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 MARIATOTUTOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTU TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA   TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTUS TUUS MARIA TOTU 

               ST. JOHN  PAUL  II

 

This piece of cloth is from the cover of the Kneeler on which St. John Paul II prayed to Our Lady of Belen, Carmel Mission, California on September 17, 1987.

 

The cover and the pillow were made by sir Richard Menn, Curator of the Mission. He donated them to the Carmilelite Father, San Jose, California. Fr. James Geoghegan, OCD

QUEEN OF PEACE TOTUS TUUS MARIA

The Living Image

                                                    ST.  JOHN  DAMASCENE

                                                                       on

                                                               HOLY IMAGES

  PART III

Every one must recognise that a man who attempts to dishonour an image which has been set up for the glory and remembrance of Christ, of His holy Mother, or one of his saints, is an enemy of Christ, of His holy Mother, and the saints. It is also set up to shame the devil and his crew, out of love and zeal for God. The man who refuses to give this image due, though not divine, honour, is an upholder of the devil and his demon host, showing by his act grief that God and the saints are honoured and glorified, and the devil put to shame. The image is a canticle and manifestation and monument to the memory of those who have fought bravely and won the victory to the shame and confusion of the vanquished. I have often seen lovers gazing at the loved one’s garment, and embracing it with eyes and mouth as if it was himself. We must give his due to every man. St Paul says: ‘Honour to whom honour: to the king as excelling: or to governors as sent by him,’ to each according to the measure of his dignity.

Where do you find in the Old Testament or in the Gospel the Trinity, or consubstantiality, or one Godhead, or three persons, or the one substance of Christ, or His two natures, expressed in so many words? Still, as they are contained in what Scripture does say, and defined by the holy fathers, we receive them and anathematise those who do not. I prove to you that in the old law God commanded images to be made, first of all the tabernacle and everything in it. Then in the gospel our Lord Himself said to those who asked Him, tempting, whether it was lawful to give tribute to Cæsar, ‘Bring me a coin, and they showed Him a penny. And He asked them whose likeness it was, and they said to Him, Cæsar’s; and He said, ‘Give to Cæsar that which is Cæsar’s, and to God that which is God’s.’ As the coin bears the likeness of Cæsar, it is his, and you should give it to Cæsar. So the image bears the likeness of Christ, and you should give it Him, for it is His.

Our Lord called His disciples blessed, saying, ‘Many kings and prophets have desired to see what you see, and have not seen it, and to hear what you hear and have not heard it. Blessed are your eyes which see and your ears which hear.’ The apostles saw Christ with their bodily eyes, and His sufferings and wonders, and they listened to His words. We, too, desire to see, and to hear, and to be blessed. They saw Him face to face, as He was present in the body. Now, since he is not present in the body to us, we hear His words from books and are sanctified in spirit by the hearing, and are blessed, and we adore, honouring the books which tell us of His words. So,

 

 

 

 

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