Sunday, September 30, 2007

St. Jerome

Jerome

Title

St Jerome

Year

16th C.

Artist

Aertgen van Leyden

Technique

Oil on panel

Dimensions

48 x 38 cm

Object number

SK-A-3903

By the light of a flickering candle an old man sits reading in his study holding a skull in his hand. It is St Jerome. He is looking at the skull, from which he draws inspiration in his contemplation of death.

The candle is a symbol of transience. A flame can die at any moment. Just as a life can suddenly end. That's why a candle is often used to symbolize the transience of human existance, the ultimate certainty of death, as well as the mirror. A mirror is a symbol of vanity: it reflects only the outer form. It is the outer form that eventually decays.

This was a conventional pose for a meditating saint, especially for saints who were also hermits. Indeed, St Jerome was just such a hermit. This painting is attributed to Aertgen van Leyden, a sixteenth-century painter from Leiden.



Do you enjoy reading about the life of St. Jerome?

Friday, September 28, 2007

"I don't want it when you die!"

Parker Joseph is three years old and is very interested in my music box collection. He often asks if he can play them. There is one that he asked if he could have. I thought about it and told him that I would see if I could search and find a smilar one and if I found one I would buy him one, too.

As Parker was leaving my house that day, I told him that I would give him my music box (the one he wanted) when I die. He looked so angry and actually screamed at me, "I don't want it when you die!".

I'm still not certain if he knows what die means or why he was so angry. I'm certain that he wanted the music box , NOW!

Have you ever thought of how it may really be affecting someone when you say, "I'll give that to you when I die"?

Friday, September 21, 2007

Butterfly Landing

Yesterday morning while I was letting our dogs out into the yard, a navy blue butterfly landed on the sleeve of my blue jean jacket as I was standing in the doorway that leads to the backyard. It was a long moment that I enjoyed the company of that butterfly.

That beautiful butterfly, choosing to remain so close to me for just a moment, made me feel incredibly special.

Do butterflies often land on you?

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

September 11

Sophie Elizabeth was born on September 11, 1992. At birth she suffered a brachial plexus impairment that does not allow her to have full use of her right arm. She accepted this suffering and has yet to complain about this disadvantage.

Sophie has been home schooled all her life.

Sophie is a brown belt in martial arts. She has talent as a pianist and as a tap dancer. She excells at using photo shop and has hopes of becoming a designer in fashion or the graphic arts.

Sophie celebrated her fifteenth birthday with her family at home.

Every year I am more and more grateful for Sophie's life and the gift of being able to share time with her. She is even tempered, witty, charitable, affectionate and very tolerant of my short comings.

When I sometimes doubt the true love of some individuals, I do not doubt Sophie's love.

Do you have a true friend like Sophie in your life?

Saturday, September 8, 2007

September 8

Meditation on the Birthday of the Blessed Virgin Mary

The History of the Liturgical Celebration of Mary's Birth

[Mary's Birth; Master of the Pfullendorf Altar] [Mary's Birth; Master of the Pfullendorf Altar]

The Churches of Constantinople in the East and Rome in the West celebrate liturgies in honor of Mary's birth from the 6th and 7th centuries on. The origin of the liturgy is traced to the consecration of the church in Jerusalem in the 6th century that has been traditionally known as St. Ann's Basilica. The original church built in the 5th century was a Marian basilica erected on the spot known as the shepherd's field and thought to have been the home of Mary's parents. After its destruction and reconstruction in the 6th century, the basilica was named in honor of St.Ann.

By the 7th century the liturgy was also celebrated in Rome where it had been introduced by monks from the East. From there, it spread throughout the West, and by the 13th century the liturgy had developed to a solemnity with a major octave (eight days of commemoration prior to the liturgy) and a solemn vigil which prescribed a fastday. Pope Sergius I (687-701) established a procession (a litania) from the Roman Forum to St. Mary Major for the feast.

During the reform of St. Pius X, the octave was simplified, and in 1955 Pius XII abolished it. The liturgy received the rank of feast.

The date, September 8, was chosen as the 8th day (an octave) after the former Byzantine New Year. Although Mary's birth was celebrated on various dates throughout the centuries, September 8 predominated. The feast celebrating Mary's Immaculate Conception, December 8, (a liturgy instituted later) was set to correspond to nine months before Mary's birth.

In the East, Mary's birthday is celebrated as one of the twelve great liturgies. The title for the liturgy in the East: "The Birth of Our Exalted Queen, the Birthgiver of God and Ever-Virgin Mary." Around 560, Romanos the Melodist wrote a Kontakion for the celebration. The oldest existing sermon for the liturgy was written by St. Andrew of Crete:

[Geburt Mariae; Marx Reichlich] [Geburt Mariae; Marx Reichlich]

The present feast forms a link between the New and the Old Testament. It shows that Truth succeeds symbols and figures and that the New Covenant replaces the Old. Hence, all creation sings with joy, exalts, and participates in the joy of this day. ... This is, in fact, the day on which the Creator of the world constructed His temple; today is the day on which, by a stupendous project, a creature becomes the preferred dwelling of the Creator.

The responsory for the liturgy proclaims:

Your birth, Birthgiver of God, announced joy to the whole world. From you came the Sun of Justice, Christ our God. He released the curse and gave the blessing.




The Spiritual Tradition Regarding Mary's Birth

Sacred Scripture does not record Mary's birth. The earliest known writing regarding Mary's birth is found in the Protoevangelium of James (5:2), which is an apocryphal writing from the late 2nd century. What matters is not the historicity of the account, but the significance of Mary's and of every person's birth. In Mary's case, the early Church grew more and more interested in the circumstances surrounding the origin of Christ. Discussion about Mary throws light on the discussion about the identity of Jesus Christ.

The Church usually celebrates the passing of a person, that is, the person's entry into eternal life. Besides the birth of Christ, the Christian liturgy celebrates only two other birthdays: that of St. John the Baptizer and of Mary, the Mother of Jesus. It is not the individual greatness of these saints that the Church celebrates, but their role in salvation history, a role directly connected to the Redeemer's own coming into the world.

Mary's birth lies at the confluence of the two Testaments--bringing to an end the stage of expectation and the promises and inaugurating the new times of grace and salvation in Jesus Christ. Mary, the Daughter of Zion and ideal personification of Israel, is the last and most worthy representative of the People of the Old Covenant but at the same time she is "the hope and the dawn of the whole world." With her, the elevated Daughter of Zion, after a long expectation of the promises, the times are fulfilled and a new economy is established. (Lumen Gentium 55)

The birth of Mary is ordained in particular toward her mission as Mother of the Savior. Her existence is indissolubly connected with that of Christ: it partakes of a unique plan of predestination and grace. God's mysterious plan regarding the Incarnation of the Word embraces also the Virgin who is His Mother. In this way, the Birth of Mary is inserted at the very heart of the History of Salvation. (M. Valentini, Dictionary of Mary, pp. 36-7.)

Representations of Mary's Birth in Art

Mary's birth is usually included as one panel in art series on Mary's lifestory; however, it is also a theme depicted by itself. The oldest known representation is on a 6th century diptych in Leningrad. From the very beginning, the paintings were modeled on the type used for the birth of Christ, where the mother is in a lying position. Instead of a landscape, a cave or a stable as in the birth of Christ, various types of architectural structures are depicted which represent an interior dwelling place. Ann, the mother of Mary, is lying on a couch or on a bed. Usually, servants are busy bathing the child. Starting around 980 the compositions depict three women. One very simple painting, the so-called Berlin diptych from the early 12th century, shows a servant handing Ann a bowl, while the child lays all tucked in on a little bed. These representations show the natural and joyful event of Mary's birth.

[Anne Conceiving the Virgin; Bellegambe] [Anne Conceiving the Virgin; Bellegambe]

Other works place the stress on the destiny of the child and the teachings of the faith. Pietro Lorenzetti (1342, Siena, Museum dell'Opera del Duomo) places the birth in a side room of a church. On Wolf Huber's Field Church altar, angels participate in the birth through an opening in the heavens. Albrecht Altdorfer places Mary's birth in a church with pillars surrounded by angels (1525, Munich, Alte Pinakothek). During the baroque and the rococo periods, heaven and earth unite in the paintings in happy profusion at Mary's birth.

[Birth of the Virgin (detail); Murillo]

[Birth of the Virgin (detail); Murillo]

During the later periods, especially after the 15th century, the representations of the birth of Mary highlight her destiny as the immaculate virgin, the child predestined by God's choice to bear the God-man, Jesus Christ. The words of the mystic, Mary of Agreda (1602-1665), describe well the way art would attempt to depict this birth. Mary of Agreda wrote, "Not only was the Word conceived before all these by eternal generation from the Father, but His temporal generation from the Virgin Mother full of grace, had already been decreed and conceived in the divine mind. Inasmuch as no efficacious and complete decree of this temporal generation could exist without at the same time including his Mother, such a Mother, the most holy Mary, was then and there conceived within that beautiful immensity, and her eternal record was written in the bosom of the Divinity, in order that for all the ages it should never be blotted out. She was stamped and delineated in the mind of the eternal Artificer and possessed the inseparable embraces of his love."

The Prayer of the Church

The Church prays at midday in the Liturgy of the Hours:

Today is the birthday of the holy Virgin Mary whose life illumined all the Churches.
In many cultures, the birthday of every person merits a celebration. Family and friends gather to wish the "birthday child" many happy returns. There are well-wishing, balloons, cards, cakes, candles, a favorite meal, there are gifts and jests--all the things that say, at least once a year, "You are special, there's only one of you, we are happy that you exist." So, it is for the people of God and Mary.

[Birth of the Virgin; The Hours of Catherine of Cleves]
The Byzantine Daily Worship gives us the following prayer:

[Birth of the Virgin; The Hours of Catherine of Cleves]

Come, all you faithful, let us hasten to the Virgin: for long before her conception in the womb, the one who was to be born of the stem of Jesse was destined to be the Mother of God. The one who is the treasury of virginity, the flowering Rod of Aaron, the object of the prophecies, the child of Joachim and Anne, is born today and the world is renewed in her. Through her birth, she floods the church with her splendor. O holy Temple, Vessel of the Godhead, Model of virgins and Strength of kings: in you the wondrous union of the two natures of Christ was realized. We worship Him and glorify your most pure birth, and we magnify you. (441-442)

Author: Father Johann G. Roten, S.M.


Sources: Christopher O'Donnell, At Worship with Mary; E. Sebald, "Kunstgeschichte," and L. Heiser, "Liturgie Ost," and Th. Mass-Ewerd, "Liturgie West," in Marienlexikon 2; A. Valentini, Dictionary of Mary; Jean Guitton, The Madonna.


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This page, maintained by The Marian Library/International Marian Research Institute, Dayton, Ohio 45469-1390, and created by J.C. Tierney was last modified Thursday, 09/06/2007 11:15:03 EDT by Michael P. Duricy. Please send any comments to Johann.Roten@udayton.edu.

URL for this page is http://www.udayton.edu/mary//meditations/birthday.html

Today is also the day my father Robert was born. Will you please say an Our Father, Hail Mary, and a Glory Be for the repose of his soul?

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

The Day After The Labor Day Celebration...



Labor Day marks a new year of work, renewed goals to be met with diligence and discipline.

Do you "Go to Joseph" for help during demanding times?