Welcome to the ULC Minister's Network

Arch Bishop Micheal Ralph Vendegna S.O.S.M.A.

Office of Readings


  • Monday 14 June 2021

    Monday of week 11 in Ordinary Time 


    Office of Readings


    Introduction (without Invitatory)

    If this is the first Hour that you are reciting today, use the version with the Invitatory Psalm instead.


    O God, come to our aid.
    O Lord, make haste to help us.
    Glory be to the Father and to the Son
    and to the Holy Spirit,
    as it was in the beginning,
    is now, and ever shall be,
    world without end.
    Amen. Alleluia.


    ________

    Hymn

    O God of truth, prepare our minds
    To hear and heed your holy word;
    Fill every heart that longs for you
    With your mysterious presence, Lord.

    Almighty Father, with your Son
    And blessed Spirit, hear our prayer:
    Teach us to love eternal truth
    And seek its freedom everywhere.

    Stanbrook Abbey Hymnal

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    Psalm 49 (50):1-6
    True reverence for the Lord


    “I have not come to abolish the Law but to bring it to perfection” (cf Mt 5:17).

    Our God comes openly, he keeps silence no longer.

    The God of gods, the Lord,
    has spoken and summoned the earth,
    from the rising of the sun to its setting.
    Out of Sion’s perfect beauty he shines.
    Our God comes, he keeps silence no longer.

    Before him fire devours,
    around him tempest rages.
    He calls on the heavens and the earth
    to witness his judgement of his people.

    ‘Summon before me my people
    who made covenant with me by sacrifice.’
    The heavens proclaim his justice,
    for God himself is the judge.

    Glory be to the Father and to the Son
    and to the Holy Spirit,
    as it was in the beginning,
    is now, and ever shall be,
    world without end.
    Amen.

    Our God comes openly, he keeps silence no longer.


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    Psalm 49 (50):7-15

    Pay your sacrifice of thanksgiving to God.

    ‘Listen, my people, I will speak;
    Israel, I will testify against you,
    for I am God, your God.
    I accuse you, lay the charge before you.

    ‘I find no fault with your sacrifices,
    your offerings are always before me.
    I do not ask more bullocks from your farms,
    nor goats from among your herds.

    ‘For I own all the beasts of the forest,
    beasts in their thousands on my hills.
    I know all the birds in the sky,
    all that moves in the field belongs to me.

    ‘Were I hungry, I would not tell you,
    for I own the world and all it holds.
    Do you think I eat the flesh of bulls,
    or drink the blood of goats?

    ‘Pay your sacrifice of thanksgiving to God
    and render him your votive offerings.
    Call on me in the day of distress.
    I will free you and you shall honour me.’

    Glory be to the Father and to the Son
    and to the Holy Spirit,
    as it was in the beginning,
    is now, and ever shall be,
    world without end.
    Amen.

    Pay your sacrifice of thanksgiving to God.


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    Psalm 49 (50):16-23

    I want love, not sacrifice; knowledge of God, not holocausts.

    But God says to the wicked:
    ‘But how can you recite my commandments
    and take my covenant on your lips,
    you who despise my law
    and throw my words to the winds?

    ‘You who see a thief and go with him;
    who throw in your lot with adulterers,
    who unbridle your mouth for evil
    and whose tongue is plotting crime,

    ‘you who sit and malign your brother
    and slander your own mother’s son.
    You do this, and should I keep silence?
    Do you think that I am like you?

    ‘Mark this, you who never think of God,
    lest I seize you and you cannot escape;
    a sacrifice of thanksgiving honours me
    and I will show God’s salvation to the upright.’

    Glory be to the Father and to the Son
    and to the Holy Spirit,
    as it was in the beginning,
    is now, and ever shall be,
    world without end.
    Amen.

    I want love, not sacrifice; knowledge of God, not holocausts.


    Psalm-prayer

    Father, accept us as a sacrifice of praise, so that we may go through life unburdened by sin, walking in the way of salvation, and always giving thanks to you.


    Or:

    Father, because Jesus, your servant, became obedient even unto death, his sacrifice was greater than all holocausts of old. Accept the sacrifice of praise we offer you through him, and may we show the effects of it in our lives by striving to do your will until our whole life becomes adoration in spirit and truth.


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    ℣. Listen, my people: I will speak.
    ℟. I am God, your God.


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    Readings (official one-year cycle)

    First Reading
    Judges 4:1-24
    Deborah and Barak

    When Ehud died, once again the Israelites began to do what displeases the Lord, and the Lord handed them over to Jabin the king of Canaan who reigned at Hazor. The commander of his army was Sisera, who lived in Harosheth-ha-goiim.
    Then the Israelites cried to the Lord; for Jabin had nine hundred chariots plated with iron and had cruelly oppressed the Israelites for twenty years.
    At this time Deborah was judge in Israel, a prophetess, the wife of Lappidoth. She used to sit under Deborah’s Palm between Ramah and Bethel in the highlands of Ephraim, and the Israelites would come to her to have their disputes decided. She sent for Barak son of Abinoam from Kedesh in Naphtali. She said to him, ‘This is the order of the Lord, the God of Israel: “March to Mount Tabor and take with you ten thousand men from the sons of Naphtali and the sons of Zebulun. I will entice Sisera, the commander of Jabin’s army, to encounter you at the wadi Kishon with his chariots and troops; and I will put him into your power.”’ Barak answered her, ‘If you come with me, I will go; if you will not come, I will not go, for I do not know how to choose the day when the angel of the Lord will grant me success.’ ‘I will go with you then,’ she said ‘but, the way you are going about it, the glory will not be yours; for the Lord will deliver Sisera into the hands of a woman.’ Then Deborah stood up and went with Barak to Kedesh, and there Barak summoned Zebulun and Naphtali. Ten thousand men marched behind him, and Deborah marched with him.
    Heber the Kenite had cut himself off from the tribe of Kain and the clan of the sons of Hobab, the father-in-law of Moses; he had pitched his tent near the Oak of Zaanannim, not far from Kedesh.
    When Sisera heard that Barak son of Abinoam was encamped on Mount Tabor, he called for all his chariots – nine hundred chariots plated with iron – and all the troops he had. He summoned them from Harosheth-ha-goiim to the wadi Kishon. Deborah said to Barak, ‘Up! For today is the day the Lord has put Sisera into your power. Yes, the Lord marches at your head.’ And Barak charged down from Mount Tabor with ten thousand men behind him. At Barak’s advance, the Lord struck terror into Sisera, all his chariots and all his troops. Sisera leapt down from his chariot and fled on foot. Barak pursued the chariots and the army as far as Harosheth-ha-goiim. Sisera’s whole army fell by the edge of the sword; not one man escaped.
    Sisera meanwhile fled on foot towards the tent of Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite. For there was peace between Jabin the king of Hazor and the family of Heber the Kenite. Jael came out to meet Sisera and said to him, ‘My lord, stay here with me; do not be afraid!’ He stayed there in her tent, and she covered him with a rug. He said to her, ‘Please give me a little water to drink, for I am thirsty.’ She opened the skin that had milk in it, gave him some to drink and covered him up again. Then he said to her, ‘Stand at the tent door, and if anyone comes and questions you – if he asks, “Is there a man here?” say, “No”.’ But Jael the wife of Heber took a tent-peg, and picked up a mallet; she crept up softly to him and drove the peg into his temple right through to the ground. He was lying fast asleep, worn out; and so he died. And now Barak came up in pursuit of Sisera. Jael went out to meet him and said, ‘Come in, and I will show you the man you are looking for.’ He went into her tent; Sisera lay dead, with the tent-peg through his temple.
    Thus God that day humbled Jabin the king of Canaan before the Israelites. And the Israelites bore down more and more heavily on Jabin the king of Canaan, until he was utterly destroyed.


    Responsory
    1 Co 1:27-29; 2 Co 12:9

    ℟. God chose what the world considers weak, in order to bring down powerful men. This means that pride has no place in God’s presence:* his power is strongest when we are weak.
    ℣. God chose what the world counts as nothing; he uses it to overthrow the existing order.* His power is strongest when we are weak.


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    Second Reading
    St Cyprian's treatise on the Lord's Prayer
    Our prayer is public and communal

    Above all, the Teacher of peace and Master of unity did not want prayer to be made singly and privately, so that whoever prayed would pray for himself alone. We do not say My Father, who art in heaven or Give me this day my daily bread; nor does each one ask that only his own debt should be forgiven him; nor does he request for himself alone that he may not be led into temptation but delivered from evil. Our prayer is public and common, and when we pray, we pray not for one person but for the whole people, since we, the whole people, are one.
    The God of peace and the Master of concord, who taught unity, willed that one should pray for all, just as he himself, being one, carried us all. The three children observed this law when they were shut into the fiery furnace, praying with one voice and with one heart: thus our faith in divine Scripture teaches us, and, as it teaches us how such people prayed, gives us an example that we should follow in our own prayers, so that we may become like them: Then these three sang a hymn as if with one mouth, and blessed the Lord. They spoke as if with one mouth, even though Christ had not yet taught them how to pray.
    And therefore, as they prayed, their prayers were heard and were fruitful, because a peaceful, sincere, and spiritual prayer deserved well from the Lord. Thus, too, we find the Apostles and the disciples praying after the ascension of the Lord: They all continued with one accord in prayer, with the women and with Mary who was the mother of Jesus, and his brothers. They continued with one accord in prayer, showing, by the urgency and the unanimity of their praying, that God, who makes the inhabitants of a house to be of one mind, only admits to his divine and eternal home those among whom prayer is unanimous.
    But, dear brethren – what deep blessings are contained in the Lord’s prayer! How many they are, and how great, collected in so few words but so rich in spiritual power! There is nothing at all that is not to be found in these our prayers and petitions, as it were a compendium of heavenly doctrine. Thus, he said, you must pray: Our Father, who art in heaven.
    The new man, re-born and brought back to God by his grace, says Father at the very beginning, for he has just begun to be God’s son. He came to his own, and his own did not accept him. But to those who did accept him he gave power to become children of God, to those who believe in his name. Whoever believes in God’s name and has become his son, should start here so that he can give thanks and profess himself to be God’s son, by calling God his Father in heaven.


    Responsory

    ℟. I will proclaim your renown to my brethren:* where your people gather, I will join in singing your praise.
    ℣. I will give you thanks, O Lord, for all the world to hear, I will sing your praises among the pagans;* where your people gather, I will join in singing your praise.


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    Let us pray.

    Lord God, strength of those who hope in you,
    support us in our prayer:
    because we are weak and can do nothing without you,
    give us always the help of your grace
    so that, in fulfilling your commandments,
    we may please you in all we desire and do.
    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.
    Amen.


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    Let us praise the Lord.
    – Thanks be to God.


    Copyright © 1996-2021 Universalis Publishing Limited: see www.universalis.com. Scripture readings from the Jerusalem Bible are published and copyright © 1966, 1967 and 1968 by Darton, Longman & Todd, Ltd and Doubleday, a division of Random House, Inc, and used by permission of the publishers. Text of the Psalms: Copyright © 1963, The Grail (England). Used with permission of A.P. Watt Ltd. All rights reserved.

     

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