Showing posts with label Icon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Icon. Show all posts

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Image of Matt Talbot and the Blessed Mother

Perhaps the most active promoter for the beatification of Venerable Matt Talbot online is Gregory Jakielski in Poland, who we have noted repeatedly in our posts. 
Earlier today he posted the following at his https://www.facebook.com/VenerableMattTalbot/

“Last year I wrote to the Camaldolese Nuns from Złoczewo (Poland). I knew that they are preparing paintings and writing icons. I wanted to interest them about the life of Venerable Matt Talbot. In secret I counted on help in preparing the image of Venerable Matt that I could use to prepare Praying Cards with a prayer for the beatification of Matt Talbot.

The Sisters were very willing to help, but due to the large amount of duties I had to be patient.

The fruit of my correspondence is a beautiful painting painted by Sister Józefina OSB Cam, who reached me last week, after a small adventure of "disappearance" at the Post Office.


For me personally, this is the whole story of the life of Venerable Matt Talbot in one picture.”

Image may contain: 1 person, indoor

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

New Icon of Venerable Matt Talbot

On February 5, 2018 Gregory posted the following comment at https://www.facebook.com/VenerableMattTalbot/: “Some time ago I wrote to Juliet Venter asking if she would like to prepare a new icon of Venerable Matt Talbot. After some time a beautiful icon was created.”

Icon Matt Talbot Juliet Venter 2018



Juliet's commentary in creating this icon can be read at 
http://www.juliet-icons.co.uk/blog/venerable-matt-talbot

Thursday, June 6, 2013

New Matt Talbot Icon by Terry Nelson Forthcoming

[On this eve of the 88th anniversary of the death of Venerable Matt Talbot, Terry Nelson has announced that he is creating a new icon of Matt at  http://abbey-roads.blogspot.com/2013/06/matt-talbot-eve.html.  He has previously created the increasingly popular icon of Matt pictured below.]

“Venerable Matt Talbot exemplified the heroic virtue of temperance. He practiced the Christian life more or less as a solitary, although he was a member of the Third Order of St. Francis. The spiritual combat Talbot engaged in was associated with alcoholism, which in his case demanded the renunciation of a behavior, as well as an adjustment in lifestyle. 

Talbot overcame his attachment to the disorder through the practice of the virtues, prayer and fidelity to the duties of his state in life, and mortification.  He found support in the sacraments, spiritual direction and spiritual reading.  Although he 'took the pledge' to abstain from alcohol, he did not have a support group such as AA to aid in his recovery.  I especially admire Talbot's fortitude and perseverance, demonstrating that with God all things can be overcome... "In your strength I can crush an army; with my God I can scale any wall.

Tomorrow, June 7 is the anniversary of his death.  Matt died in 1925.

I mention Matt Talbot today because I just started a new icon of him yesterday.  It is smaller than the one shown above, the new figure is a bust, cut off just below the hands.  My intention is to redo the head and face somewhat.  The image shown here is in a private collection.”

                             
                                   

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Venerable Matt Talbot: Patron of Struggling and Recovering Addicts and Alcoholics


[The source of this article by Terry Nelson can be found at https://franciscanaction.org/earthcorps/resources/venerable-matt-talbot, dated 2013-05-14.  We have posted previous articles as well as his increasingly popular icon of Matt Talbot at http://venerablematttalbotresourcecenter.blogspot.com/search?q=terry+nelson. Terry’s blog can be found at http://abbey-roads.blogspot.com/


"Matthew Talbot (1856 - 1925) lived at an incredibly difficult time. He and his 13 siblings were born into poverty in Dublin shortly after the Irish Potato Famine. One million people died from this largely human-made disaster that saw, even while starvation was rampant, the British government's siphoning off of profit from Irish crops and livestock. Another million people emigrated out of the country, and alcoholism was rampant among those who stayed behind.

Matt's father was one man who succumbed to alcoholism and spend much of the family's income on the cheap whiskey that was widely available. Matt and his siblings spent little time in school and worked odd jobs to bring in extra money. Matt's first job, at age 12, was to deliver Guinness stout to pubs. He began drinking the dregs of the returned bottles and, at the age of 13, he too was an alcoholic. Even then he was known as a very hard worker, but as an adult he spent all his wages on alcohol. His friends later testified: “[Matt] only wanted one thing—the drink; he wouldn't go with us to a dance or a party or a school function. But for the drink he'd do anything.”

Already in his 20's Matt incurred large debts and resorted to thievery, even stealing the violin from a blind street entertainer and selling it to pay for rounds of drinks at the bar. But, at the age of 28, he realized his life had become desperate and small and his relationships extremely shallow. He resolved to take 'the pledge' for sobriety organized by Capuchin Franciscans and others in the Catholic Church began to attend Mass daily. More changes were happening inside him and, even though his hard labor as a dockworker paid little, he began quietly giving money to those around him to pay for shoes for their children or overdue rent.

Matt joined the Third Order of Saint Francis of Assisi (now called the “Secular Franciscan Order”) in 1890. His spiritual life centered him in a joyful way of being, earning him the reputation as a "happy little man . . . who smiled at everything except a dirty joke.” He filled his life with prayer, fasting, and service. He gave away most of his wages every week to the poor in Ireland and to international Catholic missions. His commitment to the lay Franciscans was incredible—the attendance records show that in 35 years he only missed a couple of the monthly meetings.

Matt often read the Bible and the lives of saints, and he also began reading papal encyclicals on social justice and books on the labor movement. His faith and his concern for the poor led him to action, and in 1900 he joined a strike from the Dublin Port & Docks Board to demand a modest raise of sixpence to their daily pay of four and sixpence. When management refused, he was one of four workers who held out from returning to work while the rest slowly gave in to the financial pressure.

He became a loyal member of Ireland's Transport and General Workers Union. When the Dublin Lockout of 1913 led to sympathy strikes throughout the city, Matt consulted a trusted priest as he discerned joining the strike. The priest encouraged him, and Matt joined the strike also came to quote a phrase from a book the priest gave him: “No man has the right to starve a worker into submission.” During this strike, he refused the strike pay given by the union to ease financial hardship, saying that he had not earned it. Later he accepted the pay but shared it among the other strikers. Matt was a vocal supporter of James Larkin, a famous union organizer and major figure in Ireland's labor movement. One union leader, Stephen McGonagle, described Matt as “a beacon of light to Irish workers.”

After a life of heroic perseverance, Matt died suddenly while walking to Mass on June 7, 1925. He was declared Venerable by Pope Paul VI in 1975. He is the Patron of Struggling and Recovering Addicts and Alcoholics and many addiction treatment programs, retreats, and centers throughout the world bear his name.

Sources:


[More information about the book, The Franciscan Tradition, and its chapter on Matt Talbot can be found at http://venerablematttalbotresourcecenter.blogspot.com/2010/10/matt-talbot-and-franciscan-tradition.html

Friday, February 22, 2013

New Venerable Matt Talbot Icon

This new Matt Talbot icon was posted 03 February 2013 at http://www.togherparish.ie/parish/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=251%3A130203mt&catid=25%3Athe-project&Itemid=2. It was created by Sr. Irene Gibson of Raheeny in Dublin and commissioned by the Cork Regional Pioneers.











The broken bottle is a symbol of his break from the slavery of addiction. Chain round waist, which he wore as a penance after his conversion, is symbol of his enslavement to the Blessed Virgin Mary. (http://peaceofzionicons.blogspot.com/2013/01/venerable-matt-talbot-icon.html)



Sunday, April 19, 2009

Venerable Matt Talbot Icon (2009) by Terry Nelson



by Terry Nelson

Terry has given us permission to post this panel he painted depicting Matt Talbot. Greater detail can be viewed by double clicking the left of your mouse. More information and reactions to his icon can be found at http://abbey-roads.blogspot.com/2009/04/matt-talbot.html