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TRÁI TIM
MẸ: NƠI CON NƯƠNG NÁU - ĐƯỜNG ĐẾN VỚI CHÚA |
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"Chúa Giêsu muốn dùng con để làm
cho Mẹ được nhận biết và yêu mến" |
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February 6, 2009 - Friday in 4th
Week of Ordinary Time
LITURGICAL/THEME MEDITATION:
"Some said, 'John the baptizer has been
raised from the dead' "
UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENT(S):
Papal Schedule Released Through Easter
SAINT OF THE DAY
St. Paul Miki and
Companions
GENERAL
MARIOLOGY
POPE JOHN
PAUL II ON BLESSED MARY
Mary has role in Jesus’ saving mission
DIVINE MERCY
On Mercy
Tell Souls of Your Goodness
TEACHING/TESTIMONY/CONVICTION:
On Paul's Death and Heritage

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DAILY LITURGICAL MEDITATION |
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"Some said, 'John the baptizer has been
raised from the dead' "
Scripture: Mark 6:14-29
14 King Herod heard of it; for Jesus' name had become known. Some
said, "John the baptizer has been raised from the dead; that is why
these powers are at work in him." 15 But others said, "It is Eli'jah."
And others said, "It is a prophet, like one of the prophets of old." 16
But when Herod heard of it he said, "John, whom I beheaded, has been
raised." 17 For Herod had sent and seized John, and bound him in prison
for the sake of Hero'di-as, his brother Philip's wife; because he had
married her. 18 For John said to Herod, "It is not lawful for you to
have your brother's wife." 19 And Hero'di-as had a grudge against him,
and wanted to kill him. But she could not, 20 for Herod feared John,
knowing that he was a righteous and holy man, and kept him safe. When he
heard him, he was much perplexed; and yet he heard him gladly. 21 But
an opportunity came when Herod on his birthday gave a banquet for his
courtiers and officers and the leading men of Galilee. 22 For when
Hero'di-as' daughter came in and danced, she pleased Herod and his
guests; and the king said to the girl, "Ask me for whatever you wish,
and I will grant it." 23 And he vowed to her, "Whatever you ask me, I
will give you, even half of my kingdom." 24 And she went out, and said
to her mother, "What shall I ask?" And she said, "The head of John the
baptizer." 25 And she came in immediately with haste to the king, and
asked, saying, "I want you to give me at once the head of John the
Baptist on a platter." 26 And the king was exceedingly sorry; but
because of his oaths and his guests he did not want to break his word to
her. 27 And immediately the king sent a soldier of the guard and gave
orders to bring his head. He went and beheaded him in the prison, 28 and
brought his head on a platter, and gave it to the girl; and the girl
gave it to her mother. 29 When his disciples heard of it, they came and
took his body, and laid it in a tomb.
Meditation: Do you ever feel haunted by a past failure or a
guilty conscience? King Herod, the most powerful and wealthy man in
Judea, had everything he wanted, except a clear conscience and peace
with God. Herod had respected and feared John the Baptist as a great
prophet and servant of God. John, however did not fear to rebuke Herod
for his adulterous relationship with his brother's wife. John ended up
in prison because of Herodias' jealousy. Herod, out of impulse and a
desire to please his family and friends, had John beheaded. Now Herod's
conscience is pricked when he hears that some think that the Baptist has
risen.
When Herod heard the fame of Jesus he supposed that John the
Baptist, whom he had beheaded, had returned from the dead. Unfortunately
for Herod, he could not rid himself of sin by ridding himself of the man
who confronted him with his sin. Herod was a weak man. He could take a
strong stand on the wrong things when he knew the right. Such a stand,
however, was a sign of weakness and cowardice. The Lord gives grace to
the humble, to those who acknowledge their sins and who seek God's mercy
and pardon. His grace and pardon not only frees us from a guilty
conscience, it enables us to pursue holiness in thought and action as
well. God's grace enables us to fight fear with faith and to overcome
the temptation to compromise goodness and truth with wrongdoing and
falsehood. Do you rely on God's grace and help to choose his way of
holiness and to reject whatever would compromise your faith and loyalty
to Christ?
"Heavenly Father, form in me the likeness of your Son that I may
imitate him in word and deed. Help me to live the gospel faithfully and
give me the strength and courage I need to not shrink back in the face
of adversity and temptation."
Psalm 18:31, 47, 50
31 For who is God, but the LORD? And who is a rock, except our God? —
47 the God who gave me vengeance and subdued peoples under me;
50 Great triumphs he gives to his king, and shows steadfast love to his
anointed, to David and his descendants for ever.
www.dailyscripture.net
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UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENTS |
Papal Schedule Released Through Easter
VATICAN CITY, FEB. 5, 2009 ( Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI has a busy few weeks ahead of him, with the start of Lent and Easter celebrations, spiritual exercises, a trip to Africa, the fourth anniversary of his predecessor's death, and his own 82nd birthday.
The Vatican released the Pope's schedule through Easter today. His birthday is four days later, on April 16.
February will be marked primarily by two celebrations: a consistory for certain causes of canonization on Saturday, Feb. 21, and the penitential procession and imposition of ashes on Feb. 25, Ash Wednesday.
Then, on the First Sunday of Lent, March 1, the Holy Father and the Roman Curia will begin their annual spiritual exercises, which last till March 7.
Just 10 days later, he leaves for his apostolic trip to Cameroon and Angola.
March will close with a pastoral visit in Rome to the parish of the Holy Face of Jesus on Sunday, March 29.
April 2 is the fourth anniversary of the death of Pope John Paul II, and Benedict XVI will mark it with a Mass for youth from the Diocese of Rome.
Then, April 5 is Palm Sunday and the Holy Father will lead the blessing of palms and celebrate Mass.
Holy Week will be characterized by the traditional celebrations, with the Pope celebrating Chrism Mass on Holy Thursday morning and the Mass of the Last Supper that evening. On Good Friday he will celebrate the Lord's Passion at 5 p.m. and participate in the Way of the Cross at the Colosseum that night.
He will celebrate the Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday, April 11, at 9 p.m.
On Easter Sunday, he will celebrate Mass in St. Peter's Square in the morning, and at midday, give his blessing "urbi et orbi" [to the city and the world].
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DAILY LITURGICAL SAINT |
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February 6, 2009
St. Paul Miki and Companions

(d. 1597)
Nagasaki, Japan, is familiar to Americans as the city on which the
second atomic bomb was dropped, killing hundreds of thousands. Three and
a half centuries before, 26 martyrs of Japan were crucified on a hill,
now known as the Holy Mountain, overlooking Nagasaki. Among them were
priests, brothers and laymen, Franciscans, Jesuits and members of the
Secular Franciscan Order; there were catechists, doctors, simple
artisans and servants, old men and innocent children—all united in a
common faith and love for Jesus and his Church.
Brother Paul Miki, a Jesuit and a native of Japan, has become the best
known among the martyrs of Japan. While hanging upon a cross Paul Miki
preached to the people gathered for the execution: “The sentence of
judgment says these men came to Japan from the Philippines, but I did
not come from any other country. I am a true Japanese. The only reason
for my being killed is that I have taught the doctrine of Christ. I
certainly did teach the doctrine of Christ. I thank God it is for this
reason I die. I believe that I am telling only the truth before I die. I
know you believe me and I want to say to you all once again: Ask Christ
to help you to become happy. I obey Christ. After Christ’s example I
forgive my persecutors. I do not hate them. I ask God to have pity on
all, and I hope my blood will fall on my fellow men as a fruitful rain.”
When missionaries returned to Japan in the 1860s, at first they found no
trace of Christianity. But after establishing themselves they found that
thousands of Christians lived around Nagasaki and that they had secretly
preserved the faith. Beatified in 1627, the martyrs of Japan were
finally canonized in 1862.
Comment:
Today a new era has come for the Church in Japan. Although the number of
Catholics is not large, the Church is respected and has total religious
freedom. The spread of Christianity in the Far East is slow and
difficult. Faith such as that of the 26 martyrs is needed today as much
as in 1597.
Quote:
“Since Jesus, the Son of God, showed his love by laying down his life
for us, no one has greater love than they who lay down their lives for
him and for their sisters and brothers (see 1 John 3:16; John 15:13).
Some Christians have been called from the beginning, and will always be
called, to give this greatest testimony of love to everyone, especially
to persecutors. Martyrdom makes disciples like their master, who
willingly accepted death for the salvation of the world, and through it
they are made like him by the shedding of blood. Therefore, the Church
considers it the highest gift and as the supreme test of love. And while
it is given to few, all, however, must be prepared to confess Christ
before humanity and to follow him along the way of the cross amid the
persecutions which the Church never lacks” (Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church, 42, Austin Flannery translation).
http://www.americancatholic.org/Features/SaintofDay
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GENERAL
MARIOLOGY |
POPE JOHN PAUL II ON BLESSED
MARY
GENERAL AUDIENCE
Wednesday, 18 December 1996
Mary has role in Jesus’ saving mission
1. After recognizing in Jesus “a light for revelation to the
Gentiles” (Lk 2:32), Simeon announces to Mary the great trial to which
the Messiah is called and reveals her participation in that sorrowful
destiny.
His reference to the redeeming sacrifice, absent at the Annunciation,
has shown in Simeon’s prophecy almost a “second Annunciation” (Redemptoris
Mater, n. 16), which will lead the Virgin to a deeper
understanding of her Son’s mystery.
Simeon, who up to that moment had addressed all those present,
blessing Joseph and Mary in particular, now prophesies to the Virgin
alone that she will share in her Son’s destiny. Inspired by the Holy
Spirit, he announces to her: “Behold, this child is set for the fall and
rising of many in Israel, and for a sign that is spoken against (and a
sword will pierce through your own soul also), that thoughts out of many
hearts may be revealed” (Lk 2:34-35).
2. These words foretell a future of suffering for the Messiah. He is,
in fact, “the sign of contradiction”, destined to meet harsh opposition
on the part of his contemporaries. But alongside Christ’s suffering
Simeon sets the vision of Mary’s heart pierced by the sword, thus
uniting the Mother with the sorrowful destiny of her Son.
In this way, while the venerable old man foresees the growing
hostility the Messiah will face, he stresses its repercussion on the
Mother’s heart. This maternal suffering will culminate in the Passion,
when she will unite with her Son in his redemptive sacrifice.
Following an allusion to the first songs of the Servant of the Lord
(cf. Is 42:6; 49:6), cited in Luke 2:32, Simeon’s words remind us of the
prophecy of the Suffering Servant (Is 52:13; 53:12), who, “wounded for
our transgressions” (Is 53:5), “makes himself an offering for sin” (Is
53:10) through a personal and spiritual sacrifice which far exceeds the
ancient ritual sacrifices. Here we can note how Simeon’s prophecy allows
us to glimpse in Mary’s future suffering a unique likeness to the
sorrowful future of the “Servant”.
3. Mary and Joseph are astounded when Simeon proclaims Jesus as a
“light for revelation to the Gentiles” (Lk 2:32). Mary, instead, with
reference to the prophecy of the sword that would pierce her heart, says
nothing. Together with Joseph, she accepts in silence those mysterious
words which predict a deeply sorrowful trial and situate the
Presentation of Jesus in the temple in its most authentic meaning.
Indeed, according to the divine plan the sacrifice offered then
“according to what is said in the law of the Lord, ‘a pair of
turtle-doves, or two young pigeons’” (Lk 2:24), prefigured the sacrifice
of Jesus, “for I am gentle and lowly in heart” (Mt 11:29); in it the
true “presentation” would be made (cf. Lk 2:22), which would see the
Mother associated with her Son in the work of Redemption.
4. Simeon’s prophecy is followed by the meeting with the prophetess
Anna: “She gave thanks to God, and spoke of him to all who were looking
for the redemption of Jerusalem” (Lk 2:38). The faith and prophetic
wisdom of the old woman who nurtures the expectation of the Messiah by
“worshipping with fasting and prayer night and day” (Lk 2:37), offer the
Holy Family a further incentive to put their hope in the God of Israel.
At this particular moment, Anna’s behaviour would have appeared to Mary
and Joseph as a sign from the Lord, a message of enlightened faith and
persevering service.
Beginning with Simeon’s prophecy, Mary intensely and mysteriously
unites her life with Christ’s sorrowful mission: she was to become her
Son's faithful coworker for the salvation of the human race.
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DIVINE MERCY
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On Mercy
Tell Souls of Your
Goodness
I want to tell souls of
Your goodness and encourage them to trust in Your mercy.
That is my mission, which You Yourself have entrusted to me,
O Lord, in this life and in the life to come (Diary,
1325).
Profound silence engulfs my soul. Not a single cloud hides
the sun from me. I lay myself entirely open to its rays,
that His love may effect a complete transformation in me. I
want to come out of this retreat a saint, and this, in spite
of everything; that is to say, in spite of my wretchedness,
I want to become a saint, and I trust that God's mercy can
make a saint even out of such misery as I am, because I am
utterly in good will (Diary, 1333).
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CATHOLIC TEACHING/CONVICTION/TESTIMONY |
On Paul's Death and Heritage
"The Figure of St. Paul Is Magnified Beyond His Earthly Life"
VATICAN CITY, FEB. 4, 2009 ( Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave today at the general audience in Paul VI Hall.
He concluded today his series of catechesis on St. Paul.
* * *
Dear brothers and sisters:
The series of our catechesis on the figure of St. Paul has arrived to its conclusion: We wish to speak today of the end of his earthly life. Ancient Christian tradition testifies unanimously that the death of Paul came as a consequence of martyrdom suffered here in Rome. The writings of the New Testament do not take up this fact. The Acts of the Apostles ends its report indicating the Apostle's condition as a prisoner, who nevertheless could receive all those who visited him (cf. Acts 28:30-31).
Only in the Second Letter to Timothy do we find these, his foreboding words: "For I am at the point of being poured out like a libation, and the time of my releasing the canvas [departure] is at hand" (2 Timothy 4:6; cf. Philippians 2:17). Two images are used here, the liturgical one of sacrifice, which he had already used in the Letter to the Philippians, interpreting martyrdom as part of the sacrifice of Christ; and the seafaring [image] of casting off: two images that together discreetly allude to the event of death, and of a bloody death.
The first explicit testimony about the end of St. Paul comes to us from the middle of the 90s of the first century, and therefore, something more than 30 years after his death took place. It comes precisely from the letter that the Church of Rome, with its bishop, Clement I, wrote to the Church of Corinth.
In that epistolary text, the invitation is made to have the example of the apostles before our eyes, and immediately after the mention of Peter's martyrdom, it reads thus: "Owing to envy and discord, Paul was obligated to show us how to obtain the prize of patience. Arrested seven times, exiled, stoned, he was the herald of Christ in the East and in the West, and for his faith, obtained a pure glory. After having preached justice in the whole world, and after having arrived to the corners of the West, he accepted martyrdom before the governors; thus he parted from this world and arrived to the holy place, thereby converted into the greatest model of patience" (1 Clement 5,2).
The patience of which it speaks is the expression of his communion with the passion of Christ, of the generosity and constancy with which he accepted a long path of suffering, to the point of being able to say: "I bear the marks of Jesus on my body" (Galatians 6:17).
We heard in the text of St. Clement that Paul had arrived "to the corners of the West." It is debated whether this refers to a trip to Spain that Paul would have carried out. There is not certainty about this, though it is true that St. Paul in his Letter to the Romans expresses his intention to go to Spain (cf. Romans 15:24).
It is very interesting, in the letter from Clement, the succession of the two names of Peter and Paul, even though these will be inverted in the testimony of Eusebius of Caesarea in the fourth century. When speaking of the Emperor Nero he wrote: "During his reign Paul was beheaded precisely in Rome and Peter was there crucified. The report is confirmed by the names of Peter and of Paul, which even today are conserved in their sepulchers in this city" (Hist. Eccl. 2,25,5).
Eusebius later would continue relating a previous declaration of a Roman presbyter by the name of Gaius, who dates back to the beginnings of the second century: "I can show you the trophies of the apostles: If you go to the Vatican or the Via Ostiense, there you will find the trophies of the founders of the Church" (ibid. 2,25,6-7).
The "trophies" are the sepulchral monuments, and these are the same sepulchers of Peter and Paul that even today we venerate, after two millenniums in the same place: here in the Vatican regarding St. Peter, in the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls on the Via Ostiense regarding that of the Apostle to the Gentiles.
It is interesting to point out that the two great apostles are mentioned together. Though no ancient source speaks of a contemporary ministry of theirs in Rome, the successive Christian awareness, on the basis of their common burial in the capital of the empire, will also associate them as founders of the Church of Rome. Thus it is read, in fact, in Irenaeus of Lyons, from the end of the second century, regarding the apostolic succession in the distinct Churches: "It would be tedious to enumerate the successions of all the Churches, we do take the very great and very ancient and well-known Church, the Church founded and established in Rome by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul" (Adv. Haer. 3,3,2).
Let us leave aside the figure of Peter and concentrate on that of Paul. His martyrdom comes recounted for the first time in the Acts of Paul, written toward the end of the second century. These report that Nero condemned him to death by beheading, carried out immediately afterward (cf. 9:5). The date of the death varies according to the ancient sources, which place it between the persecution unleashed by Nero himself after the burning of Rome in July of 64 and the last year of his reign, in 68 (cf. Jerome, De Viris Ill. 5,8).
The calculation depends a lot on the chronology of Paul's arrival in Rome, a discussion that we cannot get into here. Successive traditions would pin down two other elements. One, the most legendary, is that the martyrdom took place on the Acquae Salviae, on the Via Laurentina, with a triple bounce of the head, each one of which caused a current of water to spring out, due to which even today the place is called "Tre Fontane" (Acts of Peter and Paul of Pseudo Marcellus of the fifth century).
The other, in consonance with the ancient testimony already mentioned, of the presbyter Gaius, is that the burial occurred "not only outside of the city, in the second mile of the Via Ostiense," but more precisely "in the field of Lucina," who was a Christian matron (Passion of Paul of Pseudo Abdias, of the sixth century).
There in the fourth century, the emperor Constantine erected a first church, later enormously amplified after the fourth and fifth century by Emperors Valentinianus II, Theodosius and Arcadius. After the fire of 1800, there was erected the current Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls.
In any case, the figure of St. Paul is magnified beyond his earthly life and his death; he has left in fact an extraordinary spiritual heritage. He as well, as a true disciple of Jesus, became a sign of contradiction. While among the so-called ebionites -- a Judeo-Christian current -- he was considered as an apostate of the Mosaic Law, already in the book of Acts of the Apostles, there appears a great veneration for the Apostle Paul.
I would like now to set aside the apocryphal literature, such as the Acts of Paul and Thecla and an apocryphal collection of letters between the Apostle Paul and the philosopher Seneca. It is important to confirm that very soon the Letters of St. Paul enter into the liturgy, where the prophet-apostle-Gospel structure is determinant for the form of the liturgy of the Word. Thus, thanks to this "presence" in the liturgy of the Church, the thought of the Apostle at once becomes spiritual nourishment for the faithful of all times.
It is obvious that the fathers of the Church and afterward all the theologian have drawn form the Letters of St. Paul and his spirituality. He has remained during the centuries, until today, as true teacher and apostle to the Gentiles. The first patristic commentary that has arrived to us regarding a writing of the New Testament is from the great Alexandrian theologian Origen, who comments on the Letter of St. Paul to the Romans.
This commentary is unfortunately conserved only in part. St. John Chrysostom, besides commenting his letters, has written of him his seven memorable panegyrics. St. Augustine owes him the decisive step of his own conversion and he will return to Paul during all of his life. From this permanent dialogue with the Apostle derives his great Catholic theology and also for Protestants of all times. St. Thomas Aquinas has left us a beautiful commentary on the Pauline letters, which represents the most mature fruit of medieval exegesis.
A true point of inflection was verified in the 16th century with the Protestant Reformation. The decisive moment in Luther's life was the so-called Turmerlebnis (1517) in which in one moment he encountered a new interpretation of the Pauline doctrine on justification. An interpretation that liberated him from the scruples and anxieties of his preceding life and that gave him a new, radical confidence in the goodness of God, who pardons everything without condition. From that moment, Luther identified the Judeo-Christian legalism condemned by the Apostle with the order of life of the Catholic Church. And the Church appeared to him as an expression of the slavery to the law to which he opposed the liberty of the Gospel. The Council of Trent, between 1545 and 1563, deeply interpreted the question of justification and encountered in the line of all Catholic tradition the synthesis between law and Gospel, conforming to the message of sacred Scripture read in its totality and unity.
The 19th century, gathering the best heritage of the Enlightenment, witnessed a new renovation of Paulinism, now above all in the plane of scientific work developed for the historical-critical interpretation of sacred Scripture. Let us set aside here the fact that also in that century, as in the 20th, there emerged a true and proper denigration of St. Paul. I think above all of Nietzsche, who poked fun at the theology of humility in St. Paul, opposing to it his theology of the strong and powerful man. But let us leave that aside and look at the essential current of the new scientific interpretation of sacred Scripture and the new Paulinism of that century.
Here is emphasized as central above all the Pauline thought of the concept of liberty: In this is seen the heart of the thought of Paul, as on the other hand, Luther had already intuited. Now, nevertheless, the concept of liberty was reinterpreted in the context of modern liberalism. And later, the differentiation between the proclamation of St. Paul and the proclamation of Jesus was strongly emphasized. And St. Paul appears almost as a new founder of Christianity. It is certain that in St. Paul, the centrality of the Kingdom of God, determinant for the proclamation of Jesus, is transformed in the centrality of Christology, whose determinant point is the Paschal mystery. And from the Paschal mystery, come the sacraments of baptism and Eucharist, as a permanent presence of this mystery, from which the Body of Christ grows, and the Church is built.
But I would say, without entering here into details, that precisely in the new centrality of Christology and the Paschal mystery, the Kingdom of God is fulfilled, the authentic proclamation of Jesus is made concrete, present, operative. We have seen in the preceding catechesis that precisely this Pauline novelty is the deepest fidelity to the proclamation of Jesus. In the progress of exegesis, above all in the last 200 years, the convergences between Catholic and Protestant exegesis also grow, thus bringing about a notable consensus precisely in the point that was at the origin of the greatest historical dissent. Therefore a great hope for the cause of ecumenism, so central for the Second Vatican Council.
Briefly, I would like at the end to still point out the various religious movements, arising in the modern age in the heart of the Catholic Church, that refer back to St. Paul. That's what came about in the 16th century with the Clerics Regular of St. Paul, called the Barnabites; in the 19th century with the Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle, better known as the Paulist Fathers; and in the 20th century with the multifaceted Pauline Family, founded by Blessed James Alberione; to not speak of the secular institute of the Company of St Paul.
Substantially, there remains luminous before us the figure of an extremely fruitful and deep apostle and Christian thinker, from whose closeness, every one of us can benefit. In one of his panegyrics, St. John Chrysostom made an original comparison between Paul and Noah, expressing it like this: Paul "did not place together the shafts to build an ark, instead, in place of uniting tablets of wood, he composed letters, and thus dug out of the waters not two or three or five members of his own family, but the entire inhabited world that was about to perish" (Paneg. 1,5).
Precisely still and always the Apostle Paul can do this. To tend toward him, as much to his apostolic example as to his doctrine, would be therefore a stimulus, if not a guarantee, to consolidate the Christian identity of each one of us and for the renewal of the whole Church.
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