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|    talk.religion.misc    |    Religious, ethical, & moral implications    |    30,222 messages    |
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|    Message 28,308 of 30,222    |
|    Weedy to All    |
|    On the Wedding Garment    |
|    05 Nov 17 23:11:22    |
      From: richarra@gmail.com              On the Wedding Garment               Then the king said to the waiters: Bind his hands and feet, and       cast him into the exterior darkness: there shall be weeping and       gnashing of teeth.               The man without a wedding garment is a figure of the unrepentent       sinner in mortal sin who stands before God without the wedding garment       of sanctifying grace. The binding of his hands and feet and casting       into the exterior darkness represents God punishing the sinner and       condemning him to hell. [Matt 22: 13]                     <<>><<>><<>>       November 6th – St. Winnoc, Abbot       d. 717?              WINNOC was probably of British origin. When a young man he, with 3       companions, came to the newly founded monastery of St. Peter at Sithiu       (Saint-Omer). He was so edified with the fervour of the monks and the       wisdom of their abbot, St. Bertin that he and his companions agreed to       take the habit together. Soon, as the chronicler of the monastery       testifies, St. Winnoc shone like a morning star among the hundred and       fifty monks who inhabited that sanctuary.              When it was judged proper to found a new monastery in a remoter part       of the country of the Morini, for the instruction and example of the       inhabitants of that part, Heremar, a man who had lately embraced the       faith, bestowed on St. Bertin some land at Wormhout, near Dunkirk,       very convenient for that purpose. Bertin sent thither his four British       monks to found the new monastery. St. Winnoc and his brethren worked       tirelessly in building their church and cells, together with a       hospital for the sick, and the place soon became an important       missionary centre. Many miracles were attributed to Winnoc, who was       always foremost in the service of his monastic brethren and his       heathen neighbours. Even in his old age he ground corn for the poor of       his community, turning the hand-mill himself without any assistance.       When others were astonished that he should have strength enough to do       constantly such hard labour, they looked through a chink into the barn       and saw the quern turning without being touched, which they ascribed       to a miracle.              St. Winnoc died on November 6, the year, according to the 14th-century       tradition, being 717. Count Baldwin IV built and founded at Bergues an       abbey, which he peopled with a colony from Sithiu and enriched with       the relics of St. Winnoc. The lands of the monastery of Wormhout were       settled upon this house, and the town bears the name of       Bergues-Saint-Winnoc.              In curious contrast to St. Illtud, St. Winnoc, though his direct       connection with Great Britain is very slight, is commemorated in       nearly all the English calendars of the 10th and 11th centuries (see       those edited for the Henry Bradshaw Society by F. Wormald in 1934).       What is more, his name is mentioned and the miracle of the corn       grinding described in detail in the Old-English martyrology of c. 850.       Three Latin lives of St. Winnoc have been printed in the Acta       Sanctorum, November, vol. iii, but only the first, which may have been       written as early as the eighth century, is of much account, the other       two being obviously based upon this. This first life has also been       edited by Levison in MGH., Scriptores Merov., vol. v. See also Van der       Essen, Étude critique sur les Saints méroving., pp. 402 seq. Flahault,       Le culte de St. Winnoc a Wormhout (1903) and Duine, Memento, p. 64.       St. Winnoc is apparently the titular of Saint Winnow in Cornwall, and       in an excellent monograph (1940) Canon Doble gives reasons for       thinking he was a Welshman who founded this Cornish church, and       subsequently came to Sithiu, no doubt via Brittany.                     Saint Quote:       Those who lived according to the old order of things have come to a       new hope, no longer keeping the sabbath, but the Lord's Day, in which       our life is blessed by him and by his death.        --Saint Ignatius of Antioch              Bible Quote:       But he that heareth and doth not is like to a man building his house       upon the earth without a foundation: against which the stream beat       vehemently. And immediately it fell: and the ruin of that house was       great. (Luke 6:49) DRB                     <><><><>       Daily Thoughts and Prayers for Our Beloved Dead              "Have pity on me, have pity on me, at least you my friends, because       the hand of the Lord hath touched me" Job. 19-21.              SIXTH DAY              The Souls in Purgatory are powerless to help themselves. They cannot       do penance, nor offer satisfaction, nor gain indulgences, nor receive       the Sacraments. They cannot pray for themselves. We, who are still on       earth, can share with them the Graces which God so generously and       abundantly gives us.              Prayer: Our Father, Three Hail Marys, Gloria, De Profundis.              De Profundis               Out of the depths, I have cried to Thee,       O Lord, Lord, hear my voice.        Let Thine ears be attentive to the       voice of my supplication.        If Thou, O Lord, shalt mark my iniquities,       O Lord, who shall stand it?        For with Thee there is merciful       forgiveness: and by reason of Thy       law I have waited for Thee, O Lord.       My soul hath relied on His word; my soul       hath hoped in the Lord.        From the morning watch even until       night; let Israel hope in the Lord.       Because with the Lord there is mercy;       And with Him plenteous redemption.        And He shall redeem Israel from       all its iniquities.        Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord,       And let perpetual light shine upon them:        May they rest in peace. Amen.              Most beloved Jesus, by the merits of Thy five wounds, hear the pleas       and release from the torments of Purgatory the faithful soul that did       the most good on earth. Place it today at Thy heavenly throne that it       may join in honoring Thee and in guiding me to live according to its       dictates.              See whole prayer at:       http://www.dailycatholic.org/deprofun.htm              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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