Monday, March 16, 2009

The Zodiac and the Gospels


Lost Constellation Testifies of Christ
by John P. Pratt

Reprinted from Meridian Magazine (14 Jul 2004)©2004 by John P. Pratt. All rights Reserved.
http://www.johnpratt.com/items/docs/lds/meridian/2004/prince.html

Ancient Egyptians and Persians provide enough clues to restore a lost constellation, testifying of the virgin birth of Jesus Christ.
The Bible tells us that God named and numbered the stars (Psalms 147:4, Isaiah 40:26), and the Book of Enoch testifies that an angel revealed the figures of the constellations in the stars to the ancient prophet Enoch.[1] Even though those constellations were later worshipped by many pagans, there is much evidence that such was a perversion of what was originally a revelation about the gospel.
Serpent Bearer crushes the head of the Scorpion. Van Keulen's 1709 rendition.A century and a half ago, Frances Rolleston, a scholar of ancient languages and traditions, pieced together the basic outline of just how the constellations testify of Christ. She pointed out how most ancient historians attributed the origin of the constellations either to Enoch or to Seth, the son of Adam. Her work Mazzaroth, or the Constellations went unnoticed for two decades until it was popularized by two Bible scholars, Joseph Seiss in the Americas and Ethelbert Bullinger in Great Britain. Even so, very few people today are aware of this theory, and it is taught in introductory astronomy classes that the constellations resulted from the fantasies of shepherds who probably spent their daylight hours finding pictures in the clouds. After another century elapsed, her book has finally been republished, but the other two books are also still available and are highly recommended to the interested reader as an introduction to the subject. For those new to the theory, on my website is posted a summary of their work and also responses to criticisms,[2] but the details of the theory are not needed to understand this article. Many other books and presentations have come forth summarizing the topic, but only minor additions have been added to Rolleston's original work.
Because of certain weaknesses in Rolleston's methods[3] and the subjectivity of the entire concept, I have been hesitant to refer to her work much my articles.[4] The part of her work which seems to me clearly to be true is where famous scenes from the gospel are illustrated, such as the Ram breaking the Bands of Death, and the many heroes who are crushing the heads of serpentine monsters (Gen. 3:15).[5] She bases many of her conclusions on the Persian version of the constellations preserved by Albumazar, an Arab astronomer of about AD 850. He described the 48 original constellations, listed in twelve groups of four, in order progressing around the zodiac. The zodiac is the set of 12 constellations through which the sun, moon and planets all appear to move. Each of those twelve is associated with three other nearby constellations. Thus, the 12 zodiac constellations and their 36 associates make up a numbered and well-ordered set of 48 constellations. But just how sure are we that we know exactly what those constellations are?

1. Lost ConstellationRolleston relied heavily on Albumazar's list of constellations, but that list doesn't exactly match our modern list. In about AD 150, the Greek astronomer Ptolemy not only listed 48 constellations, he also measured the exact positions in the sky of every star in each constellation, noting just where it fit into the figure. Our modern constellations are virtually identical to Ptolemy's, with another 40 added to cover the entire sky, bringing the modern total to 88. Figure 1 shows a celestial map made from Ptolemy's precise star map, including several unfigured stars which he listed.
Figure 1. Ancient Greek Northern Constellations
How does our set of Greek constellations from Ptolemy compare to the Persian list from Albumazar? It turns out they mostly agree on 45 of the constellations, but disagree on three.[6] One mentioned by Albumazar is entirely missing, and had apparently been lost since before the time of the ancient Greeks. Keep in mind that Enoch lived about 3,000 years before the Greeks, so it is amazing that so many of the constellations have remained intact. It is mostly to the Egyptians to whom we owe the debt of thanks for preserving the treasured pictures for us today. Tradition states that Abraham delivered them to Egypt about 2000 BC and it is said that the Greek scholar Eudoxus brought an Egyptian celestial globe (a globe with a map of the stars on it) to Greece about 300 BC. The work of Eudoxus has been partially preserved in verse by the Greek poet Aratus, who describes each constellation in some detail. That poem is now our primary source of information on the actual Greek figures.[7]
So to me it is amazing that most of the constellations have come down to us intact from about 2700 BC, the time at which science has determined that they were first drawn.[8] If they truly do come from Enoch, who lived about that very time, then to me it is evidence that they were preserved for us by the hand of God. What else do we have today that dates back to before the Great Flood?
Now let us see how enough clues have been preserved by the ancient Persians and Egyptians for us to be able to restore this lost constellation.

1.1 Persian DescriptionFortunately, Albumazar gives us a lot of detail about the constellation, including its location and what the figure looked like, and even what it represented.
Location. First, we know the location because it was the first constellation associated with the Virgin (Virgo). That means that it would have been above the head of Virgo, the first part of that zodiac constellation. What constellation was at that position on the Greek map? Look at Figure 1, in the area near the top in front of the face of the winged virgin, near where she seems to be pointing. Notice the large area with no constellation, even though five stars are bright enough for Ptolemy to have measured there. That is the very area of the missing constellation.
Description. Fortunately, the Persians also describe the constellation and even give its interpretation. Rolleston translates Albumazar's description of the constellation:
"Virgo is a sign of two parts and three forms. There arises in the first decan, as the Persians, Chaldeans, and Egyptians, the two Hermes and Ascalius teach, a young woman, whose Persian name translated into Arabic is Adrenedefa, a pure and immaculate virgin, holding in the hand two ears of corn, sitting on a throne, nourishing an infant, in the act of feeding him, who has a Hebrew name (the boy, I say), by some nations named Ihesu, with the signification Ieza, which we in the Greek call Christ." -- Albumazar (non-Christian Arab astronomer, c. AD 850)[9]
Figure 2. Albumazar's description of the lost constellation.That quote sounded too good to be true to me, so I decided to check it out. I found a Latin translation of Albumazar's work, of which I reproduce the paragraph in question in Figure 2. Roger Macfarlane, a professor of classical languages at Brigham Young University, kindly verified for me that her translation is adequate.
Thus, Albumazar tells both where the constellation was located in the sky, a description of what it looked like, and even the interpretation that the infant represents Jesus Christ, as the infant son of the virgin. Moreover, he adds that there are many testimonies that this is correct: the Persians, Chaldeans, and Egyptians, as well as the Thrice Great Hermes (who was probably Enoch), and the Second Hermes (most likely Abraham). But do we have any hope of actually identifying exactly what stars formed the constellation? Or which star represented what part of the picture? Let us turn to the ancient Egyptians for the answers to these questions.

1.2 Egyptian FigureWhen Napoleon Bonaparte conquered Egypt, he sent his savants to do a thorough study of the Great Pyramid and several of the temples. One extremely interesting item was a detailed map of the heavens from the temple of Hathor at Dendera, showing the constellations as they were anciently.[10] Napoleon had his artists carefully copy all of the figures in detail, resulting in a set of huge volumes of the drawings.
The constellation of the Virgin (Virgo) is easily found in the map, as the woman holding the branch in the circle of the zodiac constellations. Near her is found a woman seated on a throne holding up a young infant. Rolleston identified this constellation to be the missing one Albumazar had described. She pointed out, "Eratosthenes call Virgo Isis. Isis, with other Egyptian goddesses differently named, is often figured holding the infant deity Horus, he who cometh."[11]
Figure 3. Constellation from Dendera Planisphere.In the planisphere of Dendera the figure is below, rather than above, Virgo, but that is relatively unimportant. All of the figures are only approximately placed, and many that didn't fit in their real locations are simply placed nearby where they do fit. Rolleston only provided a rough sketch of the figure, so again I decided to further research the problem. There is an original copy of the Napoleon volumes at the excellent University of Utah Middle East library. The author is indebted to them for allowing him to copy the engraving of the planisphere, of which the figure is here reproduced in Figure 3.
Notice that it is very similar to what the Persians described: a woman on a throne holding an infant. It is lacking two details mentioned by Albumazar: she is not holding a branch nor nursing the infant. To me it appears that the Egyptian is closer to the original constellation because the Persians often apparently made slight modifications to the constellations to render them more understandable. In this case, the branch would clearly identify the woman as Virgo, and nursing would clearly identify the queen as the infant's mother.

2. Restored ConstellationSo now we are armed with both the location and what might be an actual picture of the constellation. Is there any chance we can identify the original stars it comprised?

2.1 First Attempt: Coma BerenicesRolleston identified the area of sky where the constellation should be found as the area where the modern constellation Coma Berenices (Bernice's Hair) is found, but she made no attempt to identify specific stars. Half a century later, Joseph Seiss superimposed the outline from Dendera over the general star field of Coma Berenices, but also did not attempt to identify individual stars. To my knowledge, no one in the twentieth century made any attempt at all to improve on Seiss's suggestion.
Personally, I did not accept the Coma Berenices identification for one principal reason. In all of the other constellations, the star which represents Christ is always a bright star, or at least the brightest of the constellation. In Virgo, which is a huge constellation of dim or average stars there is exactly one very bright star (Spica), and it represents the grain she holds, the "seed of woman," which in turn represents the Savior.[12] But in Coma Berenices, there is not even one star of average brightness. Even though the Savior was to be born in the obscure circumstances of a stable, I could not see how the stars representing him could be so dim.

2.2 Combine Two Modern Constellations
Figure 4. The 7 brightest stars in area of lost constellationLast week I had occasion to review all of the constellations and it finally occurred to me to look above the area of Coma Berenices. There I was stunned to find the two stars of the modern constellation of Canes Venatici, the Hunting Dogs. One of those two is one of the brightest stars which was listed in the ancient Greek catalog as not belonging to any constellation. In 1687 the Polish astronomer Johannes Hevelius created the Hunting Dogs just to fill up the gap. The brightest star had already been named by the English as Cor Caroli, the "Heart of Charles," after King Charles I of England.
Of the five stars shown in the otherwise blank area in front of the Virgin in Figure 1, the three nearest her are in Coma Berenices, and the other two are the Hunting Dogs. If one adds the next two brightest stars in the region, to get the apparent minimum of seven stars required for ancient constellations, then the stellar configuration is as in Figure 4. They are shown there drawn as they appear in the sky (scanned from a star atlas), with the size of the dot representing their relative brightness. The four lower stars form a nearly perfect square, and the reasonably bright star is shown in the upper group.
Figure 5. Stick-figure of the restored constellation.Comparing the actual stars to the Egyptian figure at Dendera (Fig. 3) shows an excellent fit. The woman is seated on a very square throne and the bottom stars indeed form a square. Not shown are several slightly dimmer stars in the throne which make it "glitter." The queen is holding an infant, and the star Cor Caroli fits at the location of her hand, with the other star in the infant. Figure 5 shows a stick-figure version of the proposed constellation (with stars identified) and Figure 6 shows a full restoration. I asked the artist, Mary Pratt Parker, to position the infant so that the star Cor Caroli would be located at his heart, in anticipation of that star someday being renamed Cor Christi. If this restoration is correct, it represents the first time in over twenty-five hundred years that it has been known to the western world. It might be very interesting to discover just how this plain and precious constellation, which so clearly testifies of Jesus Christ, was somehow erased from the maps of the heavens. It is very fortunate that enough clues remained for it now to be restored to its proper place.

2.3 The Infant Prince
Figure 6. Proposed restoration of the "Infant Prince."What should the constellation be called? Rolleston suggested "Coma" which she felt was the ancient Hebrew name (meaning "The Desired One") which had been misunderstood by the Greeks to mean "hair." I believe that is just her speculation and would avoid the name Coma until an original source with that name is verified. I propose the name "The Infant Prince" because the ancients all agreed that it shows a virgin queen sitting on a throne, holding her infant son.

3. ConclusionThe Book of Enoch claims that the constellations were revealed by an angel to the ancient prophet Enoch. At least one of those constellations had disappeared from star maps before the time of the ancient Greeks, but fortunately the even more ancient Persians and Egyptians preserved enough information on its location, shape and even interpretation to restore it to its proper place. The Persian interpretation was that it was an infant being held by its queenly virgin mother, and that it represented Jesus Christ, leading to the proposed name "The Infant Prince." Truly, the heavens do testify of the glory of God (Psalms 19:1).

Notes
1 Enoch 74:4-7 (Laurence translation). The Book of Enoch was removed from the Bible a few centuries after Christ but it was accepted by the Savior and his apostles as authentic scripture. See my "Enoch Calendar Testifies of Christ," Meridian Magazine (11 Sep 2001), Section 1.
Rolleston, Frances, Mazzaroth; or the Constellations (London: Rivingtons, 1862, updated in 1875), with the latter version reprinted by Weiser Books (York Beach, Maine, 2001). The brilliance of her work is to have recognized the overall pattern and to have done decades of research. Perhaps the best contribution from the ancient world was her summary of the Persian constellations. The other two books are Seiss, Joseph, The Gospel in the Stars (Philadelphia: Claxton, 1882) reprinted by Kregel (Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1972) and Bullinger, E.W., The Witness of the Stars (London, 1893) reprinted by Kregel (1967). For the interested reader, I have summarized and critiqued all three books in my "Review of Gospel in the Stars" and I have responded to criticisms in my "Answering Objections to Gospel in the Stars."
The weakness of her work is the misapplication of translating star names. She started with the potentially fruitful idea that certain star names had been transliterated (meaning simply saying the same name of unknown meaning in the new language) rather than translated (meaning using the corresponding word in the new language) from the original language which she presumed to be Hebrew. The problem is that she assumed that all star names had been transliterated, but it is obvious that many star names were indeed translated correctly. For example, the name Deneb means "tail" in Arabic and stars with that name are invariably found at the tail-end of the animal described. She translates Deneb the same as the name "Dan" in Hebrew (ignore the vowels), which means "judge." Therefore, most of her name translations are to be disregarded because her assumption of transliteration is faulty. A much better source for star name translations is Paul Kunitzsch and Tim Smart, Short Guide to Modern Star Names and Their Derivations (Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1986).
One article which showed that the celestial clock of precession interacts with the constellations was "Celestial Witnesses of Christ Breaking the Bands of Death" Meridian Magazine (26 Apr 2001); one introducing her work was "The Constellations Testify of Christ" (9 Oct 2001), whereas "Lion and Unicorn Testify of Christ, Part I: The Cornerstone Constellations," Meridian Magazine (8 Nov 2001) focused on the four most important constellations. I have yet to write my interpretation of the entire set, because, as can be seen in this article, to me the set is still not perfectly defined, much less understood.
Hercules is stepping on the head of the Dragon (Draco), the Lion is bounding onto the head of the Water Serpent (Hydra), and the Serpent Bearer (Ophicuchus) is crushing the head of the scorpion (Scorpius), and Orion is crushing the Hare. In the Egyptian planisphere at Dendera, the hare was replaced by a serpent. Rolleston also has the Ram stepping on the Sea Monster, but I'm not sure what her authority is for that.
Albumazar (Rolleston uses the older spelling "Albumazer") lists the Southern Cross, the Band as separate from the Fishes, and also an otherwise unknown constellation of a virgin holding an infant. Ptolemy considered what he could still see of the Southern Cross to be part of the Centaur (Centaurus), the Band was considered part of the Fishes (Pisces), and the infant was not known to him at all, nor apparently shown on the sphere which Eudoxus of Greece had described about 300 BC, which was preserved for us by the poet Aratus (also spelled Aratos) in his poem "The Phaenomena," which title refers to the starry sky (for an English translation see G.R. Main, Aratus, Cambridge, Harvard U. Press, 1960). Instead, Ptolemy listed the Triangle (Triangulum), the Southern Crown (Corona Australis), and the Little Horse (Equuleus). All of those constellations may well have been added simply to bring the total up to the traditional 48. The infant had apparently been entirely lost, and replaced with the Triangle before 300 BC because Aratus includes it. Apparently the Greeks never knew of the Southern Cross, because it was not mentioned by him. It was underneath the Centaur, but was disappearing about the time of Christ below the horizon because of the precession of the equinoxes. It may well have been replaced by the Southern Crown, which happens to be placed below the Archer (Sagittarius), who also happens to be a centaur (half-man and half horse). Aratus mentions it as a little ring of stars, but does not give it a name nor dignify it by counting it as a constellation. A summary of all 47 constellations known from the original set, along with how to pronounce their names and an English translation is posted on my website at "Constellation Names."
It is clear that Eudoxus was looking at such a globe because he reverses left and right when describing the eyes of Draco and the knees of Hercules, and also he tells us that the Sea Monster is dark blue and the Hare is grey. The constellations on a celestial globe are mirror images of how they look in the sky because a globe represents them as how they would look from the other side of the "celestial sphere." I have also read that Pythagoras, some two centuries earlier, had been a priest in an Egyptian temple and also brought such a globe, but I've been unable to verify that statement. It is clear, however, that many of the Greek constellations were known by the time of Thales, about 600 BC.
The time of origin can be determined by the area of the sky to the south in which no constellations are shown. That part of the sky moves around during the 26,000 years of the precession of equinoxes and also depends on the latitude of the observer. See my "Scientifically Dating the Constellations" for a summary of one scientific procedure for dating their origin.
Rolleston, Book I, p. 17.
The Temple of Dendera was constructed in the first century BC, but the celestial map can be dated by the precession of the equinoxes to several centuries earlier, somewhere between 700 and 1600 BC. See Peter Tompkins, Secrets of the Great Pyramid (New York: Harper & Row, 1971), p. 174. The drawings from Napoleon were authored by the Commision des Sciences et Arts d'Egypt, Description de l'Egypte (Paris: Imprimerie Imperial, 1809-1828).
Rolleston, Book I, p. 17.
Constellations have many interpretations, and the winged Virgo also represents the Church which will be given eagle wings (Rev. 12:1-2, 5-6, 14) and which will bring forth the political Kingdom of God as a son to rule.
The Zodiac Testifies of Christ
by John P. Pratt
Published as "The Constellations Tell of Christ," by Meridian Magazine (15 Jun 2005).©2005 by John P. Pratt. All rights Reserved.
Read this fascinating article at:
The article concludes:
"The proposal made in this article that the zodiac constellations were designed to illustrate twelve distinct roles of Jesus Christ appears to be correct because 1) the figures are excellent choices to symbolize those roles, 2) the twelve break into three sets of four which are equally spaced around the circle, 3) each set of four has one as header and the other three as subdivisions of that heading, and 4) the constellations were reportedly revealed by an angel, which would imply that they should be closely tied to Jesus Christ. These meanings are proposed in addition to former work in this field which has suggested that the constellation figures also depict the gospel in chronological order, which may well also prove to be correct".
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Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Jesus of Nazareth: the 'I AM', the 'new Moses'




ZE07041510 - 2007-04-15
Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-19375?l=english


Synopsis of Pope Benedict XVI's Book "Jesus of Nazareth"


ROME, APRIL 15, 2007 (Zenit.org).- Here is the synopsis of Benedict XVI's book "Jesus of Nazareth," released by the Italian publisher Rizzoli, which has handled worldwide sale of the rights to the work.

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The Pope's Path to Jesus
A personal meditation, not an exercise of the magisterium

This book is the first part of a work, the writing of which, as its author states, was preceded by a "long gestation" (Page xi). It reflects Joseph Ratzinger's personal search for the "face of the Lord" and is not intended to be a document forming part of the magisterium (Page xxiii).

"Everyone is free, then, to contradict me," the Pontiff stresses in the foreword (Page xxiv). The main purpose of the work is "to help foster [in the reader] the growth of a living relationship" with Jesus Christ (Page xxiv). In an expected second volume the Pope hopes "also to be able to include the chapter on the [infancy] narratives" concerning the birth of Jesus and to consider the mystery of his passion, death and resurrection.

It is primarily, therefore, a pastoral book. But it is also the work of a rigorous theologian, who justifies his assertions based on exhaustive knowledge of sacred texts and critical literature. He underlines the indispen¬sability of a historical-critical method for serious exegesis, but also highlights its limits: "Admittedly, to believe that, as man, he [Jesus] truly was God exceeds the scope of the historical method" (Page xxiii).

And yet, "Without anchoring in God, the person of Jesus remains shadowy, unreal, and unexplainable" (Schnackenburg, "Freundschaft mit Jesus," Page 322). In confirming this conclusion of a notable Roman Catholic representative of historical-critical exegesis, the Pope states that his book "sees Jesus in light of his communion with the Father" (Page xiv).

In addition, based on "reading the individual texts of the Bible in the context of the whole" -- a reading that "does not contradict historical-critical interpretation, but carries it forward in an organic way toward becoming theology in the proper sense" (Page xix) -- the author presents "the Jesus of the Gospels as the real, 'historical' Jesus," underlining "that this figure is much more logical and, historically speaking, much more intelligible than the reconstructions we have been presented with in the last decades" (Page xxii).

For Benedict XVI, one finds in the Scriptures the compelling elements to be able to assert that the historical personage, Jesus Christ, is also the Son of God who came to Earth to save humanity. In page after page, he examines these one by one, guiding and challenging the reader -- the believer but also the nonbeliever -- by way of an enthralling intellectual adventure.

Grounding his core premise on the fact of the intimate unity between the Old and the New Testament, and drawing on the Christological hermeneutics that see in Jesus Christ the key to the entire Bible, Benedict XVI presents the Jesus of the Gospels as the "new Moses" who fulfills Israel's ancient expectations (Page 1). This new Moses must lead the people of God to true and definitive freedom. He does so in a sequence of actions that, however, always allow God's plan to be anticipated in its entirety.

The Baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan is "an acceptance of death for the sins of humanity, and the voice that calls out, 'This is my beloved Son,' over the baptismal waters is an anticipatory reference to the Resurrection" (Page 18). Jesus' immersion in the waters of the River Jordan is a symbol of his death and of his descent into hell -- a reality present, however, throughout his life.

To save humanity "He must recapitulate the whole of history from its beginnings" (Page 26), he must conquer the principal temptations that, in various forms, threaten men in all ages and, transforming them into obedience, reopen the road toward God (Chapter 2), toward the true Promised Land, which is the "Kingdom of God" (Page 44). This term, which can be interpreted in its Christological, mystical or even ecclesiastical dimension, ultimately means "the divine lordship, God's dominion over the world and over history, [which] transcends the moment, indeed transcends and reaches beyond the whole of history. And yet it is at the same time something belonging absolutely to the present" (Page 57). Indeed, through Jesus' presence and activity "God has here and now entered actively into history in a wholly new way." In Jesus "God ... draws near to us ... rules in a divine way, without worldly power, rules through the love that reaches 'to the end'" (Pages 60-61; John 13:1).

The theme of the "Kingdom of God" (Chapter 3), which pervades the whole of Jesus' preaching, is developed in further depth in the reflection on the "Sermon on the Mount" (Chapter 4). In the Sermon Jesus clearly appears as the "new Moses" who brings the new Torah or, rather, returns to Moses' Torah and, activating the intrinsic rhythms of its structure, fulfills it (Page 65).

The Sermon on the Mount, in which the beatitudes are the cardinal points of the law and, at one and the same time, a self-portrait of Jesus, demonstrates that this law is not just the result of a "face-to-face" talk with God but embodies the plenitude that comes from the intimate union of Jesus with the Father (Page 66). Jesus is the Son of God, the Word of God in person. "Jesus understands himself as the Torah" (Page 110). "This is the point that demands a decision [...] and consequently this is the point that leads to the Cross and the Resurrection" (Page 63).

The exodus toward the true "Promised Land," toward true freedom, requires the sequel of Christ. The believer has to enter the same communion of the Son with the Father. Only in this way can Man "fulfill" himself, because his innermost nature is oriented toward the relationship with God. This means that a fundamental element of his life is talking to God and listening to God. Because of this, Benedict XVI dedicates an entire chapter to prayer, explaining the Lord's Prayer, which Jesus himself taught us (Chapter 5).

Man's profound contact with God the Father through Jesus in the Holy Spirit gathers them together in the "we and us" of a new family that, via the choice of the Twelve Disciples, recalls the origins of Israel (the twelve Patriarchs) and, at the same time, opens the vision toward the new Jerusalem (Revelation 21:9-14) -- the ultimate destination of the whole story -- of the new Exodus under the guidance of the "new Moses."

With Jesus, the Twelve Disciples "have to pass from outward to inward communion with Jesus," so as then to be able to testify to his oneness with the Father and "become Jesus' envoys -- 'apostles,' no less -- who bring his message to the world" (Page 172). Albeit in its extremely variegated composition, the new family of Jesus, the Church of all ages, finds in him its unifying core and the will to live the universal character of his teaching (Chapter 6).

To make his message easier to understand and indeed to incorporate that message into daily living, Jesus uses the form of the parable. He comports the substance of what he intends to communicate -- ultimately he is always talking about his mystery -- attuned to the listener's comprehension using the bridge of imagery grounded in realities very familiar and accessible to that listener. Alongside this human aspect, however, there is an exquisitely theological explanation of the parables' sense, which Joseph Ratzinger highlights in an analysis of rare depth. He then comments more specifically on three parables, via which he illustrates the endless resources of Jesus' message and its perennial actuality (Chapter 7).

The next chapter also centers round the images used by Jesus to explain his mystery: They are the great images of John's Gospel. Before analyzing them, the Pope presents a very interesting summary of the various results of scientific research into who the apostle John was. With this, as also in his explanation of the images, he opens up new horizons for the reader that reveal Jesus with ever-increasing clarity as the "Word of God" (Page 317), who became man for our salvation as the "Son of God" (Page 304), coming to redirect humanity toward unity with the Father -- the reality personified by Moses (Chapter 8).

This vision is further expanded in the last two chapters. "The account of the Transfiguration of Jesus [...] interprets Peter's confession and takes it deeper, while at the same time connecting it with the mystery of Jesus' death and resurrection" (Pages 287-288). Both events -- the transfiguration and the confession -- are decisive moments for the earthly Jesus as they are for his disciples.

The true mission of the Messiah of God and the destiny of those who want to follow him are now definitively established. Both events become comprehensible to their full extent only if based on an organic view of the Old and New Testament. Jesus, the living Son of God, is the Messiah awaited by Israel who, through the scandal of the Cross, leads humanity into the "Kingdom of God" (Page 317) and to ultimate freedom (Chapter 9).

The Pope's book ends with an in-depth analysis of the titles that, according to the Gospels, Jesus used for himself (Chapter 10). Once again it becomes evident that only through reading the Scriptures as a united whole is one able to reveal the meaning of the three terms "Son of Man," "Son," and "I Am." This latter term is the mysterious name with which God revealed himself to Moses in the burning bush. This name now allows it to be seen that Jesus is that same God. In all three titles "Jesus at once conceals and reveals the mystery of his person. [...] All three of these terms demonstrate how deeply rooted he is in the Word of God, Israel's Bible, the Old Testament. And yet all these terms receive their full meaning only in him -- it is as if they had been waiting for him" (Page 354).

Together with the man of faith, who seeks to explain the divine mystery above all to himself; together with the extremely refined theologian, who ranges effortlessly from the results of modern doctrinal analyses to those of their ancient precursors, the book also reveals the pastor, who truly succeeds in his attempt "to help foster [in the reader] the growth of a living relationship" with Jesus Christ (Page xxiv), almost irresistibly drawing him into his own personal friendship with the Lord.

In this perspective the Pontiff is not afraid to denounce a world that, by excluding God and clinging only to visible and tangible realities, risks destroying itself in a self-centered quest for purely material well-being -- becoming deaf to the real call to the human being to become, through the Son, a son of God, and thereby to reach true freedom in the "Promised Land" of the "Kingdom of God."

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich's Account of Jesus Christ

THE
DOLOROUS

(SORROWFUL)
PASSION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST


FROM THE MEDITATIONS OF

ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH


Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich (1774-1824)
Mystic, Stigmatist, Visionary, and Prophet

THE DOLOROUS PASSION OF
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST

NIHIL OBSTAT: GEORGIVS D. SMITH. D.D.

CENSOR DEPVTATVS

IMPRIMATUR: EDM. CAN. SVRMONT

VICARIVS GENERALIS

WESTMONASTERII, DIE XXI MAII MCMXXVIII

ONE VOLUME

AND

THE FOUR VOLUME WORK:

THE LOWLY LIFE AND BITTER PASSION
OF
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST
AND
HIS BLESSED MOTHER
TOGETHER WITH
THE MYSTERIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT
FROM THE
VISIONS OF BLESSED ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH
As Recorded in the Journal of Clement Brentano
AND EDITED BY
VERY REV. C.E. SCHMOGER, C. SS. R.
1914

NIHIL OBSTAT
Brugis, 25 Martii, 1914.
Em. De Jaegher,
Can., lib.cens.

IMPRIMATUR.
Brugis, 27 Martii, 1914.
A.C. DE SCHREVEL
vic. gen.

BRIEF SUMMATION OF THIS BOOK

Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich was an Augustinian nun at the Convent of Agnetenberg, Dulmen, Westphalia, Germany. She lived between 1774 to 1824. During her life, God gave her extensive visions of the past, the present and the future. Many theologians believe that she received from God more visions than any other saint. The Sorrowful (Dolorous) Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ are the visions of Anne Catherine Emmerich concerning the horrific sufferings our Dear Lord Jesus Christ suffered in his work to save mankind. This includes the Last Supper, the Agony in the Garden, the Arrest, the Scourging the Crowning of Thorns, the Trial by Pontius Pilate, the Carrying of the Cross, the Crucifixion and the Dying on the Cross and the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. They are incredibly, highly detailed and descriptive, revealing to us more information about the Life of Jesus Christ besides what we read of Him in the Bible. These excerpts are from the book: THE DOLOROUS PASSION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST.

The addendum on the Resurrection, Ascension, Day of Pentecost and the Life of Mary after the Ascension of Christ are from the book: The Lowly Life and Bitter Passion of OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST AND HIS BLESSED MOTHER. Recorded in the Journals of Clemens Brentano, arranged and edited by the Very Reverend Carl E. Schmöger, C.SS.R.

THE DOLOROUS PASSION OF
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST

FROM THE MEDITATIONS OF ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PREFACEPreface to the French TranslationPages v-x
INTRODUCTIONIntroduction to the Book.Pages xi
LIFE OF ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICHReligious of the Order of St. Augustine, at the Convent of Agnetenberg, Dulmen, Westphalia.Pages 15-59
TO THE READERIntroductionPage 65
MEDITATION IPreparatons for the PaschPages 67-67
MEDITATION IIThe Supper-RoomPages 68-69
MEDITATION IIIArrangements for eating the Paschal LambPages 70-71
MEDITATION IVThe Chalice used at the Last SupperPages 72-73
MEDITATION VJesus goes up to JerusalemPages 74-75
MEDITATION VIThe Last PaschPages 76-80
MEDITATION VIIThe Washing of the FeetPages 81-83
MEDITATION VIIIInstitution of the Holy EucharistPages 84-88
MEDITATION IXPrivate Instructions and ConsecrationsPages 89-93

THE PASSION

Introduction

Pages 95-97
CHAPTER 1Jesus in the Garden of OlivesPages 97-121
CHAPTER 2Judas and his BandPages 121-127
CHAPTER 3Jesus is ArrestedPages 127-137
CHAPTER 4Means Employed by the Enemies of Jesus for Carrying out Their Designs Against HimPages 138-139
CHAPTER 5A Glance at JerusalemPages 140-144
CHAPTER 6Jesus before AnnasPages 145-148
CHAPTER 7The Tribunal of CaiphasPages 149-150
CHAPTER 8Jesus before CaiphasPages 151-158
CHAPTER 9The Insults received by Jesus in the court of CaiphasPages 158-160
CHAPTER 10The Denial of St. PeterPages 161-164
CHAPTER 11Mary in the House of CaiphasPages 164-167
CHAPTER 12Jesus Confined in the Subterranean PrisonPages 167-170
CHAPTER 13The Morning TrialPages 171-173
CHAPTER 14The Despair of JudasPages 173-176
CHAPTER 15Jesus is taken before PilatePages 176-179
CHAPTER 16Description of Pilate's Palace and the Adjacent BuildingsPages 179-183
CHAPTER 17Jesus before PilatePages 183-189
CHAPTER 18The Origin of the Way of the CrossPages 189-191
CHAPTER 19Pilate and his WifePages 191-194
CHAPTER 20Jesus before HerodPages 194-199
CHAPTER 21Jesus led back from the Court of Herod to that of PilatePages 200-205
CHAPTER 22The Scourging of JesusPages 205-210
CHAPTER 23Mary during the Flagellation of our LordPages 210-212
CHAPTER 24Interruption of the Visions of the Passion by the Appearance of St. Joseph under the form of a ChildPages 212-218
CHAPTER 25Description of the Personal Appearance of the Blessed VirginPages 218-219
CHAPTER 26The Crowning with ThornsPages 220-221
CHAPTER 27Ecce HomoPages 222-224
CHAPTER 28Reflections on the VisionsPages 225-226
CHAPTER 29Jesus Condemned to be CrucifiedPages 227-232
CHAPTER 30The Carriage of the CrossPages 233-236
CHAPTER 31The First Fall of JesusPages 236
CHAPTER 32The Second Fall of JesusPages 237-238
CHAPTER 33Simon of Cyrene.---Third Fall of JesusPages 239
CHAPTER 34The Veil of VeronicaPages 241-242
CHAPTER 35The Fourth and Fifth Falls of Jesus.---The Daughters of JerusalemPages 243-244
CHAPTER 36Jesus on Mount Golgotha.---Sixth and Seventh Falls of JesusPages 245-246
CHAPTER 37The Departure of Mary and the Holy Women of Calvary.Pages 247-248
CHAPTER 38The Nailing of Jesus to the CrossPages 249-252
CHAPTER 39Erection of the CrossPages 253
CHAPTER 40Crucifixion of the ThievesPages 254-255
CHAPTER 41Jesus Hanging on the Cross Between Two ThievesPages 256-257
CHAPTER 42First Word of Jesus on the CrossPages 258
CHAPTER 43Eclipse of the Sun.---Second and Third Word of Jesus on the CrossPages 259-260
CHAPTER 44The Fear felt by the Inhabitants of Jerusalem.---Fourth Word of Jesus on the CrossPages 261-265
CHAPTER 45Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Words of Jesus on the Cross.---His DeathPages 266-269
CHAPTER 46The Earthquake.---Apparitions of the Dead in JerusalemPages 270-273
CHAPTER 47The Request of Joseph of Arimathea to be allowed to have the Body of JesusPages 274
CHAPTER 48The Opening of the Side of Jesus.---Death of the Two ThievesPages 275-277
CHAPTER 49A Description of Some Parts of Ancient JerusalemPages 278-280
CHAPTER 50The Descent from the CrossPages 281-285
CHAPTER 51The Embalming of the Body of JesusPages 286-291
CHAPTER 52The Body of Our Lord Placed in the SepulchrePages 292
CHAPTER 53The Return from the Sepulchre.---Joseph of Arimathea is put in PrisonPages 293-294
CHAPTER 54On the Name of CalvaryPages 295-296
CHAPTER 55The Cross and the Wine-pressPages 297
CHAPTER 56Apparitions on Occasion of the Death of JesusPages 298-299
CHAPTER 57Guards are Placed Around the Tomb of JesusPages 300
CHAPTER 58A Glance at the Disciples of Jesus on Holy SaturdayPages 301-304
CHAPTER 59A Detached Account of the Descent into HellPages 305-310
CHAPTER 60The Eve of the ResurrectionPages 311
CHAPTER 61Joseph of Arimathea Miraculously Set at LargePages 312
CHAPTER 62The Night of ResurrectionPages 313-316
CHAPTER 63The Resurrection of Our LordPages 317
CHAPTER 64The Holy Women at the SepulchrePages 318-323
CHAPTER 65The Relation which was given by the Sentinels who were placed around the SepulchrePages 324-325
CHAPTER 66The End of the Lenten MeditationsPages 326
APPENDIXDetached Account of LonginusPages 327-330

THE END OF THE DOLOROUS PASSION OF JESUS CHRIST






CONTINUATION OF THE RESURRECTION OF CHRIST: INCLUDES THE RESURRECTION, THE ASCENSION OF CHRIST INTO HEAVEN AND THE DAY OF PENTECOST AND THE LIFE OF THE VIRGIN MARY AFTER THE ASCENSION OF JESUS INTO HEAVEN:

FROM THE BOOK: THE LIFE OF OUR LORD AND SAVIOUR JESUS CHRIST Combined with THE BITTER PASSION and THE LIFE OF MARY, VOLUME IV. from the visions of Blessed Anna Catharina Emmerick.
(PDF Format) (Loads very, very slow for dial-up modem users)

CLICK THE LINKS BELOW FOR MORE FROM THE VISIONS OF BLESSED ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH



CONTINUATION OF RESURRECTION & ASCENSION

373-430


PENTECOST AND BEGINNINGS OF THE CHURCH

430-449


LIFE OF MARY AFTER CHRIST ASCENDS INTO HEAVEN

449-476


THE BOOK OF BLESSED ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH'S VISION OF THE LIFE OF CHRIST:

THE LOWLY LIFE AND BITTER PASSION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST AND HIS BLESSED MOTHER TOGETHER WITH THE MYSTERIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT (VISIONS OF BLESSED ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH) (.PDF FILES)

(LOADS VERY SLOWLY FOR DIAL -UP MODEM USERS)

VOLUME I

VOLUME II

VOLUME III

VOLUME IV

OTHER WEB SITES WHERE THE DOLOROUS PASSION OF CHRIST
CAN BE FOUND:

IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE:

http://www.catholicplanet.com/ebooks/Dolorous-Passion.pdf

http://my.homewithgod.com/israel/acemmerich1/

IN THE FRENCH LANGUAGE:

LA DOULOUREUSE PASSION DE N. S. JESUS-CHRIST et VIE de N. S. JESUS CHRIST: D'APRÈS LES VISIONS D'ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH

IN THE SPANISH LANGUAGE:

LA DOLOROSA PASION DE CRISTO

IN THE GERMAN LANGUAGE:

Das Leiden unseres Herrn Jesu Christi (PDF segmented for Dial up modem users)

Das Bittere Leiden unseres Herrn Jesu Christ Buch (PDF: The whole book unsegmented, for high speed internet users)

v

PREFACE TO THE FRENCH TRANSLATION

BY THE ABBÉ DE CAZALES

THE writer of this Preface was travelling in Germany, when he chanced to meet with a book, entitled, The History of the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, from the Meditations of Anne Catherine Emmerich, which appeared to him both interesting and edifying. Its style was unpretending, its ideas simple, its tone unassuming, its sentiments unexaggerated, and its every sentence expressive of the most complete and entire submission to the Church. Yet, at the same time, it would have been difficult anywhere to meet with a more touching and life-like paraphrase of the Gospel narrative. He thought that a book possessing such qualities deserved to be known on this side of the Rhine, and that there could be no reason why it should not be valued for its own sake, independent of the somewhat singular source whence it emanated.

Still, the translator has by no means disguised to himself that this work is written, in the first place, for Christians; that is to say, for men who have the right to be very diffident in giving credence to particulars concerning facts which are articles of faith; and although he is aware that St. Bonaventure and many others, in their paraphrases of the Gospel history, have mixed up traditional details with those given in the sacred text, even these examples have not wholly reassured him. St. Bonaventure professed only to give a paraphrase, whereas these revelations appear to be something more. It is certain that the holy maiden herself gave them no higher title than that of dreams, and that the transcriber of her narratives treats as blasphemous the idea of regarding them in any degree as equivalent to a fifth Gospel; still it is evident that the confessors who exhorted Sister Emmerich to relate what she saw, the celebrated poet who passed four years near her couch, eagerly transcribing all he heard her say, and the German Bishops, who encouraged the publication of his book, considered it as something more than a paraphrase. Some explanations are needful on this head.

vi

The writings of many Saints introduce us into a new, and, if I may be allowed the expression, a miraculous world. In all ages there have been revelations about the past, the present, the future, and even concerning things absolutely inaccessible to the human intellect. In the present day men are inclined to regard these revelations as simple hallucinations, or as caused by a sickly condition of body.

The Church, according to the testimony of her most approved writers, recognises three descriptions of ecstasy; of which the first is simply natural, and entirely brought about by certain physical tendencies and a highly imaginative mind; the second divine or angelic, arising from intercourse held with the supernatural world; and the third produced by infernal agency.* Lest we should here write a book in.stead of a preface, we will not enter into any development of this doctrine, which appears to us highly philosophical, and without which no satisfactory explanation can be given on the subject of the soul of man and its various states.

The Church directs certain means to be employed to ascertain by what spirit these ecstasies are produced, according to the maxim of St. John: ‘Try the spirits, if they be of God.’ When circumstances or events claiming to be supernatural have been properly examined according to certain rules, the Church has in all ages made a selection from them.

* See, on this head, the work of Cardinal Bona, De Discretionc Spiritaum.

vii

Many persons who have been habitually in a state of ecstasy have been canonised, and their books approved. But this approbation has seldom amounted to more than a declaration that these books contained nothing contrary to faith, and that they were likely to promote a spirit of piety among the faithful. For the Church is only founded on the word of Christ and on the revelations made to the Apostles. Whatever may since have been revealed to certain saints possesses purely a relative value, the reality of which may even be disputed—it being one of the admirable characteristics of the Church, that, though inflexibly one in dogma, she allows entire liberty to the human mind in all besides. Thus, we may believe private revelations, above all, when those persons to whom they were made have been raised by the Church to the rank of Saints publicly honoured, invoked, and venerated; but, even in these cases, we may, without ceasing to be perfectly orthodox, dispute their authenticity and divine origin. It is the place of reason to dispute and to select as it sees best.

With regard to the rule for discerning between the good and the evil spirit, it is no other, according to all theologians, than that of the Gospel. A fructibus eorum cognoscetis eos. By their fruits you shall know them. It must be examined in the first place whether the person who professes to have revelations mistrusts what passes within himself; whether he would prefer a more common path ; whether far from boasting of the extraordinary graces which he receives, he seeks to hide them, and only makes them known through obedience; and, finally, whether he is continually advancing in humility, mortification, and charity. Next, the revelations themselves must be very closely examined into; it must be seen whether there is anything in them contrary to faith whether they are conformable to Scripture and Apostolical tradition; and whether they are related in a headstrong spirit, or in a spirit of entire submission to the Church.

viii

Whoever reads the life of Anne Catherine Emmerich, and her book, will be satisfied that no fault can be found in any of these respects either with herself or with her revelations. Her book resembles in many points the writings of a great number of saints, and her life also bears the most striking similitudeto theirs. To be convinced of this fact, we need but study the writings or what is related of Saints Francis of Assissium, Bernard, Bridget, Emmerich to have been inspired by God’s Holy Spirit, we Ignatius, John of the Cross, Teresa, and an immense number of other holy persons who are less known. So much being conceded, it is clear that in considering Sister Emmerich to have been inspired by God’s Holy Spirit, we are not ascribing more merit to her book than is allowed by the Church to all those of the same class. They are all edifying, and may serve to promote piety, which is their sole object. We must not exaggerate their importance by holding as an absolute fact that they proceed from divine inspiration, a favour so great that its existence in any particular case should not be credited save with the utmost circumspection.

With regard, however, to our present publication, it may be urged that, considering the superior talents of the transcriber of Sister Emmerich’s narrations, the language and expressions which he has made use of may not always have been identical with those which she employed. We have no hesitation whatever in allowing the force of this argument. Most fully do we believe in the entire sincerity of M. Clement Brentano, because we both know and love him, and, besides, his exemplary piety and the retired life which he leads, secluded from a world in which it would depend but on himself to hold the highest place, are guarantees amply sufficient to satisfy any impartial mind of his sincerity. A poem such as he might publish, if he only pleased, would cause him to be ranked at once among the most eminent of the German poets, whereas the office which he has taken upon himself of secretary to a poor visionary has brought him nothing but contemptuous raillery. Nevertheless, we have no intention to assert that in giving the conversations and discourses of Sister Emmerich that order and coherency in which they were greatly wanting, and writing them down in his own way, he may not unwittingly have arranged, explained, and embellished them. But this would not have the effect of destroying the originality of the recital, or impugning either the sincerity of the nun, or that of the writer.

ix

The translator professes to be unable to understand how any man can write for mere writing’s sake, and without considering the probable effects which his work will produce. This book, such as it is, appears to him to be at once unusually edifying, and highly poetical. It is perfectly clear that it has, properly speaking, no literary pretensions whatever. Neither the uneducated maiden whose visions are here related, nor the excellent Christian writer who has published them in so entire a spirit of literary disinterestedness, ever had the remotest idea of such a thing. And yet there are not, in our opinion, many highly worked-up compositions calculated to produce an effect in any degree comparable to that which will be brought about by the perusal of this unpretending little work. It is our hope that it will make a strong impression even upon worldlings, and that in many hearts it will prepare the way for better ideas—perhaps even for a lasting change of life.

In the next place, we are not sorry to call public attention in some degree to all that class of phenomena which preceded the foundation of the Church, which has since been perpetuated uninterruptedly, and which too many Christians are disposed to reject altogether, either through Ignorance and want of reflection, or purely through human respect. This is a field which has hitherto been but little explored historically, psychologically, and physiologically; and it would be well if reflecting minds were to bestow upon it a careful and attentive investigation. To our Christian readers we must remark that this work has received the approval of ecclesiastical authorities. It has been prepared for the press under the superintendence of the two late Bishops of Ratisbonne, Sailer and Wittman. These names are but little known in France; but in Germany they are identical with learning, piety, ardent charity, and a life wholly devoted to the maintenance and propagation of the Catholic faith. Many French priests have given their opinion that the translation of a book of this character could not but tend to nourish piety, without, however, countenancing that weakness of spirit which is disposed to lend more importance in some respects to private than to general revelations, and consequently to substitute matters which we are simply permitted to believe, in the place of those which are of faith.

x

We feel convinced that no one will take offence at certain details given on the subject of the outrages which were suffered by our divine Lord during the course of his passion. Our readers will remember the words of the psalmist: ‘I am a worm and no man; the reproach of men, and the outcast of the people;’ and those of the apostle: ‘Tempted in all things like as we are, without sin.’ Did we stand in need of a precedent, we should request our readers to remember how plainly and crudely Bossuet describes the same scenes in the most eloquent of his four sermons on the Passion of our Lord. On the other hand, there have been so many grand platonic or rhetorical sentences in the books published of late years, concerning that abstract entity, on which the writers have been pleased to bestow the Christian title of the Word, or Logos, that it may be eminently useful to show the Man-God, the Word made flesh, in all the reality of his life on earth, of his humiliation, and of his sufferings. It must be evident that the cause of truth, and still more that of edification, will not be the losers.

******

xi

INTRODUCTION
_____

THE following meditations will probably rank high among many similar works which the contemplative love of Jesus has produced; but it is our duty here plainly to affirm that they have no pretensions whatever to be regarded as history. They are but intended to take one of the lowest places among those numerous representations of the Passion which have been given us by pious writers and artists, and to be considered at the very utmost as the Lenten meditations of a devout nun, related in all simplicity, and written down in the plainest and most literal language, from her own dictation. To these meditations, she herself never attached more than a mere human value, and never related them except through obedience, and upon the repeated commands of the directors of her conscience.

The writer of the following pages was introduced to this holy religious by Count Leopold de Stolberg.* Dean Bernard Overberg, her director extraordinary, and Bishop Michael Sailer,* who had often been her counsellor and consoler, urged her to relate to us in detail all that she experienced; and the latter, who survived her, took the deepest interest in the arrangement and publication of the notes taken down from her dictation. These illustrious and holy men, now dead, and whose memory is blessed, were in continual communion of prayer with Anne Catherine, whom they loved and respected, on account of the singular graces with which God had favoured her. The editor of this book received equal encouragement, and met with no less sympathy in his labours, from the late Bishop of Ratisbonne, Mgr. Wittman.* This holy Bishop, who was so deeply versed in the ways of Divine grace, and so well acquainted with its effects on certain souls, both from his private investigations of the subject, and his own experience, took the most lively interest in all that concerned Anne Catherine, and on hearing of the work in which the editor of this book was engaged, he strongly exhorted him to publish it. ‘These things have not been communicated to you for nothing,’ would he often say; ‘God has his views in all. Publish something at least of what you know, for you will thereby benefit many souls.’ He at the same time brought forward various instances from his own experience and that of others, showing the benefit which had been derived from the study of works of a similar character. He delighted in calling such privileged souls as Anne Catherine the marrow of the bones of the Church, according to the expression of St. John Chrysostorn, medulla enim hujus mundi sunt, and he encouraged the publication of their lives and writings as far as lay in his power.

The editor of this book being taken by a kind friend to the dying bed of the holy Bishop, had no reason whatever to expect to be recognised, as he had only once in his life conversed with him for a few minutes; nevertheless the dying saint knew him again, and after a few most kind words blessed and exhorted him to continue his work for the glory of God.

Encouraged by the approbation of such men, we therefore yield to the wishes of many virtuous friends in publishing the Meditations on the Passion, of this humble religious, to whom God granted the favour of being at times simple, ingenuous, and ignorant as a child, while at others she was clear-sighted, sensible, possessed of a deep insight into the most mysterious and hidden things, and consumed with burning and heroic zeal, but ever forgetful of self, deriving her whole strength from Jesus alone, and steadfast in the most perfect humility and entire sclf-abnegation.

We give our readers a slight sketch of her life, intending at some future day to publish her biography more in full.

* The Count de Stolberg is one of the most eminent converts whom the Catholic Church has made from Protestarnism. He died in 1819.

* The Bishop of Ratisbonne, one of the most celebrated defenders of the faith in Germany.

* Mgr. Wittman was the worthy successor of Sailer, and a man of eminent sanctity, whose memory is held in veneration by all the Catholics of the south of Germany.

*****

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Saturday, December 27, 2008

Jesus and the Falling and Rising of Many in Israel


Luke 2:22-40

22When the time came for their purification according to the law of Moses, they brought him up to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord
23(as it is written in the law of the Lord, “Every firstborn male shall be designated as holy to the Lord”),
24and they offered a sacrifice according to what is stated in the law of the Lord, “a pair of turtledoves or two young pigeons.”

25Now there was a man in Jerusalem whose name was Simeon; this man was righteous and devout, looking forward to the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit rested on him.
26It had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen the Lord’s Messiah.
27Guided by the Spirit, Simeon came into the temple; and when the parents brought in the child Jesus, to do for him what was customary under the law,
28Simeon took him in his arms and praised God, saying,
29“Master, now you are dismissing your servant in peace, according to your word;
30for my eyes have seen your salvation,
31which you have prepared in the presence of all peoples,
32a light for revelation to the Gentiles and for glory to your people Israel.”
33And the child’s father and mother were amazed at what was being said about him.
34Then Simeon blessed them and said to his mother Mary, “This child is destined for the falling and the rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be opposed
35so that the inner thoughts of many will be revealed—and a sword will pierce your own soul too.”
36There was also a prophetess, Anna the daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher. She was of a great age, having lived with her husband seven years after her marriage,
37then as a widow to the age of eighty-four. She never left the temple but worshiped there with fasting and prayer night and day.
38At that moment she came, and began to praise God and to speak about the child to all who were looking for the redemption of Jerusalem.
39When they had finished everything required by the law of the Lord, they returned to Galilee, to their own town of Nazareth.
40The child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom; and the favor of God was upon him.