Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

(g) Antiphon.

Psalm 4. (4)

(g) Antiphon.

(h) Antiphon.

Psalm 5. (5)

NOCTURN II.

Blessed Laurence prayed saying, Lord Jesus Christ, God from God, have mercy on Thy servant.

Hear me when I call, O God of my righteousness: thou hast set me at liberty when I was in trouble; have mercy upon me, and hearken unto my prayer.

O ye sons of men, how long will ye blaspheme mine honour; and have such pleasure in vanity, and seek after leasing?

Know this also, that the Lord hath chosen to himself the man that is godly: when I call upon the Lord, he will hear me.

Stand in awe, and sin not: commune with your own heart, and in your chamber, and be still.

Offer the sacrifice of righteousness: and put your trust in the Lord.

There be many that say: Who will shew us any good? Lord, lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us. Thou hast put gladness in my heart: since the time that their corn, and wine, and oil increased.

I

I will lay me down in peace, and take my rest: for it is thou, Lord, only, that makest me dwell in safety. Glory be, &c.

Blessed Laurence prayed saying, Lord Jesus Christ, God from God, have mercy on thy servant.

Romanus said to blessed Laurence, I see before thee a young man of fair countenance, hasten to baptize me.

Ponder my words, O Lord: consider my meditation. O hearken thou unto the voice of my calling, my King, and my God: for unto thee will I make my prayer.

My voice shalt thou hear betimes, O Lord: early in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up.

For thou art the God that hast no pleasure in wickedness: neither shall any evil dwell with thee.

Such as be foolish shall not stand in thy sight: for thou hatest all them that work vanity.

Thou shalt destroy them that speak leasing: the Lord will abhor both the blood-thirsty and deceitful man.

But as for me, I will come into thine house, even upon the multitude of thy mercy; and in thy fear will I worship toward thy holy temple.

(h) Antiphon.

(i) Antiphon.

Psalm 8. (6)

(i) Antiphon.

Lead me, O Lord, in thy righteousness, because of mine enemies: make thy way plain before my face.

For there is no faithfulness in his mouth: their inward parts are very wickedness.

Their throat is an open sepulchre: they flatter with their tongue.

Destroy thou them, O God; let them perish through their own imaginations: cast them out in the multitude of their ungodliness: for they have rebelled against thee.

And let all them that put their trust in thee rejoice; they shall ever be giving of thanks, because thou defendest them; they that love thy Name shall be joyful in thee.

For thou, Lord, wilt give thy blessing unto the righteous: and with thy favourable kindness wilt thou defend him as with a shield. Glory be, &c.

Romanus said to blessed Laurence, I see before thee a young man of fair countenance, hasten to baptize me.

Blessed Laurence answered, My night has no darkness, but all things grow clear in the light.

O Lord, our Governor, how excellent is thy name in all the world: thou that hast set thy glory above the heavens!

Out of the mouth of very babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength, because of thine enemies: that thou mightest still the enemy and the avenger.

:

For I will consider thy heavens, even the works of thy fingers the moon and the stars which thou hast ordained. What is man, that thou art mindful of him: and the Son of man that thou visitest him?

Thou madest him lower than the angels: to crown him with glory and worship.

Thou makest him to have dominion of the works of thy hands and thou hast put all things in subjection under his feet;

All sheep and oxen: yea, and the beasts of the field; The fowls of the air, and the fishes of the sea: and whatsoever walketh through the paths of the seas.

O Lord, our Governor: how excellent is thy name in all the world! Glory be, &c.

Blessed Laurence answered, My night has no darkness, but all things grow clear in the light.

(j) Verse and Response.

Lord, thou hast set upon his head,

A crown of precious stones.

The Lord's Prayer, (privately.)

Absolution 2.

Benediction 4.

Lesson 4.

Pope.)

Our Father, &c.

And lead us not into temptation,

But deliver us from evil.

His pity and mercy help us, who with the Father, and the Holy Spirit-liveth and reigneth, world without end. Amen.

Reader.-Sir, be pleased to bless us.

Minister.-God the Father Almighty, be favourable and gracious unto us. Amen.

While the fury of the heathen powers raged against the (Sermon of St. Leo, most chosen members of Christ, those chiefly who were in the order of the Ministry, Laurence the Deacon, having not only the dispensation of the Sacraments, but also of the Church's store, incited the impious persecutor, who promised himself a double price in one man, the gain of the sacred treasure and the ruin of him who surrendered it. Instigated therefore by this twofold flame, avarice and hatred of the truth, to rob him of his treasure and of Christ, he demands of the spotless Sacristan, those stores of the Church of which he was greedy. To whom he, most holy Deacon, by way of showing where they really were laid up, presented vast multitudes of Christian poor, on whose food and clothing he had expended wealth which could not be taken away, but was irrevocably his from the sanctity of his using.

But thou, O Lord, have mercy upon us.

Thanks be to God.

Response 4.

Benediction 5. Lesson 5. (Sermon, continued.)

Whither speedest thou without thy Son, O my father?
Whither hurriest thou, holy priest, without thy
Deacon? Thou never yet hast offered sacrifice with-
out attendant.

What hath in me displeased thy fatherly love? in what
have I come short? make trial of his fitness to whom thou
hast entrusted the dispensation of the Lord's blood.
Thou never yet hast offered sacrifice without attendant.

Reader.-Sir, be pleased to bless us.

Minister. Christ grant us the joys of eternal life. Amen. Therefore, the disappointed robber roars aloud, and kindling into hatred of that religion, which had introduced such an application of worldly goods, he attempts the plunder of another treasure-house, not of gold or silver, to rob it of that store which was of a more holy costliness. He bids Laurence renounce Christ, and prepares against the stubborn

Response 5.

Benediction 6.

Lesson 6.

VOL. III.-75.

courage of that Deacon's heart, dreadful tortures; and when
the first prove fruitless, he proceeds to fiercer. He tears
and shreds his limbs with continued scourging, next he
gives orders to broil them over the fire, so that, being
stretched upon the red hot bars, first on one side, then on
the other, the torment might be the greater, and the punish-
ment more protracted.

But thou, O Lord, have mercy upon us.

Thanks be to God.

Forsake me not, O holy father, for I have already laid
out my stores. I desert thee not, my son, neither do I
forsake thee; but a fiercer conflict for the faith of Christ
is in store for thee.

We, as aged men, receive the onset of the skirmish, thou,
being young, will have to bear off a more glorious triumph
over the persecutor; the Deacon shall follow his Bishop on
the third day.

I desert thee not, my son, neither do I forsake thee; but a
fiercer conflict for the faith of Christ is in store for thee.
But thou, O Lord, have mercy upon us.

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors]

Minister.-God kindle the fire of His love in our hearts.

Amen.

Thou gainest nothing, thou availest nothing, O savage
cruelty! The mortal frame is gradually released from thy
tortures. Laurence departs heavenward, and thy flames fail
thee. The love of Christ surpassed the flame, and the fire
which burned around him was duller than that which was
kindled within him. O Persecutor, thou hast spent thy
rage upon the Martyr; thou hast spent it, and added to his
palm, while adding to his pain. For what part of thy de-
vice has not redounded to the conqueror's glory, when even
the instruments of his suffering are converted into deco-
rations of his triumph? Let us then rejoice, dearly be-
loved, with a spiritual joy, and glory in the Lord concerning
the most blessed end of this famous man. God is wonderful
in His Saints, in whom He bath ordained for us a sanction
and an example, and hath so shown forth His glory through
the whole world, that from the rising to the setting sun,
among the refulgent lights of the Diaconate, Rome became
as honoured in her Laurence, as Jerusalem in Stephen.
But thou, O Lord, have mercy upon us.

Thanks be to God.

K

Response 6.

Blessed Laurence cried out and said, My God I worship,
Him alone I serve, and therefore I fear not your

tortures.

My night hath no darkness, but all things grow clear in the light.

And therefore I fear not your tortures.

Glory be to the Father, &c.
And therefore I fear not your tortures.

(k) Antiphon.

Psalm 15. (7)

(k) Antiphon.

NOCTURN. III.

They bound down his limbs upon the bars; but while they laid underneath live coals, the Deacon of Christ laughs them to scorn.

Lord, who shall dwell in thy tabernacle: or who shall rest upon thy holy hill?

:

Even he that leadeth an uncorrupt life and doeth the thing which is right, and speaketh the truth from his heart. He that hath used no deceit in his tongue, nor done evil to his neighbour: and hath not slandered his neighbour. He that setteth not by himself, but is lowly in his own eyes and maketh much of them that fear the Lord.

He that sweareth unto his neighbour, and disappointeth him not: though it were to his own hindrance.

He that hath not given his money upon usury: nor taken reward against the innocent.

Whoso doeth these things shall never fall. Glory be, &c. They bound his limbs upon the bars; but while they laid underneath live coals, the Deacon of Christ laughs them to

scorn.

(1) Antiphon.

Psalm 17. (8)

Thou hast tried me with fire, and hast found no wickedness in me.

Hear the right, O Lord, consider my complaint: and hearken unto my prayer, that goeth not out of feigned lips.

Let my sentence come forth from thy presence: and let thine eyes look upon the thing that is equal.

Thou hast proved and visited mine heart in the nightseason; thou hast tried me, and shalt find no wickedness in me: for I am utterly purposed that my mouth shall not offend.

Because of men's works, that are done against the words of thy lips: I have kept me from the ways of the destroyer.

11

« AnteriorContinuar »