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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260708T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260708T170000
DTSTAMP:20260705T125201Z
CREATED:20260705T125201Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260705T125201Z
UID:15148-1783497600-1783530000@laycisterciansofgethsemani.org
SUMMARY:Vigils Reading - Bl Eugene III
DESCRIPTION:A reading from St Bernard of Clairvaux for \nPOPE BLESSED EUGENE III \n◊◊◊ \nIt has occurred to me to write something which might edify\, delight or \nconsole you\, Blessed Father Eugene. But I do not know the rules for writing a \nformal yet intimate treatise. Two opposites\, your majesty and my love\, vie to \ndictate my style. Love draws me on; majesty holds me back. But you graciously \nintervene and request rather than command this treatise\, although it would be \nmore fitting for you to command it. Since your majesty so admirably \ncondescends\, why does my hesitancy persist? What if you have ascended the \nthrone? Even if you were to walk on the wings of the wind\, you would not escape \nmy affection. Love knows no master. It recognizes a son even though he wear \nthe tiara. It is the nature of a lover to be suitably humble\, willingly submissive\, \nfreely compliant\, respectful without duress. \nThis is not the way with others however; they are driven either by fear or \nby greed. Such men bless openly\, but harbor evil in their hearts. They flatter you \nwhen you are present\, yet fail you in time of need. But charity never fails. It is \ntrue that I have been freed of maternal obligation toward you\, but I am not \nstripped of affection for you. You were once in my womb; you will not be drawn \nfrom my heart so easily. Ascend to the heavens\, descend to the depths\, you will \nnot escape me. I will follow you wherever you go. I loved you when you were \npoor in spirit; I shall love you still as father of the poor and the rich. \nIf I know you\, you did not cease being poor in spirit when you became the \nfather of the poor. I am confident that this change has been thrust on you and \nwas not of your doing\, that this promotion has not replaced your former state\, \nbut rather has enhanced it. Therefore I will instruct you not as a teacher\, but as a \nmother\, indeed as a lover. I may seem more the fool\, but only to one who does \nnot love\, to one who does not feel the force of love.
URL:https://laycisterciansofgethsemani.org/event/vigils-reading-bl-eugene-iii-3/
CATEGORIES:Vigils Readings
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260709T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260709T170000
DTSTAMP:20260705T125256Z
CREATED:20260705T125256Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260705T125256Z
UID:15150-1783584000-1783616400@laycisterciansofgethsemani.org
SUMMARY:Vigils Reading - Office for the Dead
DESCRIPTION:A reading from \nFR LOUIS BOUYER \n◊◊◊ \nIt is not purely and simply by dying that we shall live\, but by dying such a \ndeath that it kills death itself – and it is only the death of Christ that can do that. \nFor it is not the life of the mortal body which has injured the life of the soul. It is\, \non the contrary\, the death of the soul which has injured the body and made it \nmortal. Life will be won back by the resurrection\, not of the soul alone\, but of the \nhuman being in its unity\, inseparably body and soul. And if the passage through \ndeath can lead to the resurrection\, it is only in as much as the soul\, which has \nbecome alive again in Christ\, has been made capable of burning away the death \nof the body as with a red-hot iron and of causing it to evaporate in its own flame. \nThe monk goes forward to meet death because he believes that this \nmiracle\, the greatest of all\, has been accomplished in the death of Christ: \nbecause he believes that Christ was Life\, the very Life of God\, and that in making \nphysical death his own\, he has robbed the evil one of all his power and all his \nempire which are annihilated by this very act. Again he goes forward to meet \ndeath because he believes that Christ now and for the future lives in him: and \nfinally because he believes that what has taken place in Christ will be \nreproduced in himself\, in the same manner. \nThe death of the monk\, so desired and sought after day after day\, is then \nonly the supreme evidence of his faith\, his faith in Christ vanquishing death in \nhimself\, his faith in Christ present in his followers to vanquish it in them. The \nmonk’s mortification is ultimately nothing more than his witness given to \nChrist\, the witness of his faith\, which makes it clear that it is not only an \nintellectual thing but an engagement of the whole being.
URL:https://laycisterciansofgethsemani.org/event/vigils-reading-office-for-the-dead-27/
CATEGORIES:Vigils Readings
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260710
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260711
DTSTAMP:20260705T125357Z
CREATED:20260705T125357Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260705T125357Z
UID:15152-1783641600-1783727999@laycisterciansofgethsemani.org
SUMMARY:Vigils Reading
DESCRIPTION:A reading from \nST AELRED OF RIEVAULX \n◊◊◊ \nFor when in bitterness of soul \nI view my former life\, \nit scares and frightens me that I should be called shepherd\, \nfor I am surely crazy if I do not know myself \nunworthy of the name. \nYour holy mercy is upon me\, \nto snatch my wretched soul out of hell. \nYou show mercy as you will; \nyour pity succors him whom you are pleased to pity; \nand such is your forgiveness of my sin\, \nthat you do not avenge yourself by damning me\, \nnor do you even overwhelm me with reproaches; \nand\, even when you do accuse\, you love me no less. \nNevertheless\, I am disturbed and troubled\, \nfor I am mindful of your goodness\, yes— \nbut I am not unmindful of my own ingratitude. \nSee\, then\, \nbefore you is my heart’s confession of the countless sins\, \nfrom which your mercy has been pleased to free my \nhapless soul. \nMy whole heart renders thanks and praise to you \nwith all its might for all these benefits. \n6 (CF 2 : 106-107).12 \nBut I am no less in your debt \nfor all the evil things I have not done. \nFor\, most assuredly\, whatever evil thing \nI have not done\, it was your guiding hand \nthat made me abstain from doing it; \nsince either you took away the means to do it\, \nor else you corrected my inclination\, \nor gave me the power to resist. \nBut what am I to do\, O Lord my God\, \nabout the ills whereby\, in your just judgment\, \nyou suffer your servant\, the son of your handmaiden\, \nstill to be wearied and be overcome? \nThe things concerning which my sinful soul \nis troubled in your sight\, O Lord\, cannot be counted; \nyet\, for all that\, \nneither my sorrow for them nor my care \nto shun their repetition is as great \nas they demand\, and as my will desires.
URL:https://laycisterciansofgethsemani.org/event/vigils-reading-445/
CATEGORIES:Vigils Readings
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260711
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260712
DTSTAMP:20260705T125503Z
CREATED:20260705T125503Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260705T125503Z
UID:15154-1783728000-1783814399@laycisterciansofgethsemani.org
SUMMARY:Vigils Reading - St Benedict
DESCRIPTION:A reading from “Butler’s Lives of the Saints” on \nST BENEDICT \n◊◊◊ \nBenedict was of good birth\, and was born and brought up at the ancient \nSabine town of Nursia. He was sent to Rome for his ‘liberal education’\, being \naccompanied by a ‘nurse’\, probably to act as housekeeper. He was then in his \nearly teens\, or perhaps a little older. But Benedict\, revolted by the licentiousness \nof his companions in the city\, made up his mind to leave Rome. He made his \nescape without telling anyone of his plans excepting his nurse\, who \naccompanied him. They made their way to the village of Enfide in the \nmountains thirty miles from Rome. What was the length of his stay we do not \nknow\, but it was sufficient to enable him to determine his next step. Absence \nfrom the temptations of Rome\, he soon realized\, was not enough; God was \ncalling him to be a solitary and to abandon the world. \nIn search of complete solitude Benedict started forth once more\, alone\, \nand climbed further among the hills until he reached a place now known as \nSubiaco. In this wild and rocky country he came upon a monk called Romanus\, \nto whom he opened his heart\, explaining his intention of leading the life of a \nhermit. Romanus assisted the young man\, clothing him with a sheepskin habit \nand leading him to a cave in the mountain. In this desolate cavern Benedict \nspent the next three years of his life… \nDisciples began to gather about him\, attracted by his sanctity and by his \nmiraculous powers… We do not know how long the saint remained at Subiaco\, \nbut he stayed long enough to establish his monasteries on a firm and permanent \nbasis. His departure was sudden. \nHaving set all things in order\, he withdrew from Subiaco to the territory of \nMonte Cassino… Upon the site of a big temple he built two chapels and round \nabout these sanctuaries there rose little by little a great building which was \ndestined to become the most famous abbey the world has ever known\, the \nfoundation of which is likely to have been laid by St Benedict in the year 530… \nIt is probably that Benedict\, who was now in middle age\, again spent some \ntime as a hermit; but disciples soon flocked to Monte Cassino too… \nThe holy abbot\, far from confining his ministrations to those who would \nfollow his rule\, extended his solicitude to the population of the surrounding \ncountry: he cured their sick\, relieved the distressed\, distributed alms and food \nto the poor\, and is said to have raised the dead on more than one occasion. The \ngreat saint who had foretold so many other things was also forewarned of his \nown approaching death. He notified it to his disciples… He was stricken with \nfever\, and on the last day he received the Body and Blood of the Lord. Then\, \nwhile the loving hands of the brethren were supporting his weak limbs\, he \nuttered a few final words of prayer and died – standing on his feet in the chapel\, \nwith his hands uplifted towards heaven.
URL:https://laycisterciansofgethsemani.org/event/vigils-reading-st-benedict-4/
CATEGORIES:Vigils Readings
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