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    31 March 2006

    Some very nice graphics for Stations

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 4:10 pm

    Ninth Station Dan Mitsui

    May I recommend that you check out the very nice black and white graphics for Stations of the Cross on the blog The Lion and the Cardinal.  They are very much worth a close look. 

    The graphic above is by the author of the blog in question, Dan Mitsui. 

    • • • • • •

    Friday in the 4th Week of Lent

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM, WDTPRS — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 10:45 am

    Novus Ordo prayer composition toolsCOLLECT
    Deus, qui fragilitati nostrae congrua subsidia praeparasti,
    concede, quaesumus, ut suae reparationis effectum
    et cum exsultatione suscipiat,
    et pia conversatione recenseat.

    Glue - another toolThis prayer today was not in the pre-Concilar Missale Romanum.  It also has me scratching my head.  Once I looked up all the references, I knew why.  In effect, this is clearly a cut and paste job and it just doesn’t hang together well.  A predecessor (Concede, quaesumus, domine, fragilitate nostrae sufficientiam conpetentem, ut suae reparationis effectum et pia conuersatione recenseat et cum exultatione suscipiat: per.)  is in the Gelasianum Vetus in two places, Friday of the 3rd Week of Lent and for Septuagesima.  The "et fragilitati nostrae congrua praeparasti subsidia" is in the Veronese in April and references to fragilitas and pia conversatio in a prayer in July. 

    Subsidium is, you guessed it, military language.  It means, "the troops stationed in reserve in the third line of battle (behind the principes), the line of reserve, reserve-ranks, triarii".  Thus, it is "support, assistance, aid, help, protection, etc.".   A reparatio is "a restoration, renewal".  Recenseo is "to count, enumerate, number, reckon, survey" and "to go over in thought, in narration, or in critical treatment, to reckon up, recount, review, revise".  Blaise/Dumas says “recolere, rappeler, célébrer le souvenir de…”.  But there is in the entry no reference to our prayer, which I find puzzling. 

    Scissors - another toolConversatio is a super-charged word in Christian literature, which has to do with "manner of life", how one comports himself.   This is often used in monastic literature.  I now have also at my fingertips the helpful big dictionary of the indefatigable Albert Blaise, the Dictionnarie Latin-Francais des Auteurs Chrétiens reworked by Henri Chirat.  This lexical tool is out of print, so I can’t suggest you buy it any time soon.   I will have to start distinguishing now Blaise/Chirat from Blaise/Dumas, won’t I!  Any way, Blaise/Chirat shows that Patristic sources handle conversatio in a moral sense of conversio as well as "genre de vie".  As I mentioned before, it also indicates "monastic life", though that is outside of this context. 

    Novus Ordo prayer composing toolsPius, in the mighty Lewis & Short is "honest, upright, honorable" and "benevolent, kind, gentle, gracious".  With respect to God it points to His mercy.  In respect to man, in much Latin literature, it point to his interior and exterior response to duty, the exigencies he faces. 

    The suae refers back to something feminine, which leaves a single candidate, fragilitas nostraGiotto - Crucifixion
    <supportLineBreakNewLine]—>

    The problem with cutting and pasting a prayer together is that you don’t get much of a unified "vision" from it.  This is a good prayer, don’t get me wrong, at least I think it is a good prayer, but it is not in the same league as some of the ancient integral works we have seen, even having endured slight changes from The Redactors.

    LITERAL TRANSLATION
    O God, who made ready suitable helps for our fragility,
    grant, we beg, that it may both catch up
    the effect of its own renewal in exultation,
    and sum it up in upright conduct of life.

    ?? 

    What on earth does this mean? I think we need …

    ANOTHER VERSION TO SPIN THIS OUT
    O God, who prepared the helps proportional to our (sin induced) frailty,
    grant, we beg You, that our (
    sin induced) frailty
    may both take up in joy the effect of its own renewal
    (that effect being the Passion and Resurrection)

    and also critically express (our sin induced frailty) by means of a proper manner of living.

    I can’t tell you how much I look forward to reading your own perfect versions of this very odd Collect.  Perhaps I am burning out from work on top of illness, but I am still scratching my head.  I think I nailed it, however.

    The "effect of our renewal" is the impact of the merits of Jesus’ Passion, Resurrection and subsequent Ascension to the right hand of the Father.  The "congruent helps" are the mysteries of the Lord’s Death and Resurrection.  These are our two hinges.

    The sin of our First Parents opened a chasm between us and God which no mere human being (very limited) could bridge or repair.  This reparation or renewal required a human being (because of justice) but no mere human was proportioned to the work of our salvation.  So, from unfathomable love, God stepped into and over the chasm.  In the fullness of time, the Second Person took our humanity into an indestructible bond with His divinity.  Only the God/man could repair the rift.  The Passion and Resurrection are the "congruent helps", proportional to such an effect of reparation/renewal.

    Realization of this must have a consequence for our lives.  It must transform us.  The effect, which is interior, must find outward expression.  We feel joy interiorly and this must be expressed outwardly.  The reordering of the disorder of our soul is an interior and invisible effect, but that effect must be brought to outward expression in proper conduct of life.

    That is, I believe, what is going on in this very odd snipped and pasted prayer.  Not bad, but it is not user friendly.

    • • • • • •
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