from earliest times to the present enrich us with their insight and inspiring examples. The Book of Saints: The Middle Era is a treasury of priceless and thoughtful reflections from church leaders, teachers, and spiritual mentors who lived between the early fourth and early fifteenth century. Living in a world of change, conflict, and controversy, these saintly persons have much to say to us today. THE MIDDLE ERA THE BOOK OF SAINTS the middle era AL TRUESDALE is emeritus professor of philosophy of religion and Christian ethics at Nazarene Theological Seminary. Truesdale has authored numerous books, including A Dangerous Hope; If God Is God, Then Why? and With Cords of Love. He and his wife, Esther, live in the historic South Carolina Lowcountry. RELIGION / Christian Church / History AL TRUESDALE, Editor Contents INTRODUCTION 9 Eusebius of Caesarea 11 Athanasius 14 Hilary of Poitiers 26 Macarius-Symeon (Pseudo-Macarius) 29 The Cappadocian Fathers 43 Basil the Great 47 Gregory of Nyssa 60 Gregory of Nazianzus 66 Ambrose of Milan 70 John Chrysostom 78 Augustine, Bishop of Hippo 87 John Cassian 97 Vincent of Lérins 112 Leo the Great 121 Gregory the Great 134 Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury 147 Bernard of Clairvaux 155 Hildegard of Bingen 165 Francis of Assisi 169 Meister Eckhart 175 John of Ruysbroeck 182 Julian of Norwich 187 Catherine of Siena (Caterina di Benincasa) 197 Thomas à Kempis 202 Theologia Germanica 212 SOURCES 217 BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX The remarkable record of service to Christ and his church left by Ber- nard of Clairvaux (AD 1090–1153) marks him as a giant of Christian discipleship and teaching. -
Trial and Triumph
Trial and Triumph Trial and TRIUMPH STORIES FROM CHURCH HISTORY RICHARD M. HANNULA illustrated by MARCUS MASHBURN canonpress Moscow, Idaho Special thanks to my wife, Kathy, for her support and patience; to Linus Breul, whose much needed advice improved the stories substantially; to Bob Rogland, Doug Bond, and Peggy King Anderson for their helpful comments; and to Rob Rayburn for encouragement given and books lent. Published by Canon Press P.O. Box 8729, Moscow, ID 83843 800.488.2034 | www.canonpress.com Richard M. Hannula, Trial and Triumph: Stories from Church History Copyright © 1999 by Richard M. Hannula Scripture quotations in this publication are taken from the Holy Bible: A New Interna- tional Version. Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984 by the International Bible Society/Zonder- van Publishing House. Cover illustrations by Jessica Evans. Cover design by Rachel Hoffmann. Interior illustrations by Marcus Mashburn Illustrations. Interior design by Laura Storm. Printed in the United States of America. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise, without prior permission of the author, except as provided by USA copyright law. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hannula, Richard M. Trial and triumph : stories from church history / Richard M. Hannula. — 8th ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. Summary: “[Presents brief biographies of various Christian men and women who helped to shape the Christian faith and church throughout history. Written for ages seven and up]”—Provided by publisher. ISBN-13: 978-1-885767-54-7 (pbk.) ISBN-10: 1-885767-54-4 (pbk.) 1.