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Friday, January 13, 2012

Saint Hilary of Poitiers - January 13

Saint Hilary of Poitiers
Bishop
Doctor of the Church
(c 315 – c 368)

"Much ink has been inconclusively spilled debating whether reason can prove the existence of God. But without doubt reason can carry a person to faith, as it brought St. Hilary of Poitiers to Christianity. A gifted pagan rhetorician, Hilary observed that human beings had been placed on earth to live virtuously and be rewarded for it. Such thinking led him to make a rational inquiry about God. He dismissed polytheism as illogical and determined that God was one and eternal." (Bert Ghezzi, Voices of the Saints: A 365-Day Journey with Our Spiritual Companions, page 116)


Prayer of Saint Hilary of Poitiers
O God, may all my thoughts and words speak of You.
Fill with wind the sails I have hoisted for You,
and carry me forward on my course.

Breathe Your Spirit into my faith
and the way I confess it.
Enable me to continue
the preaching I have begun. 


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Art
Saint Hilary of Poitiers - Parmigianino

Monday, January 9, 2012

The Baptism of the Lord

The Baptism of Our Lord

With today's Feast of Jesus' Baptism the liturgical Season of Christmas concludes. The Child, who the Magi from the East came to adore at Bethlehem offering their symbolic gifts, we now find an adult, at the time when he is baptized in the Jordan River by the great Prophet John ( Matthew 3: 13).


The Gospel notes that after Jesus had received baptism and left the water, the heavens opened and the Holy Spirit descended on him like a dove (Matthew 3: 16). Then a voice was heard from heaven that said: "This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased" (Matthew 3: 17). This was his first public manifestation after approximately 30 years of hidden life at Nazareth….

What is the meaning of this act that Jesus wishes to fulfill - overcoming the Baptist's resistance - in order to obey the Father's will (Matthew 3: 14-15)? The profound sense emerges only at the end of Christ's earthly existence, in his death and Resurrection. Being baptized by John together with sinners, Jesus began to take upon himself the weight of all of humanity's sin, like the Lamb of God who "takes away" the sin of the world (John 1: 29): an act which he brought to fulfillment on the Cross when he also received his "baptism" (Luke 12: 50). In fact, by dying he is "immersed" in the Father's love and the Holy Spirit comes forth, so that those who believe in him could be reborn by that inexhaustible font of new and eternal life. Christ's entire mission is summed up in this: to baptize us in the Holy Spirit, to free us from the slavery of death and "to open heaven to us". (Pope Benedict XVI on the Solemnity of the Baptism of the Lord January 13, 2008)



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Art
Baptism of Christ - Francesco Alban
The Seven Sacraments: Baptism - Nicolas Poussin
The Baptism of Christ - Jean Baptiste Camille Corot