"Love follows knowledge."
"Beauty above all beauty!"
– St. Catherine of Siena

Thursday, January 16, 2025

2022 Reads

So it’s been three years since I listed my annual reads.  I have felt very guilty on not posting them but I got out of the habit of tracking my reads.  After all, my guilt is exacerbated because this was the major reason for my blog.  I really want to keep a log of my reading whether for the blog or not.  I am going to try to track down to the best of my knowledge what I read for the years 2022 through 2024.  2022 will be the easiest because I still had most of that list.  But I have means of compiling the other lists.  I sometimes set aside the finished books in specific spots; I have my discussions on Goodreads; and I have what we discussed at the Adult Faith Formation class I lead at my parish.  If I don’t get the exact list, I will come close. 

These blog posts on my annual reads will not come with any analysis of what types of books I read or their genres.  Just a straight listing.

 

 


First Quarter:

Magnificat, January 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

“The Traveler,” a short story by Wallace Stegner.

“The Curtain Blown by the Breeze,” a short story by Muriel Spark.

Magnificat, February 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

“Chef’s House, a short story by Raymond Carver.

 “Petrified Man,” a short story by Eudora Welty.

Jesus and the Jewish Roots of Mary: Unveiling the Mother of the Messiah, a non-fiction book by Brant Pitre.

Confessio, a short autobiographical testimonial by St. Patrick.

The City of God Books 11-16, by St. Augustine of Hippo, translated by William Babcock.

Magnificat, March 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

 

Second Quarter:

Magnificat, April 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

How Catholic Art Saved the Faith: The Triumph of Beauty and Truth in Counter-Reformation Art, a non-fiction book by Elizabeth Lev.

Magnificat, May 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

The Timeless Dominic: A Commentary on the O Lumen, a biographical devotional by Richard T.A. Murphy, O.P.

Walking with Mary: A Biblical Journey from Nazareth to the Cross, a devotional by Edward Sri.

Magnificat, June 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

 

 

Third Quarter:

Magnificat, July 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

The Early Church Was the Catholic Church : The Catholic Witness of the Fathers in Christianity's First Two Centuries, a Non-Fiction book by Joe Heschmeyer.

Magnificat, August 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

Apologia Pro Vita Sua, a confessional memoir by St. John Henry Newman.

Book of Genesis, a book from the Old Testament, RSV Translation.

Magnificat, September 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

 

 

Fourth Quarter:

Magnificat, October 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

Come Rack! Come Rope!, an historical novel by Robert Hugh Benson.

The Gospel of Luke, a book of the New Testament, RSV Translation.

Magnificat, November 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

The Quest for Shakespeare, a biography by Joseph Pearce.

Measure for Measure, a comic play by William Shakespeare.

“Ligeia,” a short story by Edgar Allen Poe.

The Crucified Rabbi: Judaism and the Origins of Catholic Christianity, a Non-Fiction Book by Taylor R. Marshall.

Desiderio Desideravi, an apostolic letter by Pope Francis.

Magnificat, December 2022, a monthly Catholic devotional.

 

Unfinished Reading:

The Intellectual Life: It’s Spirits, Conditions, Methods, a non-fiction work by A.G. Sertillanges, O.P.

Wisdom of the Desert Fathers and Mothers: Ancient Advice for the Modern World, a non-fiction book by Philip G. Bochanski.

K: A History of Baseball in Ten Pitches, a Non-Fiction book by Tyler Kepner.

Whose Body? A Lord Wimsey Story, a detective story by Dorothy L. Sayers.

The Dialogue, A Book of Spirituality by St. Catherine of Siena, Translated and Edited by Suzanne Noffke.




Sunday, January 12, 2025

Sunday Meditation: The Feast of the Baptism of the Lord

And so Christmas is over, and we begin with Ordinary Time once more, but on the First Sunday we immediately start with a Feast.  Today we celebrate the Baptism of the Lord. Let’s just watch the Gospel in film clip from the great Jesus of Nazareth movie.



The opening of heaven with the Voice of the Father and the descent of the Holy Spirit is a theophany.

 

The people were filled with expectation,

and all were asking in their hearts

whether John might be the Christ.

John answered them all, saying,

“I am baptizing you with water,

but one mightier than I is coming.

I am not worthy to loosen the thongs of his sandals.

He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.”

 

After all the people had been baptized

and Jesus also had been baptized and was praying,

heaven was opened and the Holy Spirit descended upon him

in bodily form like a dove.

And a voice came from heaven,

“You are my beloved Son;

with you I am well pleased.”

~Lk 3:15-16, 21-22


That is such a moving clip from the most iconic of Jesus movies.  Now let the video gel in your mind and then listen to Bishop Barron give the best explanation of why Jesus had to be baptized in his homily this week. 


It is not just because Jesus sanctifies the water for all to undergo baptism, though it is that too.  He was baptized to prepare Himself as the Lamb of God to take away the sins of the world.  That homily knocked my socks off.  That is one of Bishop Barron’s all-time best.

I like to pair an exegesis homily with a homily that draws out the pastoral significance of the passage. This week I present from St. Leo the Great Catholic Church in Lancaster, PA Fr. Peter Hahn’s homily.

 



Sunday Meditation: “Heaven was opened and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in bodily form like a dove.”

 

For the hymn this week, let’s go with the Negro Spiritual, “Wade in the Water.”

 

 

Negro spirituals are so good.  I love that hymn.  I don’t know Cynthia Liggins Thomas but that is beautiful. 

Friday, January 10, 2025

Poetry Analysis: “The Christmas Tree” by Cecil Day-Lewis

Now that the Christmas season is over—December 25th to Epiphany—the holiday decorations have come down, and it is noticeable.  And so this poem is fitting.  I heard this poem read on the The Daily Poem podcast which is a production from Goldberry Studios, hosted by Sean Johnson.  This is a wonderful podcast that you don’t have to be an expert in poetry to enjoy a poem every day.  I find Sean Johnson very knowledgeable and very likable.  Each episode I would estimate to be roughly ten minutes, so it’s easy for a quick listen or to binge on a series when you have fallen behind.  The episode for this poem can be found here.   

My analysis below will be independent of Sean Johnson’s comments, though we pretty much have the same reading of the poem.  You’ll get double insight by reading my post and listening to his podcast comments.

 

The Christmas Tree

by C. Day-Lewis

 

Put out the lights now!

Look at the Tree, the rough tree dazzled

In oriole plumes of flame,

Tinselled with twinkling frost fire, tasseled

With stars and moons—the same

That yesterday hid in the spinney and had no fame

Till we put out the lights now.

 

Hard are the nights now:

The fields at moonrise turn to agate

Shadows as cold as jet;

In dyke and furrow, in copse and faggot

The frost’s tooth is set;

And stars are the sparks whirled out by the north wind’s fret

On the flinty nights now.

 

So feast your eyes now,

On mimic star and moon-cold bauble;

Worlds may wither unseen,

But the Christmas Tree is a tree of fable,

A phoenix in evergreen,

And the world cannot change or chill what its mysteries mean

To your heart and eyes now.

 

The vision dies now

Candle by candle: the tree that embraced it

Returns to its own kind,

To be earthed again and weather as best it

May the frost and the wind.

Children, it too had its hour—you will not mind

If it lives or dies now.

 


I had never heard of Cecil Day-Lewis, not to be confused with C.S. Lewis.  Both were British, both Anglo-Irish, and both lived approximately contemporaneous with each other but I do not believe they were related.  Day-Lewis was actually a Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom for the last four years of his life, and yet I have never heard of him before.  This is the one and only poem of his that I have read, and I think a very good one.

The poem has a fascinating structure, four stanzas of seven lines each (called a heptastich or septet) with a rhyme scheme of ABCBCCA.  The first and seventh lines of all four stanzas end with the word “now.”  The second through fifth lines form a quatrain of BCBC and the sixth line repeats the C sound, forming an inner quintain (five line poem).  Perhaps the most well known quintain is “To a Skylark” by Percy Bysshe Shelley.  Interestingly Day-Lewis also has an analogy of a bird in his poem, an oriole in the third line.  This inner quintain is then framed by the two lines ending with the repeated word “now.”  While septet stanzas are popular in English literature (Chaucer, Spenser, Herbert, and others) I could not find another example of this rhyme scheme.  Seven lines is half a sonnet, and it does have the feel of an incomplete sonnet.  Typically septets tend to allude to the mysterious or numinous, seven being the number of days of creation in Genesis.  This poem certainly does that.

The line lengths are also rather interesting.  They alternate between a short line of five to seven syllables and a long line of nine to fourteen syllables.  The first line of a stanza is always a five syllable line ending with “now,” and the last line is short line with an extra syllable or two ending with “now.”  The short lines seem to anchor the stanza lyrically while the long lines tend to unwind into a contemplative recitative.  The meter of the lines are varied and what I can only see as sprung rhythm, a natural unfixed pattern based on the number of stressed syllables per line.  I did not decompose the poem into the number of stressed syllables per line, but it would not surprise me if there was a pattern.  (If someone does that decomposing and finds the pattern, please let us know.) 

So what is this poem about?  Let’s understand the progression of thought from stanza to stanza.

In the first stanza we are presented with a decorated Christmas tree, magnificently “dazzled/In oriole plumes of flame.”  “Put out the lights now” seems to be an imperative command to shut the lights in the room so that one can fully absorb the dazzling brightness of the decorated tree, a tree that only yesterday stood in its natural environment, “in the spinney.”  “Put out the light” can also refer to the extinguished lights on the tree at the end of the poem when the holiday is over and the tree taken down.  That gives the poem a circular structure.

In the second stanza, in the “now,” with the tree dazzling inside, we are presented with the “hard” world outside with its winter hardships, where even the shadows are cold and stars are sparks blown about by the north wind.

In the third stanza, in the “now,” and again presented with the dazzling Christmas tree, we see the tree in its mystery capable of overcoming nature’s disintegrating forces, worlds withering and such.  The tree is a “phoenix in evergreen,” the phoenix being a symbol of resurrection rising from burning ashes. 

In the fourth and final stanza, the “now” is gone, the vision “dies” as does the tree as it is tossed into the outside world of frost and wind to decompose in the natural elements.  The decorations are “candle by candle” put out as the holiday has passed.  The tree “had its hour” but that hour has passed and will shortly go out of mind.

The circular aesthetic is brought out.  So the tree, like Christmas, will be over, and come next year, the “Tree” (capitalized to represent a universal, platonic tree) will phoenix like be resurrected in another tree.  The poem incorporates a tension between a “now” and a timeless moment that is re-presented before us every Christmas.  “Tree” is capitalized twice—in the second line of the first stanza and fourth line of the third stanza.  It is contrasted with the lower case “tree,” which stands for the specific tree of this specific Christmas.

This little drama is set within the cosmic context of moon and stars, fields and copses, nights and frost, shadows and north wind whirling.  These represent the forces of nature that wish to degenerate, but they also represent the mystical forces that regenerate.  That which disintegrates will also regenerate.

I believe the poem alludes to two famous Shakespearean soliloquies.  First, there is the “put out the light” allusion in Othello where just before Othello smothers Desdemona he speaks this famous soliloque.

 

Yet she must die, else she’ll betray more men.

Put out the light, and then put out the light:

If I quench thee, thou flaming minister,

I can again thy former light restore,

Should I repent me: but once put out thy light,

Thou cunning’st pattern of excelling nature,

I know not where is that Promethean heat

That can thy light relume.

            Othello, Act 5, Scene 2, ll. 6-13

Here the extinguishing of light refers to death, a death that cannot be brought back to life.  The other allusion is to the “Tomorrow and Tomorrow” soliloquy from Macbeth.  Macbeth upon hearing of his wife’s death falls into this despair.

 

Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,

Creeps in this petty pace from day to day

To the last syllable of recorded time,

And all our yesterdays have lighted fools

The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!

Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player

That struts and frets his hour upon the stage

And then is heard no more: it is a tale

Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury.

            Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 5, ll. 19-28

This too is about death, and a nihilistic sense of the lack of meaning of life.  Day-Lewis’s poem takes elements from these two Shakespearean soliloquies and contrasts the nihilism of their message (Shakespeare is not a nihilist; it’s the characters of the play who are expressing their despair) with the universal hope of Christmas coming round every year.  While Desdemona’s “light” is put out, and the tree’s lights snuffed out, the Tree’s lights will not end and, indeed, will return.  While the “lighted fool” of Macbeth will “strut and fret its hour upon the stage/ And then is heard no more,” and the light of the “tree” will extinguish, the light of the “Tree” will return.

The central theme of Day-Lewis’s poem I think can be found in the third stanza:

 

 Worlds may wither unseen,

But the Christmas Tree is a tree of fable,

A phoenix in evergreen,

And the world cannot change or chill what its mysteries mean

To your heart and eyes now.

The “fable” is not referring to a false story but alludes to what is always true.  The Christmas Tree is always true because Christmas will return and a new tree will be put up. 

Here are some of my favorite lines from the poem.  From the first stanza: “Look at the Tree, the rough tree dazzled/In oriole plumes of flame/Tinselled with twinkling frost fire, tasseled/With stars and moons.”  From the second stanza: “In dyke and furrow, in copse and faggot/The frost’s tooth is set;/And stars are the sparks whirled out by the north wind’s fret/On the flinty nights now.”  I already gave that key sentence from the third stanza, and from the fourth stanza we have this: “the tree that embraced it/Returns to its own kind,/To be earthed again and weather as best it/May the frost and the wind.”

Sean Johnson did make one observation I missed.  The “oriole plumes of flame” in the first stanza connect with the rising phoenix of the third stanza.  The oriole is a bird plumed in black and orange, and so can seem like a bird in flames.  I really appreciate that given that in baseball I am a Baltimore Orioles fan.

There is an audio clip of Cecil Day-Lewis reading this poem himself.  I hope you enjoy it.

 

I hope you had a wonderful Christmas.  Until next year, keep Christmas in your heart and before your eyes now.



Sunday, January 5, 2025

Solemnity Meditation: The Magi

On this second Sunday of Christmas, we celebrate the Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord.  Who were these strange men—the Gospel does not say they were kings—who followed a star to baby Jesus?  Well I had four blog posts on the reading of Fr. Dwight Longenecker’s book, The Mystery of the Magi.  If you really want to know who these mysterious men were—not the fable of Balthazar, Caspar, and Melchior—but the real history, read my posts.  Here is blog post #4 on Fr. Longenecker’s book, and from there are links to Posts one, two, and three.  The real history is more astonishing than the legend. 

However, Matthew’s spiritual significance is just what epiphany means.   Epiphany is a revelation of God, a theophany, and here the Magi reveal to the world that baby Jesus is the Christ, King of the Jews.

 

When Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea,

in the days of King Herod,

behold, magi from the east arrived in Jerusalem, saying,

“Where is the newborn king of the Jews?

We saw his star at its rising

and have come to do him homage.”

When King Herod heard this,

he was greatly troubled,

and all Jerusalem with him.

Assembling all the chief priests and the scribes of the people,

he inquired of them where the Christ was to be born.

They said to him, “In Bethlehem of Judea,

for thus it has been written through the prophet:

And you, Bethlehem, land of Judah,

are by no means least among the rulers of Judah;

since from you shall come a ruler,

who is to shepherd my people Israel.”

Then Herod called the magi secretly

and ascertained from them the time of the star’s appearance.

He sent them to Bethlehem and said,

“Go and search diligently for the child.

When you have found him, bring me word,

that I too may go and do him homage.”

After their audience with the king they set out.

And behold, the star that they had seen at its rising preceded them,

until it came and stopped over the place where the child was.

They were overjoyed at seeing the star,

and on entering the house

they saw the child with Mary his mother.

They prostrated themselves and did him homage.

Then they opened their treasures

and offered him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.

And having been warned in a dream not to return to Herod,

they departed for their country by another way.

~Mt 2:1-12

 

Fr. Geoffrey Plant as usual does a thorough of explaining the historical and biblical significance of the Epiphany.

 



Fr. Geoffrey gives a handful of theories of where the Magi came from but none of them agree with Fr. Longenecker’s research.  I would go with Fr. Longenecker. 

Now for a sermon on the spiritual significance of the epiphany, let’s turn to Jeff Cavins.

 


It occurs to me that the light given off by Christ shines through the Magi.  Let the light of Christ shine through you.  Let your person be a manifestation of Christ, an epiphany to the world.

We don’t see much of how the Magi are transformed by their visit, but the poet T.S. Eliot speculates on how one particular Magus (singular for Magi) is transformed in his great poem “The Journey of the Magi.”  I provided a detailedanalysis of the poem here if you wish to read and understand this great work of poetry.    

 

Solemnity Meditation: “Where is the newborn king of the Jews?  We saw his star at its rising and have come to do him homage.”

 

Instead of a hymn this week, I am going to provide a reading by someone named Arthur L. Wood of T.S. Eliot’s he Journey of the Magi.” 

 


I selected this clip since it provided the words, but that is also an excellent reading.

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Solemnity Meditation: The Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of God

January 1st is celebrated as a religious holiday either to commemorate Christ’s circumcision or to commemorate His Blessed Mother as the Mother of God, the Theotokos.  From Wikipedia:


The Second Vatican Council stated: "Clearly from earliest times the Blessed Virgin is honoured under the title of Mother of God." and at an early stage the Church in Rome celebrated on 1 January a feast that it called the anniversary (Natale) of the Mother of God. When this was overshadowed by the feasts of the Annunciation and the Assumption, adopted from Constantinople at the start of the 7th century, 1 January began to be celebrated simply as the octave day of Christmas, the "eighth day" on which, according to Luke 2:21, the child was circumcised and given the name Jesus.

 

In the 13th or 14th century, 1 January began to be celebrated in Rome, as already in Spain and Gaul, as the feast of the Circumcision of the Lord and the Octave of the Nativity, while still oriented towards Mary and Christmas, with many prayers, antiphons and responsories glorifying the maternity of Mary. Pope John XXIII's General Roman Calendar of 1960 removed the mention of the circumcision of Jesus and called 1 January simply the Octave of the Nativity.

There is even more to the history, which you can read for yourself.  Today’s Gospel reading:

 

The shepherds went in haste to Bethlehem and found Mary and Joseph, 

and the infant lying in the manger.

When they saw this, 

they made known the message 

that had been told them about this child.

All who heard it were amazed 

by what had been told them by the shepherds.

And Mary kept all these things, 

reflecting on them in her heart.

Then the shepherds returned, 

glorifying and praising God 

for all they had heard and seen, 

just as it had been told to them. 

 

When eight days were completed for his circumcision, 

he was named Jesus, the name given him by the angel 

before he was conceived in the womb.

~Lk 2:16-21

It is interesting that the shepherds “went in haste” where Luke uses the same word as in just the previous chapter where Mary “went in haste” to visit her cousin Elizabeth.

Here is a wonderful homily from Fr. James McCurry OFM Con of the Companions of St. Anthony, a Franciscan Friar Conventional association.  (Someday I will figure out the various divisions of the Franciscans, but it always escapes me.) 


The homily was delivered in 2021, so don’t be thrown by his best wishes for the new year of 2021.  It is now 2025!

Now for a second homily by another Franciscan, Fr. Terrance of the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate.  This is a little longer but there is a wealth of knowledge here.



My, my two Franciscans highlighted by a Lay Dominican.  What is the world coming to.  Peace might just ring out…lol. 😋

I love Fr. Terrance.  I have been trying to get one of his homilies into one of these Sunday Meditations ever since I learned of him a little over a year ago.  He is extremely smart.  Notice he even quotes a Dominican, St. Thomas Aquinas at the 9:33 mark where Fr. Terrance provides Aquinas’s definition of love: “love is to will the good of the other.”  (You can read about Aquinas' definition of love in this Word on Fire article by Dr. Tom Neal.)  Fr. Terrance also mentions the Sub tuum praesidium the third century papyrus fragment with the earliest Marian prayer. 

 

Solemnity Meditation: “And Mary kept all these things, reflecting on them in her heart.”

 

For today’s hymn, what better than the Sub tuum praesidium in an ancient Gregorian chant, performed here by the sacred music group, Floriani. 

 


Here are the lyrics in Latin:

 

Sub tuum praesidium

confugimus,

Sancta Dei Genetrix.

Nostras deprecationes ne despicias

in necessitatibus,

sed a periculis cunctis

libera nos semper,

Virgo gloriosa et benedicta

Here is the English translation.


We fly to thy protection,

O Holy Mother of God;

Do not despise our petitions

in our necessities,

but deliver us always

from all dangers,

O Glorious and Blessed Virgin.

You may recognize fragments of the prayer in the more contemporary (only 500 years old!) Memorare prayer.  

Happy New Year!