About C.U.S.P.

Christian Understanding through Study & Prayer

Refounder & CUSP Publications

Evangelization Endeavour

Utinam Patribus Nostris Digni Simus

In his FOREWORD to each volume, Cardinal Hickey emphasizes the need for all of us to know our faith more deeply and accurately, as he urges … clergy, religious and teachers, and anyone wishing to know their faith … to read (these) volumes carefully and to refer to them often.” 

Pope Francis reminds us  in Evangelii Gaudium: Every Christian is challenged, here and now, to be actively engaged in evangelization; indeed, anyone who has truly experienced God’s saving love does not need much time or lengthy training to go out and proclaim that love.

These words impel us, in the spirit of the Pope’s call for EVANGELIZATION, to embark on the formidable effort of republishing and translating our 13 volumes into the principal languages of Catholicsm worldwide.

This includes  Spanish,Portuguese, languages of Eastern and Central Europe, and the Far East. These no less the English speaking nations need authentic Church teaching.  

From the founding of CCSP and now refounding of CUSP, this Apostolate has  been privileged to serve the Church, the Magisterium and our Holy Fathers. On behalf of all past advisors and advocates of CCSP and today all those  associated with the refounding of CUSP, we ask for your prayers and support to continue our work.  

We thank all who have aided us in this effort. Going forward we adopt as our motto Utinam Patribus Nostris Digni SimusMay We Be Worthy Of Our Forefathers.

John D. Hipsely, CUSP President, Refounder

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John D. Hipsley

CUSP Publications, President, Refounder

Christian Understanding through Study & Prayer

Education

Graduate in Law and Commerce (B.Com./LLb) from the University of New South Wales, Sydney Australia

Judge's Associate

John was the Judge’s Associate (Law-clerk) to the Chairman of the Australian Law Reform Commission the Hon. Mr. Justice Michael Kirby

Barrister at Law & Lecturer in Law

  • Formerly a Barrister of the Supreme Court of New South Wales
  • Associate lecturer-in-law teaching Criminal Process at the University of Technology in Sydney.

Consultant

Clients included: Visa International, United WayNational Hispanic University and others

Patent Author

Co-Inventor of  US Patent “Method, dual-device and system for secure financial transactions“; [Patent: # 8,453,223] filed May 28, 2013

Social Entrepreneur

Co-founder of the social enterprise CauseFunders, Inc. which is a turnkey and sustainable nonprofit fundraising program branded “DonorRewards” www.CauseFunders.com

Other Publications 

The Mass: It's Mystery Revealed

The Mass: Its Mysteries Revealed by George P. Morse

Foreword by Christoph Cardinal Schönborn

This booklet by George P. Morse, entitled “THE MASS: ITS MYSTERIES REVEALED” is a very good and fine book written in a spirit of the living faith and love, giving the essential of the rich and concise teachings of our Hotly Faith, including the doctrine of the:

  • The doctrine of the Church
  • Of the councils and the Church Fathers
  • The writings of saints and other Great Christian authors
  • And the Catechism of the Catholic Church
  • On the Holy Sacrifice of the Eucharist in all its dimensions

It was written in order to help Catholics to better understand and appreciate this infinite Treasure of inestimable value for the whole Church, the entire world, and for each and every member of the faithful in their daily lives on their way to grace to eternal beatitude.

Mr. Morse, who with his wife, Margaret, were the Founders and President of CATHOLICS COMMITTED TO SUPPORT THE POPE. Mr. Morse was the founding publisher of the thirteen Volume series of “PRÉCIS OF OFFICIAL CATHOLIC TEACHING” which the late James Cardinal Hickey, in one of his FORWARDS, describes as “valuable guides to authentic sources of Catholic teaching…they spread knowledge and love of the Church’s teachings to the ends of the earth.”

Sincerely in Christ,

Christoph Cardinal Schönborn

Archbisop of Vienna

Degeneration and Regeneration of Jurisprudence

Law thesis by Valentin Tomberg; translated from German into English by Gabriel Jabouri

by Valentin Tomberg

The work at hand was written in the fall of 1944, i.e. at a time when despotism and war still reigned. Despite the times having changed, I did not find it necessary to modify the contents or wording of this work. In many ways the theses of this work have been confirmed anew by the events of the one and a half years that passed since then, and have neither weakened nor even refuted them in any way.

This work came into being due to the encouragement by Professor Ernst von Hippel; several conversations with him – some of which taking place in the basement shelter of the house we both resided in – about the topics discussed herein provided additional valuable contributions to the development of this work. It is therefore a heartfelt necessity for me to use this opportunity to express my profound thanks to Professor von Hippel.

 Table of Contents

I. JURISPRUDENCE AND ITS CAUSES

  1. Quantitative and Qualitative Thought in Natural Sciences, and Mechanical and Moral Thought in Jurisprudence
  2. The Historical “Fall” of Jurisprudence From the Heights of Natural Law, Based on Religion, to the Depths of Positivism, Based on Power
  3. Manifestations of Degeneration in Jurisprudence and Their Effects on Jurists and Laymen

II. THE NATURE OF TRUE JURISPRUDENCE

  1. The Nature of the Task of the True Jurist
  2. The Nature of True Creative Realization in Jurisprudence and Its Administration
  3. The Goal of True Administration of Justice

III.        THE WAY TO REGENERATION OF JURISPRUDENCE

  1. Regeneration of the Method
  2. Basic Draft of a Reform of Juristic Education

Foundation of International Law as Humanity's Law

Law thesis by Valentin Tomberg; translated from German into English by Gabriel Jabouri

by Vaentin Tomberg

The following proverb is popular in the author’s distant homeland: “When the forest is cut, the splinters fly”, meaning that where the whole is concerned, no consideration can be given to the individual. The truth of this proverb was experienced in sufficient clarity by innumerable and completely innocent people and their children in most European countries during the years of war. The states which arrogantly consider themselves to represent the highest value, and called to lead humanity – they let this war happen by using their political art, and then they let the barrel of their technological-military might roll over men, women and children.

The same states then proceed to give the survivors hope that they, with their politics of “balance” and their way of “solving” problems by war, now will be erecting an order of freedom and justice. But are they able to do that? We, the “splinters” of the cut forest of mankind, cannot but doubt it.

Table of Contents

I. The Nature of Internation al Law as Humanity’s Law – Concept, Idea, and Ideal of International Law

  1. Terminology
  2. Method
  3. Premises Based on One’s Conception of the World
  4. Premises Based on The Philsophy of Law
  5. Concept, Idea and Ideal of International Law as Humanity’s Law

II. The Subject of Internationla Law as Humanity’s Law

  1. International Law as Manifestation
  2. Sources of International Law
  3. The State as Subject of International Law
  4. International Law as State Law and Humanity’s Law

III. Historical Foundations of Internatinal Law as Humanitys Law

  1. Historical Foundations of International law as Humanity’s Law
  2. Historical Origins of Internatinal Law
  3. Sacral (Divine Law) and Natural Law Principles of International law, insofar as They Can be Detrmined by Histtorical FActs
  4. Main Historical Trends of Positive Internatinal Law (International Legal System and World Order)

III. Present Problems of International Law

Presentations

John is a public speaker and presenter on various themes outlined below.He approaches these subjects is through the “way of beauty” (via pulchritudinis).

The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom

The Stages of the Liturgy

The Divine Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom is the most celebrated divine liturgy (or “mass”) in the Byzantine Rite.

It is named after its core part, the anaphora attributed toSaint John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople in the 5th century.

The Divine Liturgy is the primary worship service of the Church The Divine Liturgy is a eucharistic  service.

It contains two parts: the Liturgy of the  Catechumens , sometimes called the Liturgy of the Word, at which the  are proclaimed and expounded; and the Liturgy of the Faithful, sometimes called the Liturgy of the Eucharist, in which the gifts of bread and wine are offered and consecrated; the faithful then partake of them in the Sacrament of Holy Communion.

The Church teaches that the gifts truly become the body and blood of Jesus Christ , but it has never dogmatized a particular formula for describing this transformation.

The Prothesis (or Proskomedia ), the service of preparing the holy gifts, can be considered a third part which precedes the Liturgy proper.

Source:  The Divine Liturgy of Saint  John Chrysostom by Saint John Chrysostom

Lectio Divina Cordis

Divine Reading of the Heart

A presentation integrating the two compoementary practices of Lectio Divina (Divine Reading)and Visio Divina (Divine Seeing)

Lectio Divina is a traditional Benedictine practice of scriptural reading, meditation and prayer intended to promote communion with God and to increase the knowledge of God’s word. It does not treat scripture as texts to be studied, but as the living word.

Over time the steps have varied between 4 and 9. Traditionally, Lectio Divina has four separate steps: read; meditate; pray; contemplate. First a passage of scripture is read, then its meaning is reflected upon. This is followed by prayer and contemplation on the Word of God.

Visio Divina — “sacred seeing” — is an ancient form of Christian prayer in which we allow our hearts and imaginations to enter into a sacred image, in silence, to be receptive to the inner voice of conscience and the Divine.

Lectio Divina Cordis combines these two traditional forms of prayer and includes a focus on icons and sacred images. The five steps are 

H: HEAR the words as you inwardly read  or speak – LECTIO: Read

E: ENTER  the silence to reflect on a core precept – MEDITATIO: Meditate

A: Answer the knocking at the door of your heart – ORATIO: Speak

R: REST peacefully without words or thoughts – CONTEMPLATIO: Contemplate

T: TRUST: “Do not let your HEART  be troubled. Trust in God; trust also in me.” (John 13:1)

The Ladder of Divine Ascent by St. John Climacus

Application of the 30 Principles to Daily Life

Feast Day of St. John Climacus: March 30,  4th Sunday of Lent

Quote by St. John Climacus

“Do not be surprised if you fall back into your old ways every day. Do not be disturbed but resolve to do something positive about it; and without question the angel who stands guard over you will honor your perseverance.”

The Ladder of Divine Ascent, or Ladder of ParadiseScala or Climax Paradisi), is an important ascetical treatise for monasticism in Eastern Christianity written by John Climacus in ca. AD 600 at the request of John, Abbot of Raithu, a monastery situated on the shores of the Red Sea.

The Scala, which obtained an immense popularity and has made its author famous in the Church, is addressed to anchorites and cenobites and treats of the means by which the highest degree of religious perfection may be attained.

Divided into thirty parts, or “steps”, in memory of the thirty years of the life of Christ, the Divine model of the religious, it presents a picture of all the virtues and contains a great many parables and historical touches, drawn principally from the monastic life, and exhibiting the practical application of the precepts.

The Scala consists of 30 chapters or “rungs”:

  1. Renunciation
  2. Detachment
  3. Exile or pilgrimage
  4. Obedience
  5. Repentance
  6. Reembrace of death
  7. Mourning
  8. Anger and meekness
  9. Remembrance of wrongs
  10. Slander or calumny
  11. Talkativeness and silence
  12. Lying
  13. Despondency
  14. Gluttony
  15. Purity and chastity
  16. Love of money or avarice
  17. Non possessiveness
  18. Insensibility
  19. Sleep (and psalmody)
  20. Bodily vigil
  21. Cowardice
  22. Vainglory
  23. Pride and blasphemous thoughts
  24. Meekness, simplicity and guilelessness
  25. Humility
  26. Discernment: thoughts, passion and virtues
  27. Stillness
  28. Prayer
  29. Godlike dispassion
  30. Trinity and the virtues

Source:  The Ladder of Divine Ascent by St. John Climacus

Our Lady of Guadalupe, Patroness of the Americas

She is Rising in the East

A presentation on the iconography, Codex and symbols contained in the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

Feast Day of Our Lady of Guadalupe: December 12

Quote by Pope Francis:

“Tomorrow is the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Patroness of the Americas. On this occasion, I wish to greet the brothers and sisters of this continent, and I do so thinking of the Virgin of Tepeyac.

When she appeared to St. Juan Diego, her face was that of a mestiza (mixed race) woman and her clothes were full of symbols of the indigenous culture. Following the example of Jesus, Mary is close to her children. She accompanies them on their way as a solicitous mother, and shares the joys and hopes, sufferings and anxieties of the people of God, who are called to form part of all the peoples of the earth.

The appearance of the image of the Virgin on the tilma of Juan Diego was a prophetic sign of an embrace, Mary’s embrace, of all the inhabitants of the vast American lands, both those who were already there and those who came after.”

The historical account of the five apparitions in three days is based on the oldest written record of the miracle of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the Nican Mopohua, written in Náhuatl about 1540 by Don Antonio Valeriano, one of the first Aztec Indians educated by the Franciscans at the Bishop’s Colégio de la Santa Cruz. An illustration of the apparition event with the signatures of Don Antonio Valeriano and his teacher Father Bernardino de Sahagún with the date 1548 was recently uncovered in a private collection in 1995, now referred to as the Codex 1548. The Codex 1548 has been scientifically determined to be genuine, and substantiates the historical basis of the apparition of Guadalupe.

The Jesuit Father Miguel Sanchez published the first Spanish work on Guadalupe, Imagen de la Virgen Maria Madre de Dios de Guadalupe in 1648. Brother Luis Lasso de la Vega published in Náhuatl the Nican Mopohua; the Nican Motecpana, an account of fourteen miracles of Our Lady; and other documents in a collection known as Huey Tlamahuizoltica in 1649.

The theologian Luis Becerra Tanco published his work on the tradition of Guadalupe in 1675. Finally, the Jesuit professor of theology Francisco de Florencia produced his account of the apparition in 1688. These four writers have been important in the preservation of the tradition of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

The history of the event is of prime importance. The precipitous conversion of over 8 million Aztec Indians to Catholicism in seven years is highly indicative of the miracle of Guadalupe. Dr Alan Schreck of Franciscan University has pointed out that great historical movements do not result from non-events.

Stars on the Tilma

A study by Dr. Hernandez Illescas of 150 icons and paintings of the Virgin of Guadalupe during the 17th and 18th centuries following the revelation on “December 12th  1531” did not reveal a single replica or copy in which the viewer could recognize the constellations depicted on the original Tilma (cloak) of Juan Diego.

Source: “La Virgen de Guadalupe y Las Estrallas, Dr. Juan Homero Hernandez Illescas; Pbo. Mario Rojas, Mons. Enrique Salazar, Centro des Estudios Guadalupanos.

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