Donate To CYF USA

Media > St. John of the Cross (Dec. 14)



Spoken Word uploaded by: saintofday
About this Item
Title: St. John of the Cross (Dec. 14)
Added: 5 years ago

Categories: Saints
Tags: saint, day, martyr
Description:

(1541-1591)


John is a saint because his life was a heroic effort to live up to his name: “of the Cross.” The folly of the cross came to full realization in time. “Whoever wishes to come after me must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me” (Mark 8:34b) is the story of John’s life. The Paschal Mystery—through death to life—strongly marks John as reformer, mystic-poet and theologian-priest.


Ordained a Carmelite priest at 25 (1567), John met Teresa of Jesus (Avila) and like her vowed himself to the primitive Rule of the Carmelites. As partner with Teresa and in his own right, John engaged in the work of reform, and came to experience the price of reform: increasing opposition, misunderstanding, persecution, imprisonment. He came to know the cross acutely—to experience the dying of Jesus—as he sat month after month in his dark, damp, narrow cell with only his God!


Yet, the paradox! In this dying of imprisonment John came to life, uttering poetry. In the darkness of the dungeon, John’s spirit came into the Light. There are many mystics, many poets; John is unique as mystic-poet, expressing in his prison-cross the ecstasy of mystical union with God in the Spiritual Canticle.


But as agony leads to ecstasy, so John had his Ascent to Mt. Carmel, as he named it in his prose masterpiece. As man-Christian-Carmelite, he experienced in himself this purifying ascent; as spiritual director, he sensed it in others; as psychologist-theologian, he described and analyzed it in his prose writings. His prose works are outstanding in underscoring the cost of discipleship, the path of union with God:

rigorous discipline, abandonment, purification. Uniquely and strongly John underlines the gospel paradox: The cross leads to resurrection,

agony to ecstasy, darkness to light, abandonment to possession, denial to self to union with God. If you want to save your life, you must lose

it. John is truly “of the Cross.” He died at 49—a life short, but full.


Related Media
SaintCast Episode #82 Saintly Feedback, and St. John of the Cross
Podcast
views:90
rating:
Description: What do a physics professor, Philmont Boy Sco... (more)
SaintCast Episode #13 St. John Francis Regis, Audio St. Jeopardy, New Segment ÂAsk Relicman, Feedback Number 312-235-2278
Podcast
views:198
rating:
Description: Today on the SaintCast we debut a new segment... (more)
SaintCast Episode #12 Bilocation, St. Joan of Arc, St. Charles Lwanga, and others, St. Jeopardy, St. JosephÂs Oil, number for feedback 312-235-2278
Podcast
views:418
rating:
Description: What do Padre Pio and the TV Series LOST have... (more)
St. John Joseph of the Cross (Mar. 5)
Spoken Word
views:116
rating:
Description: (1654-1734)  Self-denial is never an end in ... (more)
Dec 04 - St. john Of Damascus
Spoken Word
views:153
rating:
Description: This divinely-enlightened Harp of the Spirit ... (more)


views: 218
rate:
add to favorites
send to friend
flag


ratings:


0 Ratings


0 Ratings


0 Ratings


0 Ratings


0 Ratings
Embed code: Permalink:
inspiration image
We ourselves feel that what we are doing is just a drop in the ocean. But the ocean would be less because of that missing drop.
Mother Teresa
Leave a Comment   0 total comments

Donate To CYF USA

Copyright © 2007-2009 Catholic Content, LLC - US Patents Pending


Login to MyCatholicVoice.com





Invalid Username or Password
Need to Register? | Forgot Username? | Forgot Password?
oops! image

Oops, sorry!


This feature has been temporarily disabled.

Click here for more information.