I am not going to make a long address to you, my dear boys,
or say anything that you have not often heard before from your superiors, for I
know well in what good hands you are, and I know that their instructions come
to you with greater force than any you can have from a stranger. If I speak to
you at all, it is because I have lately come from the Holy Father, and am, in
some sort, his representative, and so in the years to come you may remember
that you saw me today and heard me speak in his name, and remember it to your
profit.
You know that today we keep the Feast of the Holy Rosary,
and I propose to say to you what occurs to me on this great subject. You know
how that devotion came about; how, at a time when heresy was very widespread,
and had called in the aid of sophistry, that can so powerfully aid infidelity
against religion, God inspired St Dominic to institute and spread this
devotion. It seems so simple and easy, but you know God chooses the small
things of the world to humble the great (I Cor. 1,27-28).
Now the great power of the Rosary lies in this, that it
makes the Creed into a prayer; of course, the Creed is in some sense a prayer
and a great act of homage to God; but the Rosary gives us the great truths of
His life and death to meditate upon, and brings them nearer to our hearts. And
so we contemplate all the great mysteries of His life and His birth in the
manger; and so too the mysteries of His suffering and His glorified life. But
even Christians, with all their knowledge of God, have usually more awe than
love of Him, and the special virtue of the Rosary lies in the special way in
which it looks at these mysteries; for with all our thoughts of Him are mingled
thoughts of His Mother, and in the relations between Mother and Son we have set
before us the Holy Family, the home in which God lived. Now the family is, even
humanly considered, a sacred thing; how much more the family bound together by
supernatural ties, and, above all, that in which God dwelt with His Blessed
Mother.
This is what I should most wish you to remember in future
years. For you will all of you have to go out into the world, and going out
into the world means leaving home; and, my dear boys, you don't know what the
world is now. You look forward to the time when you will go out into the world,
and it seems to you very bright and full of promise. It is not wrong for you to
look forward to that time; but most men who know the world find it a world of
great trouble, and disappointments, and even misery.
If it turns out so to you,
seek a home in the Holy Family that you think about in the mysteries of the
Rosary. Schoolboys know the difference between school and home. You often hear
grown-up people say that the happiest time of their life was that passed at
school but when they were at school you know they had a happier time, which was
when they went home; that shows there is a good in home which cannot be found
elsewhere. So that even if the world should actually prove to be all that you
now fancy it, if it should bring you all that you could wish, yet you ought to
have in the Holy Family a home with a holiness and sweetness about it that
cannot be found elsewhere.
This is, my dear boys, what I most earnestly ask you. I ask
you when you go out into the world, as you soon must, to make the Holy Family
your home, to which you may turn from all the sorrow and care of the world and
find a solace, a compensation, and a refuge. And this I say to you, not as if I
should speak to you again, not as if I had of myself any claim upon you, but
with the claims of the Holy Father, whose representative I am, and in the hope
that in the days to come you will remember that I came amongst you and said it
to you. And when I speak of the Holy Family I do not mean Our Lord and Our Lady
only, but St Joseph too; for as we cannot separate Our Lord from His Mother, so
we cannot separate St Joseph from them both; for who but he was their protector
in all the scenes of Our Lord's early life? And with Joseph must be included St
Elizabeth and St John, whom we naturally think of as part of the Holy Family;
we read of them together and see them in pictures together. May you, my dear
boys, throughout your life find a home in the Holy Family; the home of Our Lord
and His Blessed Mother, St Joseph, St Elizabeth, and St John.
(Mary—The Virgin Mary in the Life and Writings of John Henry
Newman, chap. 6, Edited by Philip Boyce).
Above from: EWTN - Bl. John Henry Newman on the Holy Rosary
*We continue on our 7th Day of the Novena for an Irish Ordinariate through the intercession of Bl. John Henry Newman whose feast is on the 9th October which is Wednesday. Prayer to Bl. Johh Henry at top of sidebar. Perhaps we can also pray a Rosary for this intention.
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