Chair of Unity Octave IV
January 21, Fourth Day of the Chair of Unity Octave - for the conversion of Schismatic Orthodox Churches
Let
us Pray.
O Lord, Who hast united all nations in the confession of Thy Name, we pray Thee for our formerly Catholic brethren of the East. Mindful of the eminent place they once held in Thy Church, we beg of Thee to inspire them with the desire to occupy it again, so as to form with us one single Fold, under the guidance of one and the same Shepherd. Grant that they, together with ourselves, may be penetrated with the teaching of those holy Doctors of the Eastern Church, who are also our Fathers in the Faith, and submit themselves in all humility to the voice of Peter, the Prince of the Apostles, Who so dearly desires to feed the lost sheep and lambs who have wandered from the Fold. Grant that the spirit of peace and charity, which is the mark of Thy presence with the faithful, may hasten the day in which our prayers may be united with theirs, so that every people and every tongue may acknowledge and glorify Our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son. Amen. (300 days)
Let
us Pray.
O Mary, Mother of mercy and Refuge of sinners, we beseech thee, be pleased to look with pitiful eyes upon miserable heretics and schismatics, especially those pitiful souls once united with us in our former community and congregation who have now separated themselves from the true Church. Thou who art the Seat of Wisdom, enlighten the minds that are miserably enfolded in the darkness of ignorance and sin, that they may clearly know that the one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church is the one true Church of Jesus Christ, outside of which neither holiness nor salvation can be found. Finish the work of their conversion by obtaining for them the grace to accept all the truths of our holy Faith and to submit themselves to the true Bishops of Thy Church, the successors of Thy Apostles; that so, being united with us in the sweet chains of Divine charity, there may soon be one only fold under the same one Shepherd; and may we all, O glorious Virgin, sing forever with exultation: Rejoice, O Virgin Mary, thou alone hast destroyed all heresies in the whole world. Amen. Three Aves. (500 days.)
(Three
Hail Mary's)
Antiphon: "That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in Me and I in Thee; that they also may be one in Us; that the world may believe that Thou has sent Me." (John 17: 21)
V. I say unto thee that thou art Peter
R. And upon this Rock I will build My Church.
Let
us pray. O Lord Jesus Christ, Who saidst unto Thine Apostles: Peace I
leave with you, My peace I give unto you; regard not our sins, but the
faith of Thy Church, and vouchsafe to grant unto Her that peace and
unity which are agreeable to Thy Will. Who livest and reignest God
forever and ever. Amen.R. And upon this Rock I will build My Church.
An indulgence of 300 days during the octave of prayers for the unity of the Church, from the Feast of the Chair of St. Peter in Rome to the feast of the Conversion of St. Paul. A Plenary Indulgence on the usual conditions at the end of the devout exercise.
January 21, Feast of Saint Agnes, Virgin & Martyr
Saint Agnes was twelve years old when
she was led to the altar of Minerva at Rome and commanded to obey the
persecuting laws of Diocletian by offering incense. In the midst of
the idolatrous rites she raised her hands to Christ, her Spouse, and
made the sign of the life-giving cross. She did not shrink when she
was bound hand and foot, though the manacles slipped from her young
hands, and the heathens who stood around were moved to tears. Bonds
were not needed for her; she hastened gladly to the place of her
torture.
When the judge saw that pain had no
terrors for her, he inflicted a sentence comporting an insult worse
than death: she was condemned to be taken to a house of infamy and
her clothes stripped off. I have an Angel with me, she said, and he
will guard me. Christ, whom you do not know, surrounds me like a wall
which cannot be forced. And so it occurred. The Spouse of Virgins
revealed, by a miracle, His custody of the pure in heart: her hair
grew miraculously to such a length that she was entirely covered by
it. The place to which she was taken was illuminated by a brilliant,
inexplicable light; and there she knelt down to pray. At that site a
Church has been built in honor of this young maiden's victory over
impurity. Only an impudent suitor, the cause of her arraignment as a
Christian, dared approach her, and her Angel struck him dead at her
feet. His father prayed Agnes to raise him up again by her magic
arts; she answered that magic was not responsible for his death, but
only the young pagan's lack of respect for God. She said she would
pray to Him that her Lord's glory might be manifested by the miracle
his father requested, and it was granted to her prayer.
At length the sentence of death by the
sword was passed upon her by a subordinate judge. For a moment she
stood erect in prayer, then bowed her neck to the sword, rejoicing
that the time of her liberation had arrived. The Angels bore her pure
soul to Paradise. A week after her death, Saint Agnes appeared to her
parents as they were praying at her tomb; she was amid a choir of
virgins clothed in golden robes and crowned with garlands. She begged
them not to weep for her as for one dead, telling them rather to
rejoice with her in her happiness.
Little Pictorial Lives of the
Saints, a compilation based on Butler's Lives of the Saints
and other sources by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York,
1894); Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul
Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 1