WEEK 18 - THURSDAY
Office of Readings
Lord, open my lips.
- And my mouth shall proclaim your praise.
Psalm 95 is the traditional Invitatory Psalm. Psalm 24, 67, or 100 may be substituted.
Antiphon: Come into the Lord's presence, singing for joy.
God, come to my assistance.
- Lord, make haste to help me.
Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit:
- as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be for ever.
Amen. (Alleluia.)
HYMN
Beneath the shadow of your throne
Your saints have dwelt secure;
Sufficient is your arm alone,
And our defense is sure.
Before the hills in order stood,
Or earth received her frame,
From everlasting you are God,
To endless years the same.
A thousand ages in your sight
Are like an evening gone,
Short as the watch that ends the night
Before the rising sun.
Time, like an ever-rolling stream,
Bears all our lives away;
They fly, forgotten, as a dream
Dies at the opening day.
O God, our help in ages past,
Our hope for years to come,
Be now our guide while life shall last,
And our eternal home.
Text: Isaac Watts; Melody: St. Anne C. M.
PSALMODY
Antiphon 1:
Lord, you are our Savior; we will praise you for ever.
The misfortune of God's people
We triumph over all these things through him who loved us (Romans 8:37)
I
We heard with our own ears, O God,
our fathers have told us the story
of the things you did in their days,
you yourself, in days long ago.
To plant them you uprooted the nations;
to let them spread you laid peoples low.
No sword of their own won the land;
no arm of their own brought them victory.
It was your right hand, your arm
and the light of your face; for you loved them.
It is you, my king, my God,
who granted victories to Jacob.
Through you we beat down our foes;
in your name we trampled down our aggressors.
For it was not in my bow that I trusted
nor yet was I saved by my sword:
it was you who saved us from our foes,
it was you who put our foes to shame.
All day long our boast was in God
and we praised your name without ceasing. Glory...
Antiphon 1
Lord, you are our Savior; we will praise you for ever.
Antiphon 2
Spare us, O Lord; do not bring your own people into contempt.
II
Yet now you have rejected us, disgraced us;
you no longer go forth with our armies.
You make us retreat from the foe
and our enemies plunder us at will.
You make us like sheep for the slaughter
and scatter us among the nations.
You sell your own people for nothing
and make no profit by the sale.
You make us the taunt of our neighbors,
the laughing stock of all who are near.
Among the nations, you make us a byword,
among the peoples a thing of derision.
All day long my disgrace is before me;
my face is covered with shame
at the voice of the taunter, the scoffer,
at the sight of the foe and avenger. Glory...
Antiphon 2
Spare us, O Lord; do not bring your own people into contempt.
Antiphon 3
Rise up, O Lord, and save us, for you are merciful.
III
This befell us though we had not forgotten you,
though we had not been false to your covenant,
though we had not withdrawn our hearts;
though our feet had not strayed from your path.
Yet you have crushed us in a place of sorrows
and covered us with the shadow of death.
Had we forgotten the name of our God,
or stretched out our hands to another god
would not God have found this out,
he who knows the secrets of the heart?
It is for you that we face death all day long
and are counted as sheep for the slaughter.
Awake, O Lord, why do you sleep?
Arise, do not reject us for ever!
Why do you hide your face
and forget our oppression and misery?
For we are brought down low to the dust;
our body lies prostrate on the earth.
Stand up and come to our help!
Redeem us because of your love! Glory...
Antiphon 3
Rise up, O Lord, and save us, for you are merciful.
Lord, to whom shall we go?
- You have the words of eternal life.
FIRST READING
From the beginning of the book of the prophet Hosea 1:1-9;3:1-5
The prophet, a sign of God's love for his people
The word of the Lord that came to Hosea, the son of Beeri, in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, Hezekiah, kings of Judah, and in the days of Jeroboam, son of Joash, king of Israel. In the beginning of the Lord's speaking to Hosea, the Lord said to Hosea:
Go, take a harlot wife and harlot's children,
for the land gives itself to harlotry,
turning away from the Lord.
So he went and took Gomer, the daughter of Diblaim; and she conceived and bore him a son. Then the Lord said to him:
Give him the name Jezreel,
for in a little while
I will punish the house of Jehu
for the bloodshed at Jezreel
And bring to an end the kingdom
of the house of Israel;
On that day I will break the bow of Israel
in the valley of Jezreel.
When she conceived again and bore a daughter, the Lord said to him:
Give her the name Lo-ruhama;
I no longer feel pity for the house of Israel:
rather, I abhor them utterly.
Yet for the house of Judah I feel pity;
I will save them by the Lord, their God;
But I will not save them by war,
by sword or bow, by horses or horsemen.
After she weaned Lo-ruhama, she conceived and bore a son. Then the Lord said:
Give him the name Lo-ammi,
for you are not my people,
and I will not be your God.
Again the Lord said to me:
Give your love to a woman
beloved of a paramour, an adultress;
Even as the Lord loves the people of Israel,
though they turn to other gods
and are fond of raisin cakes.
So I bought her for fifteen pieces of silver and a homer and a lethech of barley. Then I said to her:
"Many days you shall wait for me;
you shall not play the harlot
Or belong to any man;
I in turn will wait for you."
For the people of Israel shall remain many days
without king or prince,
Without sacrifice or sacred pillar,
without ephod or household idols.
Then the people of Israel shall turn back
and seek the Lord, their God,
and David, their king;
They shall come trembling to the Lord
and to his bounty, in the last days.
RESPONSORY 1 Peter 2:9-10; Romans 9:26
You are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation;
a people God has made his own.
- Once you were not his people
but now you are the people of God.
Instead of being told:
You are not my people,
they shall be called the sons of the living God.
- Once you were not his people
but now you are the people of God.
SECOND READING
From a treatise by Baldwin of Canterbury, bishop
(Tract. 10: PL 204, 513-514, 516)
Love is as strong as death
Death is strong, for it
can rob us of the gift of life. Love too is strong, for it can restore us to a
better life. Death is strong, for it can strip us of this robe of
flesh. Love too is strong, for it can take death's spoils away and give them
back to us.
Death is strong, for no man can withstand it. Love too is
strong, for it can conquer death itself, soothe its sting, calm its violence,
and bring its victory to naught. The time will come when death is reviled and
taunted: O death, where is your sting? O death, where is your victory?
Love is as strong as death because Christ's love is the very death of death. Hence it is said: I will be your death, O death! I will be your sting, O hell! Our love for Christ is also as strong as death, because it is itself a kind of death: destroying the old life, rooting out vice, and laying aside dead works.
Our love for Christ is a return, though very unequal, for his love of us, and it is a likeness modeled on his. For he first loved us and, through the example of love he gave us, he became a seal upon us by which we are made like him. We lay aside the likeness of the earthly man and put on the likeness of the heavenly man; we love him as he has loved us. For in this matter he has left us an example so that we might follow in his steps.
That is why he says: Set me as a seal upon your heart. It is as if he were saying: "Love me as I love you. Keep me in your mind and memory, in your desires and yearnings, in your groans and sobs. Remember, man, the kind of being I made you; how far I set you above other creatures; the dignity I conferred upon you; the glory and honor with which I crowned you; how I made you only a little less than the angels and set all things under your feet. Remember not only how much I have done for you but all the hardship and shame I have suffered for you. Yet look and see: Do you not wrong me? Do you not fail to love me? Who loves you as I do? Who created and redeemed you but I?
Lord, take away my heart of stone, a heart so bitter
and uncircumcised, and give me a new heart, a heart of flesh, a pure heart. You
cleanse the heart and love the clean heart. Take possession of my heart and
dwell in it, contain it and fill it, you who are higher than the heights of my
spirit and closer to me than my innermost self! You are the pattern of all
beauty and the seal of all holiness. Set the seal of your likeness upon my
heart! In your mercy set your seal upon my heart, God of my heart and the God
who is my portion for ever! Amen.
RESPONSORY Canticle 8:6-7; John 15:13
Love is as strong as death;
its flames are like a blazing fire.
- Deep waters cannot quench love.
There is no greater love than this:
to lay down your life for your friends.
- Deep waters cannot quench love.
COLLECT
Draw near to your servants, O Lord,
and answer their prayers with unceasing kindness,
that, for those who glory in you as their Creator and guide,
you may restore what you have created
and keep safe what you have restored.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God, for ever and ever.
Let us praise the Lord.
- And give him thanks.
The English translation of Psalm Responses, Alleluia Verses, Gospel Verses from Lectionary for Mass © 1969, 1981, 1997, International Commission on English in the Liturgy Corporation (ICEL); the English translation of Antiphons, Invitatories, Responsories, Intercessions, Psalm 95, the Canticle of the Lamb, Psalm Prayers, Non-Biblical Readings from The Liturgy of the Hours © 1973, 1974, 1975, ICEL; excerpts from the English translation of The Roman Missal © 2010, ICEL. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
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