Celebrating St. Thomas Aquinas

Celebrating St. Thomas Aquinas

On March 7, the St. Dominic Centre of Studies, Macau, celebrated, with joy and gratitude, the Feast of St Thomas Aquinas, to honor his memory and accept the challenge that our brother and saint always arouses in us.

The venue of the celebration was Saint Paul’s School, Macau, which once more offered all the facilities and the adequate setting for the event. Our brothers in charge of the school saw to it that everything would rise to the occasion of this very significant event for our Centre of Studies, our Convent and the whole Dominican Family and friends in Macau. Our most heartfelt “Benedictus Deus” for their fraternal service.

Aside from the presence “in full” of the members of the community, joined by a considerable number of our brothers in Hong Kong and China, our Father Provincial included, were also present our Dominican Sisters, Monsignor Joseph Lai, Bishop of Macau, personalities of the University of Saint Joseph (Macau) and other numerous guests, lay and religious, totaling some 100 people. Their presence honored the great, yet humble Saint Thomas and multiplied the joy of all of us.

The Conference for the day, addressed by fr. Felicísimo Martínez, OP, was a masterly exposition touching on the very contemporary issue of “Truth, Meaning and Faith: How to approach these questions”? [See doc. Attached]

After stating that the questions about “Truth, Meaning and Faith” are transcendental for human existence today, the lecturer led us to reflect on some fundamental questions, such as: is it worthwhile to live in a lie? Is it possible an honorable and harmonious human coexistence at the margin of truth?

The question about meaning –already touched upon by St Thomas in his time- is the fundamental question of the human being, much more than the question about pleasure. Viktor E. Frankl said that: “The human being’s fundamental problem is not the absence of pleasure, but the lack of meaning”. It is there where the fundamental questions of the human being are to be situated: wherefrom do we come? Where are we going to? What’s the meaning of life? Why suffering and injustice? Why death and what can we wait for after death? At the end, it is faith that allows us to find a definitive meaning: the human faith in the other and the religious faith in God. Is it possible, without faith, to know all that this creation and this human being can yield of themselves?

To approach truth, meaning and faith, it is necessary to foster some fundamental attitudes in life: cultivate the culture of trust (only he who has learnt to trust can reach faith); to cultivate the heart’s habits (we reach truth, meaning and faith, not only through reasoning, but also through intuition, sensitivity, emotion); to cultivate the contemplative dimension of life (truth dwells only in our inner world); to cultivate the openness to the Transcendence through the mystical experience of the Other and the ethical experience of the other.

It was an excellent, even if not programmed, invitation to approach Lent in an attitude of deep contemplation and intimacy with the mystery that presides throughout the Season.

A very solemn Eucharist, presided by Bishop Lai, followed at the School’s Chapel -beautifully decorated by Sister Camino, OP for the occasion-, joyfully participated by all. Bishop Lai centered his homily on the need to preach, as Saint Thomas Aquinas did, the God News to today’s world. This is particularly relevant in those places where, as it is the case of Macau, so many people have not yet heard about Jesus, but appear to be eager to wholeheartedly offer “cult” to god Mammon… Macauenses, he continued, need to hear the Gospel of the Lord, and above all, to see witnesses of Jesus’ presence in their world today. Here and now. We are among those chosen by the Lord to be sent to bring His Good News to the whole world, particularly to the poor. This is our commitment. We cannot fail Him and the people whom we have been sent to.

The celebration ended with a fraternal, generous and exquisite lunch, “cortesía de la casa!”

FR. JOSE LUIS DE MIGUEL, OP

(Macau, March, 2014)

TRUTH, MEANING AND FAITH: HOW TO APPROACH THESE QUESTIONS?

TRUTH, MEANING AND FAITH: HOW TO APPROACH THESE QUESTIONS?

 

(On March 7, 2014, the Dominican Center of Institutional Studies, or St. Dominic’s Center of Studies, celebrated solemnly the Feast of St. Thomas Aquinas at St. Paul’s School, Macau. The morning celebration consisted of three parts: lecture, Mass and fraternal agape. More than one hundred people attended the memorable event. The highlight of the celebration was the public lecture given by theologian Felicisimo Martinez, OP, who is currently teaching at the University of Saint Joseph. Hereafter, we print the excellent text of the conference)

 Saint Thomas begins any discussion with one question, even the discussion about the existence of God. Answers without questions are absolutely useless.

  1. 1.     Questions about truth, meaning and faith.

Truth has become a real question, because for many people truth has been associated with dogmatism, fundamentalism, violence, intolerance…Therefore they refuse even to talk or to listen to talk about truth. But, what would be life if there is no truth at all? In the last moments of Jesus the question about truth is dramatically present: What is truth? This question continues been present today, but in a real practical way. Where is truth? Who are on its side?

The adequate relationship with truth is not appropriation, but questioning, searching, looking for, approaching… Only God is the owner, the Lord of the Truth; we are mere servants. God told to a rabbi: “Look, here on one of my hands I have the truth, on the other one I have the instinct of the truth, please, which is your choice?” The rabbi answered: “Lord, give me the instinct of the truth, because the whole truth is your own property”. We, human beings, have to learn how to live, not with full security or total certitude, but with many questions and uncertainties. That means that we have to learn a culture of trust and confidence.

We enjoy today an enormous scientific and technological progress. We know every day more and more, and at the same time we become more aware of our ignorance. But day after day we feel more insecure regarding the question of truth. “Today’s man is the man of “perhaps””. In this situation we observe the continuous growing of fundamentalisms, dogmatisms, relativisms… Many people refuse to believe in the ideal of the truth but at the same time they think they are in the right position.DSC_0335

There is today a crisis of confidence; there is a general suspicion, mistrust towards anybody and towards everything. While we speak once and again about transparency, a kind of culture or un-culture of mistrust and diffidence is widespread in any area of our society.  We do not trust the politicians, the economists, the mass media, even the scientists… We do not believe that they tell the whole truth…  We have more and more information, but we do not know whom to believe. Truth is not more associated to the dignity of a person.  Some persons pretend to be honest and honorable without been truthful. Here the real problem is not the objective, but the subjective dimension of truth: truthfulness, living in the truth.

A dangerous enemy of truth today is what is called “politically correct”. It has become a kind of a dictatorship, compelling us to a certain auto-censorship in all areas of our life. But freedom is the first condition for a person to tell the truth and to live in the truth. “Truth is truth, says Saint Thomas, not because it is spoken by many people, but because it reflects things as they are”.

Enemy of truth today is also certain pragmatism. In front of dramatic situations of injustice and enormous suffering, those who are responsible for those situations do not want the real truth to be known; on the other side what the victims really want is practical solutions to their dramatic problems. Deeds, not only words!  What really the Commissions of the Truth are investigating in many countries are not only words, and many times atrocious deeds.

Enemy of truth is many times the history of the same truth, the use and abuse of the truth, which has widespread blood, crime and death all through history of mankind.  And so truth remained associated with intolerance and violence.

And, according to Saint Thomas, another enemy of truth is mental laziness, because searching for truth demands a lot of effort, of ascetic effort, of renunciation. And that we do not like too much.

In modern society the interest for the esthetic is growing every day more and more, as the interest for ethical problems is also growing, sometimes due to a real convictions sometimes due to some urgent needs. There is no that much interest regarding the question of truth. Some people are aware of the devastating results of falsehood as a way of life, as a companion of injustice… But today most of the people think that lying is absolutely meaningless and has not transcendence at all. Even more, they do not associate truth or lie with morals. When we speak about war or genocide we are very much worried about injustice, violence, human rights…, but we do not care too much about the enormous amount of falsehood used to covered up and justify war, injustice, genocide, etc…

But, truth is absolutely essential in order to live together, to establish harmonious relationships among persons, to live humanely… As a matter of fact, Saint Paul states firmly that the first thing that injustice has to do is precisely to stifle the truth (Rm 1, 18).  Probably this is the most powerful test of the relevance of the truth. Falsehood is the radical evil. The Gospel of John goes as far as to present the Devil as the only father of falsehood (“He is not rooted in the truth; there is no truth in him.  When he tells a lie he is speaking his own language, for he is liar and father of lies” (Jn 8, 44). Jankelevitch puts the falsehood as an essential element of the radical evil in the Holocaust.

The question of truth embraces at the same time the area of meaning and the area of faith.

Truth includes basically three levels or strata.

a. The first level is the transparent reality or the reality itself without any mask or disguise or cover up. The truth is the reality itself, things as they are, the objectivity of reality. Ellacuria used to call this “to be honest to reality, to call things by their name”. Let us observe and let us listen to scientific conclusions.  In this fist level of the truth we have to pay attention to the facts: the facts as they are. Here the different sciences have a relevant word to tell, but we should be aware that also a scientific conclusion is an interpretation –a hermeneutic exercise- of reality, not a dogmatic conclusion.   Sciences do not tell us everything about reality, not even the most important or transcendental conclusions about reality. But, at least, thanks to the scientific conclusions we can know every day more and better this wonderful world and this wonderful human nature. As a matter of fact, lying consist of concealing – for different purposes- that part of reality that we already know. Lie is not equal to error or misunderstanding; lie is to hide or to cover up something on purpose.

b. The second level of truth is related to the sense or meaning of reality. Here the exercise of hermeneutics is more needed and more complicated, especially today, because the management of meaning has become a private task of the individuals, not a public mission of the traditional institutions, let us say religions, churches, educations centers, family… E. Schillebeeckx established a closed relationship between truth and meaning. From the perspective of meaning things are not mere means, tools, objects…; they become final purpose, real values, and symbols inviting us to a transcendental experience. In this area of meaning the pluralism is spreading everyday more and more in our culture, and the chance of consensus is lessening every day more and more. The meaning of human being, of freedom, of happiness… is so different even for different people in the same culture! Searching for truth and meaning today demand a lot of humility and dialogue. (Saint Thomas compares this task of searching for the truth with the hunting sport, all participants coming together like a team to catch the animal). This dialogue about meaning is absolutely needed today since the lack of meaning leads a person towards a kind of vital emptiness, existential disorientation, even to suicide.  (This is the main point in the whole work of Viktor Frankl. The central statement of his doctrinal system is this: The real drama in human life is not the lack of pleasure, but the lack of meaning). These questions about meaning are closely related to the deepest questions of human being: the meaning and destine of our life, the problem of suffering and, what is to expect beyond death?… Are these not practical questions? Ignoring them is to put ourselves at our back, as Saint Augustin says in his Confessions. “Then, you, my Lord, took me from my back, where I had put myself in order not to see me, and you threw me against my eyes”.  This level of truth demands from us a real exercise of the contemplative dimension of our life.

c. The third level of truth places us at a theological level. It considers the salvific dimension of reality, the deepest capacity of reality accessible only to faith. The Vatican Council II invited to respect the autonomy of mundane reality. But this autonomy is compatible with this salvific dimension of the same mundane reality. In this salvific horizon mundane reality becomes creature and has a vocation, a destiny, finality. This salvific projection has been revealed all along the history and specially in the personal history of Jesus of Nazareth, the new man and the origin of the New Creation. For the believers God is the truth and the truth is the world of God. Out of the truth God can´t be, can´t exist. Out of the truth, what appears is inhumanity. These statements are not easily accepted in the secular culture, which is closed in it, blocked to any Transcendence. Faith has become a question more than a solution for many people.

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In all these three levels it is very important to distinguish error and lie, ignorance and lie. Error and ignorance have no ethic connotations. They are not mortal enemies of truth; they are simply the absence of truth. Meanwhile lie has ethic connotations. It is a mortal enemy of truth, it is radically immoral. Jon Sobrino put the problem in these terms: “The main purpose of human being is not to pass from ignorance to knowledge, but from lie to truth”. And Don Miguel de Unamuno states: “Death is lie, truth is life, and if truth leads us to die, it is better to die for truth than to live lying, to live dying”.

2. Attitudes to approach truth, meaning and faith.

In this second moment of my talk I´ll present some attitudes which can facilitate our approach to truth, meaning and faith. Let us be clear from the very beginning: these attitudes facilitate, show the way, and indicate the direction…, they are not absolute guarantee. There are people already with these attitudes and notwithstanding they say they are not sure about truth, meaning and faith. By talking about these attitudes all I want to say is that it is easier to approach truth, meaning and faith in these conditions than in the contraries.

Many and different are the attitudes to facilitate our approach to truth, meaning and faith. It is important to be clever, wise, profound, honest, humble, open-minded, simple, confident, and ready to listen to the Word… But no one can be so much talented, with so many virtues at the same time. I´ll present only the attitudes I consider more relevant for our purpose. For the rest our task will be to pray so that strong faith will be given to us or that our faith does not become weak.

a. Cultivating a culture of confidence and trust.

First of all, faith is an anthropological phenomenon. Only in a second moment it becomes a religious phenomenon. First of all faith is a necessary condition to make it possible a real human relationships between human beings. Faith is a condition to make possible for people to live together in a just, harmonious and gratifying way.

Human being is anthropologically speaking a believer, and, many times, very much credulous. Most of the knowledge we have, we learned by believing other people, by trusting them. Many of our securities and certainties are based more on faith than on scientific knowledge or personal experience. Modern man and woman is much more credulous than he or she believes. Not only in the area of religion or para-religious phenomena, but also in scientific matters. If people eliminate from their mind all the archives they have learned trusting other people, their remaining ideas would be very few. Most of the ideas we assure to be true and certain is due not to an objective evidence, but to the fact that the mechanic, the doctor, de scientific, the philosopher, the theologian… assure us to be true and certain.  Objective evidence is not abundant for most of people.

Faith is related not only with knowledge. It has another dimension even more specific and transcendental: the personal dimension. Faith is a way of relationship among persons. This relationship goes beyond mere knowledge; it embraces the totality of communication, communion among people. Here to say “I believe in you” means “I believe what you are telling me”. But it means especially “I trust you”, beyond any objective evidence. Without any objective evidence, this confidence gets highest degree of firmness and security. “I believe in you”, “I trust you”: these are expressions approaching us to the culture of confidence and trust.

The culture of confidence and trust has two main dimensions.

First of all, this culture has a personal dimension. “I believe in you” means “I trust you”. That means a close personal relationship of full confidence, a kind of personal encounter, a certain relationship of love, of communion, of personal communication. This personal encounter is possible because one person manifests his or her oneself, his or her personal identity… and the other person responds with an attitude of faith, of confidence, of trust. Both of them offer themselves generously, to make the encounter possible.  Both, personal auto-revelation and personal confidence have their last motivation in love. That is why K. Barth said in one of his books:  “only love is worthy of faith”.

Second, the culture of confidence has also an intellectual dimension. Just because my master is for me worthy of confidence, he becomes a fountain of knowledge, of illumination. His moral authority is for me guarantee of truth in all what he says. To trust him means also to trust his word, to trust what he says, without fear to be induced to error. And so faith is not contrary to knowledge; it is a real possibility of knowledge, but in other way, in other key, from other perspective. To let oneself be informed, to be taught, instructed and trained, to be illuminated, to be revealed… is a real exercise of faith and confidence. Saint Thomas calls this the virtue of “docibilitas”.  “Faith makes man not blind, but helps him to see more and further…”

Modern culture is enemy of the argument of authority and tradition. To say knowledge means to say “critical reason”, “critical knowledge”, “empirical knowledge”… Tradition and authority are underestimated or, at least, are suspicious as fountains of knowledge. In order to reach the adulthood, modern culture demands from human being to be liberated from tradition, authority and faith.

Of course, objective evidence is the supreme degree of natural knowledge. But we should not forget an elemental fact of human history: our first learning is by faith or based on others authority; let us say parents, teachers, adult persons, professors… In most of the matters we do not know by ourselves; simply we believe what the specialists tell us, we trust them. Without faith, trust and confidence… there is no way of learning, of progress in knowledge.

Unfortunately a culture of mistrust is spreading today. Shaking hands is not more enough to close a contract. We need the signature of the parts, the lawyer, registrar… Every contract must be with signature and seal in order to be valuable. This culture of mistrust or disbelieve has spread towards persons and institutions.

It is necessary to retrieve the culture of trust and confidence in order to place us in the way towards truth, meaning and faith. Religious faith is essentially an experience of confidence and trust in other person, in the Other with capital letter. When a person lacks confidence she closes herself within herself and so such person becomes blocked to faith.

b. Cultivating the culture of heart.-

The questions of truth, meaning and faith… must be often translated from the stage of mind to the stage of heart, from the level of ideas to the level of vital experiences. This is not a mere invitation to emotivism or sentimentalism, but a claim for an integral consideration of human being.

Modern critical reason meant a relevant progress towards the adulthood of mankind. No doubt. Much dogmatism, both religious and secular, was destroyed. But critical reason itself became in some way an idol, became a kind of god, a dogma, and closed the door toward truth, meaning and faith. These three values inhabit not on only in our critical reason but also in the habits of heart. We can approach them through intuition, emotion, ethical sense, esthetic feeling… We should not place critical reason against the habits of heart; it is question, not of splitting but rather of putting together, of harmonizing different ways of approaching truth, meaning and faith.

Let us take theology as an example. In the Scholastic the rational exercise, the demonstration, the justification, the scientific argument… prevailed so much, that there was no place for experience of faith. Faith itself was mainly defined as the mere acceptance of certain truths previously defined by the magisterium.

No objection to this worthy intent of theology to present religious faith as something reasonable. The reasonable dimension and the existential dimension of faith should not be divorced. Neither a cold rationalism nor a sterile fideism is convenient to religious experience. We are bound to purify constantly our concept of God, of the incarnation, of resurrection, of salvation…

The believer is committed to understand and to formulate in some way what he believes. But in this exercise he should never forget that the central point of faith is the experience of confidence in God, of trusting him, and this is a habit of heart.  A mere theoretic acceptance of the dogmas can leave human heart absolutely indifferent and can leave a person absolutely distant from God, not having any incidence at all in his or her life. Such a theoretic acceptance of the dogmas can be existentially empty of truth and meaning.

Many problems of faith, truth and meaning become more and more dramatic inasmuch they become trapped in the rationalistic area, far  away from any existential and heartily dimension. In the three areas of truth, meaning and faith we often move between the cold rationalism and the irrationality of fideism. Fideism sticks to the truth, the meaning, the faith without reason, and even against reason. The rationalism considers that truth, meaning and faith are simply question of arguments. That can produce great intellectual success and satisfaction, but probably will leave a frozen soul and a personal history absolutely unchanged, and without any valuable challenge.

The Bible associates truth, meaning and faith with the nucleus of the person, that what the Semitic culture calls “heart”. In that center come together and from there flow the most transcendental experiences of human life: trust and disbelief, communion and loneliness, openness to other and isolation, courage and fear… In that center are rooted the attitudes which shape and form the whole life of a person, those which make it possible to trust other people, to offer confidently one´s life, to have the guarantee of been in the right way even when we lack rational securities…

c. Cultivating the contemplative dimension in life.

All we want to underline here is that the contemplative dimension facilitates the approach to truth, meaning and faith much more than a dispersed, banal, diverted and dissipated life. Pascal was a special master in this question. He considered the contemplative dimension of life a special condition to approach truth, meaning and faith, more than a life absolutely diverted and alien to the great questions about the mystery of this cosmos, and the meaning and destiny of human existence.

All along history many philosophers searching for wisdom and many mystics searching for God experience came to the same conclusion: “Noli foras ire, in interiore enim hábitat veritas” (Do not go outside, within you inhabit the truth). Saint Augustin, with his wonderful capacity of interiorization, was very much aware of that and made an excellent formulation: “Oh my Lord, I was looking for you outside, and you were inside”. And that is why he could find neither God nor the truth. In his Confession he describes this error in a magisterial metaphor: “Then, you, my Lord, took me from my back, where I had put myself so that I could not see me, and threw me against my eyes”. ¡Wonderful!

Contrary to live in the depth is dispersion, banality, di-version in the sense of Pacal. This diversion consists of being always distracted by any noise and external rumor, but mainly by any intellectual or affective interference, by mere banal curiosities…  It consists of being indifferent to the main and transcendental questions of human life. Where we come from? Where we go? Why there is so much suffering and injustice? Why death and what after death? Is there any reason for hope after death?…

But there is not only contemplative dimension towards the interiority of the subject; there is contemplative dimension towards outside, the cosmos, things, events, history… This contemplative dimension allows us to contemplate objects and events, not as mere tools or facts, but as signs, as symbols, full of meaning and significance. And so we proceed from mere scientific knowledge to a true wisdom.  Wisdom, sapientia, sapere…means to enjoy the flavor of reality and history.

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When we reach this level of the truth and contemplation we are placing ourselves on the way of faith. This contemplative dimension does not move us away from the world and history. Neither we can nor should we escape from this world and history in order to be awarded with the gift of faith. But we have to be in the world with mystical and contemplative eyes. Contemplation is the way of looking at reality from the depth; it is the exercise which allows us to go down to the depth of reality and to the profundity of the historical events and to transcend the mere appearances, so that we can catch the whole meaning and plenitude of things and events. Only this contemplative vision can reveal the real possibilities of human history, the whole truth and meaning of human existence.

d. Openness to experience of Transcendence.

We should begin here making reference to the experience of being a mere creature. But it seems to me that this language belongs to a religious creed: “we believe in one God creator of heaven and earth”. This creed helps us to conceive ourselves as creatures, and invites us to recognize and accept the sovereignty of the Creator, to accept our finitude, our limitation and to adopt an attitude of recognition and veneration.

People alien to any religious experience, do not think of any creatural relationship; they only think in terms of finitude and limitation. Some of them live this finitude peacefully and with no pain at all. Many people live this finitude like a real drama of human being, bound to swing in tension between this finitude and the desire for the Infinite. This desire is an open door to the ultimate truth, meaning and faith.

The experience of finitude can open our path towards the experience of transcendence. But the experience of transcendence has two fundamental versions: the mystical one related to the experience of the Infinite, the Absolute, the absolute Transcendental Being; and the ethic one related to the experience of the Other, opening us to other subjects.

The mystical version of transcendence is not private or exclusive of Christian religion; it is shared with all religious traditions. Even more, this mystical experience has also not religious versions, secular versions. Every day more agnostic and not religious persons claim the right to have their own spirituality, their mystical experience, their secular experience of Transcendence. They have their time for prayer, meditation, contemplation…

This mystical experience of transcendence is based on the experience of finitude, on the consciousness of limitation, on the desire for the Absolute. Modern culture is a culture of autonomy without limits, without frontiers. The subject has become a God for him or herself. It reminds of the first temptation in the Bible: “God knows that as soon as you eat it, your eyes will be opened and you will be like gods knowing both good and evil” (Gn 3, 5). On the contrary the experience of finitude allows the subject to overcome any isolation in itself, any temptation of being like God, of closing any horizon for the future. The awareness of finitude opens new dimensions to human beings. We do not know all we are capable to. We need to become aware of our finitude in order to be open to the experience of Transcendence. This experience helps us to maintain open the door so that our human vocation can be expanded beyond our natural capabilities. This is the real target of our infinite desire of knowledge, of our desire of going into the core of the mystery of reality, of our desire of love in plenitude. ¡May the Absolute come to our encounter! This openness to the transcendence is an important approach to truth, meaning and faith.

Other version of the openness to Transcendence has an ethic character. It is related to our openness to other subjects, to our relationship with other persons. This version is specially needed today in the post-modern culture, when a radical individualism is widespread, producing much of isolation and loneliness in many people. We are invited to go outside of ourselves, not for dispersion or di-version, but to encounter the other, to experience communion and plenitude. Just the other makes it possible for us to know ourselves, to become responsible and moral subjects, to be really humans. The other, specially, the wounded person allows us to discover our condition as moral subjects, as responsible subjects. It reminds us of the second great question in the Bible: “Cain, ¿where is your brother Abel?” (Gn 4, 9). Here is another way of approaching truth, meaning and faith.

The mystical experience of Transcendence leads us into the depth of reality and eventually allows us to Felicisimo Martínez, O.P.encounter a kind of absolute Presence wrapping all our life. On their side the ethic experience of Transcendence leads us towards the face of our neighbor and eventually allows us to understand our life as an exercise of dialogue, of trust, of faith and encounter with other people. Both experiences place us in the way and can facilitate our approach to truth, meaning and faith.

Felicisimo Martinez, O.P

Macau, March 7, 2014

24 February Suggested REading for the Memory of Blessed Ascension Nicol

24 February Suggested REading for the Memory of Blessed Ascension Nicol

24 February

BLESSED ASCENSION NICOL GOÑI

Virgin, Sister and Foundress

Greater China Region: Optional memoria

Blessed Ascensión of the Heart of Jesus, born Florentina Nicol Goñi in Tafalla, Navarra, Spain, she entered the Dominican Third Order Nuns in Huesca. She was a teacher and directress of the school adjacent to the convent. At 45, upon the invitation of the Dominican Bishop, the Servant of God, Ramón Zubieta Les, she traveled to Peru and pioneered the missionary work in the Amazon jungle, evangelizing the Amazonian tribes and elevating the status of women and children through education and social service. She helped found the Congregation of Dominican Missionary Sisters of the Most Holy Rosary, which she led with prudence and wisdom as its first general superior. In 1933 she led a group of sisters to make a foundation in China and cooperated in the foundation of the Congregation of the Dominican Third Order Sisters of Funing. In her last years she dedicated her soul and energy to consolidate her foundations, with prudence, abnegation and wisdom. All these activities were coupled with her failing health, which she bore with heroic patience. She died at the Congregation’s Motherhouse at Pamplona on 24 February 1940. She was beatified by Benedict XVI in 14 May, 2005.

From the Common of Virgins: For Women Religious, except the following.

THE OFFICE OF READINGS

Second Reading

From the Apostolic Letter «Mulieris Dignitatem» of Pope Blessed John Paul II, Pope.

(Apostolic Letter, «Mulieris Dignitatem», 15 August, 1988, no. 20)

They realize the personal value of their own femininity by becoming “a sincere gift” for God

On the basis of the Gospel, the meaning of virginity was developed and better understood as a vocation for women too, one in which their dignity, like that of the Virgin of Nazareth, finds confirmation. The Gospel puts forward the ideal of the consecration of the person, that is, the person’s exclusive dedication to God by virtue of the evangelical counsels: in particular, chastity, poverty and obedience. Their perfect incarnation is Jesus Christ himself. Whoever wishes to follow him in a radical way chooses to live according to these counsels. They are distinct from the commandments and show the Christian the radical way of the Gospel. From the very beginning of Christianity men and women have set out on this path, since the evangelical ideal is addressed to human beings without any distinction of sex.

In this wider context, virginity has to be considered also as a path for women, a path on which they realize their womanhood in a way different from marriage. In order to understand this path, it is necessary to refer once more to the fundamental idea of Christian anthropology. By freely choosing virginity, women confirm themselves as persons, as beings whom the Creator from the beginning has willed for their own sake. At the same time they realize the personal value of their own femininity by becoming “a sincere gift” for God who has revealed himself in Christ, a gift for Christ, the Redeemer of humanity and the Spouse of souls: a “spousal” gift. One cannot correctly understand virginity – a woman’s consecration in virginity – without referring to spousal love. It is through this kind of love that a person becomes a gift for the other..

Women, called from the very “beginning” to be loved and to love, in a vocation to virginity find Christ first of all as the Redeemer who “loved until the end” through his total gift of self; and they respond to this gift with a “sincere gift” of their whole lives. They thus give themselves to the divine Spouse, and this personal gift tends to union, which is properly spiritual in character. Through the Holy Spirit’s action a woman becomes “one spirit” with Christ the Spouse.

This is the evangelical ideal of virginity, in which both the dignity and the vocation of women are realized in a special way. In virginity thus understood the so-called radicalism of the Gospel finds expression: “Leave everything and follow Christ” (cf. Mt 19:27). This cannot be compared to remaining simply unmarried or single, because virginity is not restricted to a mere “no”, but contains a profound “yes” in the spousal order: the gift of self for love in a total and undivided manner.

Responsory

R. How great is your beauty, Virgin of Christ* you have been proved worthy of the reward given by the Lord, the crown of perpetual virginity.

V. Nothing could bring you to surrender virginity; nothing could separate you from the love of the Son of God.

R. * you have been proved worthy of the reward given by the Lord, the crown of perpetual virginity.

Alternative Second Reading

A reading from the Encyclical Letter «Redemptoris Missio» by Blessed John Paul II, Pope.

(Encyclical «Redemptoris Missio», 7 December, 1990, nn. 33-34.)

The missio ad gentes knows no boundaries

By virtue of Christ’s universal mandate, the missio ad gentes knows no boundaries. Still, it is possible to determine certain parameters within which that mission is exercised, in order to gain a real grasp of the situation.

Missionary activity has normally been defined in terms of specific territories. The Second Vatican Council acknowledged the territorial dimension of the missio ad gentes, a dimension which even today remains important for determining responsibilities, competencies and the geographical limits of missionary activity. Certainly, a universal mission implies a universal perspective. Indeed, the Church refuses to allow her missionary presence to be hindered by geographical boundaries or political barriers. But it is also true that missionary activity ad gentes, being different from the pastoral care of the faithful and the new evangelization of the non-practicing, is exercised within well-defined territories and groups of people.

The growth in the number of new churches in recent times should not deceive us. Within the territories entrusted to these churches – particularly in Asia, but also in Africa, Latin America and Oceania – there remain vast regions still to be evangelized. In many nations entire peoples and cultural areas of great importance have not yet been reached by the proclamation of the Gospel and the presence of the local church. Even in traditionally Christian countries there are regions that are under the special structures of the mission ad gentes, with groups and areas not yet evangelized. Thus, in these countries too there is a need not only for a new evangelization, but also, in some cases, for an initial evangelization.

Situations are not, however, the same everywhere. While acknowledging that statements about the missionary responsibility of the Church are not credible unless they are backed up by a serious commitment to a new evangelization in the traditionally Christian countries, it does not seem justified to regard as identical the situation of a people which has never known Jesus Christ and that of a people which has known him, accepted him and then rejected him, while continuing to live in a culture which in large part has absorbed gospel principles and values. These are two basically different situations with regard to the faith.

Thus the criterion of geography, although somewhat imprecise and always provisional, is still a valid indicator of the frontiers toward which missionary activity must be directed. There are countries and geographical and cultural areas which lack indigenous Christian communities. In other places, these communities are so small as not to be a clear sign of a Christian presence; or they lack the dynamism to evangelize their societies, or belong to a minority population not integrated into the dominant culture of the nation. Particularly in Asia, toward which the Church’s missio ad gentes ought to be chiefly directed, Christians are a small minority, even though sometimes there are significant numbers of converts and outstanding examples of Christian presence.

The rapid and profound transformations which characterize today’s world, especially in the southern hemisphere, are having a powerful effect on the overall missionary picture. Where before there were stable human and social situations, today everything is in flux. One thinks, for example, of urbanization and the massive growth of cities, especially where demographic pressure is greatest. In not a few countries, over half the population already lives in a few “megalopolises,” where human problems are often aggravated by the feeling of anonymity experienced by masses of people.

In the modern age, missionary activity has been carried out especially in isolated regions which are far from centers of civilization and which are hard to penetrate because of difficulties of communication, language or climate. Today the image of missio ad gentes is perhaps changing: efforts should be concentrated on the big cities, where new customs and styles of living arise together with new forms of culture and communication, which then influence the wider population. It is true that the “option for the neediest” means that we should not overlook the most abandoned and isolated human groups, but it is also true that individual or small groups cannot be evangelized if we neglect the centers where a new humanity, so to speak, is emerging, and where new models of development are taking shape. The future of the younger nations is being shaped in the cities.

Speaking of the future, we cannot forget the young, who in many countries comprise more than half the population. How do we bring the message of Christ to non-Christian young people who represent the future of entire continents? Clearly, the ordinary means of pastoral work are not sufficient: what are needed are associations, institutions, special centers and groups, and cultural and social initiatives for young people. This is a field where modern ecclesial movements have ample room for involvement.

Among the great changes taking place in the contemporary world, migration has produced a new phenomenon: non-Christians are becoming very numerous in traditionally Christian countries, creating fresh opportunities for contacts and cultural exchanges, and calling the Church to hospitality, dialogue, assistance and, in a word, fraternity. Among migrants, refugees occupy a very special place and deserve the greatest attention. Today there are many millions of refugees in the world and their number is constantly increasing. They have fled from conditions of political oppression and inhuman misery, from famine and drought of catastrophic proportions. The Church must make them part of her overall apostolic concern.

Finally, we may mention the situations of poverty – often on an intolerable scale – which have been created in not a few countries, and which are often the cause of mass migration. The community of believers in Christ is challenged by these inhuman situations: the proclamation of Christ and the kingdom of God must become the means for restoring the human dignity of these people.

Responsory Mk 16:15-16; Jn 3:5

R. Go out to the whole world; proclaim the Good News to all creation: * He who believes and is baptized will be saved.

V. No one can enter the kingdom of God without being born from water and Spirit.

R. * He who believes and is baptized will be saved.

Concluding Prayer

Lord you bestowed upon your virgin, Blessed Ascension Nicol countless apostolic virtues and inspired her to offer her life to serve and educate the poor, the marginalized, the women and the weak; may we cherish what she treasured in life and put her teachings and counsels into practice. (We make our prayer) through our Lord. (Through Christ our Lord.)

Or

God, the Father of mercy, you called Blessed Ascension to serve you with generosity in the most needy: allow us, through her intercession to discover the treasures of your love and to share them with all humanity. (We make our prayer) through our Lord. (Through Christ our Lord.)

By Fr. Jarvis Sy.

20 February Suggested Reading for the Memory Blessed Francisco and Blessed Jacinta

20 February Suggested Reading for the Memory Blessed Francisco and Blessed Jacinta

20 February

BLESSED FRANCISCO MARTO

AND BLESSED JACINTA MARTO

The Little Shepherds of Fatima

Francisco Marto (June 11, 1908–April 4, 1919) and his sister Jacinta Marto (March 11, 1910–February 20, 1920), together with their cousin, Lúcia dos Santos (1907–2005) were the shepherd children from Aljustrel near Fátima, Portugal who reported to have witnessed three apparitions of an angel in 1916 and several apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1917.

Following the Marian apparitions, while their fundamental personalities remained the same, there was a very drastic transformation in the lives with regards to their faith and piety. Heeding the call of the Virgin for atonement and reparation for sins, they began to spend time in prayer, and make penances and stringent self –mortification for the conversion of sinners “to console Jesus for the sins of the world”.

The siblings fell victims of the great influenza epidemic (known in history as the “Spanish Flu”) which swept through Europe in 1918. Both lingered for many months. Francisco declined hospital treatment and died peacefully at home on April 4, 1919. Meanwhile Jacinta had to endure greater suffering as her health worsened and developed complications which she bore with the most heroic of patience and courage. She died alone as she had prophesized, in far away Lisboa. Both siblings were beatified by Blessed John Paul II on 13 May, 2000 which coincided with the publication of the “third Secret” of Fatima. The liturgical memory is fixed on the date of the glorious passage of Bl. Jacinta to the next life.

From the Common of Saints, except the following.

THE OFFICE OF READINGS

Second Reading

The Homily of Blessed John Paul II on the occasion of the beatification of Francisco and Jacinto Marto, (Fátima, 13 May, 2000. Nn. 1-4)

They see a light shining from her maternal hands which penetrates them inwardly,

so that they feel immersed in God.

“Father, … to you I offer praise; for what you have hidden from the learned and the clever you have revealed to the merest children” (Mt 11: 25). With these words, dear brothers and sisters, Jesus praises the heavenly Father for his designs; he knows that no one can come to him unless he is drawn by the Father (cf. Jn 6: 44); therefore he praises him for his plan and embraces it as a son: “Yes, Father, for such was your gracious will” (Mt 11: 26). You were pleased to reveal the kingdom to the merest children.

Later Francisco, one of the three privileged children, exclaimed: “We were burning in that light which is God and we were not consumed. What is God like? It is impossible to say. In fact we will never be able to tell people”. God: a light that burns without consuming. Moses had the same experience when he saw God in the burning bush; he heard God say that he was concerned about the slavery of his people and had decided to deliver them through him: “I will be with you” (cf. Ex 3: 2-12). Those who welcome this presence become the dwelling-place and, consequently, a “burning bush” of the Most High.

What most impressed and entirely absorbed Blessed Francisco was God in that immense light which penetrated the inmost depths of the three children. But God told only Francisco “how sad” he was, as he said. One night his father heard him sobbing and asked him why he was crying; his son answered: “I was thinking of Jesus who is so sad because of the sins that are committed against him”. He was motivated by one desire – so expressive of how children think – “to console Jesus and make him happy”.

A transformation takes place in his life, one we could call radical: a transformation certainly uncommon for children of his age. He devotes himself to an intense spiritual life, expressed in assiduous and fervent prayer, and attains a true form of mystical union with the Lord. This spurs him to a progressive purification of the spirit through the renunciation of his own pleasures and even of innocent childhood games.

Francisco bore without complaining the great sufferings caused by the illness from which he died. It all seemed to him so little to console Jesus: he died with a smile on his lips. Little Francisco had a great desire to atone for the offences of sinners by striving to be good and by offering his sacrifices and prayers.

The life of Jacinta, his younger sister by almost two years, was motivated by these same sentiments. Little Jacinta felt and personally experienced Our Lady’s anguish, offering herself heroically as a victim for sinners. One day, when she and Francisco had already contracted the illness that forced them to bed, the Virgin Mary came to visit them at home, as the little one recounts: “Our Lady came to see us and said that soon she would come and take Francisco to heaven. And she asked me if I still wanted to convert more sinners. I told her yes”. And when the time came for Francisco to leave, the little girl tells him: “Give my greetings to Our Lord and to Our Lady and tell them that I am enduring everything they want for the conversion of sinners”. Jacinta had been so deeply moved by the vision of hell during the apparition of 13 July that no mortification or penance seemed too great to save sinners.

“Father, to you I offer praise, for you have revealed these things to the merest children”. Today the Church wishes to put on the candelabrum these two candles which God lit to illumine humanity in its dark and anxious hours. May they shine on the path of this immense multitude of pilgrims… may Francisco and Jacinta be a friendly light that illumines all Portugal.

Responsory 1 Cor 7: 29, 30; 2: 12.

R. Our time is growing shot. Those who enjoy life should live as though there were nothing to enjoy, and those who deal with worldly things should not become engrossed in them. * I say this because the world as we know it is passing away.

V. It is not the spirit of the world which we have received.

R. * I say this because the world as we know it is passing away.

Concluding Prayer

O God who granted to Blessed Francisco and Blessed Jacinta the two little Shepherds the grace to become little burning bushes on fire with love for God and the Church; Grant that we, too, may burn with the same love and, with them, all meet together again in Heaven around Our Lady in adoration of the Blessed Trinity. (We make our prayer) through our Lord. (Through Christ our Lord.)

By Fr. Jarvis Sy.