As Cardinal Mercier said : "When prudence is everywhere, courage is nowhere."                                                                                  From Cardinal Sarah : "In order to avoid hearing God's music, we have chosen to use all the devices of this world. But heaven's instruments will not stop playing just because some people are deaf."                                                                                              Saint John-Paul II wrote: "The fact that one can die for the faith shows that other demands of the faith can also be met."                                                 Cardinal Müller says, “For the real danger to today’s humanity is the greenhouse gases of sin and the global warming of unbelief and the decay of morality when no one knows and teaches the difference between good and evil.”                                                  St Catherine of Siena said, “We've had enough exhortations to be silent. Cry out with a thousand tongues - I see the world is rotten because of silence.”                                                  Chesterton said, “The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult; and left untried.”                                                Brethren, Wake up!

CARDINAL'S CORPUS CHRISTI HOMILY

On this day, the ancient Octave day of the Feast of Corpus Christi, we are happy to share a video of the Homily preached by Cardinal Nichols at Mass of the Feast last Sunday, in the Diocesan Shrine of the Blessed Sacrament, the church of Corpus Christi, Maiden Lane, in the presence of Fra' Max Rumney, Grand Prior of England. The Mass was followed by a Eucharistic procession around Covent Garden. (The video should start at the beginning of the homily at 21.23, which doesn't work in all browsers, and which lasts 15 minutes. If it doesn't work for you CLICK HERE)


O sacrum convivium!
in quo Christus sumitur:
recolitur memoria passionis eius:
mens impletur gratia:
et futurae gloriae nobis pignus datur.
Alleluia.

FEAST OF SAINT FLEUR OF BEAULIEU

 Today is the feast of Saint Fleur, one of our three illustrious Dame saints.

Saint Fleur (Flora in Latin) was born about 1300 at Maurs in France. At the age of thirteen, she took the veil in the convent of the Sisters of St. John of Jerusalem at Beaulieu, in the diocese of Cahors in France, where she devoted herself to tending the poor and the sick in the hospital attached to the convent, which served the Poor, travellers and orphans, as well as housing a noviciate. The monastic buildings were sacked in 1793, the Dames expelled and killed and the buildings destroyed, all that survives is the Chapter House.


Fleur subdued distractions and temptations in the love of God and in mystical experiences. She had a special devotion to the Passion of Christ Crucified, to Our Lady of the Annunciation, and to Saint John the Baptist, patron of the Order of Saint John. She died in 1347 and her relics were venerated in the Convent. The relics survived and were restored to the nearby parish church of Saint Julien in Issendolus (called Saint-Dolus before the Revolution) in 1852, since when there has been continuous veneration by the villagers as well as members of our Order.

We see in the photograph our friend and confrère Jacques de Saint-Exupéry carrying the relics of Saint Fleur in the annual procession on this feast in Issendolus, presided by the bishop of Cahors, with Madame Alix de Tourtier in front.

Sancta Flora, ora pro nobis.