Office Of Readings | Week 28, Tuesday, Ordinary Time | A Reading From The Instructions Of Saint Columbanus | Perpetual Light In The Temple Of The Eternal Priest
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Office Of Readings | Week 28, Tuesday, Ordinary Time | A Reading From The Instructions Of Saint Columbanus | Perpetual Light In The Temple Of The Eternal Priest
‘Light everlasting in the temple of the eternal high priest.’
Saint Columban’s reflection is structured as a prayer that unites watchfulness, inner purification, and illumination. His imagery of light and the burning lamp develops the biblical theme of readiness for the coming of Christ. The text opens with an allusion to Luke 12:37: ‘Blessed are those servants whom the Lord finds awake when he comes.’ The call to remain watchful is interpreted as a lifelong spiritual vigilance — an alertness to divine presence that stands in contrast to the ‘sleep of slothfulness’.
Columban connects this wakefulness with the fire of divine love. The image of fire is not merely emotional but theological: it signifies the energy of the Holy Spirit, which enkindles the believer and purifies the soul. The reference to light ‘beyond the stars’ conveys the transcendence of divine love, which originates not within the created order but in God himself.
The lantern burning ‘in the temple of the Lord’ recalls the sanctuary lamp of the ancient Temple and anticipates the believer’s body as a living temple of the Spirit. Columban prays that his lantern — his interior life — may burn continuously, providing light to others. The image unites contemplation and mission: illumination received from Christ becomes illumination shared. The ‘eternal light’ of Christ sustains and renews the lesser light of the believer, echoing the Johannine theology of participation in divine life.
The text then turns to the vision of the ‘holy of holies’. Here Columban draws on the temple symbolism of Hebrews 9 and 10, where Christ, the eternal High Priest, enters once for all into the heavenly sanctuary. The monk’s desire to ‘see only’ Christ expresses the monastic vocation to undivided contemplation — a turning of the whole self toward God.
The closing section extends this vision into a prayer for transformation. Love becomes not an occasional affection but the organising principle of existence. To be filled with divine love is to have one’s senses, thoughts and desires oriented toward God alone. The quotation from the Song of Songs — ‘many waters could not extinguish love’ (8:7) — places this love within the scriptural tradition of nuptial union between God and the soul, interpreted in Christian theology as the consummation of divine charity in eternity.
A Reading From The Instructions Of Saint Columbanus | Perpetual Light In The Temple Of The Eternal Priest
How blessed, how fortunate, are those servants whom the Lord will find watchful when he comes. Blessed is the time of waiting when we stay awake for the Lord, the Creator of the universe, who fills all things and transcends all things.
How I wish he would awaken me, his humble servant, from the sleep of slothfulness, even though I am of little worth. How I wish he would enkindle me with that fire of divine love. The flames of his love burn beyond the stars; the longing for his overwhelming delights and the divine fire ever burn within me!
How I wish I might deserve to have my lantern always burning at night in the temple of my Lord, to give light to all who enter the house of my God. Give me, I pray you, Lord, in the name of Jesus Christ, your Son and my God, that love that does not fail so that my lantern, burning within me and giving light to others, may be always lighted and never extinguished.
Jesus, our most loving Savior, be pleased to light our lanterns, so that they might burn for ever in your temple, receiving eternal light from you, the eternal light, to lighten our darkness and to ward off from us the darkness of the world.
Give your light to my lantern, I beg you, my Jesus, so that by its light I may see that holy of holies which receives you as the eternal priest entering among the columns of your great temple. May I ever see you only, look on you, long for you; may I gaze with love on you alone, and have my lantern shining and burning always in your presence.
Loving Savior, be pleased to show yourself to us who knock, so that in knowing you we may love only you, love you alone, desire you alone, contemplate only you day and night, and always think of you. Inspire in us the depth of love that is fitting for you to receive as God. So may your love pervade our whole being, possess us completely, and fill all our senses, that we may know no other love but love for you who are everlasting. May our love be so great that the many waters of sky, land and sea cannot extinguish it in us: many waters could not extinguish love.
May this saying be fulfilled in us also, at least in part by your gift, Jesus Christ, our Lord, to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.
Christian Prayer With Jesus
Light of the world, who dwell in unapproachable brightness, kindle within us the flame of your love, that our lamps may burn without ceasing in the temple of your presence. Grant that we may watch with clear eyes and serve with a single heart, until you appear in glory, O Christ, our eternal priest and light everlasting. Amen.
Glossary Of Christian Terms
Watchfulness – The spiritual discipline of attentiveness to God’s presence and readiness for Christ’s coming.
Lamp / Lantern – A symbol of the soul illuminated by divine grace; derived from biblical images such as the wise virgins’ lamps in Matthew 25.
Temple – In Christian theology, both the dwelling place of God in heaven and the human person sanctified by the Spirit.
Holy of holies – The innermost part of the Jerusalem Temple, representing the immediate presence of God; in Christian interpretation, it prefigures access to God through Christ.
Divine love – The love of God communicated by the Holy Spirit, purifying and transforming the believer.
Eternal light – A traditional term for Christ as the uncreated source of truth and life.
High Priest – A title for Christ, who offers himself once for all as the mediator between God and humanity (Hebrews 7–10).
Jesus, as the Son of God, perfectly embodied the essence of this commandment. He lived in complete submission and obedience to his heavenly Father, never allowing anything or anyone to come before God’s will and purpose for his life. Jesus declared, ‘I and the Father are one’ (John 10:30, KJV), emphasizing Jesus’ unity with God and unwavering devotion to Him [ … ]
Saint Fulgentius reminds us that the great transformation of the resurrection begins now, in the hidden conversion of the heart. The ‘first resurrection’ is not merely an image but a real spiritual event: the passage from sin to grace, from darkness to light, from unbelief to faith. In this life, God works the first change within us — a change that prepares and guarantees the glorious change to come [ … ]
The Carrefour will be open, where I can buy nuts for the red squirrel, who lives in Campo Grande. The red squirrel is Valladolid’s best bit. Even as a child, I had never seen one before, apart from in picture books. It was last term’s discovery. The most beautiful encounter. I didn’t know it was there – in the park. A complete surprise. The tiny little thing bobbled and hopped, as it received in its little hands a nut from the man’s hands. Each surprising instant – it was childlike. I whispered: ‘Oh my wow.’ I walk toward the El Cortes Ingles. There is, for now, that settled feel of friends in bookshops. Though a null-affect, neutral day – it won’t glean, it is not to be scratched at. The queues are long in the Carrefour. Though, as it might be, on relatively modest incomes, many people live centrally. Their behaviours neither pinched nor stark. Yet the shop so busy while the street so empty… An error in the simulation, a glitch in the code. I potter about the aisles, which are pleasant enough, then at the tills I flinch at how expensive a little bag of up-sold nuts can be. Nonetheless, I queue for a packet of almonds. Two English men queue directly ahead of me. They are stocky, and have gay voices, their wheelie-bucket piled with soft drinks and party food, while they bitch to one another about the obviously terrible party they’re going to. The air heaves relief as I wander up the way to the broad plaza fringing Campo Grande. This is a place to see – a piece of Spain. There is a tourist information office, though unopened. At these fountains, three girls take selfies. Pompous-looking buildings, the military offices aside, line the park’s nearest vicinities. Hotel-bars have their patches. Liveried doormen idle time, for there are no paying customers, in and out the doorways’ shadows. A mixed group of kids play at the hoops on the pedestrian boulevard, and two boys practise on skateboards, working the thing out. I pass by them, touched by the thought, and happy that they are there. Wistful, I smile at the odds of the ball spilling over to me, and play in mind the agreeable scene of a fleeting connection. Then I am through the park gates. An air now – of humanity become self-selecting. Modestly understated. Understatedly modest. Campo Grande is nice but it isn’t grande… I walk slowly, and very soon hear for a second time English voices. Not them – it is an English family, just a little way ahead, a Dad and a Mum and a younger boy and an older girl, and theirs are Midlands accents. Dad seems to have been here and to know the place. He gestures panoramically. Mum wants her lunch. The girl at a difficult age. She carries a balloon-on-a-stick. Though she is sprouting – yet wears a loud dress. Then leggings, trainers. Her hair is nice… Maybe she is being okay about it. And not horrific. It’s okay once they get into it, but those months… Yet then, they mostly blossom, if they come from a good home, and become rounded personalities, entering into their womanhood. It was that… when yet they weren’t… I shudder to think of it. They walk toward the pond, and I trail, and would follow had I not been going that way. I wish I could say something so they might hear I am English too. (Fake a phone call?) How my voice might sound – there’d be all college hurling around in such matter I… a demented thing, ludicrous blurt – of Henry, Geoff, and all of them – not to mention the personal predicament. Maybe they’re a nice family. She is letting him explain what he needs to explain. And it would blow his fire, me being English. Mum and Dad. You’d probably see them all having their lunch in a little while. All sat round the table. With napkins and the menus out. Dad looks safe. I look into the pond. Terrapins live in there. But not today. I walk toward the join in the paths where the squirrel lives. There, I crumple the packet of almonds, making noise. I peer and I squat and crouch – chewing a mouthful. All the peacocks have perched right up in the trees’ branches. That never looks like something they should be doing. It’s disappointing that the squirrel isn’t here – but then the not-knowing-if is a part of it. Now, next, my visit to the National Sculpture Museum is an obligation. Canon Peter stood literally aghast when I hadn’t heard of it. Mortified, I made resolute promises. Though a few weeks have passed, it isn’t just any old something I could do on the hoof. A great commitment – it must command a known and prepared and anticipated not-just-any-old-time. But, rather, the sort you must wait for – and listen for. [ … ] Beyond Plaza Mayor, there would be a brief series of old-town alleyways. The National Sculpture Museum would be – just up there, this archway, this next…They are bleached and forgotten-looking walls, and the smoothed paving could be medieval. Not that it is making Tomàs anxious – I follow the map. A kind of place – uneasy credit-cards, and modern vaccinations, and a phone, might not help much. I fancy I feel the back-wall of a church, and that – fancifully – pressure-release drawn out of me. Only I am playing games in a nice way – making play-scared on the uncertainty – with only myself to see. The National Museum is there, modestly signed on stencilled plexiglass stuck to the stone wall. A uniformed lady sits just a little way inside the doorway. She reassures me there is no money required, and directs me over the courtyard into the planned route, showing me where I can pick up a free map. I get my […]
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