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Offline Binechi

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Second Sunday After Pentecost
« on: June 18, 2017, 10:38:11 AM »
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  • INSTRUCTION FOR THE SECOND SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST,
    by Leonard Goffine, 1871



    Introit: The Lord hath become my protector, and set me at large: He has saved me, because He loved me. (Ps. xvii.) I will love Thee, O Lord, my strength: the Lord is my support, my refuge, and my deliverer. Glory, &c.

    PRAYER OF THE CHURCH. Grant us, O Lord, both a constant love and fear of Thy holy name: since Thou never withdrawest Thy protection from those, whom Thou solidly groundest in Thy love. Thro.

    EPISTLE, (i. John iii. 13 - 18.) Dearly Beloved: Wonder not if the world hate you. We know that we have passed from death to life, because we love the brethren. He that loveth not, abideth in death. Whosoever hateth his brother, is a murderer. And you know that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in himself. In this we have known the charity of God, because he hath laid down his life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren. He that hath the substance of this world, and shall see his brother in need, and shut up his bowels from him: how doth the charity of God abide in him? My little children, let us not love in word, nor in tongue, but in deed, and in truth.

    EXPLANATION. People who are really pious, have always something to suffer from the wicked world, as Jesus foretold, but they do not cease to love their persecutors as their best friends, and are ready, if necessary, to give their life for their enemies, as did Christ. Thus should all Christians act; for the love of our neighbor and even of our enemies, is a universal command, a law that binds all; it is the life of the soul. Hatred deprives the soul of this life, and makes man a murderer, because hatred is the beginning of murder, and often ends in murder or homicide. By love we know the true Christians. (John xiii. 35.) St. John even considers love the certain sign of being chosen for eternal life, when he says: We know, we have passed from death to life, because we love the brethren. Alas! how few will be chosen, among the Christians of to-day, because there is so little love among them! With empty compliments, assurances of friendship, &c, love appears only in words, only on the tongue, and such idle, ephemeral, worthless love is found everywhere in this world; but love which is love in truth and reality, which shows charity to the suffering, how rare it is! and yet only to this love is promised eternal life, because it alone rests on the love of God.

    GOSPEL. (Luke iv. 16 - 24.) At That Time: Jesus spoke this parable to the Pharisees: A certain man made a great supper, and invited many, and he sent his servant at the hour of supper to say to them that were invited, that they should come, for now all things are ready. And they began all at once to make excuse. The first said to him: I have bought a farm, and must needs go out and see it: I pray thee, hold me excused. And another said: I have bought five yokes of oxen, and I go to try them: I pray thee, hold me excused. And another said: I have married a wife, and therefore I cannot come. And the servant returning told these things to his lord. Then the master of the house being angry said to his servant: Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in hither the poor, and the feeble, and the blind, and the lame.--And the servant said: Lord, it is done as thou hast commanded, and yet there is room. And the lord said to the servant: Go out into the high ways and hedges; and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled. But I say unto you, that none of those men that were invited, shall taste of my supper.


    What is to be understood by this great supper?

    The Church militant on earth, in which the true doctrine of Jesus and His most precious flesh and blood are given as food to those who belong to her, and also the Church triumphant in heaven, in which God Himself, in the beatific vision, is the nourishment given. This supper is called great, because God Himself has founded the Church; because the Church embraces heaven and earth, hence many belong and will belong to her; and because having ended the contest on earth, she will last forever in heaven. There the saints of God will enjoy the Highest Good for all eternity, and will have nothing to wish for, since all their desires will be there realized. O, what happiness it is, that we are invited even now to this supper, are even now guests, and are nourished as such here with the teachings of Christ, and with His most sacred flesh and blood.


    Who is it that prepares the supper?

    It is Christ, the God-Man, who for our benefit has not only instituted His Church, to which He has entrusted His doctrine and the Sacrament of His flesh and blood, but has gained eternal salvation for us by His passion and death, and who has, first by the prophets, who foretold Him and His divine kingdom, and afterwards through His apostles, invited us, and is ever inviting us, through the successors of the apostles, to His supper.


    Who are they who excuse themselves?

    They are principally the Jєωs who bound by pride and avarice to earthly possessions, and blinded by the pleasures of the world, did not recognize Jesus, and came not to His Church. By him who said, he had bought a farm, are meant in general those who by constant anxieties about the possession of earthly goods and the riches of this world, become indifferent to eternal salvation. By him who had bought five yokes of oxen, is to be understood that sort of busy men, who are so burdened with work and business that they find no time to work for heaven, for they even appropriate Sundays and festivals to their worldly affairs. By him who had taken a wife, and says, without ceremony, that he cannot come, the carnal, impure men are represented, who have rendered themselves by their lusts, incapable of spiritual and heavenly joys. Since all these different sorts of persons do not wish to have part in the heavenly banquet, God has excluded them and called others.


    Who are meant by the others, the poor, the feeble, the blind, and the lame, who are called after the first invitations?

    The humble and submissive Jєωs, the publicans, also the Samaritans and the gentiles, who did not reject Jesus and His doctrine as did the proud, highminded, carnal Pharisees and scribes, to whom Jesus spoke in this parable. The former faithfully received Him, entered His Church, and became participators in eternal happiness. This is daily repeated, because God excludes from the kingdom of heaven those proud, avaricious, and carnal Christians who are ever invited by His servants, the priests, to the enjoyment of holy Communion, but who reject the invitation, and, on the contrary, welcomes the poor, despised people, the penitent sinners, by separating them, through the inspirations of His grace, and by the adversities which He sends them, from love of the world. Thus, in a measure, He forces them to take part in the spiritual joys of a sincerely pious life in His Church on earth, and in the heavenly bliss of His Church in heaven.

    SUPPLICATION. I thank Thee, O most merciful Jesus, that Thou hast called me to Thy Church, permitting me so often to share in the banquet of Thy love, and that by Thy sufferings and death Thou hast obtained the joys of heaven for me. Force me to Thy pleasure, compel me to it by temporal trials, that by the use of these graces I may gain, that my place may not some day be given to another.



    MORAL LESSONS CONCERNING THE VICE OF IMPURITY
    I have taken a wife, and therefore cannot come.-- (Luke xiv. 20.)

    From this foolish excuse it would seem as if married life were an obstacle to prevent arriving at the heavenly banquet, although lawful, chaste, Christian marriage is, on the contrary, a means of eternal salvation for those to whom the gift of continency is not given. The excuse of this married person was not grounded in his station of life, but in his inordinate inclination for carnal pleasures, which renders the man who gives way to it, unfit for spiritual or heavenly things, for the sensual man perceiveth not the things that are of the Spirit of God. (i Cor.ii. 14.) Unfortunate indeed are they who suffer themselves to be carried away by their sensual lusts, who give away the priceless Jєωel of chastity and purity of heart, which makes man equal to the angels (Matt. xxii. 30.), who for a momentary enjoyment of sinful pleasure lose that white and precious garment in which chaste souls, who preserve it unstained, will shine for ever in heaven before the face of God! And what benefit does the impure man derive from the gratification of vile lust? He gains nothing but intolerable disgust when the sin is consummated, the torment of a remorseful conscience, the anger and contempt of God, and, unless he repents, eternal torments in hell; for the apostle says: Be not deceived; neither fornicators, nor adulterers, nor the effeminate shall possess the kingdom of God. (i. Cor. vi. 9, 10.)

    It is seen from the examples of the Old Law. how much God hates and abominates the sins of impurity; for why did God regret having created man? (Gen. vi. 6.) Why did He destroy all except a very few, by a universal deluge? (Gen.xi. 17.) Why did He lay the cities of Sodom and Gomorrha in ashes by a rain of fire and brimstone? (Gen. xix.) Why did He punish the two brothers, Her and Onan, by a sudden death? (Gen. xix. 38.) Why did He permit the whole tribe of Benjamin to be extirpated? (Judges xx.) Why? But because of these detestable sins of impurity. And is this vice not indeed detestable, and an object of the just wrath of God? By these sins an impure man disgraces his body which should be a member of Christ, a temple of the Holy Ghost--he disgraces his soul, the image of God, purified and purchased by the precious blood of Christ, and lowers himself beneath the animal which, devoid of intellect, follows its instinct; he weakens the power of his body and soul, and ruins his health; he loses the respect of the good, scandalizes his fellowmen, voluntarily separates himself from the communion of saints, deprives himself of the sanctifying grace of God and participation in the merits of Jesus and His saints, and, if he continues like an animal to wallow in this vice, he finally falls into such blindness and hard heartedness, that eternal truths, death, judgment, hell, and eternity no longer make any impression upon him; the most abominable crimes of impurity he considers as trifles, as human weaknesses, no sin at all. He is therefore but seldom or never converted, because the evil habit has become his second nature, which he can no longer overcome without an extraordinary grace of God. This God seldom gives, because the impure man generally despises ordinary means and graces, and therefore despairs and casts himself into the pool of eternal fire, where the worm dies not, and where with Satan and his angels the impure shall be for ever tormented.

    Suffer not yourself to be deceived, my Christian, by the words "Love and friendship", with which it is sought to cover this vice, and make it appear a weakness clinging to man. This impure love is a fire which has its origin in hell, and will in hell eternally torment the bodies in which it has prevailed. That which God so much detests and so punishes, certainly cannot be a trifle, a human weakness! Imprint deeply in your heart, that all impure thoughts, desires, looks, to which you consent, all impure words, songs, exposures, touches, jokes, and such things, are great sins which exclude you from the kingdom of heaven, into which nothing defiled can enter. Remember that he who looks at a woman with desire, has already, as Christ says, committed adultery in his heart. (Matt. v. 28.) We must, then, carefully guard against "such trifles" as the wicked world calls them, if we do not wish to expose ourselves to the greatest danger of losing our souls. Although it is certainly difficult for an impure person to be converted, yet he should not despair. God does not cast away even the greatest sinner; Jesus forgave the adulteress in the temple, and forgave and received Mary Magdalen. But such a one must make use of the proper means to prevent a relapse, and to regain the grace of God. Of these means those also may make use, who have not defiled themselves by the sin of impurity. These means are:

     1. Constant prayer. The wise king advises to this: As I knew that I could not otherwise be continent, except God gave it, I went to the Lord and besought him. (Wisd. viii. 21.) 2. Mortification of the flesh by fasting and abstinence; for Jesus says of this kind of impure spirits, that they can in no other way be cast out but by prayer and fasting. (Matt. xvii. 20.) 3. The frequent meditation on the four last things, and on the bitter sufferings of our Lord; for there is, says St. Augustine, no more powerful and effective means against the heat of lust than the death of the Redeemer. 4. The quiet consideration of the temporal and eternal evils which follow this vice, as already described. 5. The love and veneration of the Blessed Virgin who is the mother of beautiful love and refuge of all sinners, of whom St. Bernard says, "that no one has ever invoked her in his necessities without being heard." 6. The careful training of the eyes. The pious Job made a covenant with his eyes, that he would not so much as look upon a virgin. (Job. xxxi. 1.) 7. The avoidance of evil occasions, especially the avoidance of intercourse with persons of the other sex. "Remember," says St. Jerome, "that a woman drove out the inhabitants of paradise, and that you are not holier than David, not stronger than Samson, not wiser than Solomon, who all fell by wrong intercourse." 8. The avoidance of idleness; for idleness, says the proverb, is the beginning of all evil. 9. The quick driving away of all bad thoughts by often pronouncing the names of Jesus and Mary, which, as St. Alphonsus Ligouri says, have the special power of driving away wrong thoughts. 10. The frequent use of the holy Sacraments of Penance and of the Altar. This last remedy in particular, is a certain cure if we make known to our confessor, and always if possible to the same one, our weaknesses, and use precisely the remedies he prescribes. The Scripture says in regard to holy Communion, that it is the grain from which virgins spring, and the table which God has prepared against all temptations that annoy us.

    THE CHURCHY PRAYER FOR CONTINENCY. Inflame, O Lord, our veins and hearts with the fire of Thy Holy Spirit, that we may serve Thee with pure bodies, and please Thee with clean hearts. Amen.




     ___________________________________



    Prayer to Mary for the Extirpation of the Habit of Impurity


    August Mother of God, universal protectress of the human race! look down on the immense and ever-increasing ruin which hell is occasioning souls by the spread of so much impurity through the internet, movies, television, music, books and writings. For thy sweet pity's sake, pray God, Who loveth thee so well, to give us a remedy for so great an evil. Yes. dear Lady, pray; thy prayers are all-powerful with Jesus, thy Son, Whose pleasure it is to grant whatever thou dost ask.


    Prayer to obtain a Victory over Temptations


    My God, "cast me not away from Thy face" (Ps. 1. 13). I well know that Thou wilt never abandon me if I do not first abandon Thee. Alas! I fear this misfortune through the experience I already have of my own weakness. Lord, it is for Thee to give me the strength of which I am in need to withstand the assaults of hell. I ask this for the love of Jesus Christ. My Saviour, establish perpetual peace between me and Thee; establish an eternal and indissolvable union. To this end, give me Thy love. " He that loveth not, abideth in death" (1 John iii. 14). It is for Thee, O God of my soul! to deliver me from this miserable death. By that, bitter death which Thou didst endure for me, let me not again lose Thy friendship, O my Jesus! I love Thee more than all else, and hope to remain ever bound to Thee by the chains of love. I hope ever to live bound by them, both on earth and eternally in heaven.

    O Mary! thou art the mother and dispenser of perseverance; it is from thee that I ask and hope for this great gift.


    Prayer to Avoid Hell


    O my beloved Jesus and my Judge! when Thou dost judge me, for Thy mercy's sake condemn me not to hell. In hell I cannot love Thee, but must hate Thee forever; and how can I hate Thee Who art so worthy of love, and Who hast loved me so well? If Thou wilt condemn me to hell, at least grant me grace to be able to love Thee there with all my heart. This grace I do not deserve, through my sins; but if I do not deserve it, Thou hast purchased it for me with the Blood which Thou didst shed with such anguish for me upon the cross. O my Judge! inflict on me every pain, but deprive me not of the power of loving Thee. O Mother of God! behold the peril in which I stand of being condemned to be unable of loving thy Son, Who deserves an infinite love; help me; have pity on me.


    Prayer to Obtain Purity of Heart


    Saviour of the world! O my only Hope! by the merits of Thy Passion, deliver me from every impure desire which may hinder me from loving Thee as I ought. May I be stripped of all desires that savor of the world; grant that the only object of my desires may be Thyself, Who art the Sovereign Good and the only good that is worthy of love. By Thy sacred wounds heal my infirmities ; give me grace to keep far from my heart every love which is not for Thee, Who deservest all my love. O Jesus, my Love ! Thou art my hope. O sweet words! sweet consolation! Jesus, my Love, Thou art my hope!



    PRAYERS TO OBTAIN PURITY


    I. O Jesus, Son of the living God, brightness of eternal light, who from all eternity wast begotten most pure in the bosom of the eternal Father, and who in time didst will to be born of a most pure and immaculate virgin: I, thy most frail creature, with all my heart beseech thee to preserve me pure in soul and body, and to make holy purity flourish abundantly in Thy holy Church, for Thy greater glory and the salvation of the souls redeemed by Thee.

     II. O Mary ever virgin, most pure and immaculate daughter of the eternal Father, mother of the eternal Son, spouse of the Holy Ghost, august and living temple of the most blessed Trinity, lily of purity, and mirror without spot: obtain for me, O dear mother! from your good Jesus and mine, purity of soul and body; and beg of Him to make this virtue flourish more and more in all classes of the faithful.

     III. O most chaste spouse of Mary immaculate, who didst merit at the hands of God the singular honor of being the foster-father of Innocence itself, Christ Jesus, and the spotless guardian of the Virgin of virgins: obtain for me the love of Jesus, my God and Saviour, and the special protection of Mary, my most holy mother; and procure, O holy Joseph, protector of all chaste souls! that thy chosen virtue of holy purity be better loved by me and by all men.

     IV. And thou, all on fire with love for Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, model of Christian modesty and restorer in your time of piety and good morals, our special advocate and example, S. Bernardino: present our prayers to the Holy Family, and beg of them that, with piety and the fear of God, holy purity in soul and body may reign in all Christian families, and in all who are children of the holy Roman Church, our mother. Amen.

    His Holiness, Pope Pius IX., by a rescript of the Sacred Penitentiary, Feb. 27, 1862, granted to all the faithful, every time that, with at least contrite heart and devotion, they shall say these prayers to obtain holy purity:

     An Indulgence Of Three Hundred Days. A Plenary Indulgence, once a month, on any day; to all those who, having said these prayers for a month, being truly penitent, shall confess their sins and receive holy communion.






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    Offline Binechi

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    Re: Second Sunday After Pentecost
    « Reply #1 on: June 18, 2017, 02:57:42 PM »
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    Sunday within the Octave of Corpus Christi
    by Fr. Francis Xavier Weninger, 1877

     "And they began all at once to make excuses."--Luke 14.




    The Church reads today the Sunday within the Octave of Corpus Christi a Gospel, which points not only to the table which Jesus, by the institution of the most holy Sacrament, has set for the children of His Church, but also to His great desire that they may all draw from this inexhaustible fountain of all graces the merits of the Redemption, to sanctify their lives and to secure for all eternity the salvation of their souls.

    Indeed, we need not hesitate to say that the entire life of the children of the Church, if it is to be a truly Catholic life, depends on their benefiting by the presence of Christ in the most holy Sacrament, as was acknowledged so clearly and distinctly by the apostolic Christians.

    The holy Eucharist is a source of grace to us in three ways. It is, namely, first a sacrifice; secondly, a banquet; and, thirdly, the Sacrament of Christ's presence among us here upon earth. Unfortunately, so many children of the Church are inconceivably indifferent to the presence of Christ in the Most Holy Sacrament, and do not benefit by it as they should, they excuse themselves.

    Let us consider, in order, the emptiness and frivolity of these excuses. I shall speak today, especially, of the high regard we should entertain for Holy Mass, and of the fervor that should animate us to derive from the holy sacrifice great fruit for our salvation.

    Mary, thou who didst most highly esteem the presence of Christ, and most wisely benefit by it, increase in our hearts love and devotion to Jesus, especially in that character in which, as the sacrifice of the New Testament, He is offered to God upon our altars! I speak in the most holy name of Jesus, to the greater glory of God!

    The first relation of Christ to us in the Most Holy Eucharist, is that of a sacrifice. Through the transubstantiation effected at Mass, Christ sacrifices Himself always anew upon the altars of the Church to His heavenly Father, and thus becomes the sacrifice of the New Testament, which, according to the words of the Prophet Malachias, would be offered to God over the entire earth "from the rising to the setting of the sun," and until the end of time.

    Let us consider, especially, two points; namely, esteem for this holy sacrifice, and participation in its fruits. Both of these points deserve the greatest attention, as they relate to the essential part ot external worship, namely, sacrifice, and to the countless graces which flow from this sacrifice to those who share in its fruits.

    I say, first: The Most Holy Eucharist relates to the essential part of the external worship of God. The reason lies in the fundamental character of a sacrifice. The offering of sacrifice has been recognized since the creation of mankind by all nations of the earth, as an expression of devotion, and the highest and most proper way of worshiping God. Abel and Cain already offered sacrifices, and these were; surely preceded by Adam. The Patriarchs brought sacrifices, and so did Melchisedech and Job.

    But we see also among all nations countless temples and altars, and the sacrifice which was offered there was at all times regarded as the highest act of the worship of God. And when God chose from among the human races a nation to prepare for the coming of the Messiah, He gave Moses manifold and minute commands in regard to the offering of sacrifices. He glorified, by a visible sign of His presence, the temple which Solomon had built, in order to give a special sanction to the sacrifices offered there by priests, forming a cast by themselves and separated from the people.

    All these sacrifices, however, were only figures of that sacrifice which, according to the command of Christ, is offered upon our altars, and which, in overflowing fullness of graces, exceeds all its prototypes. To recognize this truth we need only think:


    First: Who it is that offers, and what is offered, and in what way and manner. He who makes the offering in the person of the priest is Christ Himself, the incarnate Son of God. As St. Ambrose rightly remarks, the words of the transubstantiation remind us of this. The priest does not say: "This is the body this is the chalice of His blood;" but he says: "This is my body this is the chalice of my blood," as if Christ Himself were speaking. Yes, indeed, it is Christ Himself, Who, through the words of transubstantiation uttered by the priest, offers the sacrifice to His heavenly Father.

    Catherine of Bologna saw one day at Mass which was read by her confessor, St. Raymond at the moment when the priest took the host in his hand, two persons standing before the altar on the same spot St. Raymond and Christ in him. She saw at the elevation of the host, in the hands of the priest, the hands of Christ with the marks of His wounds! That which St. Catherine saw with, her bodily eyes, we see at every Mass with the eyes of faith.

    And what is offered? Christ Himself lies upon the altar a victim, veiled in the sacramental species. This transubstantiation of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ is, according to St. Augustine, an infinitely greater miracle than the creation of the world, which God called into existence by the words: "Let there be light!" Then Omnipotence called finite beings into existence now the Creator Himself appears at the word of a creature of the priest. And how perfectly this sacrifice which Christ makes of Himself includes all the acts of worship which distinguish sacrifices, as, for instance, praise, adoration, thanksgiving, petition and atonement!

    The reason is, that Christ is both priest and victim, and that by the personal union in Him of the word with the human nature, all His actions have an infinite value. No pure creature nor any number of creatures could make; an offering of equal value. The praise of the angels continued from the moment of their creation through the ages of all eternity, the praise of all the saints, their adoration, their thanksgiving, their prayers and intercessions all vanish in comparison with the adoration, praise, thanks, prayers and atonement which, in one holy Mass, Christ offers to His heavenly Father.

    It is the sacrifice of the Mass that, like a sun, pierces and illumines the whole service of God, that gives our homage its highest meaning and makes it worthy of the Most High; it is to this sacrifice that all the grades of holy Orders have reference, by which the servants of the sanctuary are raised step by step to the dignity of the priesthood.

    The Church explains all that we have to consider in this matter when she says, that Mass is the same sacrifice which Christ offered for us upon the cross, with only this difference, that it is not a bloody sacrifice. What a sight, what an impulse to praise and exultation must it not be for the angels when they look down upon the most holy Sacrament, which at every moment, in some part of the earth, is raised to heaven by the oblation of priests, to give thanks and praise to God, and to reconcile us to Him through our Lord Jesus Christ!

    But if this is the case, oh how eager every child of the Church should be to assist daily, if possible, at holy Mass, and to unite his praise, adoration, prayer and atonement with the praise, adoration, prayer and atonement of Christ! How fortunate we should deem ourselves that we are permitted to assist at the offering of this sacrifice, and as the Church desires and demands of the faithful during Mass to unite our acts and prayers spiritually with those of the priest! It is for this reason that St. Peter calls the Christians a sacerdotal people, although priests alone are permitted to say Mass.

    How sad to think that so many children of the Church do not value this sacrifice, yes, do not even seem to understand it, and, therefore, do not endeavor to assist as often as possible, even daily, at Holy Mass, but must be forced by the commandment of the Church to hear Mass at least on Sundays and holydays! And even on these days, not a few stay away through shere carelessness or indolence, and others, make the slightest inconvenience a pretext for absenting themselves.

    But of those who assist at Mass, many by their willful distractions, their idle curiosity, their disrespectful behavior, offend God, even though they fulfill the command of the Church. We can maintain, on the contrary, with certainty, that those whoever they may be that endeavor to assist every day devoutly at the Mass, will lead, in other respects, too, the life of true children of God, and walk the path of salvation without hesitation.

    Hence, how becoming, how profitable would it be if out of every family in the congregation, at least one member assisted each day at Mass! Streams of heavenly grace would then pour from the altar upon the whole congregation, conveying blessings for time and eternity, through Jesus Christ our Lord! Amen!
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    If in mortal sin, the Church calls on you to repent, and by a sincere and contrite confession be reconciled to God, and then approach the blessed Eucharist, otherwise you commit a sacrilege. The only condition which our Lord requires for admission to His holy table, is to be in a state of grace, and to have a desire to receive Him.






    Prayer which may be said some days before Communion

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    O Lord Jesus Christ! whom I aspire to receive in a few days within the temple of my soul, I come to implore that Thou wilt Thyself prepare Thy destined abode, cleansing it from every stain, and enriching it with ornaments worthy of Thy presence. Grant me an increase of faith, hope, and charity; grant me true contrition, and profound humility; grant me to sigh with holy Simeon for Thy coming, and, like him, to centre in Thee alone the ardent affections and fervent desires of my heart. O Lord! whose throne is surrounded by cherubim and seraphim! whose presence is felt by all creation, whose spotless sanctity the angels themselves contemplate with awe, I acknowledge my extreme unworthiness to receive Thee; but animated with lively confidence in Thy paternal goodness, I conjure Thee to prepare me Thyself, and to supply from the treasury of Thy abundant mercies for all my deficiencies. O Thou who hast come on earth to save me, and who by Thy sufferings hast opened heaven to receive me, grant me grace to profit by all Thou hast done and endured for my salvation! Amen


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    Aspirations which whould be used the Days Preceeding Communion

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    As the wearied hart pines for the refreshing water, so does my soul thirst for Thee, O Lord!

    My soul sighs for the possession of God; when shall I come and appear before Him? Lord, I come to Thee; but how shall I prepare the way for Thee? I am not worthy that Thou shouldst enter under my roof; say but the word, and my soul shall be healed.

    How can I receive Thee into a heart so full of iniquities, and yet how can I abstain from the living Bread come down from heaven to give life to the world?

    Have pity, I beseech Thee on me, a sinner; and deign to prepare Thyself a dwelling in my heart; grant that from Thy adorable body may proceed a virtue to give strength and life to my soul.

    Prepare me for Thyself, O Jesus! and render me worthy of Thy visit; look on me, O Lord! and inflame me with Thy love; that I may run after the odor of Thy perfumes.

    Grant me humility of spirit, and pure charity, to render me worthy of participating in the blessed food of heaven.

    I wish to attract Thee by my love, and to enjoy Thy presence in the centre of my soul. O my God! my life! my all! I beseech Thee to come into my heart, and to unite me to Thyself forever.


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