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|    alt.religion.new    |    Sortof like the Flying Spaghetti Monster    |    684 messages    |
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|    Message 229 of 684    |
|    Waldtraud to All    |
|    The Holy Garden (1/2)    |
|    14 Feb 09 11:11:42    |
      From: richarra@gmail.com              The Holy Garden              A little bit of prayerful, quiet time every day goes a long way in clearing       a path to that holy garden in our humdrum lives where the gift of wisdom is       perennially       blossoming. And it is there-which really is right here-where our hearts are       enlightened to and       set ablaze by "the fullness of him who fills all in all" (Ephesians 1:23).       -from Enkindled: Holy Spirit, Holy Gifts              Meditation for troubled times:              I believe that life is a school in which I must learn spiritual       things. I must trust in God and He will teach me. I must listen to God and       He       will speak through       my mind. I must commune with Him in spite of all opposition and every       obstacle.       There will be       days when I will hear no voice in my mind and when there will come no       intimate       heart to heart       communion. But if I persist, and make a life habit of schooling myself in       spiritual things, God       will reveal Himself to me in many ways.       I pray that I may regularly go to school in things of the spirit. I pray       that I       may grow spiritually       by making a practice of these things.       -From Twenty-Four Hours a Day                     <><><><><>       .February 14th - Sts. Cyril and Methodius (RM)              Born in Thessalonika, Greece; Cyril in 827, Methodius in 815 (some say 826);       died respectively in Rome on February 14, 869 and probably at Stare Mesto       (Velehrad, Czechoslovakia) on April 6, 884; feast day formerly on July 7 (or       March 9); Pope John Paul II in 1981 declared them joint patrons of Europe       with       Saint Benedict.              ". . . We pray Thee, Lord, give to us, Thy servants, in all time of our life       on       earth, a mind forgetful of past ill-will, a pure conscience and sincere       thoughts, and a heart to love our brethren; for the sake of Jesus Christ,       Thy       Son, our Lord and only Savior."              -From the Coptic Liturgy of Saint Cyril.              Cyril and Methodius were brothers, born into a senatorial family, who both       rose       to high positions in the world-Methodius became governor of a colony in the       Slav       province of Opsikion; Cyril, a leading philosopher at the University of       Constantinople. Cyril, the younger of the two, was baptized Constantine and       sent       at an early age to study at the imperial university at Constantinople under       Leo       the Grammarian and Photius, was ordained deacon, and in time took over       Photius's       position at the university. Cyril also served as librarian at the church of       Santa Sophia, where he earned the reputation and surname 'the Philosopher.'       Methodius was also ordained. Both renounced the life of this world and went       to       live in a monastery on the Bosphorus. In 861, Emperor Michael III sent Cyril       deep into the Dneiper-Volga regions of Russia to convert the Khazars, who       were       Jews. His brother accompanied him. Both brothers were brilliant linguists       and       soon familiarized themselves with the Khazar language. They came back to       their       monastery after a successful mission, and Methodius became abbot of an       important       monastery in Greece.              Almost immediately (863) they were sent by the then Patriarch Photius of       Constantinople to convert the Moravians at the request of Prince Rostislav.       German missionaries had been unsuccessful in their attempts to convert the       Moravians; Cyril and Methodius met with success because of their knowledge       of       the Slavonic tongue.              They invented an alphabet called glagolitic, which marked the beginning of       Slavonic literature (the Cyrillic alphabet traditionally ascribed to Cyril       was       probably the work of his followers in Bulgaria, although both could have       been       inventions of Saint Cyril). Cyril, with the help of his brother, translated       the       liturgical books into Slavonic.              Meanwhile, they incurred the enmity of the German clergy because of their       free       use of Slavonic in Church services and because they were from       Constantinople,       which was suspect to many in the West because of the heresy rife in the       East.       Further, their missionary efforts were hampered by the refusal of the German       bishop of Passau to ordain their candidates for the priesthood.              In Rome the pope had heard of their good work. Pope Nicholas I summoned them       to       meet him, but when they reached Rome he had died. They traveled at an       unfortunate time; Photius had incurred excommunication (because he had been       illegally appointed) and their liturgical use of Slavonic was strongly       criticized. Nicholas's successor, Adrian II, received them warmly. They       presented him with the alleged relics of Pope Saint Clement, which Cyril was       said to have miraculously recovered from the sea in Crimea on his way back       from       the Khazars.              Adrian was convinced of their orthodoxy, approved their use of Slavonic in       the       liturgy, and was so delighted and impressed by Cyril and Methodius that he       determined that they should be consecrated bishops. It is believed that       before       this could happen, Constantine became a monk at Sts. Boniface and Alexus       (Monastery) in Rome and took the name Cyril, but probably died before his       consecration as bishop. He was buried in the beautiful church of San       Clemente on       the Coelian in Rome, where there is an ancient fresco depicting Cyril's       funeral.       (His earthly remains were discovered in the lower part of the church in 1880       and       now lie in a chapel dedicated to him and his brother, set off the right       aisle of       this church.)              Methodius was consecrated bishop and struggled on alone, often in       dangerously       hostile lands. He bore a letter from the Holy See commending him as a man of       "exact understanding and orthodoxy." At the request of Prince Kosel of       Moravia       and Pannonia, Pope Adrian revived the ancient archdiocese of Sirmium (now       Mitrovitsa), consisting of Moravia and Pannonia, independent of the German       hierarchy, and made Methodius archbishop at Velehrad, Czechoslovakia              Although he was supported by the pope, many German bishops resented his work       among the Moravians (and probably the loss of territory). King Ludwig (Louis       the       German), urged on by the bishops, deposed Methodius at a synod at Ratisbon       (Regensburg) and actually imprisoned him for two years in 870. Pope John       VIII       secured his release and returned him to his See, but thought it politic to       forbid his use of Slavonic in the liturgy, although Methodius was authorized       to       use it in preaching. At the same time John reminded the German bishops that       Pannonia and the disposition of Sees throughout Illyricum belonged to the       Holy       See.              During the following years, Methodius continued his work of evangelization       in       Moravia, but he made an enemy of Rostislav's nephew, Svatopluk, who had       driven       his uncle out. Methodius rebuked Svatopluk for his wicked ways. Accordingly,       in       878, the archbishop was reported to the Holy See for continuing to hold Mass       in       Slavonic and for heresy, in that he omitted the words "and the Son       (filioque)"              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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