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Easter: June 6th

Friday of the Seventh Week of Easter; Opt Mem of St. Norbert, Bishop

MASS READINGS

June 06, 2025 (Readings on USCCB website)

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COLLECT PRAYER

Friday of the Seventh Week of Easter: O God, who by the glorification of your Christ and the light of the Holy Spirit have unlocked for us the gates of eternity, grant, we pray, that, partaking of so great a gift, our devotion may grow deeper and our faith be strengthened. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.


Optional Memorial of St. Norbert: O God, who made the Bishop Saint Norbert a servant of your Church outstanding in his prayer and pastoral zeal, grant, we ask, that by the help of his intercession, the flock of the faithful may always find shepherds after your own heart and be fed in the pastures of salvation. 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.

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Today is the Optional Memorial of St. Norbert (1080-1134). Norbert was born at Xanten near Cologne about the year 1080. As a young cleric he resided at the court of the Archbishop of Cologne and then at that of the emperor where he allowed himself to be influenced by the spirit of the world. But he was won back by grace; caught by a storm during a journey on horseback he made up his mind to take his clerical obligations seriously. After ordination to the priesthood he devoted himself to itinerant preaching.

In 1120, on the advice of the bishop of Laon, he settled in the forest of Voix, not far from Soissons at a place called Premontre, in order to found a community of regular Canons. In 1126 he was sent to what was then one of the outposts of Christendom for he was appointed archbishop of Magdeburg. He died in 1134.

Continue praying the Pentecost Novena to the Holy Spirit.


Meditation for Friday of the Seventh Week of Easter:
Christ Jesus has opened Heaven to us: Prayer of Thanksgiving
On the day of His Ascension, Christ, the supreme High Priest of the human race, took us with Him into heaven, by right and in hope.

Never forget that it is only by Him that we can enter there; no man can enter into the Holy of holies except with Him; no creature can enjoy eternal bliss except by following Jesus; it was His merits that won for us infinite beatitude. Throughout eternity we shall say to Him: O Christ Jesus, it is through You, through Your Blood shed for us, that we are before the Face of God; it is Your sacrifice, Your immolation, that has gained for us each instant of our glory and beatitude: to You, O Lamb slain for us, be all honour, all praise, all thanksgiving!

Let us have absolute confidence in the sacrifice, the merits and the prayer of our High Priest. He has entered today into the heavens; He inaugurates, with His triumph, His unceasing mediation; He is the beloved Son in Whom the Father is well pleased; how can He fail to be heard, after having manifested by His Sacrifice such love to His Father?
—Dom Columba Marmion, Christ in His Mysteries, p. 319


St. Norbert
Although a cleric, Norbert led a very worldly life for a number of years. The decisive change took place suddenly in 1115. While riding one day, he was overtaken by a thunderstorm. A flash of lightning struck the ground before him, the horse threw him, and he seemed to hear a voice upbraiding him for his conduct.

As in the case of St. Paul, the experience wrought a complete transformation. Norbert decided to give away his property and income rights, and to lead a life of abnegation, devoting himself particularly to preaching. In 1120 he founded the Order of Premonstratensians (the first monastery was at Premontre) according to the rule of St. Augustine; approval came from Pope Honorius II in 1126.

In 1125, he was named archbishop of Magdeburg. On July 13, 1126, Norbert entered the city and came barefoot to the cathedral. About to enter the archepiscopal palace, he was refused admission by the porter, who failed to recognize a bishop so poorly dressed. "You know me better and see me with clearer eyes than those who are forcing me to this palace. Poor and wretched man that I am, I should never have been assigned to this place," Norbert answered when the porter later sought his pardon.
—Excerpted from The Church's Year of Grace, Pius Parsch

Patronage: against birth complications; for peace; Bohemia; archdiocese of Magdeburg, Germany

Symbols and Representation: monstrance; cross with two cross-bars

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