Weekend Edition - A Daily Spiritual Seed

Published: Fri, 12/05/14

A Daily Spiritual Seed
Weekend Edition: December 5-7, 2014
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Book of the Week

Three Women in Dark Times: Edith Stein, Hannah Arendt, Simone Weil, by Sylvie Courtine-Denamy. Cornell Univ., 2000.

The author interweaves the lives of these three women of the Holocaust times, the age of the darkest period of the 20th century. Each was born a Jew but reacted in totally different ways during Hitler’s regime. Arendt affirmed herself as a Jew. Well became a Christian but never joined the Church. Stein became a Catholic Carmelite nun and died in Auschwitz. All three were philosophers, learned women.

Each one caught the eye of a famous male teacher yet dared to criticize and go beyond his teachings. All three explored their sense of femininity, and her relation to her Jewishness. All three tried to move the world with their fierce desire to understand a world much out of joint.

“Condemned to exile, they not only sought to understand a horrible reality, but also attempted to make peace with it.. To do so, Edith Stein and Simone Weil encouraged a stoic acceptance of necessity while Hannah Arendt argued for the capacity for renewal and the need to fight against the banality of evil.”

- Thanks to Sr. Irene Hartman OP for this review.

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Saint of the Week

St. Damasus: (305-384) December 11.

To his secretary St. Jerome, Damasus was “an incomparable person, learned in the Scriptures, a virgin doctor of the virgin Church, who loved chastity and heard its praises with pleasure.”

Damasus seldom heard such unrestrained praise. Internal political struggles, doctrinal heresies, uneasy relations with his fellow bishops and those of the Eastern Church marred the peace of his pontificate.

The son of a Roman priest, possibly of Spanish extraction, Damasus started as a deacon in his father’s church, and served as a priest in what later became the basilica of San Lorenzo in Rome. He served Pope Liberius (352-366) and followed him into exile.

When Liberius died, Damasus was elected bishop of Rome; but a minority elected and consecrated another deacon, Ursinus, as pope. The controversy between Damasus and the antipope resulted in violent battles in two basilicas, scandalizing the bishops of Italy. At the synod Damasus called on the occasion of his birthday, he asked them to approve his actions. The bishops’ reply was curt: “We assembled for a birthday, not to condemn a man unheard.” Supporters of the antipope even managed to get Damasus accused of a grave crime—probably sexual—as late as A.D. 378. He had to clear himself before both a civil court and a Church synod.

As pope his lifestyle was simple in contrast to other ecclesiastics of Rome, and he was fierce in his denunciation of Arianism and other heresies. A misunderstanding of the Trinitarian terminology used by Rome threatened amicable relations with the Eastern Church, and Damasus was only moderately successful in dealing with that challenge.

During his pontificate Christianity was declared the official religion of the Roman state (380), and Latin became the principal liturgical language as part of the pope’s reforms. His encouragement of St. Jerome’s biblical studies led to the Vulgate, the Latin translation of Scripture which twelve centuries later the Council of Trent declared to be “authentic in public readings, disputations, preachings.”

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Inner Explorations: a vast array of spirituality resources for the mature Christian.

Surrender in Prayer: Prayers for abundance and freedom.

SeeScapes. Picturing the deeper dimensions of our spirituality.

Heartland Center for Spirituality: sponsoring Internet workshops year-round.

Emanuella House of Prayer: a place for prayer and silence in British Columbia.

Kyrie Places of Pilgrimmage and Renewal

Temenos Catholic Worker: support for homeless youth in Polk Street neighborhood, San Francisco.

The Sanctuary Foundation for Prayer: resources for spiritual growth.

Philothea.net: promoting the love of God as expressed in The First Great Commandment

Hearts on Fire: a blog to spark inspiration, thought, wonder, laughter and prayer.

Stillpoint: Programs in spiritual direction, contemplative prayer.

The Ark: Providing a variety of scripture and lectionary study resources.

Contemplative Ministries of the Pacific Northwest: Teaching and support on contemplative practice.


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