Universalis
Saturday 27 April 2024    (other days)
Saint Louis Marie Grignion de Montfort, Priest 
 or Saturday of the 4th week of Eastertide 

Using calendar: Australia. You can pick a diocese or region.

Office of Readings

If this is the first Hour that you are reciting today, you should precede it with the Invitatory Psalm.
INTRODUCTION
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
Love’s redeeming work is done,
fought the fight, the battle won.
Lo, our Sun’s eclipse is o’er!
Lo, he sets in blood no more!
Vain the stone, the watch, the seal!
Christ has burst the gates of hell;
death in vain forbids him rise;
Christ has opened paradise.
Lives again our victor King;
where, O death, is now thy sting?
Dying once, he all doth save;
where thy victory, O grave?
Soar we now where Christ has led,
following our exalted Head;
made like him, like him we rise,
ours the cross, the grave, the skies.
Hail the Lord of earth and heaven!
Praise to thee by both be given:
thee we greet triumphant now;
hail, the Resurrection thou!

Psalm 77 (78)
The history of salvation: the Lord's goodness, his people's infidelity (II)

The Lord saved them from their foe. Alleluia.
How often they rebelled in the wilderness!
  How often they grieved him in the desert!
Again and again they put God to the test
  and provoked the Holy One of Israel.
They forgot his strength, they forgot the time
  when he saved them from the oppressor’s power.
When he showed his signs in Egypt,
  his wonders in the plain of Tanis,
he turned their rivers into blood
  and the streams: there was nothing they could drink.
He sent biting flies to eat them up,
  and frogs to bring devastation.
He gave their fruit to the caterpillar,
  the fruit of their labours to the locust.
He killed their vines with hail,
  he killed their sycamores with frost.
He gave their herds as victims to hail;
  their flocks, to lightning.
He loosed upon them the heat of his anger:
  rage, fury, and destruction;
  he sent his destroying angels among them.
He cleared a path for his anger:
  he did not spare them from death,
  but cut off their lives in pestilence.
He struck down all the first-born in the land of Egypt,
  the first-fruits of their strength in the tents of Ham.
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.
The Lord saved them from their foe. Alleluia.

Psalm 77 (78)

The Lord brought them to his holy mountain. Alleluia.
He led his people away like sheep,
  like a flock through the wilderness.
They were led in hope, they did not fear –
  and the sea covered up their enemies.
He brought them within the borders he had sanctified,
  to the mountain that his right hand had conquered.
He drove out the nations before them
  divided their land, to be an inheritance,
  and made Israel dwell in their tents.
Still they tested and angered God, the Most High,
  and would not keep his decrees.
They went back to their unfaithfulness,
  like their fathers before them:
  they twisted round, like a crooked bow.
They stirred him to anger by their worship in high places:
  they provoked him to jealousy with their idols.
God heard, and burned with anger:
  then truly he spurned Israel.
He abandoned his dwelling-place in Shiloh,
  the tent where he had lived among men.
He gave up his power to captivity,
  his glory to the hands of the enemy.
He gave up his people to the sword,
  he burned hot against his own inheritance.
Fire burned up their youths,
  and their maidens remained unwed.
Their priests fell to the sword,
  and their widows died unmourned.
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.
The Lord brought them to his holy mountain. Alleluia.

Psalm 77 (78)

He chose the tribe of Judah and David his servant to be shepherd of Israel, his own possession. Alleluia.
The Lord awoke as a sleeper awakes,
  like a warrior fuddled with wine.
He attacked his foes from behind,
  he put them to everlasting shame.
He rejected the tents of Joseph,
  he did not choose the tribe of Ephraim;
but the tribe of Judah he chose,
  and his beloved mountain of Zion.
He built his sanctuary as a high place,
  firm as the earth he had founded for ever.
He chose David for his servant
  and raised him up from his flocks.
He took him from following the pregnant ewes
  to be the shepherd of Jacob, his people,
  and of Israel, his inheritance.
He pastured them with a pure heart
  and led them with skilful hands.
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.
He chose the tribe of Judah and David his servant to be shepherd of Israel, his own possession. Alleluia.

℣. You will hear the word from my mouth, alleluia.
℟. You will speak to them in my name. Alleluia.

First Reading
Apocalypse 18:1-20 ©

Destruction of Babylon

After this, I saw another angel come down from heaven, with great authority given to him; the earth was lit up with his glory. At the top of his voice he shouted, ‘Babylon has fallen, Babylon the Great has fallen, and has become the haunt of devils and a lodging for every foul spirit and dirty, loathsome bird. All the nations have been intoxicated by the wine of her prostitution; every king in the earth has committed fornication with her, and every merchant grown rich through her debauchery.’
  A new voice spoke from heaven; I heard it say, ‘Come out, my people, away from her, so that you do not share in her crimes and have the same plagues to bear. Her sins have reached up to heaven, and God has her crimes in mind: she is to be paid in her own coin. She must be paid double the amount she exacted. She is to have a doubly strong cup of her own mixture. Every one of her shows and orgies is to be matched by a torture or a grief. I am the queen on my throne, she says to herself, and I am no widow and shall never be in mourning. For that, within a single day, the plagues will fall on her: disease and mourning and famine. She will be burnt right up. The Lord God has condemned her, and he has great power.’
  There will be mourning and weeping for her by the kings of the earth who have fornicated with her and lived with her in luxury. They see the smoke as she burns, while they keep at a safe distance from fear of her agony. They will say:
‘Mourn, mourn for this great city,
Babylon, so powerful a city,
doomed as you are within a single hour.’
There will be weeping and distress over her among all the traders of the earth when there is nobody left to buy their cargoes of goods; their stocks of gold and silver, jewels and pearls, linen and purple and silks and scarlet; all the sandalwood, every piece in ivory or fine wood, in bronze or iron or marble; the cinnamon and spices, the myrrh and ointment and incense; wine, oil, flour and corn; their stocks of cattle, sheep, horses and chariots, their slaves, their human cargo.
  ‘All the fruits you had set your hearts on have failed you; gone for ever, never to return, is your life of magnificence and ease.’
  The traders who had made a fortune out of her will be standing at a safe distance from fear of her agony, mourning and weeping. They will be saying:
‘Mourn, mourn for this great city;
for all the linen and purple and scarlet that you wore,
for all your finery of gold and jewels and pearls;
your riches are all destroyed within a single hour.’
All the captains and seafaring men, sailors and all those who make a living from the sea will be keeping a safe distance, watching the smoke as she burns, and crying out, ‘Has there ever been a city as great as this!’ They will throw dust on their heads and say, with tears and groans:
‘Mourn, mourn for this great city
whose lavish living has made a fortune
for every owner of a sea-going ship;
ruined within a single hour.’
‘Now heaven, celebrate her downfall, and all you saints, apostles and prophets: God has given judgement for you against her.’
Responsory
Is 52:11-12; Jr 51:45; Rv 18:4
℟. Come out of Babylon, keep yourselves pure, you who carry the vessels of the Lord, for the Lord will march at your head:* your rearguard will be Israel’s God, alleluia.
℣. Come out of her, O my people, and let every man save himself from the anger of the Lord:* your rearguard will be Israel’s God, alleluia.

Second Reading
From "On Devotion to the Virgin Mary" by St Louis

Wholly yours

As all perfection consists in our being conformed, united and consecrated to Jesus it naturally follows that the most perfect of all devotions is that which conforms, unites, and consecrates us most completely to Jesus. Now of all God’s creatures Mary is the most conformed to Jesus. It therefore follows that, of all devotions, devotion to her makes for the most effective consecration and conformity to him. The more one is consecrated to Mary, the more one is consecrated to Jesus.
  That is why perfect consecration to Jesus is but a perfect and complete consecration of oneself to the Blessed Virgin, which is the devotion I teach; or in other words, it is the perfect renewal of the vows and promises of holy baptism. This devotion consists in giving oneself entirely to Mary in order to belong entirely to Jesus through her.
  It follows that we consecrate ourselves at one and the same time to Mary and to Jesus. We give ourselves to Mary because Jesus chose her as the perfect means to unite himself to us and unite us to him. We give ourselves to Jesus because he is our last end. Since he is our Redeemer and our God we are indebted to him for all that we are.
  At baptism he has either personally or through his sponsors solemnly renounced Satan, his seductions and his works. He has chosen Jesus as his Master and sovereign Lord and undertaken to depend upon him as a slave of love. This is what is done in the devotion I am presenting to you. We renounce the devil, the world, sin and self, as expressed in the act of consecration, and we give ourselves entirely to Jesus through Mary.
  In holy baptism we do not give ourselves to Jesus explicitly through Mary, nor do we give him the value of our good actions. After baptism we remain entirely free either to apply that value to anyone we wish or keep it for ourselves. But by this consecration we give ourselves explicitly to Jesus through Mary’s hands and we include in our consecration the value of all our actions.
Responsory
Ps 115 (116), 16 b. 17 a. 18
℟. Lord, I am your servant and the son of your handmaid.* I will offer you a sacrifice of praise, alleluia.
℣. I will fulfil my vows to the Lord before all his people.* I will offer you a sacrifice of praise, alleluia.

Let us pray.
Father, you made your Church grow
  through the Christian zeal and apostolic work
  of Saint Louis Marie Grignion de Montfort.
By the help of his prayers
  give your Church continued growth in holiness and faith.
Grant this 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.

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

The psalms and canticles here are our own translation from the Latin. The Grail translation of the psalms, which is used liturgically in most of the English-speaking world, cannot be displayed on the Web for copyright reasons. The Universalis apps and programs do contain the Grail translation of the psalms.

You can also view this page in Latin and English.


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