AN INCENTIVE TO PRAYER

                     by Francis Cardinal Spellman

 IT IS TRULY meet and just, indeed it seems providential, that the
 Holy Year of 1950 should be marked from its outset by the publication
 in English of the Roman Breviary.  The appearance at any time of a
 new rendition of the Breviary may properly be regarded as an
 important event in the life of the Church. When this event is
 associated with the Year of Jubilee, and takes place in America,
 great significance rightly attaches to it. Perhaps one could say that
 this new translation, successfully undertaken in the United States,
 is America's way of answering Our Holy Father's call to penance and
 prayer in this Year of Reconciliation.

 For the truth is, the Breviary is fast becoming the prayer-book of
 the nun in the convent, even as it has long been the daily book of
 prayer for the priest. It is more than likely to become the Vade
 Mecum of the man in the street. This hope is justified, for the world
 has urgent need of the spirit, both of penance and prayer, which the
 Breviary, when properly used, abundantly supplies. Any earnest soul
 who looks about for helps in his life of prayer and in his practice
 of penance, need look no further. The Breviary, which is the official
 prayer-book of the Church, brings great graces: such as the grace to
 know the mind of the Church, the grace to live the life of the
 Church, the grace to share in the mission of the Church. In a word,
 more than any other book, the Breviary reveals the inner spirit of
 the Church and, what is just as important, it attracts the soul to
 intimate union with Her. All is said when it is stated that the
 Breviary helps the soul through and beyond such union into unity with
 the Church, possessing with Her "cor unum et anima una."

 It is worth recalling in this regard that the closer the soul is to
 the Church, the closer it is to Christ. For, as Saint Paul teaches in
 so many places, the Church is "the body" of Christ (Eph. 5:30).
 Though this truth is shrouded in mystery, it emits bursts of light,
 as precious as they are dazzling. It helps the seeking soul to
 realize that the Son of God actually lives in His Church and works
 through Her, continuing in Her and through Her the mission He
 initiated in and through the Body Which His Virgin Mother gave to
 Him. It is an incentive to the soul to pray the prayer of the Church
 when the soul knows that Christ is now praying through the Church
 after the manner of His praying through His mortal Body. It gives
 courage to the soul to suffer with the Church when the soul is
 convinced that Christ is now suffering through His "body" which is
 the Church.

 I point to this shining truth for the value it gives to the use of
 the Breviary. In this venerable book the Church has deposited the
 heritage of the ages, the inspirations which the Holy Spirit of God
 breathed into the minds and hearts of the faithful down the
 centuries. Actually, the thoughts dwelling therein are Christ's own;
 He conceived them through the mind of the Church. The feelings to be
 found here, too, are His own; He experienced them through His life in
 the Church. The prayers, with which the Breviary is replete, reveal
 the way Christ prays in His Church. Any one essaying to pray with
 Christ can pray with Him, through the open mouth of His Church, by
 using this prayer-book of the Church. Such a soul can be sure that in
 praying thus he is echoing the prayer which the Holy Spirit played on
 the heart-strings of the saints, evoking purest melody before the
 Lord.

 In fine, the Breviary can best be described as the daily prayer of
 the Church, beginning with morning prayers, called Matins, and ending
 with night prayers, Compline. From dawn till dusk, and into the black
 watches of the night, the Church prays by the Spirit of Christ;
 Christ, too, prays through "his body", the Church. The Breviary is,
 thus, in very truth "the prayer of God" (Luke 6:12).

 As a prayer-book, the Breviary is a library in itself, and a vast
 one, matchless for its variety, beauty and power. For instance, there
 are psalms of praise and petition, running the gamut of the emotions.
 These range from the woeful cry of misery in Psalm 29: "Out of the
 depths" to the hymn of exultation in Psalm 88: "The graces of the
 Lord I will sing forever"-the psalm, which Saint Teresa of Avila
 loved. There is history too.  The Breviary contains selected readings
 from the lives of the patriarchs and prophets, as well as the history
 of Christ on earth and during the first years of His life in the
 Church. There is even prophetic history, wherein, as in the
 Apocalypse, the plan of God may be traced until its progress ends in
 triumph and glory for the striving God and regenerated humanity. All
 these are, of course, drawn from the Bible; in the Breviary, however,
 there is this advantage: they are read against a special background,
 proper to the various seasons and feasts of the calendar year.

 A most appealing feature of the Breviary is this aspect of the spirit
 of the Church, expressing itself prayerfully through seasons and
 feasts. The praying soul who accompanies the Church through Advent is
 caught by Her radiant joy as She prepares, all expectant, for the
 journey to Bethlehem, with its Christ Child, the Angels' Song and the
 nearing Star. The Office for this period is charged with a calm
 jubilation such as we cannot hope to enjoy in its fullness until we
 reach the Vision of Heaven. Then, there is the season of Lent. At its
 coming, the Church lays aside her festive robes and puts on sackcloth
 and ashes for the penances She needs must undergo if Christ is to
 have in Her, His Agony in the Garden and His Death on the Cross. All
 this is but a prelude to Her cry of triumph as She stands before the
 Empty Tomb, adoring Her Risen Lord, Who is within a few days to send
 down upon Her the Divine Spirit of Love.

 To us who wander the way of life in cold and darkness, the use of the
 Breviary affords much comfort through the short lives of the Saints
 as recorded in their feasts. These show how the Holy Spirit of Love
 worked the wonders of His grace in willing souls, thus giving to us
 both hope and strength against temptation. To the seekers after
 truth, the Breviary unlocks immense stores of wisdom through the
 explanation of Biblical texts by the great Doctors of the Church,
 such as Saint Jerome, Saint Augustine and Saint John Chrysostom. The
 lovers of sublime songs will here find the noble hymns composed by
 saintly singers and sung by the faithful, from the remote past up to
 the present day. I refer to the "Pange Lingua" of Saint Thomas
 Aquinas and the "Te Deum" of Saint Ambrose.

 For a long time the Breviary was a closed book to the layman, largely
 because it was written in Latin. Yet its charm cast a potent spell
 wherever the priest prayed or the monk chanted his Breviary. In
 consequence, the demand for wider use of it has been growing more
 insistent. Moreover, this demand has been calling for better
 renditions, such as embody the newest translations of the Psalter and
 of the New Testament. Now that this present edition includes these
 features, it is to be hoped that the greater use of it will stimulate
 ever greater love for the Breviary. Certainly, such use of it will
 help to satisfy the inner hunger of those souls who yearn to pray
 through Christ, with Christ and in Christ, unto the praise of the
 glory of his glory, in which he hath graced us in his Son (Eph. 1:6).


 In these fearful days of crises and crosses, the pattern of life in
 the world is tangled and oddly out of focus. Minds are confused at
 it, and hearts restless. If the human mind is to have calmness in
 crises, if the human heart is to have courage amid crosses, recourse
 must be had to the power that prayer gives and to the patience that
 penance brings.  Prayer and penance, and they alone, can compose the
 problems now trying the souls of men. For this reason The Sovereign
 Pontiff's proclamation of the Holy Year is, to this generation, like
 to the voice of John the Baptist in the wilderness of Judea; it is a
 call to penance and prayer, a promise of progress towards peace and
 plenty where now there are war and want. It is my earnest hope and
 belief that this new edition of the Roman Breviary in English may be
 fruitful in many souls, fruitful of prayer, fruitful of penance and
 fruitful of unity with Christ through His Church.

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