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Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A, Mt 9,36-10,8
God never stops calling…
Jesus, when he saw the crowds, had compassion on them ~ Mt 9:36.
Jesus, when he saw the crowds, had compassion on them. Jesus has his eyes wide open. He sees people and the state they are in, what they are experiencing, what they are facing. He has crowds before him, but he sees the face of each one personally, individually. He sees that some are being served, others are wronged, and still others are lonely. Man cannot hide from God. He is not in a position to deceive Him; even if he pretends that he is well and that nothing bothers him, God knows better. Because he looks into the face and heart of each person, he knows what is pressing on him and what he needs.
Jesus does not look at me, driven only by simple curiosity; he does not look to catch me in something and punish me. When God looks at me, he does not act like a gendarme or a policeman. He looks at me with the eyes of a loving Mother and a loving father. He seems to know what I need most and when and how best to help me. Jesus looks and sees that the harvest is great. What is it if not the “harvest” of our human suffering, difficulties, struggles for a better life, our fight with evil, with temptations, with Satan? There are many needs. Every person, at different times in life, has many. The problem is that he, alone and by his own strength, is not able to cope. And very often he remains alone with his difficulties. He feels abandoned and therefore helpless.
The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. The number of those who would like to help another when he is in need is small. We become more and more egotistical, closed to others, and even hostile towards them. Jesus sees this and suffers. He suffers because we have so many serious difficulties that there is a “harvest” full of them, and we are less and less able to cope with them. There is more and more sadness on our faces and less and less true joy. More and more fear accumulates in our hearts, and there is less and less trust in them. We feel lost in a world that we would like to know and govern, but without God. We have known much, and we rule strongly, but because we have excluded God, the world terrifies us, and we fear tomorrow. Truly great is the “harvest” of human needs.
Pray to the Lord of the harvest,” says Jesus. He wants to help us, that is why he says “just.” He does not want to replace us in what we can do ourselves, for which we have enough strength and time. Jesus says that we should pray! So little, and yet so much. So little, but with such colossal value. Jesus speaks of this with great kindness for us. He does not mean himself or his goods. He wants to make us happy. He wants me to feel good in the world I live in, and he longs for something else: heaven, where I will be even better.
When a person prays, he does a lot. In prayer, he cooperates with God; he unites his strength with His power. He is no longer alone; God is with him. And so, when he prays, he has power over unclean spirits, casts them out, and heals all diseases and all infirmities. Only the one who prays has such exceptional power. Jesus thus reveals to us the sources of power for correcting our spiritual state. He knows perfectly what ails us, and he administers the responsible medicine for the disease. He determines his diagnosis and recommends therapy. He is the divine Physician.
He called twelve to himself – writes the inspired author. Not five, or ten, but twelve, because a year consists of 12 months. So Jesus called twelve and sent them into the world, because there is no month in any year of my life without His closeness, concern, and active love. Jesus sends a clear signal: He is with me every month, every week, and every day, in every moment of my life. Why? To heal those who are sick, to bring hope, love, and harmony to life for those who have perhaps forgotten hope, who have abandoned love or been betrayed, to reconcile us with one another, to appease passions, to calm wars, to establish peace.
Jesus also wants to cleanse lepers. How many different kinds of leprosy are there in our lives! There are words full of leprosy that undermine the dignity of others, give rise to passions, and destroy families. There are leprous glances that do not embrace others in their entirety, with love and kindness, but objectively and with anger. There is much leprosy in our lives. Jesus also comes to cast out evil spirits. He removes from our lives harmful thoughts, distorted desires, aggression, and hatred of our neighbor.
And he wants nothing but a change. He does it for free. There is more beauty in giving than in receiving. That is why God offers himself for free. In return, He expects only that I pray to Him and thank Him in prayer. And it is beautiful that Jesus does not want to act alone and does not intend to. He desires to share with others the beauty that He does. He invites men to cooperate: He chose twelve and sent them. Every day, God chooses new people, new apostles, and sends them to do good in His name, because there is a great harvest of needs. And is He calling me too? Has he already called me? Have I responded to Him? God calls different people and in different ways, but always so that they may do the same good that He does. Today, we ask that our ears and hearts be open to the voice of God when He calls and sends us to do good. Let us also pray for holy priestly vocations.
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The Heart of Jesus, an invincible force
St. Gertrude, called the Great, once saw St. John the Apostle in a vision. She asked him why he had not revealed in his Gospel the mystery of the Heart of the Lord Jesus, since it rested on his chest. The saint is said to have replied that his task was to reveal the mystery of the Incarnate Word. And when love wanes, the Lord Jesus himself will reveal the mystery of his most sacred heart to set the whole world on fire with divine love. This happened 400 years later, when the Lord Jesus said to St. Margaret Alacoque, “My Divine Heart is so filled with love for people, and for you in particular, that it can no longer hold within itself these flames of ardent love but must manifest them through you, reveal them to people, and enrich them with the precious wealth that it conceals within itself…” This Divine Heart of Jesus is capable of giving love to all people in the whole world. He forgives all who have offended, insulted, and dishonored him. To people who are afflicted by any sorrow, misery, and sin, he calls, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you strength…” (Mt 11:28). He offers his Divine love to all tired, abandoned, and desperate hearts. Therefore, we cry out to him with the Church: “Heart of Jesus, invincible power, have mercy and save those who glorify you.” In the 1930s, America waged a fight against alcoholism and its excessive spread. This fight was failing badly because the mafia that benefited from it had corrupt allies, even among the police. They blocked the effectiveness of the interventions and often even covered up the people they found. At that time, honest police officers came together and decided to enforce the law, rather than succumb to bribery or threats. Many of them paid with their lives, but they did not give in. To this day, their memory has a beautiful name: the incorruptible. The Divine Savior, in His goodness, offered a magnificent promise and blessing for all classes. The “Twelve Promises of the Heart of Jesus” is a gift of the Heart of Christ, expressing Jesus’ undoubted will to pour out the immense wealth of His heart on all who worship Him. St. Gertrude, whom the Savior chose as the confidant of His Divine Heart, did not live long on this earth, but she did so much that she deserved heaven. She excelled above all in fulfilling the duties of her profession. She was fueled by love for God, which she knew how to transfer to love for all. Let us not be afraid to approach this source either. If we look with trust to the Divine Heart of Jesus, we too will be not only incorruptible but also invincible. St. Paul was already aware of this truth when he wrote, “If God is for us, who can be against us?” (Rom 8:31).
Wilhelm Busch (in his book Jesus Our Destiny) cites a letter from a young Christian soldier who fell in Russia during World War II. The letter reads something like this: It is terrible all around us! When the Russians fire Katyushas, panic comes over us all. And the cold! And the snow! Terrible! But I am not afraid at all. Even if I should fall, it will be wonderful: then I will be one in glory. There the fighting ends – I will see my Lord face to face, and his glory will surround me. I have nothing against falling here. St. Gertrude of Helfa, called the Great, a virgin, was born in Eisleben, Thuringia, in 1256. As a little girl, she was accepted into the Cistercian monastery in Helfa. A deep Eucharistic piety distinguished her.
In her writings, we find obvious roots of reverence for the Sacred Heart of Jesus. She died on November 17, 1301. He fell shortly afterward. He was not afraid of death either, because he knew Jesus, who provides the sure hope of eternal life! The psalmist was already aware of this when he wrote, “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore, we will not fear, even if the earth shakes and the mountains fall into the depths of the sea. (Ps 45:2-3). Therefore, we too, aware that our God is “our refuge” (Ps 46:8; 12), our “protection” (Ps 58:10) and our “protector” (Ps 58:18), can confidently cry out with the Church: “O mighty Lord, be always with us, for we have no other helper in tribulation besides you. O mighty Lord, remain with us!” (Eucharistic Devotion II).
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St.Barnabas
Position: apostle
Death: around AD 61
Patron: weavers, coopers, of Milan and Florence; protector against disputes, falling stones, hail, and sadness
Attributes: stoning, olive branch, sometimes a book
BIOGRAPHY
He arrived in Jerusalem to study the Old Testament. There, he also came to know the law of Jesus Christ and joined his disciples. He sold his property and gave the money to the apostles to distribute to poor believers. He was full of the Holy Spirit and faith. He took Paul in after his conversion and introduced him to the apostles. He preached the Gospel in Antioch, from which he accompanied Paul on his first apostolic journey and, with him, founded Christian communities. He took part in the Council of Jerusalem around AD 50 and spoke there immediately after Peter. He then left with Mark for his native island of Cyprus, where, according to oral tradition, he was stoned by the Jews in AD 60–62 and then perhaps burned.
BIOGRAPHY FOR MEDITATION
WE MUST GO THROUGH MANY TRIALS BEFORE ENTERING THE KINGDOM OF GOD (Acts 14:22).
He came from a Jewish Levitical family on the island of Cyprus, and because he worked closely with the apostles and his activity was very significant in the early church, he is given the title of apostle. His original name was Joseph, and the name Barnabas, meaning “Son of Encouragement,” was given to him by the apostles because of his character and his influence on those around him. He likely came to Jerusalem for education. According to some, he was among the 72 disciples mentioned in the Gospel, but this is nowhere documented and is regarded only as a conjecture. Besides the gift of encouragement, he is said to have had the charisma of clairvoyance.
We read about him more often in the Acts of the Apostles, which introduces him as early as chapter 4. It also says there that “he had a field, sold it, brought the money and laid it at the apostles’ feet” (Acts 4:37). We can say that he then became one of the greatest missionaries. Acts further says of him: “He was a good man, full of the Holy Spirit and of faith, and a great many people were brought to the Lord” (Acts 11:24). His first place of ministry is Antioch, where believers who had fled from Jerusalem began spreading the faith, and the representatives of the Jerusalem church sent Barnabas there with confidence to that Syrian metropolis. He went to Tarsus to fetch the converted Saul, for whom he had earlier interceded with the apostles, and brought him with him. In Antioch, they proclaimed the good news and taught a great many people for a whole year, as written in Acts.
From Jerusalem, prophets came to Antioch, including Agabus, who, under the influence of the Holy Spirit, foretold a worldwide famine. Because of this, the believers in Antioch sent a collection through their two missionaries to the church leaders in Jerusalem. After completing their task, they returned with John, who called Mark. They apparently did not stay long in Antioch because Acts chapter 13 says that the Holy Spirit sent them on further missionary work to Seleucia and, from there, to Cyprus. They proclaimed the Word of God in Salamis, then traveled across the island to Paphos, where they had a conflict with a sorcerer. After defeating him, Paul took the lead, and even in Scripture, Paul’s name is thereafter placed before Barnabas’s. Perhaps in this context Barnabas’s virtue of humility is emphasized. The change in precedence bothered only Mark, who returned from Pamphylia, while the other two continued together through the Taurus Mountains to Pisidia and Iconium. It was difficult to preach the Gospel, with successes, opposition, and persecution.
In the Lycaonian city of Lystra, they also experienced a curious event: after healing a disabled person, the inhabitants began to regard Barnabas, the older and more majestic one, as the god Zeus, and Paul, the chief speaker, as Hermes, the messenger of the gods. Both had to resist this strongly, for the priest of Zeus’s temple brought them to the gate, garlanded with bulls, and wanted to offer sacrifice to the apostles together with the people. The two tore their clothes and cried out: “We too are only mortal men like you. We are bringing you good news, so that you may turn from these worthless things to the living God …” (Acts 14:15). Then the Jews arrived, having already persecuted the apostles in the previous cities, and persuaded the local people to stone Paul. After reaching Derbe, they returned from the first missionary journey through Lystra, Iconium, and Pisidian Antioch. Everywhere they encouraged the disciples and said to them: “We must go through many trials before entering the kingdom of God” (Acts 14:22). The appointment of elders was apparently in practice the ordination of priests, or possibly bishops, who led the Christian communities after the apostles left.
They returned to Antioch around AD 48. There, the peace was disturbed by people converted from Judaism, who wanted believers to submit also to circumcision. Barnabas and Paul opposed these demands, but that was not enough. Messengers were sent with them to the apostles in Jerusalem. In Jerusalem, after their arrival, the apostolic council assembled and finally decided that those converted from paganism need not be forced to observe the Mosaic law with circumcision. The council’s decision was then accepted in Antioch, and the community continued to flourish.
Paul decided to undertake a second apostolic journey through the churches of Asia Minor. He invited Barnabas again, but Barnabas wanted to go only with his cousin Mark, whom Paul rejected. They did not agree, and Barnabas left with Mark for Cyprus, while Silas went with Paul in AD 50. The apostles’ disagreement was not permanent, but it teaches us how personal reasons can disrupt even the relationship of people of character with the highest ideals.
In the prison epistles, Paul mentions Barnabas positively (cf. Col 4:10–11; Phlm 24) as his helper (2 Tim 4:11). From the mention in the First Letter to the Corinthians: “Or is it only I and Barnabas who are obliged to earn our living?” (1 Cor 9:6), it follows that before AD 57, they were again working together. Barnabas was known to the Corinthian communities.
Many details about Barnabas’s fate are missing. Historians, however, consider it certain that he preached the Gospel not only in Cyprus but also in Greece. Some later biographies also name Italy as a place of his ministry, which historians strongly doubt. Barnabas likely died a martyr’s death, according to an old tradition, by stoning and burning in Salamis near Famagusta on Cyprus, where his tomb is also located.
His relics were divided several times. They are said to be in some cities in Italy, as well as Cologne and Andechs in Germany, Prague, Toulouse, and Namur.
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Jesus did not come to abolish the law.
In ancient times, under the old regime, the only real law was the king’s will. He possessed all the power, and therefore it was said: if the king wants it, the law wants it. The current uncrowned “kings”—the powerful, the rich, the solvent— take it much more personally. They have well-paid lawyers and judges who always help them beat the system. In addition, these “self-crowned” brazenly laugh in the face of anyone normal. Normal is someone who respects rules, regulations, and laws. The current situation is even more chaotic.
Honoré de Balzac put it aptly: Laws are like spider webs; big flies fly through, but small ones get caught. This approach is what makes current legislation live at a high level. Those who should protect man and his uniqueness also do very well. The law is supposed to be the same for everyone, but in reality, its application remains highly arbitrary, especially in many democratic countries today. It is comforting to know that in Christ’s kingdom, things will be different.
Jesus explains the relationship between God’s moral principles, the Mosaic Law, and the traditions. Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them, but to fulfill them. The Law and the Prophets” is a term that refers to all the teachings contained in the Old Testament. Jesus confirms the authority of Scripture and at the same time explains how to interpret and apply it now that he has come to offer the Jews the restoration of the Davidic kingdom on earth. One fairly widespread idea is that Jesus’ commandments differed from those of Moses. On the contrary, Jesus categorically affirmed his submission to all the Scriptures that existed in his time, the Old Testament.
A contemporary exegete wrote, “Why then do we say that he came to fulfill the law? Look: the fruit does not destroy the flower. Spring awakens all nature to life. Soon, everything will be green. Seedlings will grow in the gardens, and trees will turn green. I will only mention strawberries and cherries. We do not have them in the garden only because of the beautiful flowers. We are waiting for delicious, sweet strawberries and cherries.
These delicious delicacies do not destroy the flower, but they fulfill it. It all depends on what we mean by the term “fulfillment.” It is clear that if we mean only a literal adaptation to the law, then Jesus did not come to fulfill it. However, if we mean fulfillment as bringing something to perfection, then the Messiah came to fulfill the law of Moses. And the term “fulfillment” is precisely intended to refute the misconceptions of those who might mistake this fulfillment for abrogation, denial, or betrayal. It can be paraphrased as if Jesus said, “The fruit does not destroy the flower but fills it, completes it”. Similarly, we are led to understand that the Good News of Jesus Christ does not abolish Judaism but fulfills it, perfects it, and leads to its full realization.
Therefore, according to Jesus, fulfilling the Law that commands “you shall not kill” is insufficient. We must also eliminate aggression, contempt for others, insults, and revenge from our lives. Certainly, those who do not kill fulfill the Law, but if they remain violent, God, who desires to build a more human life with us, does not yet reign in their hearts. According to some observers, a new language is spreading in today’s society that reflects increased aggression. Insulting insults, uttered with the sole aim of humiliating, belittling, or hurting, are increasingly common. These words stem from rejection, resentment, hatred, or the desire for revenge.
On the other hand, conversations are often full of unfair words that express condemnation and sow suspicion. Words spoken without love and respect poison coexistence and cause harm. Words that almost always stem from irritation, pettiness, or baseness. Such behavior is not just a social phenomenon. It is also a serious problem within the Church. Pope Francis was alarmed to see divisions, conflicts, and confrontations of “Christians at war with other Christians.” This state of affairs is so contrary to the Gospel that he felt compelled to issue an urgent appeal: “No to war among us”! In this Lenten season, let us ask for the grace to listen and do what Jesus tells us!
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St. Ephrem the Syrian
St. Ephrem the Syrian
Ephrem the Syrian, deacon and doctor of the Church
June 9, non-binding commemoration
Position: deacon and doctor of the church
Death: 378
Attributes: deacon, book, pillar
CURRICULUM VITAE
He came from Nisibis in Mesopotamia, where he became a deacon and a renowned teacher. From about 363, he continued his vocation in Edessa, where he founded a theological school.
Through prayer, self-denial, reading the Holy Scriptures, and spiritual education, he reached Christian perfection. He showed sinners the path of truth, as a preacher, he defended the faith against heretics, and showed them deeds of love. He was gentle, kind, and a worshipper of the Virgin Mary. He left behind many writings and hymns, all written in Syriac.
CV FOR MEDITATION
TOOL OF GOD
He was born around 306 in Nisibis, now called Nusabin, in Turkey, between the upper reaches of the Euphrates and Tigris. His mother is said to have been a Christian, while his father was an active pagan. Reports of Ephrem’s youth vary and are unreliable, from a good upbringing by his mother through a sinful youth to his expulsion by his father after he became a Christian. Some mention his capricious youth and his innocent imprisonment. He is said to have renewed his spiritual life and strengthened his faith after learning about God’s providence, which he had doubted. His religious upbringing and education are probably due to the prayers of his mother and the Bishop of Nisibis, James, whom Ephrem later remembered with great respect. According to some accounts, he worked in Edessa from the age of 18 and then returned to his hometown to help people in need.
He was interested in Greek philosophy and focused mainly on theology. He wanted to impart theological training to ordinary people and lead them to piety. He is said to have also prepared for his work by leading a hermit’s life and meditating on the texts of Holy Scripture.
He became a deacon to preach the gospel better, and, out of humility, he remained one throughout his life. He wanted to be only an instrument. In 325, he was with his bishop at the Council of Nicaea. In Nisibis, he then became the administrator of a school. As a deacon, he taught, preached, wrote extensively, and was involved in charity. During the time of doctrinal disputes, he zealously defended the true faith. His exceptional learning led the believers and local clergy to want to make him a bishop. At that time, he is said to have begun feigning madness to avoid the rank skillfully.
When Nisibis fell under Persian rule in 363, or shortly thereafter, Ephrem and part of the population fled westward to Edessa (present-day Urfa in southeastern Turkey). This was a city with a larger church community, and Ephrem founded a theological school there, taught, continued his diaconal ministry, and lived in asceticism. He devoted much of the night to prayer and the day to zealous apostolate.
The most frequent topics of his sermons were said to be the last things of man. He also excelled as a writer. He wrote commentaries on the Holy Scriptures and on doctrinal and moral writings and composed church poems and songs. He honored and sang the praises of the Virgin Mary, through whom he hoped to reach the kingdom of heaven. He called her the Reconciliator between heaven and earth, and he himself was called the “harp of the Holy Spirit” or the “harp of God” for the hymns he wrote. Ephrem excelled as an instrument of God in his other writings and throughout his life as a deacon. He also showed us an example of fervent love and respect for the Mother of God, the Church, and all people.
During the severe famine of 372, Ephrem, as a deacon, organized aid to the affected population and treated the plague patients. His life and work overflowed with love for Christ and Mary. He died at about 67, according to the new martyrology, in 378, as Baronius also writes, and there is a reference to the same year that Valencius also died.
The year 378 mentioned in the Martyrology already appears in the Calendarium Romanum (from 1969) – see pp. 94 and 126. This is not an error, but only an uncertainty in determining the year due to a discrepancy between the breviary and other sources. The year 373 mentioned there is based on the so-called Edessa Chronicle, which has become authoritative for most believers. Other working groups prepared the post-conciliar revision of the breviary texts. In conclusion, it can be stated that there is no complete certainty whether Ephrem died in 378 or 373.
St. Ephrem was included in the Roman Missal by Benedict XV, who honored him with the title of Doctor of the Church on October 5, 1920.
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The Beatitudes are the navigators of Christian life
The Beatitudes are the navigators of Christian life … Following and living the Beatitudes, which, like a “navigator,” show the right path in life. Christians have a clear signpost on the path of faith, so they do not get lost. Ignoring the direction indicated by the Beatitudes can mean stumbling on three steps, which are the idols of egoism, the idolatry of money, and the idolatry of vanity, that is, the satiety of a heart that enjoys its satisfaction while ignoring others. This is the new law, what we call the ‘Beatles.’ It is the new law of the Lord for us. They are a guide, a guide on the path; they are the navigators of the Christian life. It is here that we see, on this path, according to this navigator’s indicators, how we can move forward in our Christian life. In the text of the Beatitudes according to St. Luke (Luke 6:17-26), Jesus exclaims “woe” four times: woe to the rich, woe to those who are full, woe to those who laugh, and woe to those whom all men praise. Riches are beneficial. What causes evil is attachment to riches, which becomes a kind of idolatry. This is the anti-law; it is a mistaken navigator. Interestingly, these three steps lead to destruction, just as the Beatitudes lead forward in life. And these three steps that lead to destruction are attached to riches so that I lack nothing; vanity, to be praised by all: everyone speaks well of me, I feel important, too much incense… and I think of myself as righteous—not like this one or that one… Let us think of the parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector: ‘I thank you that I am not like this one…’. ‘But I thank you, Lord, that I am a good Catholic, not like my neighbor, my neighbor…’. It happens every day… The second was vanity, and the third is pride, which is satiety, that laughter that closes the heart. Among all the Beatitudes, there is one that may not be key but which can help us to reflect on the Christian life: “Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.” Jesus says of himself, ‘Learn from me, for I am meek in heart,’ because I am meek and humble in heart. Silence is a way of life that brings us so much closer to Jesus. On the other hand, the opposite attitude always causes hostility and war, and so many terrible things happen. But silence, the silence of the heart, which is wisdom, is something else. It is a depth of understanding of God’s greatness and adoration.
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St.Norbert of Xanten
| Position: | founder of the order, Archbishop OPraem |
| Death: | 1134 |
| Patron: | Bohemia; Premonstratensians; invoked as an aid for a good birth |
| Attributes: | bishop, devil, chalice or monstrance, spider, premonstrate |
CURRICULUM VITAE
He came from the Middle Rhine. Awakened from a frivolous life, he began to live in strict austerity, prayer, and study. Devoted to the apostolate, he brought people to Christ, reconciled hostile cities, and excelled in reverence for the Blessed Sacrament. In France, in the Premontré Valley, he founded a Premonstratensian monastery. He became the Archbishop of Magdeburg, a reformer of spiritual life. His poverty, humility, zeal, and fearlessness made him enemies. He called for the spread of faith among the Slavs. When his remains were placed in Prague, he was included among the Czech patrons.
CV FOR MEDITATION
THE SAINT OF THE EUCHARIST
He was born in the German city of Xanten, near the Dutch border. He belonged to the noble family of the Lords of Gennep. His parents, Herbert and Hedwig, intended him for a spiritual career, as the family inheritance was destined for his older brother.
His father is mentioned as the administrator of Xanten Castle, the region and the property of the Cologne Archbishopric. There is talk of his activities in the archbishop’s service. At a very young age, Norbert received a canon position in the chapter of Saint Victor in Xanten, associated with a larger pension, then called a benefice in church law. He also soon ranked among the educated of his time. He had talent, excelled in public speaking, and is said to have applied it particularly in diplomacy. The path of the priesthood did not appeal to him. As a canon, he accepted subdeacon ordination but lived the secular life of the rich. He left the archbishop’s curia for the court of Emperor Henry V, who appreciated his skillful conduct and appointed him his secretary and, probably, also his chaplain. For 9 years, he traveled everywhere with the emperor. In 1111, they went to Rome. The emperor decided to force the Pope to confirm the investiture of bishops. Pope Paschal II. was captured, released, and crowned Henry according to his wishes. Norbert was displeased with the emperor’s actions and immediately begged the pope for forgiveness. The following year, the pope himself condemned his actions as an act of weakness. Norbert remained with the emperor until he was about 30 years old, although their relationship cooled because his conscience troubled him. Therefore, in 1113, he also refused the emperor’s offer of the bishopric of Cambrai. After leaving the emperor, who had been excommunicated for his actions, Norbert began to change.
In 1115, he was traveling on horseback to Wreden in Westphalia and was caught in a storm. Stunned by lightning, he fell from his horse. When he woke up, he perceived it as God’s call to complete conversion. He accepted the call, renounced comfort and worldly interests, and went to the Benedictine monastery of St. Michael in Siegburg. There, he decided to live a life of penance and priestly service. After the necessary preparation, he received priestly ordination in December and returned to the monastery for further preparation. On Holmdun 1116, he celebrated his primogeniture in Cologne. At it, he said: “What blindness to desire fame that will pass, to seek wealth that impoverishes the soul, and to love a world in which there is no joy without thorns and in which the soul finds no peace.” He also called on secular clergy to convert and was called a hypocrite. He spoke to his fellow canons, calling them to the apostolate. However, they despised him so much that they hired a cleric who spat in his face.
Norbert lived in seclusion for three more years, with deep reverence for the Eucharist, and received formation for his future apostolate. He renounced his canonry and distributed his property. Pope Gelasius II, who was in exile in France, sought approval and blessing for his work as an apostolic missionary. His annual mission was in France, Belgium, and the Rhineland. He tried to lead his listeners to reconciliation with God and with all people. He taught about the need for the sacraments, about Christian love, and about the hope of eternal salvation. Some disciples joined him, and the need for a residence became ever greater.
After the death of Gelasius II, Calixtus II ascended the throne, and during his visit to Reims, Norbert asked him to reconfirm his activities. The Pope, at the instigation of the Bishop of Laon, recommended that he work in his diocese in the north of France. Norbert therefore wanted to reform Laon Abbey, but he was unsuccessful. In the spring of 1120, he settled with his followers in the Premontré Valley and founded a new community there. He thus gave rise to a new order of religious canons, who began to be called Premonstratensians after the place of their origin. They took over the religious statutes from St. Augustine, who, according to legend, appeared to Norbert. The main focus of the order was on the most perfect pastoral service in parishes, with an emphasis on the dignified celebration of divine services and the liturgical education of the faithful. The Premonstratensian garment became a white tunic with a scapular and a cingulum.
Christmas Eve 1121, when Norbert took his famous religious vows, is often cited as the date of the order’s founding. Perhaps that is why the oldest depiction of St. Norbert shows him with the Virgin Mary holding the baby Jesus. The paintings in which the Virgin Mary hands over the vows to the Child Jesus do not deviate from this theme either. We find the Marian journey to Jesus and the extraordinary reverence for the Eucharist in the lives of important saints to be a clear foundation for the holiness we should follow them.
For the new church that they built in Premontré, Norbert went to Cologne to obtain the relics of the holy martyrs. There, after a night prayer, he announced where one of the companions of St. Ursula and St. Gereon, a fellow soldier of St. Maurice, was buried. The unexpectedly found relics were solemnly transferred to Premontré.
According to the oldest biography, a woman came to Norbert for advice because of infertility with her husband, from whom she would rather separate than be childless. Norbert freed her from wrong desires, encouraged her with the word of God, and predicted to her the imminent birth of a son and then other children, which came true. This story is connected to the effective invocation of St. Norbert, requesting his intercession for mothers expecting a child. The Premonstratensian sisters of Doksan also include expectant mothers in their contemporary intercessory prayers.
In 1124, the Bishop of Cambrai summoned Norbert to Antwerp, Belgium, to help combat the heretical teachings of Tanchelm, who presented himself as a zealous reformer. While criticizing the disorderly life of the clergy, he denied the church hierarchy and the sacraments, especially the Eucharist. This led to painful disputes. Norbert was able to convince them of the church’s true teachings and establish peace.
Caring for the community that Norbert founded was not the goal of his life, even when he returned to Premontré from his apostolic journeys. In 1126, during a visit to Rome, he achieved confirmation of the Premonstratensian order. In the same year, he was appointed Archbishop of Magdeburg in what is now Germany. At the insistence of his superiors, he accepted the service in July, after his episcopal ordination. He entered his new cathedral, where he was solemnly welcomed, barefoot and in monastic garb. He retained his humility and ascetic lifestyle; therefore, he did not lead a court, as was customary for episcopal dignitaries. He began the renewal of spiritual life with the priests and by renovating the monasteries. To fully utilize his new position, he handed over leadership of the monastery at Premontré to Hugo de Fosses.
Norbert also reclaimed church property seized by the nobility. The unauthorized holders joined forces with rebellious priests. They incited the people against Norbert, who believed that he wanted to steal the relics of saints from the church altars for his order. He was attacked right in the cathedral, and the servant who tried to protect him was seriously wounded. The imperial administrator of the city intervened to protect Norbert, while the orthodox priests displayed the supposedly stolen relics to the rebels. The curse supposedly cooled the rebels’ heads, and they then begged for forgiveness.
Norbert also invited his spiritual sons to promote the reforms. As a zealous archbishop, he supported the spread of the Gospel in the eastern regions, where Christianity was not yet rooted. The movement he spread and his lifelong apostolic work are described as Eucharistic in nature.
In 1130-32, he advocated recognizing Pope Innocent II against the illegitimate Anacletus, especially at the court of Emperor Lothair II, whom he accompanied to Rome, where he was instrumental in resolving some delicate matters.
The hard life and excessive effort exhausted the 50-year-old archbishop, and on Maundy Thursday in 1134, he celebrated his last Holy Mass with great fervor. He then fell seriously ill, and he succumbed on June 6.
The cathedral chapter and the Premonstratensians were interested in his body, and the emperor decided in their favor. They buried him in the Church of the Virgin Mary. He was canonized by Gregory XIII in 1582. At that time, Protestantism was spreading throughout northern Europe, and Protestants occupied the Premonstratensian church. Catholic monasteries, therefore, sought the saint’s remains. After difficult negotiations, at the beginning of 1627, Abbot Questenberg managed to obtain precious relics for the Strahov Monastery in Prague.
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Ten Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A Mt 9,9-13
God sees even what people do—for the youth … It is very easy to judge people, to recognize someone as bad, as unworthy. It is very easy to look down on someone because we consider ourselves better, holier, or more religious. In fact, attitudes are also criticized by Jesus in today’s Gospel.
The year is 1907. Klodzko. A young girl, Mária, gave birth to an illegitimate child. She named him Gerard. The girl is extremely brave. Mária heard disparaging remarks more than once. She felt unspeakably alone. She avoided public places for fear of being scorned. His son was his whole world, his whole strength. Hope. When Gerard was little, a neighbor stopped him in the street and said, “You will be nothing. You are the fruit of sin…” Gerard was too young to understand. When he returned home, he asked, “Mom, what does it mean that I am the fruit of sin?” The woman hugged the child and said, “All people are the fruit of God’s love. Everyone! Without exception. My little Gerard is also the fruit of God’s love. Love is the hardest of all the arts in the world. But it is the only right way. Remember! Love people. Love them despite everything…”
Years passed, and the boy developed. The people around him, consciously or unconsciously, tried to make him a second-class person. It was difficult for him to love people, but he knew and felt that his mother loved him, and he trusted her words to love above all else. He felt in his heart that God was calling him to the priesthood. He enrolled in a seminary in Wrocław. And then the terrible blow—Father Rector, a very good-hearted person, tells him that according to the then Code of Canon Law, candidates of non-marital origin cannot even be admitted to the seminary. That, according to the Law, he is actually of illegitimate origin. And then a broken Gerard asked: “According to the Law, yes. And according to God and you, Father Rector?” The rector decided to give him a chance.
Before the ordination, the Rector wrote a letter to Rome requesting that Gerard be ordained. The Apostolic See gave its consent. After his ordination, he was sent to the parish of Czermna near Kudlow Zdroj. They quickly recognized him as a sacrificial priest. The year 1933 came. Hitler came to power. Priest Gerard was banned from meeting young people. In 1939, in one sermon, he said: “He who tears faith in Christ from the hearts of the youth is a criminal”. A few hours later, he was arrested and put in prison in Kłodzko. They beat him, tortured him, and humiliated him. In prison, he wrote: “They took everything from me, all my rank, my health, but they didn’t take the fact that I’m a child of God and that I’m His priest, no one will take that away from me.” He was taken to the Dachau concentration camp. There he wrote, “The Lord God put me here as a shepherd, because the sheep are here, that’s why I’m here. It’s not by chance that I’m here. The shepherd does not leave the lost sheep in the camp”. He died of hunger and exhaustion in 1942.
And it might seem that with the end of his life, his mission has ended. We might have the impression that evil has managed to sanctify the 35-year-old priest. And yet no. During the resettlement of the civilian population from Silesia to Germany, several German mercenaries enter the house of a young woman. They want to throw her out to take up residence and resettle her in the depths of Germany. But before that, they intend to hurt her, rape her, and humiliate her. And suddenly, one of the soldiers stops, looks at the wall in amazement, and asks, “Where did you get that picture?” Frightened, she replies: “That’s our chaplain, Priest Gerard”. The German, clearly excited, says: “I saw him in the Dachau camp. I have never met such a man, such a man of such faith and such love…” Telling his colleagues to let the girl go, he takes a picture from the wall and gives it to the girl, saying, “Take it, let it guard you”. He pushes the image into the girl’s hands and says, “The good shepherd does not abandon his sheep even after death. Pack your things and run quickly from the flock.” 14. IX. In 2010, Pope Benedict XVI proclaimed priest Gerhard Hirschfelder blessed.
This is the true story of a boy who was despised by others, like the Pharisees in today’s Gospel. And Jesus looks at it completely differently. His vision penetrates a person to the bone; he sees what is best hidden in the heart. And actually, that boy very realistically puts the Gospel teaching of Jesus into his life: “I want mercy rather than sacrifice.” Mercy was a defining characteristic of his life and ministry as a priest. Mercy permeated everything he did. And that counted most with God.
Lord Jesus shows once again that there are no lost people for God, that there are no less important people for God. Everyone, even the smallest, invisible one, has a wonderful value to Him. That value is determined by the rank we have received from God as His children. And that rank is independent of us. She is simply in us. God always recognizes his child in us. And the second thing that determines our rank is mercy, because God wants mercy rather than sacrifice. And that mercy is already our role, which the Lord God has entrusted to us for the rest of our lives. Some nice people sometimes can’t deal with a kind of weakness, a kind of sin that brings them down again and again and makes them dirty. And suffering for that sin, they immediately do some act of mercy. The Church gives us several such deeds for the soul and the body. A few vitamins to get your fill of. That is a nice and wise attitude. After the fall, immediately perform some act of mercy, because God wants mercy rather than sacrifice.
God has inscribed in us an amazing dignity independent of how others see us. Let us add mercy to that rank, because God prefers mercy to sacrifice…
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