Friday, 5 December 2025

5 DECEMBER – SAINT SABAS (Abbot)

Dom Prosper Guéranger:

The Roman Church confines herself today to the Office of the Feria, but to that she joins a Commemoration of Saint Sabas, Abbot of the celebrated Laura of Palestine, which still exists under his name. This Saint who died in 533 is the only one of the Monastic Order of whom the Church makes any mention in her Liturgy during the whole period of Advent. We might even say that he is the only simple Confessor whose name occurs in the Calendar of this part of the year, for, as regards Saint Francis Xavier, the glorious title of Apostle of the Indies puts him in a distinct class of Saints. Here again we should recognise Divine Providence which has selected for these days of preparation for Christmas those Saints whose characteristic virtues would make them our fittest models in this work of preparation. We have the feasts of Apostles, Pontiffs, Doctors, Virgins: Jesus, the Man-God, the King and Spouse of men, is preceded by this magnificent procession of the noblest of His servants: simple Confession has but a single representative, the Anchoret and Cenobite Sabas who, by his profession of the monastic life, is of that family of holy solitaries which began with the Prophet Elias under the Old Testament, and continued up to the time of Saint John the Precursor, who was one of its members, and will continue on, during the New Covenant, until the last Coming of Jesus. Let us, then, honour this holy Abbot towards whom the Greek Church professes a filial veneration, and under whose invocation Rome has consecrated one of her Churches.
*****
O Sabas, thou man of desires! In your expectation of that Lord who has bid His servants watch until He comes, you withdrew into the desert, fearing lest the turmoil of the world might distract your mind from its God. Have pity on us who are living in the world, and are so occupied in the affairs of that world, and yet who have received the commandment which you so took to heart: of keeping ourselves in readiness for the Coming of our Saviour and our Judge. Pray for us that when He comes, we may be worthy to go out to meet Him. Remember also the Monastic State, of which you are one of the brightest ornaments. Raise it up again from its ruins. Let its children be men of prayer and faith, as of old. Let your spirit be among them, and the Church thus regain, by your intercession, all the glory which is reflected on her from the sublime perfection of this holy State.
*****
Let us look again at the Prophecy of Jacob. The holy Patriarch not only foretells that the Messiah will be the Expectation of nations. He adds that when this promised Deliverer comes, “the sceptre will have been taken away from Judah” (Genesis xlix. 10). This oracle is now filled. The flag of Caesar Augustus floats on the ramparts of Jerusalem. The Temple is still untouched. The abomination of desolation stands not yet in the holy place. Sacrifices are there still offered up to God: but then, the true Temple of God, the Incarnate Word, has not yet been built. The Synagogue has not denied Him who was her expectation. The Victim that was to supersede all others has not been immolated. Yet Judah has no Chief of her own race. Caesar’s coin is current throughout all Palestine, and the day is not far off when the leaders of the Jewish people will own, in the presence of the Roman Governor, that they have not the power to put any man to death (John xviii. 31). So that there is now no King on the throne of David and Solomon, that throne which was to abide forever. O Jesus! Son of David and King of Peace, now is the time when you must show yourself and take possession of the Sceptre which has been taken in battle from the hand of Judah and put, for a time, into that of an Emperor. Come! for you are King, and the Psalmist, your ancestor, thus sang of you: “Gird your sword on your thigh, O thou most Mighty! With your comeliness and your beauty set out, proceed prosperously, and reign, because of truth and meekness and justice, and your right hand will conduct you wonderfully. Your arrows are sharp: under you will people fall: your arrows will go into the hearts of the King’s enemies. Your throne is for ever and ever; the sceptre of the kingdom is a sceptre of uprightness... God, your God, has anointed you, Christ! who takes thence your name, with the oil of gladness above your fellows, who have been honoured with the name of King” (Psalm xliv.) When you are come, O Messiah! men will be no more as sheep going astray without a shepherd. There will be but one fold in which you will reign by love and justice, for all power will be given to you in Heaven and on Earth. When, in the hour of your Passion, your enemies will ask you: “Are you King?” You will answer them in all truth: “Verily, I am” (John xviii. 37). Come, dearest King, and reign over our hearts. Come, and reign over this world which is yours because you created it, and will soon be yours because you will have redeemed it. Reign, then, over this world, and delay not the manifestation of your royal power until the day of which it is written: “He will break Kings in the day of His wrath” (Psalm cix.) Reign from this very hour, and let all people fall at your feet and adore you in one grand homage of love and obedience.
Also on this day according to the ROMAN MARTYROLOGY:

At Thebesta in Africa, during the time of Diocletian and Maximian, St. Chrispina, a woman of the highest nobility, who refused to sacrifice to idols and was beheaded by order of the proconsul Anolinus. Her praises were often celebrated by St. Augustine.

At Thagura in Africa, the holy martyrs Julius, Potamia, Crispinus, Felix, Gratus and seven others.

At Nicaea near the river Var, St. Bassus, bishop. In the persecution of Decius and Valerian, he was tortured by the governor Perennius for the faith of Christ, burned with hot plates of metal, beaten with rods and whips garnished with pieces of iron, and thrown into the fire. Having come out of it unhurt, he was transfixed with two spikes, and thus terminated an illustrious martyrdom.

At Pavia, St. Dalmatius, bishop and martyr, who suffered in the persecution of Maximian.

At Pelino in Abruzzo, St. Pelinus, bishop of Brindisi. Under Julian the Apostate, because by his prayers he caused a temple of Mars to fall to the ground, he was most severely scourged by the idolatrous priests, and being pierced with eighty-five wounds, merited the crown of martyrdom.

Also St. Anastasius, martyr, who, thirsting for martyrdom, voluntarily offered himself to the persecutors.

At Treves, St. Nicetius, bishop, a man of great sanctity.

At Polybotum in Asia, St. John, bishop, surnamed Wonder-Worker.

And in other places, many other holy martyrs, confessors and virgins.

Thanks be to God.

5 DECEMBER – FRIDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF ADVENT

Lesson at Matins – Isaias vi. 1‒3
In the year that King Ozias died, I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne high and elevated: and His train filled the temple. Upon it stood the Seraphim: the one had six wings, and the other had six wings: with two they covered His face, and with two they covered His feet, and with two they flew. And they cried one to another, and said: “Holy, Holy, Holy the Lord God of Hosts: all the Earth is full of His glory.”
Thanks be to God.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:
Such is the glory of the Lord in the highest heavens: who could see it and live? But now, contemplate this same Lord upon our Earth during the days which have dawned on us. The womb of a Virgin contains Him whom Heaven cannot contain. To Angels His beauty is visible, but it dazzles them not: to men, it is not even visible. Not a single voice is heard saying to Him those words of Heaven: “Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord God of Hosts!” The Angels no longer say of Him: “All the Earth is full of His glory,” for the Earth is witness of His abasement, and an abasement so abject and low that the inhabitants of the Earth do not even know it. At first, there was but one who knew the divine secret — the Virgin Mother. After her, Elizabeth was admitted to know that her cousin was Mother of God, and then, after the most painful and humiliating suspicions, the great mystery was revealed by an Angel to Joseph. So that only three on Earth know that God has come down upon it! Thus humbly did He re-enter the world after the sin of pride had driven Him out of it.
O GOD of the ancient Covenant, how great you are! And who would not tremble before you? O God of the new Covenant, how little you have made yourself! Who would not love you? Heal my pride, the source of all my sins! Teach me to value what you so much valued. By your Incarnation you do a second time create the world, and in this second creation, more excellent than the first, you work by silence and your triumph is won by self-annihilation. I wish to humble myself after your example and to profit by the lessons which a God came down so low to give me. Lay low all that is high and lifted up within me, my Jesus, for this is one of the ends of your Coming. I abandon myself to you, as to my Sovereign Master! Do with me and in me what you will.

Thursday, 4 December 2025

4 DECEMBER – PETER CHRYSOLOGUS (Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of the Church)


Peter, surnamed Chrysologus for his golden eloquence, was born at Forum Cornelii (Imola) in Aemilia, of respectable parents. Turning his mind to religion from his childhood, he put himself under Cornelius, the Bishop of that city, who was a Roman. In a short while, he made such progress in learning and holiness of life that in due time the Bishop ordained him a Deacon. Not long after, it happened that the Archbishop of Ravenna having died, the inhabitants of that city sent, as usual, to Rome the successor, they had elected, that this election might be confirmed by the holy Pope Sixtus III. Cornelius, who was also sent in company with the deputies of Ravenna, took with him the young Deacon. Meanwhile, the Apostle Saint Peter and the holy Martyr Apollinaris, appeared to the Roman Pontiff in his sleep. They stood with the young levite between them, and ordered the Pontiff to create him, and none other, as Archbishop of Ravenna. The Pontiff, therefore, no sooner saw Peter than he recognised him as the one chosen by God, and rejecting the one presented to him he appointed Peter to the Metropolitan Church of that city in 433. At first, the deputies from Ravenna were dissatisfied at this decision of the Pope, but having been told of the vision they readily acquiesced to the divine will and received the new Archbishop with the greatest reverence.

Peter, therefore, being, though reluctant, consecrated Archbishop, was conducted to Ravenna where he was received with the greatest joy by the Emperor Valentinian, and Galla Placidia the Emperor’s mother, and the whole people. On his part, he told them that he asked of them but this, that since he had not refused this great burden for their salvation’s sake, they would make it their study to follow his counsels and obey the commandments of God. He then buried in the city the bodies of two Saints after having embalmed them with the most precious perfumes. Barbatian, a Priest, was one, and the other, Germauus, Bishop of Auxerre, whose cowl and hair-shirt he claimed as his own inheritance. He ordained Projectus and Marcellinus Bishops. In the town of Classis he erected a fountain of an incredible size and built some magnificent churches in honour of several Saints, of Saint Andrew among the rest. The people had a custom of assisting at certain games on the first day of January, which consisted of theatrical performances and dances. The Saint repressed these by the severity with which he preached against them. One of his expressions deserves to be handed down: He that would play with the devil can never enjoy the company of Jesus. At the command of Pope Saint Leo I he wrote to the Council of Chalcedon against the heresy of Eutyches. He answered Eutyches himself by another epistle, which has been added to the Acts of that same Council in the new editions, and has been inserted in the Ecclesiastical Annals.

In his sermons to the people he was so earnest that at times his voice completely failed him, as in his Sermon on the Women healed by our Lord, as mentioned in the ninth chapter of Saint Matthew, on which occasion his people of Ravenna were so affected and so moved to tears, that the whole church rang with their sobbings and prayers, and the Saint afterwards thanked God, for that He had turned the failure of his speech into the gain of so much love. After having governed that Church in a most holy manner for about 18 years, and having received a divine warning that his labours were soon to end, he withdrew into his native town. There he visited the Church of Saint Cassian and presented an offering of a large golden diadem, set with most precious stones, which he placed upon the high Altar. He also gave a golden cup, and silver paten, which imparts to water poured on it the virtue of healing the bites of mad dogs, and of assuaging fevers, as frequent instances have attested. He then took leave of those who had accompanied him from Ravenna, admonishing them to spare no pains in electing for their Pastor him who was the most worthy. Immediately after this he turned in humble prayer to God, that, through the intercession of his patron Saint Cassian, he would mercifully receive his soul and calmly passed out of this life on the third of the Nones of December (Dec. 3), about the year 450. His holy body was buried, amid the tears and prayers of the whole city, near the body of the same Saint Cassian: there it is venerated even at this day, though Ravenna possesses and venerates one of the arms, which was enshrined in gold and gems and placed in the Basilica Ursicana.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:

The same divine Providence which would not that the Church should be deprived of the consolation of keeping, during Advent, the feast of some of the Apostles who announced to the Gentiles the coming of the Messiah, has also willed that the holy Doctors who defended the true Faith against heretics should be represented in this important season of the Catholic Year. Two of them, Saint Ambrose and Saint Peter Chrysologus, shine as two brilliant stars in the firmament of the Church during Advent. It is worthy of note that both of them were the zealous avengers of that Son of God whom we are preparing to receive. The first was the valiant opponent of the Arians, whose impious doctrine taught that Jesus, the object of our hopes, is merely a creature and not God. The second was the adversary of Eutyches whose sacrilegious system robs the Incarnation of the Son of God of all its glory by asserting that, in this mystery, the human nature was absorbed by the divinity.
It is this second Doctor, the holy Bishop of Ravenna, that we are to honour today. His pastoral eloquence gained for him a great reputation, and a great number of his Sermons have been handed down to us. In almost every page we find passages of the most exquisite beauty, though we also occasionally meet with indications of the decay of literature which began in the fifth century. The mystery of the Incarnation is a frequent subject of the Saint’s Sermons, and he always speaks upon it with a precision and enthusiasm which show his learning and piety. His veneration and love towards Mary, the Mother of God who, in that very age, had triumphed over her enemies by the decree of the Council of Ephesus, inspire him with thoughts and language which are extremely fine. Let us take a passage from the Sermon on the Annunciation:
“God sends to the Virgin an Angelic Messenger, who, while he brings grace, gives her the entrusted pledge and receives hers. Then does Gabriel return with Mary’s plighted troth. But before ascending to Heaven, there to tell the consent promised him by the Virgin, he delivers to her the gifts due to her virtues. Swiftly does this Ambassador fly to the Spouse that he might assert God’s claim to her as His own. Gabriel takes her not from Joseph, but he restores her to Christ to whom she was espoused when she was first formed in the womb. Christ, therefore, did but take His own, when He thus made Mary His Spouse. It is not a separation that He thus produces, but a union to Himself of His own creature by becoming Incarnate in her womb. But let us hearken to the Angel’s words. Being come in, he said to her: Hail, full of grace! The Lord is with thee! These words are not a mere salutation. They convey the heavenly gift. Hail! that is, Take, O Mary, the grace I bring you. Fear not. This is not the work of nature. Full of Grace! that is, You are not in grace as others are, you are to be filled with it. The Lord is with thee! What means this, but that He is coming to you not merely to visit you, but to enter within you by the new mystery of becoming your child? Blessed art thou among women. How fittingly does he add these words! They imply that they who heretofore were mothers with the curse of Eve upon them, now have the Blessed Mary as their joy, and honour and type. And whereas Eve was, by nature, the mother of children of death, Mary is, by grace, the mother of children of life.”
In the following passage from another Sermon, the Holy Doctor teaches us with what profound veneration we ought to contemplate Mary during these days when God is still residing in her womb:
“What reverence and awe are shown to that inner chamber of a King, where he sits in all the majesty of his power! Therein, no man may enter that is a stranger, or unclean, or unfaithful. The usages of courts require that when men come to pay their homage, everything must be the best, and fairest, and most loyal. Who would go to the palace-gate in rags? Who would go, that knew he was odious to the Prince? So it is with the sanctuary of the divine Spouse. No one is permitted to come near, but he that is of God’s family, and is intimate, and has a good conscience, and has a fair name, and leads a holy life. Within the holy place itself God receives but the Virgin and spotless virginity. Hence learn, O man, to examine yourself: who are you? And what are you? And what merits do you have? Ask yourself, after this, if you may dare to penetrate into the mystery of the birth of your Lord, or can be worthy to approach that living sanctuary in which reposes the whole majesty of the King, and your God.”
*****
Holy Pontiff, who opened your lips and poured out on the assembly of the faithful, in the streams of your golden eloquence, the knowledge of Jesus, cast an eye of compassion on the Christians throughout the world who are watching in expectation of that same God-Man, whose two Natures you so courageously confessed. Obtain for us grace to receive Him with that sovereign respect which is due to a God who comes down to His creatures, and with that loving confidence which is due to a brother who comes to offer Himself in sacrifice for His most unworthy brethren. Strengthen our faith, most holy Doctor, for the love we stand in need of comes from faith. Destroy the heresies which lay waste the vineyard of our Father, and uproot that frightful pantheism, which is the form under which the heresy you combated is still among us. May the numerous Churches of the East abjure that heresy of Eutyches which reigns so supreme amongst them, and gives them the knowledge of the ineffable mystery of the Incarnation only to blaspheme it. Pray that the children of the Church may show to the judgements of the Apostolic See that perfect obedience to which you so eloquently urged the heresiarch Eutyches in the Epistle you addressed to him and which will ever be precious to the world: “We exhort you above all things, most honoured Brother, that you receive with obedience whatever has been written by the most blessed Pope of the City of Rome, for Blessed Peter, who lives and presides in his own See, shows the truth of faith to all them that seek it” (Letter 25).

4 DECEMBER – THURSDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF ADVENT

Lesson at Matins – Isaias v. 1‒7
I will sing to my beloved the canticle of my cousin concerning his vineyard. My beloved had a vineyard on a hill, in a fruitful place. And he fenced it in, and picked the stones out of it, and planted it with the choicest wines, and built a tower in the midst thereof, and set up a wine press therein: and he looked that it should bring forth grapes, and it brought forth wild grapes. And now, O ye inhabitants of Jerusalem, and ye men of Judah, judge between me and my vineyard. What is there that I ought to do more to my vineyard, that I have not done to it? Was it that I looked that it should bring forth grapes, and it has brought forth wild grapes? And now I will show you what I will do to my vineyard: I will take away the hedge thereof, and it will be wasted; I will break down the wall thereof, and it will be trodden down. And I will make it desolate: it will not be pruned, and it will not be dug, but briars and thorns will come up, and I will command the clouds to rain no rain upon it. For the vineyard of the Lord of hosts is the house of Israel, and the man of Judah his pleasant plant: and I looked that he should do judgement, and behold iniquity; and do justice, and behold a cry.
Thanks be to God.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:
We are awaiting the birth of a child who is to appear seven hundred years after the time of Isaias, and this child will be the world’s Saviour. Men will persecute Him, load Him with calumnies and injuries, and, but a few hours before they crucify Him they will hear this parable from His lips: “There was a man, a householder, who planted a vineyard and made a hedge round about it, and dug in it a press, and built a tower, and let it out to husbandmen: and went into a strange country. And when the time of the fruits drew near, he sent his servants to the husbandmen, that they might receive the fruits thereof And the husbandmen laying hands on his servants, beat one, and killed another and stoned another. Again he sent other servants more than the former, and they did to them in like manner. And last of all, he sent to them his son, saying: They will reverence my son” (Matthew xx. 33‒37). See, Christians, this Son is coming to you. Will you reverence Him? Will you treat him as the Son of God, with that honour and love which are due to Him? Take notice of the wickedness of men. It has a progress in malice. In the days of Isaias the Jews despised the Prophets, but the Prophets, though sent by God, were only men. The Son of God came and they would not acknowledge Him: a far greater crime, assuredly, than to stone the Prophets. What, then, would be the crime of Christians who not only acknowledge Him who is now coming to them, but are His members by Baptism, if they will not open their hearts to this Messiah whom the Father is sending into the vineyard? What punishment would not the ungrateful vine deserve, planted, as it has been, with so much love, should it persist in yielding nothing but bitter fruit? Ah, dear Jesus! let not this be: make us generous: make us produce abundant flower and fruit for the day of your Coming which is so near at hand.

Wednesday, 3 December 2025

3 DECEMBER – SAINT FRANCIS XAVIER (Confessor)

 

Francis was born of noble parents, at Xavier, in the diocese of Pampelona, Spain, in. Having gone to Paris, he there became the companion and disciple of Saint Ignatius. Under such a master, he arrived at so high a contemplation of divine things as to be sometimes raised above the ground: which occasionally happened to him while saying Mass before crowds of people. He had merited these spiritual delights by his severe mortifications of the body, for he never allowed himself either flesh meat, or wine, or even wheaten bread, and ate only the coarsest food. He not infrequently abstained, for the space of two or three days, from every sort of nourishment. He scourged himself so severely with disciplines, to which were fastened pieces of iron, as to be frequently covered with blood. His sleep, which he took on the ground, was extremely short.

Such austerity and holiness of life had fitted him for the labours of an Apostle, so that when King John III of Portugal asked of Pope Paul III that some of the newly-founded Society of Jesus might be sent to the Indies, that Pontiff, by the advice of Saint Ignatius, selected Francis for so important a work, and gave him the powers of Apostolic Nuncio. Having reached those parts, he was found to be, on a sudden, divinely gifted with the knowledge of the exceedingly difficult and varied languages of the several countries. It sometimes even happened, that while he was preaching in one language to the people of several nations, each heard him speaking in their own tongue. He travelled over innumerable provinces, always on foot, and not infrequently bare footed. He carried the faith into Japan, and six other countries. He converted to Christ many hundred thousands in the Indies, and baptised several Princes and Kings.

And yet, though he was doing such great things for God, he was so humble, that he never wrote to Saint Ignatius, the then General of the Society, but on his knees. God blessed this zeal for the diffusion of the Gospel by many and extraordinary miracles. The Saint restored sight to a blind man. By the sign of the cross he changed sea-water into fresh, sufficient, for many days, for a crew of 500 men who were dying from thirst. This water was afterwards taken into several countries, and being given to sick people, they were instantly cured. He raised several dead men to life. One of these had been buried on the previous day, so that the corpse had to be taken out of the grave. Two others were being carried to the grave when the Saint took them by the hand and, raising them from the bier, restored them to their parents. Being continually gifted with the spirit of prophecy, he foretold many future events, or such as were happening in most distant parts.

At length, full of merit, and worn out by his labours, he died on the second day of December, in Sancian, an island off the coast of China. His corpse was twice buried in unslaked lime, but was found, after several months, to be incorrupt: blood flowed from it, and it exhaled a pleasing fragrance. When it was brought to Malacca, it instantly arrested a most raging pestilence. At length, fresh and extraordinary miracles being everywhere wrought through the intercession of the man of God, he was enrolled among the Saints by Pope Gregory XV.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:

The Apostles being the heralds of the Coming of the Messiah, it was fitting that Advent should have in its calendar the name of some one among them. Divine Providence has provided for this, for to say nothing of Saint Andrew whose feast is often past before the season of Advent has commenced, Saint Thomas day is unfailingly kept immediately before Christmas. We will explain later on why Saint Thomas holds that position rather than any other Apostle. At present we simply assert the fitness of there being at least one of the Apostolic College who should announce to us, in this period of the Catholic cycle, the Coming of the Redeemer. But God has not wished that the first Apostolate should be the only one to appear on the first page of the liturgical calendar. Great also, though in a lesser degree, is the glory of that second Apostolate by which the Spouse of Jesus Christ multiplies her children, even in her fruitful old age, as the Psalmist expresses it (Psalm cxi. 15). There are Gentiles who have still to be evangelised. The Coming of the Messiah is far from having been announced to all nations. Now, of all the valiant messengers of the divine Word who have, during the last few hundred years, proclaimed the good tidings among infidel nations, there is not one whose glory is greater, who has worked greater wonders, or who has shown himself a closer imitator of the first Apostles, than the modern Apostle of the Indies, Saint Francis Xavier.

Yes, the life and apostolate of this wonderful man were a great triumph for our Mother the holy Catholic Church, for Saint Francis came just at the period when heresy, encouraged by false learning, by political intrigues, by covetousness and by all the wicked passions of the human heart, seemed on the eve of victory. Emboldened by all these, this enemy of God spoke with the deepest contempt of that ancient Church which rested on the promises of Jesus Christ. It declared that she was unworthy of the confidence of men, and dared even to call her the harlot of Babylon, as though the vices of her children could taint the purity of the Mother. Gods time came at last, and He showed Himself in His power: the garden of the Church suddenly appeared rich in the most admirable fruits of sanctity. Heroes and heroines issued from that apparent barrenness, and while the pretended Reformers showed themselves to be the wickedest of men, two single countries — Italy and Spain — gave to the world the most magnificent Saints.

One of these is brought before us today, claiming our love and our praise. The Calendar of the Liturgical Year will present to us, from time to time, his contemporaries and his companions in divine grace and heroic sanctity. The sixteenth century is, therefore, worthy of comparison with any other age of the Church. The so-called Reformers of those times gave little proof of their desire to convert infidel countries, when their only zeal was to bury Christianity beneath the ruin of her churches. But at that very time, a society of Apostles was offering itself to the Roman Pontiff that he might send them to plant the true faith among people who were sitting in the thickest shades of death. But, we repeat, not one of these holy men so closely imitated the first Apostles as did Francis, the disciple of Ignatius. He had all the marks and labours of an Apostle: an immense world of people evangelised by his zeal, hundreds of thousands of infidels baptised by his indefatigable ministration, and miracles of every kind, which proved him, to the infidel, to be marked with the sign which they received who, living in the flesh, planted the Church, as the Church speaks in her Liturgy. So that in the sixteenth century the East received from the ever holy city of Rome an Apostle who, by his character and his works, resembled those earlier ones sent her by Jesus Himself. May our Lord Jesus be forever praised for having vindicated the honour of the Church, His Spouse, by raising up Francis Xavier and giving to men, in this His servant, a representation of what the first Apostles were, whom He sent to preach the Gospel when the whole world was pagan.

* * * * *

Glorious Apostle of Jesus Christ, who imparted His divine light to the nations that were sitting in the shadows of death! We, though unworthy of the name of Christians, address our prayers to you that, by the charity which led you to sacrifice everything for the conversion of souls, you would deign to prepare us for the visit of the Saviour whom our faith and our love desire. You were the father of infidel nations. Be the protector during this holy season of them that believe in Christ. Before your eyes had contemplated the Lord Jesus, you made Him known to countless people. Now that you see Him him face to face, obtain for us that when He is come, we may see Him with that simple and ardent faith of the Magi, those glorious first-fruits of the nations to which you bore the admirable light (1 Peter ii. 9).

Remember also, O great Apostle, those nations which you evangelised and where now, by a terrible judgement of God, the word of life has ceased to bring forth fruit. Pray for the vast empire of China on which you looked when dying, but which was not blessed with your preaching. Pray for Japan, your dear garden which has been laid waste by the savage wild beast, of which the Psalmist speaks. May the blood of the Martyrs which was poured out on that land like water, bring it the long expected fertility. Bless, too, all the Missions which our holy Mother the Church has undertaken in those lands where the Cross has not yet triumphed. May the heart of the infidel be opened to the grand simplicity and light of faith. May the seed bring forth fruit a hundred-fold. May the number of your successors in the new apostolate ever increase. May their zeal and charity fail not. May their toil receive its reward of abundant fruit, and may the crown of martyrdom which they receive be not only the recompense, but the perfection and the triumph of their apostolic ministry. Recommend to our Lord the innumerable members of that Association which is the means of the Faith being propagated through the world, and which has you for its Patron. Pray, with a filial affection and earnestness, for that holy Society of which you are so bright an ornament, and which reposes on you its firmest confidence. May it more and more flourish under the storm of trial which never leaves it in rest. May it be multiplied so that the children of God may be multiplied by its labours. May it ever have ready, for the service of the Christian world, zealous Apostles and Doctors. May it not be in vain that it bears the name of Jesus.

* * * * *

Let us consider the wretched condition of the human race at the time of Christs coming into the world. The ancient traditions are gradually becoming extinct. The Creator is not acknowledged, even in the very work of His hands. Everything has been made God, except the God who made all things. This frightful Pantheism produces the vilest immorality, both in society at large, and in individuals. There are no rights acknowledged save that of might. Lust, avarice and theft are honoured by men in the gods of their altars. There is no such thing as Family, for divorce and infanticide are legalised. Mankind is degraded by a general system of slavery. Nations are being exterminated by endless wars. The human race is in the last extreme of misery, and unless the hand that created it reforms it, it must needs sink a prey to crime and bloodshed. There are indeed some few just men still left upon the Earth, and they struggle against the torrent of universal degradation. But they cannot save the world: the world despises them, and God will not accept their merits as a palliation of the hideous leprosy which covers the Earth. All flesh has corrupted its way and is more guilty than even in the days of the deluge. And yet a second destruction of the universe would but manifest anew the justice of God. It is time that a deluge of His divine mercy should flood the universe, and that He who made man, should come down and heal him. Come then, O eternal Son of God! Give life again to this dead body. Heal all its wounds. Purify it. Let grace superabound where sin before abounded, and having converted the world to your holy law, you will have proved to all ages that you who earnest, was in very truth the Word of the Father. For as none but a God could create the world, so none but the same omnipotent God could save it from Satan and sin, and restore it to justice and holiness.

Also on this day according to the ROMAN MARTYROLOGY:

In Judea, the holy prophet Sophonias.

At Rome, the holy martyrs Claudius, tribune, and Hilaria, his wife, with Jason and Maurus, their sons, and seventy soldiers. By the command of the emperor Numerian, Claudius was fastened to a large stone and precipitated into the river. The soldiers and the sons of Claudius were condemned to capital punishment. But blessed Hilaria, after having buried the bodies of her sons, and while praying at their tomb, was arrested by pagans and shortly after departed for heaven.

At Tangier in Morocco, St. Cassian, martyr. After having been a recorder for a long time, at length, through the inspiration of heaven, he deemed it an execrable thing to contribute to the massacre of Christians, and therefore abandoned his office, and making profession of Christianity, deserved to obtain the triumph of martyrdom.

Also in Africa, the holy martyrs Claudius, Crispinus, Magina, John and Stephen.

In Hungary, St. Agricola, martyr.

At Nicomedia, the Saints Ambicus, Victor and Julius.

At Milan, St. Mirocles, bishop and confessor, sometimes mentioned by St. Ambrose.

In England, St. Birinus, first bishop of Dorchester.

At Coire in Switzerland, St. Lucius, king of the Britons, who as the first of those kings who received the faith of Christ in the time of Pope Eleutherius.

At Siena, in Tuscany, St. Galganus, hermit.

And in other places, many other holy martyrs, confessors and virgins.

Thanks be to God.

3 DECEMBER – WEDNESDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF ADVENT

Lesson at Matins – Isaias iii. 1‒11
For behold the sovereign the Lord of hosts will take away from Jerusalem and from Judah the valiant and the strong, the whole strength of bread, and the whole strength of water; the strong man, and the man of war, the judge and the prophet, and the cunning man, and the ancient, the captain over fifty, and the honourable in countenance, and the counsellor, and the architect, and the skilful in eloquent speech. And I will give children to be their princes, and the effeminate will rule over them. For Jerusalem is ruined, and Judah is fallen, because their tongue and their devices are against the Lord, to provoke the eyes of his majesty. The show of their countenance has answered them, and they have proclaimed abroad their sin as Sodom, and they have not hid it. Woe to their souls, for evils are rendered to them! Say to the just man that it is well, for he will eat the fruit of his doings. Woe to the wicked to evil, for the reward of his hands will be given him.
Thanks be to God.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:
Jerusalem is tending to her destruction. Therefore she is losing all power and, with the rest, the power of understanding. She no longer knows where she is going, and she sees not the abyss into which she is plunging. Such are all those men who never give a thought to the Coming of the Sovereign Judge. They are men of whom Moses said in his Canticle: “They are a nation without counsel and without wisdom: that they would be wise and would understand, and would provide for their last end!” The Son of God comes now in the swaddling-clothes of a weak babe, in the humility of a servant and, to speak with the Prophets as the dew which falls softly drop by drop. But it will not always be so. This Earth also, which now is the scene of our sins and our hard-heartedness, will perish before the face of the angry Judge. And if we have made it the one object of our love, to what will we then cling? “A sudden death which has happened in your presence,” says Saint John Chrysostom, “or an earthquake, or the bare threat of some dire calamity, terrify and prostrate you: what then will it be when the whole earth will sink beneath your feet; when you will see all nature in disorder; when you will hear the sound of the last trumpet; when the Sovereign Master of the universe will appear before you in the fullness of His Majesty? Perchance, you have seen criminals dragged to punishment: did they not seem to die twenty times before they reached the place of execution, and before the executioner could lay his hands on them, fear had crushed out life?” Oh the terror of that Last Day! How is it that men can expose themselves to such misery when, to avoid it, they have but to open their hearts to Him who is now coming to them in gentlest love, asking them to give Him a place in their souls, and promising to shelter them from the wrath to come if they will but receive Him! O Jesus, who can withstand your anger at the Last Day? Now you are our Brother, our Friend, a Little Child who is to be born for us: we will therefore make covenant with you so that, loving you now in your first Coming, we may not fear you in the second. When you come in that second one, bid your Angels approach us, and say to us those thrilling words: “It is well!”

Tuesday, 2 December 2025

2 DECEMBER – SAINT BIBIANA (Virgin and Martyr)

 
Bibiana was a Roman virgin, noble by birth, but more noble by her profession of the Christian faith. For, under the most wicked tyrant Julian the Apostate, Flavian, her father, was deprived of his dignity of prefect, and being branded with the mark of slavery, he was banished to Aquae Taurinae and there died a martyr. Her mother, Dafrosa, was first shut up in her own house with her daughters that she might die by starvation, but shortly afterwards was banished from Rome and beheaded. The virtuous parents thus put to death, Bibiana was deprived of all her possessions, as also was her sister, Demetria. Apronianus, the City Praetor, thirsting after their wealth, persecuted the two sisters. They were bereaved of every human help. But God, who gives food to them that are in hunger, wonderfully nourished them, and the Praetor was exceedingly astonished on finding them in better health and strength than before. Apronianus, notwithstanding, endeavoured to induce them to venerate the gods of the Gentiles. If they were to consent, he promised them the recovery of all their wealth, the Emperor’s favour and marriage to the noblest in the empire: but should they refuse, he would threaten them with prison, and scourgings, and the sword. But neither promises nor threats could make them abandon the true faith. They would rather die than be defiled by the idolatrous practices of paganism, and they resolutely resisted the impious Praetor. Whereupon, Demetria was struck down in the presence of Bibiana and slept in the Lord.

Bibiana was delivered over to a woman by name Rufina, who was most skilled in the art of seduction. But the virgin, taught from her infancy to observe the Christian law and to preserve with the utmost jealousy the flower of her virginity, rose above nature, defeated all the artifices of the wretched Rufina, and foiled the craft of the Praetor. Finding that Rufina could in no way shake the virgin’s holy resolution and that both her wicked words and frequent blows were of no avail, and seeing his hopes disappointed and his labour thrown away, the Praetor became violently enraged and ordered Bibiana to be stripped by the lictors, be fastened to a pillar with her hands bound, and be beaten to death with leaded whips. Her sacred body was left for two days in the Forum Boarium as food for dogs but received no injury, being divinely preserved. A priest called John then buried it during the night close to the grave of her sister and mother, near the Palace Licinius where there stands a Church consecrated to God under the title of Saint Bibiana. Pope Urban VIII restored this Church, having there discovered the bodies of Saints Bibiana, Demetria and Dafrosa, which he placed under the high altar.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:
Of the saints whose feasts are kept during Advent, five are virgins. The first, Saint Bibiana, whom we honour today, is a daughter of Rome. The second, Saint Barbara, is the glory of the Eastern Churches. The third, Saint Eulalia of Merida, is one of Spain’s richest treasures. The fourth, Saint Lucy, belongs to beautiful Sicily. The fifth, Saint Odila, is claimed by France. These five wise virgins lighted their lamps and watched, waiting for the coming of the Spouse. Such was their constancy and fidelity that four of them shed their blood for the love of Him after whom they longed. Let us take courage by this noble example, and since we have not, as the Apostle expresses it, as yet resisted unto blood, let us not think it hard if we suffer fatigue and trouble in the holy exercises of this penitential season of Advent: He, for whom we do them all, will soon be with us and repay us. Today, it is the chaste and courageous Bibiana who instructs us by her glorious example.
*****
Holy Bibiana, most wise Virgin! You have gone through the long unbroken watch of this life and when, suddenly, the Spouse came, your lamp was bright and richly fed with oil. Now you are dwelling in the abode of the eternal marriage-feast where the Beloved feeds among the lilies. Remember us who are still living in the expectation of that same divine Spouse, whose eternal embrace is secured to you forever. We are awaiting the Birth of the Saviour of the world, which is to be the end of sin and the beginning of justice. We are awaiting the coming of this Saviour into our souls that He may give them life and union with Himself by love. We are awaiting our Judge, the Judge of the living and the dead. Most wise Virgin, intercede for us by your fervent prayers with this our Saviour, our Spouse and our Judge. Pray that each of these three visits may work and perfect in us that divine union for which we have all been created. Pray also, O faithful Virgin, for the Church on Earth, which gave you to the Church in Heaven, and which so devoutly watches over your precious remains. Obtain for her that strict fidelity, which will ever render her worthy of Him who is her Spouse as He is yours. Though He has enriched her with the most magnificent gifts, and given her confidence by His promises which cannot fail, yet does He wish her to ask, and us to ask for her, the graces which will lead her to the glorious destiny which awaits her.
Also on this day according to the ROMAN MARTYROLOGY:

At Rome, the holy martyrs Eusebius, priest, Marcellus, deacon, Hippolytus, Maximus, Adria, Paulina, Neon, Mary, Martana and Aurelia, who consummated their martyrdom in the persecution of Valerian under the judge Secundian.

Also at Rome, St. Pontian, martyr, with four others.

In Africa, the birthday of the holy martyrs Severus, Securus, Januarius and Victorinus, who were there crowned with martyrdom.

At Aquileia, St. Chromatius, bishop and confessor.

At Imola, St. Peter Chrysologus, bishop of Ravenna, celebrated for his learning and sanctity. His feast is celebrated on the fourth of this month.

At Verona, St. Lupus, bishop and confessor.

At Edessa, St. Nonnus, bishop, by whose prayers the penitent Pelagia was converted to Christ.

At Troas in Phrygia, St. Silvanus, renowned for miracles.

At Brescia, St. Evasius, bishop.

In Sancian, a Chinese island, St. Francis Xavier, of the Society of Jesus, renowned for the conversions he made among the Gentiles, and for supernatural gifts and miracles. Pope Saint Pius X selected and appointed this holy man to be the heavenly patron of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith and its work. His festival, however, is kept on the third of this month by order of Pope Alexander VII.

And in other places, many other holy martyrs, confessors and virgins.

Thanks be to God.

Monday, 1 December 2025

1 DECEMBER – MONDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF ADVENT

Lesson at Matins – Isaiah i. 1618

“Wash yourselves, be clean, take away the evil of your devices from my eyes: cease to do perversely, learn to do well: seek judgement, relieve the oppressed, judge for the fatherless, defend the widow. And then come, and accuse me,” says the Lord. “If your sins be as scarlet, they will be made as white as snow, and if they be red as crimson, they will be white as wool.”

Thanks be to God.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:

The Saviour who is so soon to be with us and to save us, warns us not only to prepare ourselves to appear before Him, but also to purify our souls. “It is most just,” says Saint Bernard, “that the soul which was the first to fall should be the first to rise. Let us therefore defer caring for the body until the day when Jesus Christ will come and reform it by the Resurrection, for, in the first Coming, the Precursor says to us: Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world. Observe, he says not the maladies of the body, nor the miseries of the flesh. He says sins, which are the malady of the soul and the corruption of the spirit. Take heed then, you my body, and wait for your turn and time. You can hinder the salvation of the soul, and your own safety is not within your reach. Let the soul labour for herself, and strive you too to help her, for if you share in her sufferings, you will share in her glory. Retard her perfection, and you retard your own. You will not be regenerated until God sees His own image restored in the soul.”

Let us, then, purify our souls. Let us do the works of the spirit, not the deeds of the flesh. Our Saviours promise is most clear. He will turn the deep dye of our iniquities into the purest whiteness. He asks but one thing of us: that we sin no more. He says to us: “Cease to do perversely, and then come and accuse me, come and complain against me if I do not cleanse you.” O Jesus, we will not defer a single day of this holy season. We accept, from this moment, the conditions you offer us. We sincerely desire to make our peace with you, to bring the flesh into subjection to our spirit, to make good all the injustice we have committed against our neighbour, and to hush, by the sighs of our heart-felt compunction, that voice of our sins which has so long cried to you for vengeance.



1 DECEMBER – FERIA

Dom Prosper Guéranger:

The Church of Rome does not keep this day as a feast of any Saint. She simply recites the Office of the Feria unless it happen that the first Sunday of Advent fall on this first day of the month, in which case, the Office of that Sunday is celebrated. But should this first day of December be a simple Feria of Advent, we will do well to begin at once our considerations upon the preparations which were made for the merciful Coming of the Saviour of the world. Four thousand years of expectation preceded that Coming, and they are expressed by the four weeks of Advent, which we must spend before we come to the glorious festivity of our Lords Nativity. Let us reflect upon the holy impatience of the Saints of the Old Testament, and how they handed down, from age to age, the grand hope which was to be but hope to them since they were not to see it realised.

Let us follow, in thought, the long succession of the witnesses of the promise: Adam, and the first Patriarchs, who lived before the deluge. Then, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and the twelve Patriarchs of the Hebrew people. Then Moses, Samuel, David and Solomon. Then, the Prophets and the Maccabees and, at last, John the Baptist and his disciples. These are the holy ancestors of whom the book of Ecclesiasticus speaks,where it says: “Let us praise men of renown, and our fathers in their generation” (Ecclesiasticus xliv. 1), and of whom the Apostle thus speaks to the Hebrews: “All these being approved by the testimony of faith, received not the promise. God providing some better thing for us, that they should not be perfected without us:” their faith was tried and approved, and yet they received not the object of the promises made to them. It was for us that God had reserved the stupendous gift, and therefore did not permit them to attain the object of their desires (Hebrews xi. 39, 40).

Let us honour them for their faith. Let us honour them as our veritable fathers, since it was in reward of their faith that our Lord remembered and fulfilled His merciful promise. Let us honour them, too, as the ancestors of the Messiah in the flesh. We may imagine each of them saying, as he lay on his dying bed, this solemn prayer to Him who alone could conquer death: “I will look for your salvation, O Lord!” It was the exclamation of Jacob, at his last hour, when he was pronouncing his prophetic blessings on his children: “and then,” says the Scripture, “he drew up his feet upon his bed, and died, and he was gathered to his people” (Genesis xlix. 32).

Thus did all these holy men, in quitting this life, go to await, far from the abode of eternal light, Him who was to come in due time and re-open the gate of Heaven. Let us contemplate them in this place of expectation, and give our grateful thanks to God who has brought us to His admirable Light without requiring us to pass through a Limbo of darkness. It is our duty to pray ardently for the Coming of the Deliverer who will break down by His Cross the gates of the prison, and will fill it with the brightness of His glory. During this holy season the Church is continually borrowing the fervent expressions of these Fathers of the Christian people, making them her own prayer for the Messiah to come. Let us turn to those great Saints and beg of them to pray that our work of preparation for Jesus coming to our hearts may be blessed by God.

On this day according to the ROMAN MARTYROLOGY:

The prophet Nahum, who was buried in Begabar.

At Rome, the holy martyrs Diodorus, priest, and Marian, deacon, with many others, who by the command of the emperor Numerian, were made partakers of the glory of martyrdom.

In the same city, the martyrdom of the saints Lucius, Rogatus, Cassian and Candida.

The same day, St. Ansanus, martyr, who confessed Christ at Rome and was cast into prison in the time of the emperor Diocletian. Being afterwards conducted to Siena in Tuscany, he there ended the course of his martyrdom by decapitation.

At Amelia in Umbria, St. Olympias, ex-consul, who was converted to the faith by blessed Firmina, and being tortured on the rack, consummated his martyrdom under Diocletian.

At Arbele in Persia, St. Ananias, martyr.

At Narni, St. Proculus, bishop and martyr, who after performing many good works, was beheaded by order of Totila, king of the Goths.

At Casale, St. Evasius, bishop and martyr.

At Milan, St. Castritian, bishop, who was eminent for virtues and the practice of pious and religious deeds in very troubled times for the Church.

At Brescia, St. Ursicinus, bishop.

At Noyon, St. Eligius, bishop, whose life is rendered illustrious by a considerable number of miracles.

At Verdun, St. Agericus, bishop.

The same day, St. Natalia, wife of the blessed martyr Adrian, under the emperor Diocletian. For a long time she served the holy martyrs detained in prison at Nicomedia, and when their combats were at an end, she repaired to Constantinople where she went peacefully to her repose in the Lord.

And in other places, many other holy martyrs, confessors and virgins.

Thanks be to God.

Sunday, 30 November 2025

30 NOVEMBER – FIRST SUNDAY OF ADVENT

 
Dom Prosper Guéranger:
This Sunday, the first of the ecclesiastical year, is called in the chronicles and charts of the Middle Ages, Ad te levavi Sunday, from the first words of the Introit: or Aspiciens a longe, from the first words of one of the Responsories of Matins. The Station is at Saint Mary Major’s. It is under the auspices of Mary — in the splendid Basilica which possesses the Crib of Bethlehem, and is therefore called, in ancient documents, Saint Mary’s ad Praesepe — that the Roman Church recommences each year the sacred Cycle. It would have been impossible to select a place more suitable than this for saluting the approach of the Divine Birth, which is to gladden Heaven and Earth and manifest the sublime portent of a Virgin Mother.
Epistle – Romans xiii. 11–14
Brethren, knowing that it is now high time for us to rise from sleep. For now our salvation is nearer than when we began to believe, the night is far spent, and the day is at hand. Let us therefore cast off the works of darkness, and put on the armour of light. Let us walk honestly, as in the day: not in rioting and drunkenness, not in chambering and wantonness, not in strife and jealousy, but put on the Lord Jesus Christ.
Thanks be to God.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:
The Saviour, then, who is coming to us is the clothing which we are to put on over our spiritual nakedness. Here let us admire the goodness of our God who, remembering that man hid himself after his sin because he was naked, vouchsafes Himself to become man’s clothing and cover with the robe of His Divinity the misery of human nature. Let us therefore be on the watch for the day and the hour when He will come to us, and take precautions against the drowsiness which comes of custom and self-indulgence. The light will soon appear. May its first rays be witness of our innocence, or at least of our repentance. If our Saviour is coming to put over our sins a covering which is to hide them forever, the least that we, on our part, can do, is to retain no further affection for those sins, else it will be said of us that we refused our salvation. The last words of this Epistle were those which caught the eye of Saint Augustine when, after a long resistance to the grace which pressed him to give himself to God, he resolved to obey the voice which said to him: Tolle lege, take and read. They decided his conversion. He immediately resolved to abandon the worldly life he had hitherto led, and put on Christ Jesus. Let us begin this very day, and imitate this Saint. Let us long for that dear and glorious clothing, with which the mercy of our heavenly Father is so soon to cover us.
Gospel – Luke xxi. 25–33
At that time Jesus said to His disciples: “There will be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, by reason of the confusion of the roaring of the sea and of the waves, men withering away for fear, and expectation of what will come upon them. For the powers of the heaven will be moved; and then they will see the Son of man coming in a cloud with great power and majesty. But when these things begin to come to pass, look up and lift up your heads, because your redemption is at hand.” And He spoke to them a parable: “See the fig tree and all the trees; when they are shooting forth their fruit, you know that summer is near. So you also, when you will see these things come to pass, know that the kingdom of God is at hand. Amen, I say to you, this generation will not pass away till all things are fulfilled. Heaven, and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.
Praise be to you, O Christ.

Dom Prosper Guéranger:
You are to come, then, O Jesus, in all the terror of the Last Judgement, and when men least expect you! In a few days you are coming to us to clothe our misery with the garment of your mercy, a garment of glory and immortality to us. But you are to come again on a future day, and in such dread majesty, that men will wither away with fear. My Saviour! Condemn me not on that day of the world’s destruction. Visit me now in your love and mercy. I am resolved to prepare my soul. I desire that you should come and be born within me so that when the convulsions of nature warn me of your coming to judge me, I may lift up my head, as you bid your faithful disciples do, who, when the rest of men will tremble at the thunder of your Judgement, will have confidence in you because they have you in their hearts.

Saturday, 29 November 2025

THE HISTORY, MYSTERY AND PRACTICE OF ADVENT

Dom Prosper Gueranger
The History of Advent

The name Advent1 is applied in the Latin Church to that period of the year, during which the Church requires the faithful to prepare for the celebration of the Feast of Christmas, the anniversary of the birth of Jesus Christ. The mystery of that great day had every right to the honour of being prepared for by prayer and works of penance and, in fact, it is impossible to state with any certainty when this season of preparation (which had long been observed before receiving its present name of Advent) was first instituted. It would seem, however, that its observance first began in the West since it is evident that Advent could not have been looked on as a preparation for the Feast of Christmas until that Feast was definitively fixed to the twenty-fifth of December: which was only done in the East towards the close of the fourth century, whereas, it is certain, that the Church of Rome kept the feast on that day at a much earlier period.


We must look upon Advent in two different lights. First, as a time of preparation, properly so called, for the birth of our Saviour, by works of penance, and secondly, as a series of Ecclesiastical Offices drawn up for the same purpose. We find, as far back as the fifth century, the custom of giving exhortations to the people in order to prepare them for the Feast of Christmas. We have two Sermons of Saint Maximus of Turin on this subject, not to speak of several others which were formerly attributed to Saint Ambrose and Saint Augustine, but which were probably written by Saint Cesarius of Aries. If these documents do not tell us what was the duration and the exercises of this holy season, they at least show us how ancient was the practice of distinguishing the time of Advent by special sermons. Saint Ivo of Chartres, Saint Bernard and several other Doctors of the eleventh and twelfth centuries have left us set sermons de Adventu Domini, quite distinct from their Sunday Homilies on the Gospels of that season. In the Capitularia of Charles the Bald, in 846, the Bishops admonish that Prince not to call them away from their churches during Lent or Advent under pretext of affairs of the State or the necessities of war, seeing that they have special duties to fulfil, and particularly that of preaching during those sacred times.


The oldest document in which we find the length and exercises of Advent mentioned with anything like clearness is a passage in the second book of the History of the Franks by Saint Gregory of Tours where he says that Saint Perpetuus, one of his predecessors, who held that See about the year 480, had decreed a fast three times a week from the feast of Saint Martin until Christmas. It would be impossible to decide whether Saint Perpetuus by this regulation established a new custom, or merely enforced an already existing law. Let us, however, note this interval of forty, or rather of forty-three days, so expressly mentioned and consecrated to penance, as though it were a second Lent, though less strict and severe than that which precedes Easter.


Later on we find the ninth canon of the first Council of Mâcon held in 582 ordaining that during the same interval, between Saint Martins Day and Christmas, the Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, should be fasting days, and that the Sacrifice should be celebrated according to the Lenten Rite. Not many years before that, namely in 567, the second Council of Tours had enjoined the monks to fast from the beginning of December till Christmas. This practice of penance soon extended to the whole forty days, even for the laity, and it was commonly called Saint Martins Lent. The Capitularia of Charlemagne, in the sixth book, leave us no doubt on the matter, and Rabanus Maurus, in the second book of his Institution of Clerics, bears testimony to this observance. There were even special rejoicings made on Saint Martins Feast, just as we see them practised now at the approach of Lent and Easter.


The obligation of observing this Lent which, though introduced so imperceptibly, had by degrees acquired the force of a sacred law, began to be relaxed and the forty days from Saint Martins Day to Christmas were reduced to four weeks. We have seen that this fast began to be observed first in France, but from there it spread into England, as we find from Venerable Bedes History, into Italy, as appears from a diploma of Astolphus, King of the Lombards, dated 758, into Germany, Spain etc of which the proofs may be seen in the learned work of Dom Martene, On the Ancient Rites of the Church. The first allusion to Advents being reduced to four weeks is to be found in the ninth century in a letter of Pope Saint Nicholas the First to the Bulgarians. The testimony of Ratherius of Verona and of Abbo of Fleury, both writers of the tenth century, goes also to prove that even then the question of reducing the duration of the Advent fast by one-third was seriously entertained. It is true that Saint Peter Damian, in the eleventh century, speaks of the Advent fast as still being for forty days, and that Saint Louis, two centuries later, kept it for that length of time, but as far as this holy King is concerned, it is probable that it was only his own devotion which prompted him to this practice.


The discipline of the Churches of the West, after having reduced the time of the Advent fast, so far relented in a few years as to change the fast into a simple abstinence, and we even find Councils of the twelfth century, for instance, Selingstadt in 1122 and Avranches in 1172, which seem to require only the clergy to observe this abstinence. The Council of Salisbury held in 1281 would seem to expect none but monks to keep it. On the other hand, (for the whole subject is very confused, owing, no doubt, to there never having been any uniformity of discipline regarding it in the Western Church) we find Pope Innocent III in his letter to the Bishop of Braga mentioning the custom of fasting during the whole of Advent, as being at that time observed in Rome. And Durandus, in the same thirteenth century, in his Rational on the Divine Offices, tells us that in France fasting was uninterruptedly observed during the whole of that holy time.


This much is certain, that, by degrees, the custom of fasting so far fell into disuse that when, in 1362, Pope Urban V endeavoured to prevent the total decay of the Advent penance, all he insisted upon was that all the clerics of his court should keep abstinence during Advent, without in any way including others, either clergy or laity, in this law. Saint Charles Borromeo also strove to bring back his people of Milan to the spirit, if not to the letter, of ancient times. In his fourth Council he enjoins the parish priests to exhort the faithful to go to communion on the Sundays, at least, of Lent and Advent, and afterwards addressed to the faithful themselves a Pastoral Letter in which after having reminded them of the dispositions with which they ought to spend this holy time, he strongly urges them to fast on the Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at least, of each week in Advent. Finally, Pope Benedict XIV when Archbishop of Bologna, following these illustrious examples, wrote his eleventh Ecclesiastical Institution for the purpose of exciting in the mind of his diocesans the exalted idea which the Christians of former times bad of the holy season of Advent, and to the removing an erroneous opinion which prevailed in those parts, namely, that Advent only concerned Religious and not the laity. He shows them that such an opinion, unless it be limited to the two practices of fasting and abstinence, is strictly speaking rash and scandalous, since it cannot be denied that in the laws and usages of the universal Church there exist special practices having for their end the preparing the faithful for the great feast of the birth of Jesus Christ.


The Greek Church still continues to observe the fast of Advent, though with much less rigour than that of Lent. It consists of forty days, beginning with the 14th of November, the day on which this Church keeps the feast of the Apostle Saint Philip. During this entire period, the people abstain from flesh-meat, butter, milk and eggs but they are allowed, which they are not during Lent, fish, oil and wine. Fasting, in its strict sense, is only binding on seven out of the forty days, and the whole period goes under the name of Saint Philips Lent. The Greeks justify these relaxations by this distinction: that the Lent before Christmas is, so they say, only an institution of the monks, whereas the Lent before Easter is of Apostolic institution.


But, if the exterior practices of penance which formerly sanctified the season of Advent have been in the Western Church so gradually relaxed as to have become now quite obsolete except in monasteries, the general character of the Liturgy of this holy time has not changed. And it is by their zeal in foil owing its spirit that the Faithful will prove their earnestness in preparing for Christmas.


The liturgical form of Advent as it now exists in the Roman Church has gone through certain modifications. Saint Gregory seems to have been the first to draw up the Office for this season, which originally included five Sundays, as is evident from the most ancient Sacramentaries of this great Pope. It even appears probable, and the opinion has been adopted by Amalarius of Metz, Berno of Bichenaw, Dom Martene and Benedict XIV, that Saint Gregory originated the ecclesiastical precept of Advent, although the custom of devoting a longer or shorter period to a preparation for Christmas has been observed from time immemorial, and the abstinence and fast of this holy season first began in France. Saint Gregory therefore fixed, for the Churches of the Latin rite, the form of the Office for this Lent-like season and sanctioned the fast which had been established, granting a certain latitude to the several Churches as to the manner of its observance.


The Sacramentary of Saint Gelasius has neither Mass nor Office of preparation for Christmas. The first we meet with are in the Gregorian Sacramentary and, as we just observed, these Masses are five in number. It is remarkable that these Sundays were then counted inversely, that is, the nearest to Christmas was called the first Sunday, and so on with the rest. So far back as the ninth and tenth centuries, these Sundays were reduced to four, as we learn from Amalarius, Saint Nicholas I, Berno of Richenaw, Ratherius of Verona etc, and such also is their number in the Gregorian Sacramentary of Pamelius which appears to have been transcribed about this same period. From that time the Roman Church has always observed this arrangement of Advent, which gives it four weeks, the fourth beings that in which Christmas Day falls, unless the 25th of December be a Sunday. We may therefore consider the present discipline of the observance of Advent as having lasted a thousand years, at least as far as the Church of Rome is concerned, for some of the Churches in France kept up the number of five Sundays as late as the thirteenth century.


The Ambrosian Liturgy, even to this day, has six weeks of Advent. So has the Gothic or Mozarabic Missal. As regards the Gallican Liturgy, the fragments collected by Dom Mabillon give us no information, but it is natural to suppose with this learned man, whose opinion has been confirmed by Dom Martene, that the Church of Gaul adopted, in this as in so many other points, the usages of the Gothic Church, that is to say, that its Advent consisted of six Sundays and six weeks. With regard to the Greeks, their Rubrics for Advent are given in the Mensea, immediately after the Office for the 14th of November. They have no proper Office for Advent, neither do they celebrate during this time the Mass of the Presanctified as they do in Lent. There are only in the Offices for the Saints whose feasts occur between the 14th of November and the Sunday nearest Christmas, frequent allusions to the Birth of the Saviour, to the Maternity of Mary, to the cave of Bethlehem, etc. On the Sunday preceding Christmas, in order to celebrate the expected coming of the Messias, they keep what they call the Feast of the Holy Fathers, that is the commemoration of the Saints of the Old Law. They give the name of Ante-Feast of the Nativity to the 20th, 21st, 22nd and 23rd December, and although they say the office of several Saints on these four days, yet the mystery of the birth of Jesus pervades the whole Liturgy.

The Mystery of Advent

If, now that we have described the characteristic features of Advent which distinguish it from the rest of the year we would penetrate into the profound mystery which occupies the mind of the Church during this season, we find that this mystery of the Coming or Advent of Jesus is at once simple and threefold. It is simple, for it is the one same Son of God that is coming. It is threefold, because He comes at three different times and in three different ways.

 “In the first Coming,” says Saint Bernard, “He comes in the flesh and in weakness. In the second, He comes in spirit and in power. In the third, He comes in glory and in majesty, and the second Coming is the means whereby we pass from the first to the third.”

 This, then, is the mystery of Advent. Let us now listen to the explanation of this threefold visit of Christ given to us by Peter of Blois, in his third Sermon de Adventu:

 “There are three Comings of our Lord. The first in the flesh, the second in the soul, the third at the judgement. The first was at midnight, according to those words of the Gospel: At midnight there was a cry made, Lo the Bridegroom comes! But this first Coming is long since past, for Christ has been seen on the Earth and has conversed among men. We are now in the second Coming, provided only we are such as that He may thus come to us, for He has said that if we love Him, He will come to us and will take up his abode with us. So that this second Coming is full of uncertainty to us. For who, save the Spirit of God, knows them that are of God? They that are raised out of themselves by the desire of heavenly things know indeed when He comes, but from where He comes, or to where He goes, they know not. As for the third Coming, it is most certain that it will be most uncertain when it will be, for nothing is more sure than death and nothing less sure than the hour of death. When they will say, peace and security, says the Apostle, then will sudden destruction come on them as the pains upon her that is with child, and they will not escape. So that the first Coming was humble and hidden, the second is mysterious and full of love, the third will be majestic and terrible. In His first Coming, Christ was judged by men unjustly. In His second, He renders us just by His grace. In His third, He will judge all things with justice. In His first, a Lamb. In His last, a Lion. In the one between the two, the tenderest of Friends.”

The holy Church therefore, during Advent awaits in tears and with ardour the arrival of her Jesus in His first Coming. For this she borrows the fervid expressions of the Prophets to which she joins her own supplications. These longings for the Messiah expressed by the Church are not a mere commemoration of the desires of the ancient Jewish people. They have a reality and efficacy of their own — an influence in the great act of Gods munificence by which He gave us His own Son. From all eternity the prayers of the ancient Jewish people and the prayers of the Christian Church ascended together to the prescient hearing of God, and it was after receiving and granting them that He sent, in the appointed time, that blessed dew upon the Earth which made it bud forth the Saviour.


The Church aspires also to the second Coming, the consequence of the first, which consists, as we have just seen, in the visit of the Bridegroom to the Spouse. This Coming takes place each year at the Feast of Christmas when the new birth of the Son of God delivers the faithful from that yoke of bondage under which the enemy would oppress them. The Church, therefore, during Advent prays that she may be visited by Him who is her Head and her Spouse, visited in her hierarchy, visited in her members of whom some are living and some are dead but may come to life again, visited, lastly, in those who are not in communion with her, and even in the very infidels, that so they may be converted to the true Light, which shines even for them. The expressions of the Liturgy which the Church makes use of to ask for this loving and invisible Coming, are those which she employs when begging for the coming of Jesus in the flesh, for the two visits are for the same object.


In vain would the Son of God have come, [two thousand] years ago to visit and save mankind unless He came again for each one of us and at every moment of our lives, bringing to us and cherishing within us that supernatural life of which He and His Holy Spirit are the sole principle. But this annual visit of the Spouse does not content the Church: she aspires after a third Coming which will complete all things by opening the gates of eternity. She has caught up the last words of her Spouse, “Surely, I am coming quickly” (Apocalypse xxii. 20), and she cries out to Him, “Ah! Lord Jesus! Come!” She is impatient to be loosed from her present temporal state. She longs for the number of the elect to be filled up and to see appear, in the clouds of Heaven, the sign of her Deliverer and her Spouse. Her desires, expressed by her Advent Liturgy, go even as far as this: and here we have the explanation of those words of the beloved Disciple in his prophecy: “The nuptials of the Lamb are come, and His Spouse has prepared herself” (Apocalypse xix. 7).


But the day of this His last Coming to her will be a day of terror. The Church frequently trembles at the very thought of that awful judgement in which all mankind is to be tried. She calls it “a day of wrath on which, as David and the Sibyl have foretold, the world will be reduced to ashes: a day of weeping and fear.” Not that she fears for herself, since she knows that this day will for ever secure to her the crown as being the Spouse of Jesus, but her maternal heart is troubled at the thought that on the same day so many of her children will be on the left hand of the Judge and, having no share with the elect, will be bound hand and foot and cast into the darkness,where there will be everlasting weeping and gnashing of teeth. This is the reason why the Church, in the Liturgy of Advent, so frequently speaks of the Coming of Christ as a terrible Coming, and selects from the Scriptures those passages which are most calculated to awaken a salutary fear in the mind of such of her children as may be sleeping the sleep of sin.


This, then, is the threefold mystery of Advent. The liturgical forms in which it is embodied, are of two kinds: the one consists of prayers, passages from the Bible and similar formulas in all of which words themselves are employed to convey the sentiments which we have been explaining. The other consists of external rites peculiar to this holy time which, by speaking to the outward senses, complete the expressiveness of the chants and words. First of all, there is the number of the days of Advent. Forty was the number originally adopted by the Church, and it is still maintained in the Ambrosian liturgy and in the Eastern Church. If at a later period the Church of Rome, and those who follow her Liturgy, have changed the number of days, the same idea is still expressed in the four weeks which have been substituted for the forty days. The new birth of our Redeemer takes place after four weeks, as the first Nativity happened after four thousand years, according to the Hebrew and Vulgate Chronology.


As in Lent, so likewise during Advent, Marriage is not solemnised, lest worldly joy should distract Christians from those serious thoughts with which the expected Coming of the Sovereign Judge ought to inspire them, or from that dearly cherished hope which the friends of the Bridegroom (John iii. 29) have of being soon called to the eternal Nuptial-feast. The people are forcibly reminded of the sadness which fills the heart of the Church by the sombre colour of the Vestments. Excepting on the Feasts of the Saints, purple is the only colour she uses. The Deacon does not wear the Dalmatic, nor the Subdeacon the Tunic. Formerly it was the custom in some places to wear Black Vestments. This mourning of the Church shows how fully she unites herself with those true Israelites of old who, clothed in sackcloth and ashes, waited for the Messiah and bewailed Sion that she had not her beauty, and “Judah, that the sceptre had been taken from him, till He should come who was to be sent, the expectation of nations” (Genesis xlix. 10). It also signifies the works of penance by which she prepares for the second Coming, full as it is of sweetness and mystery, which is realised in the souls of men in proportion as they appreciate the tender love of that Divine Guest who has said: “My delights are to be with the children of men” (proverbs viii. 31). It expresses, thirdly, the desolation of this Spouse who yearns after her Beloved, who is long a-coming. Like the turtle dove, she moans her loneliness, longing for the voice which will say to her: “Come from Libanus, my Spouse! Come, you will be crowned: you have wounded my heart” (Canticles iv. 8, 9).


The Church also, during Advent, excepting on the Feasts of Saints, suppresses the Angelic Canticle, Gloria in excelsis Deo, et in terra pax hominibus bonoe voluntatis, for this glorious Song was only sung at Bethlehem over the crib of the Divine Babe — the tongue of the Angels is not loosened yet — the Virgin has not yet brought forth her divine treasure — it is not yet time to sing, it is not even true to say, Glory be to God in the highest, and peace on Earth to men of good will! Again, at the end of Mass, the Deacon does not dismiss the assembly of the faithful by the words: Ite, Missa est. He substitutes the ordinary greeting: Benedicamus Domino! as though the Church feared to interrupt the prayers of the people which could scarce be too long during these days of expectation. In the Night Office the Holy Church also suspends, on those same days, the hymn of jubilation, Te Deum laudamus. It is in deep humility that she awaits the supreme blessing which is to come to her, and in the interval she presumes only to ask, and entreat, and hope. But let the glorious hour come when, in the midst of darkest night, the Sun of Justice will suddenly rise upon the world — then indeed she will resume her hymn of thanksgiving, and all over the face of the Earth the silence of midnight will be broken by this shout of enthusiasm: “We praise you, O God! We acknowledge you to be our Lord! You, O Christ, are the King of glory, the everlasting Son of the Father! You, being to deliver man, did not disdain the Virgin's womb!


On the Ferial Days, the Rubrics of Advent prescribe that certain prayers should be said kneeling at the end of each Canonical Hour, and that the Choir should also kneel during a considerable portion of the Mass. In this respect, the usages of Advent are precisely the same as those of Lent.


But there is one feature winch distinguishes Advent most markedly from Lent: the word of gladness, the joyful Alleluia, is not interrupted during Advent, except once or twice during the ferial office. It is sung in the Masses of the four Sundays, and vividly contrasts with the sombre colour of the Vestments. On one of these Sundays — the third — the prohibition of using the organ is removed, and we are gladdened by its grand notes, and rose-coloured Vestments may be used instead of the purple. These vestiges of joy, thus blended with the holy mournfulness of the Church, tell us, in a most expressive way, that though she unites with the ancient people of God in praying for the coming of the Messiah (thus paying the debt which the entire human race owes to the justice and mercy of God), she does not forget that the Emmanuel is already come to her, that He is in her, and that even before she has opened her lips to ask him to save her, she has been already redeemed and predestined to an eternal union with Him. This is the reason why the Alleluia accompanies even her sighs, and why she seems to be at once joyous and sad, waiting for the coming of that holy night which will be brighter to her than the most sunny of days, and on which her joy will expel all her sorrow.



The Practice of Advent

If our holy mother the Church spends the time of Advent in this solemn preparation for the threefold Coming of Jesus Christ: if, after the example of the prudent virgins, she keeps her lamp lit ready for the coming of the Bridegroom, we, being her members and her children, ought to enter into her spirit and apply to ourselves this warning of our Saviour: “Let your loins be girt, and lamps burning in your hands, and ye yourselves be like men who wait for their Lord” (Luke xii. 45).


The Church and we have, in reality, the same hopes. Each one of us is, on the part of God, an object of mercy and care as is the Church herself. If she is the temple of God, it is because she is built of living stones. If she is the Spouse, it is because she consists of all the souls which are invited to eternal union with God. If it is written that the Saviour has purchased the Church with His own Blood (Acts xx. 28), may not each one of us say of himself those words of Saint Paul, “Christ has loved me, and has delivered Himself up for me?” (Galatians ii. 20).


Our destiny being the same, then, as that of the Church, we should endeavour during Advent to enter into the spirit of preparation which is, as we have seen, that of the Church herself. And firstly, it is our duty to join with the Saints of the Old Law in asking for the Messiah, and thus pay the debt which the whole human race owes to the divine mercy. In order to fulfil this duty with fervour, let us go back in thought to those four thousand years represented by the four weeks of Advent and reflect on the darkness and crime which filled the world before our Saviours coming. Let our hearts be filled with lively gratitude towards Him who saved his creature Man from death, and who came down from Heaven that He might know our miseries by Himself experiencing them, yes, all of them, excepting sin. Let us cry to Him with confidence from the depths of our misery for, notwithstanding His having saved the work of His hands, He still wishes us to beseech Him to save us. Let therefore our desires and our confidence have their free utterance in the ardent supplications of the ancient Prophets, which the Church puts on our lips during these days of expectation. Let us give our closest attention to the sentiments which they express.


This first duty complied with, we must next turn our minds to the Coming which our Saviour wishes to accomplish in our own hearts. It is, as we have seen, a Coming full of sweetness and mystery and a consequence of the first, for the Good Shepherd comes not only to visit the flock in general, but He extends his solicitude to each one of the sheep, even to the hundredth which is lost. Now, in order to appreciate the whole of this ineffable mystery, we must remember that since we can only be pleasing to our Heavenly Father inasmuch as He sees within us His Son Jesus Christ, this amiable Saviour deigns to come into each one of us, and transform us, if we will but consent, into Himself, so that henceforth we may live, not we, but He in us. This is, in reality, the one grand aim of the Christian Religion, to make man divine through Jesus Christ: it is the task which God has given to His Church to do, and she says to the faithful what Saint Paul said to his Galatians: “My little children, of whom I am in labour again, until Christ be formed within you!” (Galatians iv. 19).


But, as on His entering into this world, our divine Saviour first showed Himself under the form of a weak babe before attaining the fullness of the age of manhood, and this to the end that nothing might be wanting to His sacrifice — so does He intend to do in us. There is to be a progress in His growth within us. Now, it is at the feast of Christmas that He delights to be born in our souls, and that He pours out over the whole Church a grace of being born to which, however, all are not faithful. For this glorious solemnity, as often as it comes round, finds three classes of men. The first, and the smallest number are they who live, in all its plenitude, the life of Jesus who is within them, and aspire incessantly after the increase of this life. The second class of souls is more numerous. They are living, it is true, because Jesus is in them, but they are sick and weakly because they care not to grow in this divine life: their charity has become cold (Apocalypse ii. 4). The rest of men make up the third division, and are they who have no part of this life in them, and are dead, for Christ has said: “I am the Life” (John xiv. 6).


Now, during the season of Advent, our Lord knocks at the door of all mens hearts, at one time so forcibly that they must needs notice him, at another so softly that it requires attention to know that Jesus is asking admission. He comes to ask them if they have room for Him, for He wishes to be born in their house. The house indeed is His, for He built it and preserves it. Yet He complains that His own refused to receive Him (John iii.), at least the greater number did. But as many as received Him, He gave them power to be made the sons of God, born not of blood, nor of the flesh, but of God (John i. 12, 13).


He will be born, then, with more beauty and lustre and might than you have hitherto seen in Him, O ye faithful ones, who hold Him within you as your only treasure, and who have long lived no other life than His, shaping your thoughts and works on the model of His. You will feel the necessity of words to suit and express your love, such words as He delights to hear you speak to Him. You will find them in the holy Liturgy. You, who have had Him within you without knowing Him, and have possessed Him without relishing the sweetness of His presence, open your hearts to welcome Him this time with more care and love. He repeats His visit of this year with an untiring tenderness. He has forgotten your past slights. He would “that all things be new” (Apocalypse xxi. 5). Make room for the Divine Infant, for He desires to grow within your soul. The time of His coming is close at hand: let your heart, then, be on the watch and lest you should slumber when He arrives, watch and pray, yea, sing. The words of the Liturgy are intended also for your use: they speak of darkness which only God can enlighten, of wounds which only His mercy can heal, of a faintness which can only be braced by His divine energy.


And you, Christians, for whom the good tidings are as things that are not because you are dead in sin, lo! He who is very life is coining among you. Yes, whether this death of sin has held you as its slave for long years or has but freshly inflicted on you the wound which made you its victim — Jesus, your Life, is coming: why, then, will you die? He desires “not the death of the sinner, but rather that he be converted and live” (Ezechiel xviii. 3135). The grand Feast of His birth will be a day of mercy for the whole world: at least, for all who will give Him admission into their hearts. They will rise to life again in Him, their past life will be destroyed, and where sin abounded there grace will more abound (Romans v. 20).


But, if the tenderness and the attractiveness of this mysterious Coming make no impression on you because your heart is too weighed down to be able to rise to confidence, and because, having so long drunk sin like water, you know not what it is to long with love for the caresses of a Father whom you have slighted — then turn your thoughts to that other Coming which is full of terror and is to follow the silent one of grace that is now offered. Think within yourselves how this Earth of ours will tremble at the approach of the dread Judge, how the heavens will flee from before His face and fold up as a book (Apocalypse vi. 14), how man will wince under His angry look, how the creature will wither away with fear as the two-edged sword which comes from the mouth of his Creator (Apocalypse i. 16) pierces him, and how sinners will cry out “Ye mountains, fall on us! ye rocks, cover us!” (Luke xxiii. 30). Those unhappy souls who would not know the time of their visitation (Luke xix. 44) will then vainly wish to hide themselves from the face of Jesus. They shut their hearts against this Man-God who, in His excessive love for them, wept over them — therefore, on the day of judgement they will descend alive into those everlasting fires whose flame devours the Earth with her increase and burns the foundations of the mountains (Deuteronomy xxx. 22). The worm that never dies (Mark ix. 43), the useless eternal repentance, will gnaw them forever.


Let those, then, who are not touched by the tidings of the Coming of the Heavenly Physician and the Good Shepherd who gives His life for His sheep, meditate during Advent on the awful yet certain truth that so many render the redemption unavailable to themselves by their refusing to co-operate in their own salvation. They may treat the child who is to be born (Isaias ix. 6) with disdain, but He is also the Mighty God, and do they think they can withstand Him on that Day when He is to come not to save, as now, but to judge? Would that they knew more of this divine Judge before whom the very Saints tremble! Let them also use the Liturgy of this season, and they will there learn how much He is to be feared by sinners.


We would not imply by this that only sinners need to fear: no, every Christian ought to fear. Fear, when there is no nobler sentiment with it, makes man a slave. When it accompanies love, it is a feeling which fills the heart of a child who has offended his father, yet seeks for pardon. When, at length, love casts out fear (1 John iv. 18), even then this holy fear will sometimes come and, like a flash of lightning, pervade the deepest recesses of the soul. It does the soul good. She wakes up afresh to a keener sense of her own misery and of the unmerited mercy of her Redeemer. Let no one, therefore, think that he may safely pass his Advent without taking any share in the holy fear which animates the Church. She, though so beloved by God, prays to Him to give her this fear. And every day in her Office of Sext she thus cries out to Him: “Pierce my flesh with your Fear.” It is, however, to those who are beginning a good life, that this part of the Advent Liturgy will be peculiarly serviceable.


It is evident from what we have said that Advent is a season specially devoted to the exercises of what is called the Purgative Life, and which is implied in that expression of Saint John, so continually repeated by the Church during this holy time: “Prepare ye the way of the Lord!” Let all, therefore, strive earnestly to make straight the path by which Jesus will enter into their souls. Let the just, agreeably to the teaching of the Apostle, forget the things that are behind (Philippians iii. 13) and labour to acquire fresh merit. Let sinners begin at once and break the chains which now enslave them. Let them give up those bad habits which they have contracted. Let them weaken the flesh, and enter upon the hard work of subjecting it to the spirit. Let them, above all things, pray with the Church. And when our Lord comes, they may hope that He will not pass them by, but that He will enter and dwell within them: for he spoke of all when He said these words: “Behold, I stand at the gate and knock: if any man will hear my voice and open to me the door, I will come in to him” (Apocalypse iii. 20).




1From the Latin word Adventus, which signifies a Coming.