May the God of love and
peace set your hearts at rest
The preacher of God's truth has told us that all
who want to live righteously in Christ will suffer persecution. If he spoke
the truth and did not lie, the only exception to this general statement is,
I think, the person who either neglects, or does not know how, to live
temperately, justly and righteously in this world. May you never be numbered among those
whose house is peaceful, quiet and free from care; those on whom the Lord's
chastisement does not descend; those who live out their days in prosperity,
and in the twinkling of an eye will go down to hell.
Your purity of life, your devotion
deserve and call for a reward; because you are acceptable and pleasing to
God, your purity of life must be made purer still, by frequent buffetings,
until you attain perfect sincerity of heart. If from time to time you feel
the sword falling on you with double or treble force, this also should be
seen as sheer joy and the mark of love.
The two-edged sword consists in
conflict without, fears within. It falls with double or treble force within,
when the cunning spirit troubles the depths of your heart with guile and
enticements. You have learned enough already about these kinds of warfare,
or you would not have been able to enjoy peace and interior tranquility in
all its beauty.
The sword falls with double and treble
force externally when, without cause being given, there breaks out from
within the Church persecution in spiritual matters, where wounds are more
serious, especially when inflicted by friends.
This is that enviable and blessed
cross of Christ, which Andrew, that manly saint, received with joyful heart;
the cross in which alone we must make our boast, as Paul, God's chosen
instrument, has told us.
Look then on Jesus, the
author and preserver of faith: in complete sinlessness he suffered, and at
the hands of those who were his own, and was numbered among the wicked. As
you drink the cup of the Lord Jesus (how glorious it is!) give thanks to the
Lord, the giver of all blessings.
May the God of love and peace set your
hearts at rest and speed you on your journey; may he meanwhile shelter you
from disturbance by others in the hidden recesses of his love, until he
brings you at last into that place of complete plentitude where you will
repose for ever in the vision of peace, in the security of trust and in the
restful enjoyment of his riches.
Source: The Liturgy of
the Hours - Office of Readings
Saint Raymond of Penyafort
(1175-1275) was born near Barcelona
around 1175. He became a canon of the diocese of Barcelona and afterward
joined the Order of Preachers. He became professor of canon law
in 1195 and taught for fifteen years. In 1210 he left Spain for Bologna to
complete his studies in canon law.
In 1230 he was summoned to Rome by Gregory
IX, who appointed him chaplain and grand penitentiary. At the command of Pope Gregory IX, he
was given the assignment of re-arranging and
codifying some fourteen collections of earlier published canons of the
Church.
His work completed in 1231 was declared the single authoritative source of
canon law to be taught in schools.
Raymond was elected general of his Order in 1238 and published a
revised edition of the Dominican Constitutions. It was at his request that
Saint Thomas Aquinas wrote the Summa Contra Gentiles. Saint Raymond's
Summa Casuum, treats of the correct and fruitful administration of
the sacrament of penance, and is considered the most notable of his works.
His Summa de Poenitentia et Matrimonio is said to be the first work of its
kind. He died at Barcelona in 1275 and was canonized by Pope Clement VIII in
1601.