Rev. Fr.
Leonard Goffine's The Church's
Year
INSTRUCTION
ON THE FEAST OF THE SACRED HEART OF JESUS
ORIGIN OF THIS FESTIVAL
After many
devout souls had venerated the Sacred Heart of Jesus, with sincere
devotion, in the solitude of quiet life, as is seen in the lives of
SS..Augustine, Bernard, Bonaventura, Thomas of Aquin, Francis de
Sales, Ignatius, Clara, Gertrude, Mechtild, Catharine of Sienna,
Theresa, and others, our divine Saviour willed that His heart's
infinite love should be recognized by all men, and be kindled in
cold hearts by a new fire of love. For this end He made use of a
feeble, obscure instrument, that all the world might know that the
devotion to His loving heart; previously almost entirely unknown,
was His own work. This instrument, disregarded by the world, was one
who shone before God in all 'the radiance of the most sublime
virtues; the nun Margaret Alacoque of the order of the Visitation of
Mary, at Paray, in Burgundy. In the year 1675, whilst she was one
day in prayer before the Blessed Sacrament; our Lord appeared to
her, and pointing to His heart which He showed to her, surrounded
with flames, surmounted by the cross, encircled with a crown of
thorns, and pierced with a gaping wound, He said to her: "Behold
this heart, which has loved mankind so much, and which receives only
ingratitude and coldness in return for its love. My desire is that
you should make reparation to my heart for this ingratitude, and
induce others also to make reparation." Our Lord then designated the
Friday after the Octave of Corpus Christi as the special day for
this duty. In several subsequent apparitions our divine Lord
repeated this injunction, and made the most unbounded promises in
favor' of all who would apply themselves to this office of
reparation to His Sacred Heart. The following are some of His
promises;
- I will give
them all the graces necessary for their state of
life.
- I will
establish peace in their families.
- I will
console them in all their pains and trials.
- I will be
their assured refuge in life, and especially in
death.
- I will shed
abundant blessings upon all their undertakings.
- Sinners
shall find in my Heart an infinite ocean of mercy.
- Lukewarm
souls will be rendered fervent.
- Fervent
souls shall rise rapidly to greater perfection.
- I will bless
those houses where the image of my heart shall be exposed and
honored.
- I will give
to priests the gift of moving the hardest hearts.
- Persons who
propagate this devotion,. shall have their names inscribed on my
heart, never to be effaced from it.
Margaret
obeyed, but found everywhere the greatest opposition, actual sneers
and persecution, even from her Sisters in religion, until finally,
with the aid of her divine spouse, she succeeded as mistress of
novices, in bringing her young charges to the veneration of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus. But this did not content her zeal; although
opposition continued, she strove to fulfil the command of Jesus, who
assisted her by at last changing the hardened hearts of the nuns and
inflaming them with the same love of His Sacred Heart. This devotion
soon spread from the convent throughout the adjoining dioceses,
where confraternities in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus arose,
and Pope Clement, XIII., after causing the strictest investigation
to be made, commanded?the Festival of the Sacred Heart of Jesus to
be observed throughout the Catholic Church on the first Friday after
the octave of Corpus Christi.
ON DEVOTION
TO THE SACRED HEART OF JESUS
I. OBJECT OF THIS DEVOTION
By the Sacred
Heart of Jesus must be understood not the lifeless heart, separated
from the body of Christ, but the tender, loving heart of the
God-Man, the home of all His emotions, the fountain of all His
virtues, and the most touching embodiment of His infinite love for
man. The Catholic Church, in like manner, sets apart certain
festivals with appropriate Mass and office, in honor of the cross,
of our Lord's sacred blood and wounds that our devotion to the
Redeemer may be rendered more fervent by the contemplation of these
objects, for Jesus has shed His blood for us, has received wounds
for us which He retained even after His resurrection, as eternal
signs of His immense love for man, has taken them with Him to
heaven, and will show them to us on the judgment Day. How much more
should our Saviour's Sacred Heart be the object of our devotion,
since all the thoughts, sentiments, and emotions of this most loving
heart aim only at our salvation, and since it is always ready to
receive truly penitent sinners to forgive them, again to turn His
love to them, and make them sharers in eternal bliss.
Therefore the
saints have from the first encouraged a tender devotion to this most
Sacred Heart, as already mentioned. "Longinus," says St. Augustine,
"opened the side of Jesus with His spear; in it I enter, and
securely rest." "O how good," exclaims St. Bernard, "how lovely to
take up my abode in this Heart! In this temple, in this sanctuary,
before this ark of the covenant, I will adore and praise the name of
the Lord, and say with the prophet: I have found in the heart of
Jesus, my king, my brother, my friend." "Believe me, O blinded men,"
says St. Bonaventura, "if you knew how to enter by His sacred wounds
into the interior of Jesus, you would there find not, only a
wonderful sweetness for your soul, but even sweet repose for your
body. And if even the body there finds rest, how great, think you,
must be the sweetness which the spirit there enjoys, if through
these wounds we become united to the Sacred Heart of Jesus!" And St.
Peter Damian says: "In this adorable heart we find the weapons with
which to defend ourselves against our enemies, a cure for our ills,
powerful help against temptations, the sweetest consolation is
suffering, and the purest joy in this valley of tears."
St. Mechtild
and St. Gertrude found themselves transported in an especial manner
by the tenderness of this adorable heart, to adore it fervently, and
Gertrude, enlightened by the Spirit of God, spoke these prophetic
words: "The Lord retained until these late centuries the devotion to
His Sacred Heart, as a last effort of His divine love." We have
already seen how these words have been verified in the pious
Margaret. O would that Jesus' great desire that all men, might know
and love His Sacred Heart be accomplished!
II. EXCELLENCE OF THIS DEVOTION
It is, says the
venerable P. Simon Gourdan:
- The most
sacred devotion, for by it man venerates the holiest sentiments
and emotions of the Heart of Jesus, by which He has sanctified the
Church, glorified His Heavenly Father, and presented Himself to us
as the perfect model of the most exalted sanctity.
- The oldest
devotion of the holy Church, which, instructed by the great St.
Paul, has at all times recognized the munificence of the Sacred
Heart of Jesus.
- The most
approved devotion, for the holy Scriptures everywhere exhort us to
renew our heart by changing our lives, rendering them contrite by
true penance, inflaming them with the fire of divine love, and
adorning them by the exercise of all virtue. Therefore a new heart
is promised on which to remodel our Heart. That Heart can be no
other than the Heart of Jesus, which is given us as an example of
all virtue, and which we must imitate if we wish to be
saved.
- The most
perfect devotion, for it is the: source of all other devotions;
the Heart of Jesus is that inexhaustible treasury from which the
Mother of God and all the saints have drawn their graces, their
life, their virtues, and all spiritual blessings. Filled from this
treasury, other servants of God have instituted different
devotions.
- The most
useful devotion, for in it we have the Fountain of Life itself
before our eyes, from which we can draw directly, and increase in
all virtue by adoring this divine Heart, meditating on its holy
desires, and seeking to imitate it.
- The devotion
most pleasing to Christ, for by it we honor God, as Christ
requires, in spirit and in truth, because we adore the interior
power of God, seeking to please His heart.
- Finally; the
most necessary devotion, for its object is that we become
intimately connected as members with Jesus, our Head, that we live
by and according to His spirit, and have only one heart and soul
with Christ.
Because this devotion is of such importance, we cannot
sufficiently recommend it to all who are anxious for their soul's
salvation. Every person may cherish this devotion, and venerate the
Heart of Jesus by himself, but there is a greater blessing when
pious souls make the devotion in a confraternity. In the year 1726
there existed more than three hundred such confraternities, and they
are now spread throughout all Catholic countries. Do not delay then,
O Christian soul, to practise this devotion, uniting with others .
to honor the divine Heart of Jesus, because in this most Blessed
Heart all men find their reconciliation, the pious their assurance,
sinners their hope, the oppressed their comfort, the sick their
relief, those who are fighting their strength, the dying their
refuge and the elect their joy and bliss.
The Introit of
this day's Mass reads: He will have mercy according to the multitude
of his mercies: for he bath not willingly afflicted nor cast off the
children of men: the Lord is good to them that hope in him, to the
soul that seeketh him. Allel. allel. (Lament III. 32: 33. 25.) The
mercies of the Lord I will sing for ever: to generation and
generation. (Ps. LXXXVIII, 1.). Glory &c.
COLLECT Grant, we beseech Thee,
Almighty God, that we who, glorying in the most Sacred Heart of Thy
beloved Son, celebrate the singular benefits of His love toward us,
may rejoice equally in their operation and their fruit. Through the
same &c.
LESSON (Isai. XII. 1?6.) I will give
thanks to thee, O Lord, for thou wart angry with me; thy wrath is
turned away, and, thou hast comforted me. Behold God is my Saviour,
I will deal confidently, and will not fear: because the Lord is my
strength and my raise, and he is become my salvation. You shall draw
waters with joy out of the Saviour's fountains: and you shall say in
that day: Praise ye the Lord, and call upon his name: make his works
known among tie people: remember that his name is high. Sing ye to
the Lord, for he hath done great things: show this forth in all the
earth. Rejoice, and praise, O thou habitation of Sion: for great is
he that is in the midst of thee, the Holy One of Israel.
EXPLANATION This lesson is a hymn of
praise for the deliverance of the Jews from the hands of their
enemies, and at the same time a prophecy of the coming redemption of
mankind from sin and death through Christ. Man will then draw waters
with joy, says the prophet, from the Saviour's fountains. These
fountains are the graces which Jesus has gained for us on the cross,
but especially, as St: Augustine says, the holy Sacraments of
Baptism and Communion. We should rejoice on account of these graces,
particularly that the Holy One of Israel, Christ, the Son of God,
dwells in the midst of Sion, that is, in the Catholic Church, in the
Blessed Sacrament, to remain there to the end of the world. - Oh!
let us often approach this everflowing fountain of all grace, the
holy Eucharist, and let us draw with confidences consolation, help,
and strength from this fountain of love.
GOSPEL (John XIX. 31-35.) At that
time, The Jews (because it was the parasceve), that the bodies might
not remain upon the cross on the sabbath-day (for that was a great.
sabbath-day), besought Pilate that their legs might be broken, and
that they might be taken away. The soldiers, therefore, came, and
they broke the legs of the first, and of the other that was
crucified with him. But after they were come to Jesus, when they saw
that he was already dead, they did not break his legs. But one of
the soldiers with a spear opened his side, and immediately there
came out blood and water. And he that saw it hath given testimony:
and his testimony is true.
EXPLANATION According to the Jewish
law a criminal could not be put to death, nor could the body of one
who had been executed, remain in the place of execution, on the
Sabbath day; it was for this reason that the Jews asked Pilate, the
governor, to have the Body of Christ and those of the two thieves
buried. Before this could be done, the bones of the crucified,
according to the Roman law, had to be broken with iron clubs. The
soldiers did so to the two thieves, who were yet alive; when they
came to Jesus and found Him dead, they did not break His bones, but
one of them, Longinus, opened the Saviour's side with a spear, as
was foretold by the prophet.
Jesus permitted
His most Sacred Heart to be opened to atone for and efface those
sins of men which originate in the heart, as Christ Himself says:
(Matt. XV. 19.) From the heart come forth evil thoughts, murders,
adulteries, fornications, thefts; false testimonies, blasphemies;
also to show us the infinite love with which He has loved lts from
the beginning, so that lie even shed the last drop of His heart's
blood for our salvation; to make, as it were, a place of refuge in
His heart for us, as St. Augustine says: "The Evangelist is very
careful in his expression; he does not say, the soldiers pierced or
wounded His side, but he o p e n e d it, as if to open for us the
door of life, from which flow the Sacraments of the Church, without
which there can be no access to the true life." As often, then, as a
temptation arises, or trouble depresses us, let us take refuge in
that abode, and dwell there, until the tempest is over; as says the
prophet; (Is. II. 10.) Enter thou into the rock, and hide thee in
the pit. Who is the rock but Christ, and what is the pit but His
wound?
AN ACT OF RESIGNATION TO THE SACRED
HEART OF JESUS
[An indulgence of one hundred Days is gained
by saying this prayer with true contrition, before a picture of the
sacred heart of Jesus, and a plenary indulgence by saying it every
day for a month, an,Ру receiving the Sacraments of Penance and
Communion, and Praying for the Church.]
O
Jesus, most worthy of love! I gratefully offer Thee my heart in
compensation for my great unfaithfulness, and consecrate myself
wholly and forever to Thy service, purposing, with Thy grace, no
more to offend Thee. Amen
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