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- Proverbs 28:13-14 -

by "Waldtraud" <richarra@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 20, 2008 at 12:26 PM

- Proverbs 28:13-14 -
He who conceals his sins does not prosper,
but whoever confesses and renounces them finds mercy.
Blessed is the man who always fears the LORD,
but he who hardens his heart falls into trouble.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is human nature to hide our sins or overlook our mistakes. But it is
hard 
to
learn from a mistake you don't acknowledge making. And what good is a 
mistake if
it doesn't teach you something? To learn from an error you need to admit
it,
confess it, analyze it, and make adjustments so that it doesn't happen 
again.
Everybody makes mistakes, but only fools repeat them.


<<>><<>><<>>
March 20th - Blessed Ambrose Sansedoni, Mystic
(Also known as Ambrose of Siena or Ambrose Sassedoni)

Born in Siena, Italy, in 1220; died 1287; cultus confirmed in 1622.
Although 
his
birth was attended by the prodigies also associated with Blessed James of
Bevagna (of Mevania)-that of three brilliant stars bearing the image of a 
friar
preacher-Ambrose Sansedoni got off to a very bad start by the world's 
account.
He was so badly deformed and so ugly that his own mother could hardly bear

to
look at him.
He was given into the care of a nurse, who daily took him with her to the
Dominican church where she attended Mass. Here it was remarked that the 
baby,
who fretted most of the time, was quiet and content when the nurse would 
hold
him near the altar of relics, and that he cried violently when taken away.

One day, as the nurse was kneeling there with the baby's face covered with
a
scarf, a pilgrim approached and said to her, "Do not cover that child's 
face. He
will one day be the glory of this city." A few days later, at this same 
altar, a
miracle occurred. The unfortunate child suddenly reached out his twisted 
limbs
and quite distinctly pronounced the sacred name of Jesus. At once, all 
deformity
left him, and he became a normal child.

So early marked with the favor of God, it was only natural that Ambrose 
would be
pious. As a child of seven he would rise at night to pray and meditate,
and 
he
daily recited the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin. While still a
child, 
he
was charitable to a heroic degree, and busied himself with the poor, the
abandoned, and the sick. When he was only two or three years old, his 
father,
who was an illuminator of books, made two little books for him. One was on
secular subjects, the other on the saints. Ambrose made no hesitation
about
choosing the latter as his favorite, and throughout his life he was to 
exhibit
this same choice of the things of God.

Being a handsome and talented young man, Ambrose was beset with
difficulties
when he expressed his intention of becoming a member of the preaching 
friars.
Parents and friends tried to change his mind, and the devil appeared in 
several
different forms to counsel him against such a step. Ambrose courageously
overcame all the obstacles in his path and joined the friars on his 17th
birthday.

After his profession in 1237, Ambrose was sent to Paris to study under
Saint
Albert the Great. With his fellow pupil, Saint Thomas Aquinas, he returned

to
Cologne with Saint Albert, and thus was associated for some years with the

two
finest minds of the century. It is said that the humility of Ambrose, and 
his
recognition of the true greatness of Saint Thomas's writings, led him to 
devote
his time to preaching rather than writing. He was sent on many
peace-making
missions during his 30 years of preaching, and was highly regarded by both

popes
and Dominicans.

Despite a very active apostolate of preaching in Germany, France, and
Italy,
Ambrose lived a life of almost uninterrupted prayer. He was often in 
ecstasy,
and, shortly before his death, he was favored with several visions of
great
beauty. It is said that his death was hastened by the vehemence of his
preaching. Sometimes when he preached he levitated and a circle of glory,
in
which birds of brilliant plumage flitted, surrounded him. Many miracles
were
reported at his tomb, and he has been popularly called "Saint Ambrose of 
Siena"
since the time of his death (Benedictines, Dorcy).

In art, Blessed Ambrose is a Dominican with a dove at his ear (Roeder). He

may
also be represented as (1) holding in his hand a model of his native Siena
(Benedictines), (2) holding a book, or (3) preaching (Roeder).

Ambrose is the patron of betrothed couples and especially venerated in
Siena
(Roeder).


Saint Quote:
Even the death on the Cross was sublime: for it was the culminating and
necessary point in that scheme of Love in which death was to be followed
by
blessed resurrection for the whole "lump" of humanity: and the Cross
itself 
has
a mystic meaning.
-Saint Gregory of Nyssa

Bible Quote:
12 And on the next day, a great multitude that was to come to the festival

day,
when they had heard that Jesus was coming to Jerusalem, 13 Took branches
of 
palm
trees, and went forth to meet him, and cried: Hosanna, blessed is he that 
cometh
in the name of the Lord, the king of Israel.  (John 12:12-13)


<><><><>
Gospel Canticle- Luke 1:68-79

Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel;
He has come to His people and set them free.
He has raised up for us a mighty savior,
born of the house of His servant David.
Through His holy prophets He promised of old
that He would save us from our enemies,
from the hands of all who hate us.
He promised to show mercy to our fathers
and to remember His holy covenant.
This was the oath He swore to our father Abraham:
to set us free from the hands of our enemies,
free to worship Him without fear,
holy and righteous in His sight
all the days of our life.
You, my child, shall be called the prophet of the Most High;
for you will go before the Lord to prepare His way,
to give His people knowledge of salvation
by the forgiveness of their sins.
In the tender compassion of our God
the dawn from on high shall break upon us,
to shine on those who dwell in darkness
and the shadow of death,
and to guide our feet into the way of peace.


<><><><>
The second sorrowful mystery prayer of the Eucharistic
Rosary, to be offered before the Blessed Sacrament:

The Scourging of our Lord at the pillar, offered for penitence
and mortification:

O good Jesus! scourged and covered with wounds, the sins
committed by men against the  holy virtue of purity thus
torture Thy innocent flesh; and in  the Blessed Sacrament
impure hearts insult Thee by their sacrilegious  communions.

O Thou bloody Victim, scourged at the pillar, patient Victim
abused in the Sacrament, we adore Thee and we beg of Thee,
through the intercession of Thy holy Mother the grace of
mortifying our senses.




 1 Posts in Topic:
- Proverbs 28:13-14 -
"Waldtraud" <  2008-03-20 12:26:50 

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