Cor ad Cor Loquitur |
Cor ad cor loquitur - "Heart speaks unto heart"
the official theme of the Visit
John Henry Cardinal Newman chose the words as the motto to go on his coat of arms. Heart speaks unto heart is a fitting choice for the Visit as, on the final day of his Apostolic Journey, the Holy Father will beatify Cardinal Newman.
Origins of the motto
When Newman became a Cardinal in 1879, he had to choose a motto to go on his coat of arms. He chose the Latin words Cor ad Cor loquitur – heart speaks unto heart. Where did these words come from? At the time, Newman thought they came from the classic spiritual treatise, The Imitation of Christ (written in the 1400s), but in fact he was mistaken – they are from Saint Francis de Sales (1567-1622). Saint Francis was a French Bishop and great spiritual writer whom Newman revered. In fact, Newman chose to put a painting of Saint Francis above the altar in his own Chapel at the Birmingham Oratory.
'Heart speaks to Heart' – who is speaking to whom?
The phrase has different levels, which together tell us a lot about Newman, his understanding of what it is to be human, and his vision of a humanity redeemed by Christ. Newman thought that true communication between us speaks from our heart to the heart of others around us – much more than just clever talking. He wrote in an Anglican sermon: 'Eloquence and wit, shrewdness and dexterity, these plead a cause well and propagate it quickly, but it dies with them. It has no root in the hearts of men, and lives not out a generation.'
Truth speaks from the centre of the person, from the heart: 'By a heart awake from the dead, and by affections set on heaven, we can... truly and without figure witness that Christ liveth.' In the age of the Internet, Newman tells us that however we communicate, what we say should come from the heart, the fruits of a moral life lived in communion with Christ.
In fact, Christ speaks to us from his own Heart. 'Thou art the living Flame, and ever burnest with love of man' – he is 'the Word, the Light, the Life, the Truth, Wisdom, the Divine Glory.' So, in the end, it's the Heart of God himself which speaks to us – in prayer, in the Mass, through the Scriptures. But also through other faithful Christians, and in the teachings of the Church. As Newman says, 'when the Church speaks Thou dost speak.' The Church has no other heart than the Heart of Christ himself.
Source: thepapalvisit.org.uk
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