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Eric S's avatar

Thanks for letting everyone know about the eightfold Miserere. It is one of the absolute treasures of the liturgical year.

And as for being 'repetitive' in Latin it really isn't. If I had to recite the English translation of Psalm '51' found currently in the Liturgy of the Hours eight times in a day I really would feel oppressed, but the Latin is not so. It is musical and rhythmic and the words just roll right off the tongue.

Really the Latin Psalter of the West is something we should be giving a great deal more respect to. It is a historical monument, along with the Mass, that puts absolutely everything on the UNESCO world heritage list to shame yet for two hundred years our so called 'scholars' even some in the so called trad world today have just blown it off or tried to run it down.

We have something here that has been in continuous use in the West since the Roman Empire and is so old that we have no idea who the translator was. Saint Jerome just touched it up a little but not really all that much. Yet we ignore this great treasure and insist that some medieval manuscript produced by non Christians is a better option. Stupid.

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Nathaniel Richards's avatar

“He offers to pour His blood into our wounds, to water them back to health, and feed them with life. He came for sinners because of their sin, not their natural goodness streaming from His hand. Sin was, is, the implacable enemy of Christ — an enemy that withers before His accepted gaze and touch.”

The wonder and mercy of Our Lord! That, “…when as yet we were sinners, …Christ died for us.” (Rom v. 8-9) We were His enemies and yet He laid down His life for us. We did not deserve anything from our sins and wickedness, but Our Lord—in His love—intervened for our salvation. As the Exsultet of the Easter Vigil will proclaim, “O Happy Fault! O truly necessary sin of Adam, that won for us so great a Saviour!”

All we can offer in exchange is our lives confirmed to His, our meager penances and sacrifices united to His Holy Cross, so that we may found like Him (Phil iii. 8-9). And all this only because He first loved us and made it possible by the shedding of His Precious Blood. For God works in us to bring us to salvation as we cooperate with His graces (Phil ii. 13). The Psalms—and their constant consumption via prayer and recitation—are a great way to keep the cyclic nature of the foretelling, the acting out, and the fruits of the Paschal Mystery ever in our minds and hearts.

Thank you, Lord Jesus. Thank you for purchasing our salvation in the Passion. A mercy we don’t deserve. Miserere mei Deus secundum magnum misericordiam tuam!

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