Stabat Mater Menevia

Stabat Mater Menevia
We praise you O Lord and we bless you, for by thy Holy Cross thou hast redeemed the world

Wednesday, 16 June 2021

Fourth Sunday After Pentecost - 20th June 2021 at 1pm

 Fourth Sunday After Pentecost - 20th June 2021 at 1pm




"Stupor enim circumdéderat eum et omnes qui cum illo erant, in captúra píscium quam céperant:"


Holy Mass will take place at Sacred Heart Morriston at 1 p.m. this Sunday , for the Fourth Sunday after Pentecost. 


Please see this link for the propers of the Holy Mass which can be printed and downloaded


An interesting commentary on this Sunday's Gospel Reading can be found here


In the current situation it is very important that as many people as possible come to the Holy Mass.  This is the most important thing we can do aside from prayer to play our part in the continuation of the celebration of the Holy Mass not only in our diocese but up and down the country. Please also continue to pray for our priests who offer the Holy Mass in the Extraordinary Form.


If you have not already done so,  would you be so kind as to complete a registration form and hand it in to Father at the end of Sunday's Mass.  Should the need then arise in the future,  it will be possible to provide details of the stable group within the diocese, and this will strengthen the case for continuation of the Holy Mass .  If you don't have a form or have mislaid it,  we will have spare copies on Sunday that you will be able to take away and fill in. 

Many thanks for your continued support. 

Father has kindly sent us an article which we publish today on the blog about the Stabat Mater  It is the name of our stable group, It brings to mind that as we offer up our sorrows to Christ on the cross,  we say to both Christ and Our Blessed Lady "Your Efforts were not in vain"

The below article is from https://marytv.tv/a-moment-with-mary/

"Is there any grief like a mother’s when she loses her child? Stabat Mater, a Latin hymn that can also be recited in prayer, immerses us in the Blessed Mother’s intense sorrow at seeing her beloved Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, dying on the cross in His Passion so that we might have Eternal Life! Its title comes from its first line in Latin “Stabat Mater dolorosa” (roughly translated “the sorrowful mother stood”).

A Franciscan friar named Jacopone da Todi is said to have written the original text of the Stabat Mater in the 13th century, although some scholars have attributed it to Pope Innocent III, among others.

There are over 60 English translations of the Stabat Mater. It has been so popular that numerous composers including Bach, Vivaldi, Haydn, Schubert, and Verdi have set the original Latin text to music.

The Stabat Mater was used frequently in the Liturgy for centuries before it became a sequence (a hymn spoken or sung before the Gospel) in 1727 for the feast of the Seven Sorrows [or Dolors] of the Blessed Virgin Mary on September 15th. Its use as a sequence is optional now on that feast day (now called the feast for Our Lady of Sorrows), but the hymn is often prayed with the Stations of the Cross at Lent.

The Stabat Mater brings to mind front and center just how fully our Blessed Mother suffered along with Jesus, like Him on our behalf! St Alphonsus Liguori once wrote that “two hung upon one cross.”

While she wasn’t crucified, of course, her heartbreak was just as intense! After all, as we read in the seventh stanza of the twenty that comprise the Stabat Mater she saw her beloved Son “bruised, derided, cursed, defiled…all with bloody scourges rent.”

Imagine seeing a loved one, a very special loved one, in fact, undergoing such physical and emotional agony. Now add to that the thought that you can’t do anything to help that person, who’s suffering all the more to see your anguish!

Is it any wonder that we have devotions and prayers to our Blessed Mother as Our Lady of Sorrows? St Bonaventure wrote of Mary’s sorrow at her Son’s death that “no grief was more bitter than hers, because no son was as dear as her Son.”

From what tradition tells us, the Blessed Mother had a strong sense of what was coming way before Christ’s Passion. When she presented her little baby Jesus in the Temple, fulfilling Mosaic law, a “just and devout” (Lk 2:25) man named Simeon, enlightened by the Holy Spirit, foretold both our Lord’s greatness, saying He would be “a light of revelation to the Gentiles and a glory for thy people, Israel,” calling Him “a sign that shall be contradicted” (Lk 2:32 and 34).

He told Mary that she would suffer along with her Son as well, saying that “thy own soul a sword shall pierce” (Lk 2:35). Her wounds would be figurative but just as painful! St Bernard once noted that “Love inflicted on the heart of Mary the same tortures caused by the nails in the body of Jesus.”

When the Blessed Mother experienced, along with her Son, such an intense, bitter martyrdom of love that awful day at Calvary, could anyone present there have imagined that anything good would come out of it? Yet something quite wonderful did occur! Christ, in His death and resurrection, paved the road for our salvation and “life everlasting” with Him in Heaven.

When we offer up our sorrows to Jesus on the Cross, bearing our own cross with patience, and truly seek to follow in His footsteps in our daily lives, we say to both Him and His Blessed Mother, “your efforts on my behalf weren’t in vain!”