SATURDAY
OF THE SECOND
WEEK OF ADVENT
The Liturgical Year
Dom
Guéranger
Come, let us adore
The King our Lord, who
Is to come.
From the Prophet Isaias
Ch. XXV
O Lord, thou art
my God, I will exalt O thee, and give glory to thy name: for thou hast done
wonderful things, thy designs of old faithful, Amen. For thou hast reduced the
city to a heap, the strong city to ruin, the house of strangers, to be no city,
and to be no more built up for ever. Therefore shall a strong people praise
thee, the city of mighty nations shall fear thee. Because thou hast been a
strength to the poor, a strength to the needy in his distress: a refuge from
the whirlwind, a shadow from the heat. For the blast of the mighty is like a whirlwind
beating against a wall. Thou shalt bring down the tumult of strangers, as heat
in thirst: and as with heat under a burning cloud, thou shalt make the branch
of the mighty to wither away. And the Lord of hosts shall make unto all people
in this mountain, a feast of fat things, a feast of wine, of fat things full of
marrow, of wine purified from the lees. And he shall destroy in this mountain
the face of the bond with which all people were tied, and the web that he began
over all nations. He shall cast death down headlong for ever: and O Lord, thou art
my God, I will exalt thee, and give glory to thy name: for thou hast done
wonderful things, thy designs of old faithful. Amen. For thou hast reduced the
city to a heap, the strong city to ruin, the house of strangers to be no city,
and to be no more built up for ever. Therefore shall a strong people praise
thee, the city of mighty nations shall fear thee. Because thou hast been a
strength to the poor, a strength to the needy in his distress: a refuge from
the whirlwind, a shadow from the heat. And the Lord of hosts shall make unto all
people, in this mountain, a feast of fat things, a feast of wine, of fat things
full of marrow, of wine purified from the lees. And fie shall destroy in this
mountain the face of the bond with which all people are tied, and the web that
he began over all nations. He shall cast death down headlong for ever: and the
Lord God shall wipe away tears from every face, and the reproach of his people
he shall take away from off the whole earth: for the Lord hath spoken it. And
they shall say in that day: Lo, this is our God, we have waited for him, and he
will save us: this is the Lord, we have patiently waited for him, we shall
rejoice and be joyful in his salvation.
Yet a little while, and the conqueror of death will appear, and then,
in the joy of our hearts, we will say: Lo, this is our God; we have waited for
him, and he will save us; we have patiently waited for him; this is he, and we
will rejoice and be joyful in his salvation. Let us, therefore, prepare the way
of the Lord, that we may receive him worthily; and in this work of our preparation, let us have recourse to Mary. Saturday
is the day which is sacred to her; she will the more readily grant the prayers
said to her upon it. Let us consider her in her grand privilege of being full
of grace, carrying in her womb Him whom we so long to possess. If we ask her,
by what means she rendered herself worthy of such an immense favour, she will tell us that in her was simply fulfilled
the prophecy, which the Church so continually repeats during these days of Advent:
Every valley shall be filled up. The humble Mary was the valley blessed of the
Lord; a valley beautiful and fertile, in which God sowed the Divine Wheat, our
Saviour, Jesus: for it is written in the Psalm, that the Valleys shall abound
with corn. O Mary! it was thy humility that drew down upon thee the admiration
of thy Creator. If, from the high heaven where he dwells, he had perceived a Virgin more
humble in her love, he would have chosen her in preference to thee: but no, it
was thou that didst win his predilection, O mystic valley, ever verdant and
lovely in thy flowers of grace. We that, like high hills, are so proud and such
sinners, what shall we do? We must look on this God of ours, who comes to us in
infinite humility, and then humble ourselves out of love and gratitude. O
Blessed Mother! obtain this grace for us. Pray for us, that henceforth we may
submit ourselves to the will of our Lord as thou didst, when thou didst speak
those admirable words: Behold the handmaid of the Lord: may it be done to me according
to thy word!
PROSE IN HONOR OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN
(Taken from the CIuny Missal
of 1523)
Gabriel, sent from heaven, faithful bearer of the word, holds sacred converse with the holy Virgin.
In the inner chamber he
discloses the good and sweet word; and inverting the name of Eve, Eva becomes Ave,
his salutation, Hail!
The covenant made, and
instantly there was present the Word made flesh; and yet the pure Maid a Virgin
still for ever.
Parent like no other; Mother,
yet not losing the treasure; giving birth to her child, yet not a pain or travail.
Unheard-of prodigy! 'tis so indeed, and all
thou, my soul, canst do is to believe it: we have not power to loose the
latchet.
It is the great, the wondrous
portent of the burning bush; let him that would approach, take off the sandals
from his feet.
A dry branch, with not one
drop of dew, once yielded a flower and fruit; it was a new law, a new way: so
was it when the Virgin brought forth her Son. What a blessed Fruit! a Fruit of
joy, not of woe. There will be no Adam deceived, if men but eat of this.
He is our Jesus! the good
Jesus! lovely burden of a lovely Mother! He who has a throne in heaven, has a
stable for his birth-place!
May he, that for our sakes
was thus born, wipe away all our gilt; for our sojourn here is full of dangers.
Amen.
PRAYER FROM THE MOZARABIC BREVIARY
(For the Friday of
the third Week of Advent)
Who, O God thou Son of God, who can search into thy ways? and tell how
thou wast born of a Virgin, when thou camest from heaven, or by what paths thou
didst return thither? And therefore since thou alone knowest all things, thou
whose name is beyond the ends of the earth; grant us so to think and speak of
thee, as to be guiltless of error: that so thou, who, high in power, dost come
down to lowly things and love them, mayest make us worthy of thy gifts. Amen.
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