Thursday, April 30, 2009

Sunday Reading Reflections:

Fourth Sunday of Easter
May 3rd, 2009
by
Larry Gillick, S.J.
Deglman Center for Ignatian Spirituality






PREPRAYING:


We are encouraged to pray for the strength and courage to lay down our lives as did the Good Shepherd. We all will die of course, but how we live our days of life will be the measure of our following Jesus. We are encouraged not so much to “die” for Christ, but “live” for Christ.

Most of us are laying down our lives for some person or persons. We pray today for the freedom and joy which it takes to really live while dying to ourselves.

REFLECTION:

The temple officials and religious leaders have arrested Peter and John after the healing of the man who was crippled. Many, because of this healing, were coming to believe in their message about Jesus. Peter and John are dragged into the midst of this religious gathering and asked two direct questions about the healing event. They want to know by what “power” and by what “name” was this performed?

What we hear in today’s First Reading is Peter’s explanation and direct confrontation with the leaders. The “name” and the “power” are the same. Jesus, crucified by these same leaders, but Who the very God of Israel has raised has also raised this man who had been crippled, to health. The elders are the “builders” and they have rejected Jesus Who is the “Cornerstone” of salvation. This is a scriptural image referring to a line from Psalm 118. Peter affirms Jesus as the One and Only source for salvation, given to the world by the God of these religious leaders of Israel.

Peter and John have done a “good deed” and in keeping with the ways of Jesus, good deeds done in His name, can result in opposition and fear-based persecution. From its earliest days, the Church and the followers of Jesus have been called out, knocked down, and done in by those forces of darkness and fear. It follows then that when there is persecution of the Church, the Church must be doing something good.

For the next several Sundays of this Easter season we will be hearing some familiar themes from the Gospel of John. Jesus makes many imaginative “I am “statements. “I am the light.” “I am the bread of life.” “I am the living water.” “I am the way, the truth and the life.” When the guards come out to meet Him in the Garden, they are asked about whom they seek. Jesus says simply, “I am.”

In today’s Gospel we hear Jesus say twice “I am the good shepherd.” John has Jesus continue Jesus’ discussion and confrontation with the Pharisees after His having healed a man who was born blind. This man, who was blind, first heard the voice of Jesus and through believing in that voice came to believe and that was his new way of seeing.

The Pharisees are blinded by what they see and so are impaired of hearing and do not believe. Hearing and believing becomes the central message of Jesus’ saying that He is the “Good Shepherd”. It is the shepherd’s voice that is important and the sheep are not ignorant, but attentive and responsive. Jesus is telling those who can hear and want to hear important aspects of just what the Shepherd does for His flock.

In other chapters John has presented Jesus as teacher, finder, healer, feeder and forgiver. In this reading, Jesus is presented as the Shepherd Who will lay down His life for His flock. He will stay faithful to Whom He is while the “hired” or the Pharisees turn away and have turned away from their vocation of tending their “flock”. Jesus is very direct with His listeners who do not want to hear, but they obviously do. He announces that He will stay faithful to Himself and His mission and thereby to the “flock”, because of the love of His Father. The Pharisees hear that they are interested only in their being paid and so have made that their mission and not caringly guide their “flock”.

Jesus claims that He is living this through, because the Father loves Him and and desires that all of God’s people become one holy family with the Father. This ultimate uniting will depend on the mission of Jesus being continued through the verbal and non-verbal preaching and living of His Voice, the Good News.

Each time John presents Jesus as saying “I am”, John is also saying that Jesus claims His followers as those who can also say with confidence, “I am” and “we are”. In this section we are not sheep, but listeners who learn the tenor and timber of His voice and message. We have learned and continue to learn the other voices within and around us. They can sound so inviting, comforting, and of Grace. They just might truly be, but it takes a long time to be so in tuned with the Voice of Jesus, that we need experiences of life and prayer to figure out the difference. Our egos need attention but not constant indulgence. Our fears are to be respected, but not adored. Our cultures”’ ways are to be influential, but not conformed to entirely.

Most of us, upon listening to our own recorded voices, wonder if that is really us! What we sound like to others is not the exact way we sound like to ourselves. People who are visually impaired learn quickly who is who by their footsteps, pace, noisiness as well as their voices. Jesus is telling us that He will keep calling in the same voice and when we begin to follow, He will keep speaking. There will always be other voices, from within ourselves and from outside. How will we ever learn! One sure way, (I know you are not going to like this), is to trust the adventure of mystery. It seems that is part of His voice pattern. The Pharisees did not like it either, but the man who was cured from his blindness came to like it.

“The Good Shepherd is risen! He who laid down his life for his sheep, who died for his flock, he is risen, alleluia.”

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Sunday Gospel Reflection:

April 26th, 2009
by Larry Gillick, S.J.
Deglman Center for Ignatian Spirituality



PREPRAYING

We pray for the grace of youthful joy. This grace for which we long does not return us to the innocence of our youth, but the sense of our being re-embraced. It is the season of Baptism and we pray with the infants and the adults who are “claimed by Christ” as His own.

Easter lingers in our church assemblies and the readings and prayers keep insisting that we allow the grace of joy to return and flow in and around us. Our memories can also insist that we have walked away and forgotten and forsaken our own baptismal joy. We can pray that we remember as well, at these times, the life, death and resurrection of the most Innocent all to re-immerse us by His ever-flowing love.

I was privileged to concelebrate Easter-morning liturgy recently at the Sacred Heart Church in the town of Pine Ridge South Dakota. It was a cloudless dawning and as I was standing in the back of the little Jesuit parish church, Delbert Yellow Horse greeted me and said, “Today I am going to drown myself in the sunshine.” His words rearranged the homily I had prepared and prayed over earlier. We had had a total emersion in an adult baptism the night before in a beautifully decorated “horse stock tank”. The lovely young woman candidate had had some kind of almost drowning in the blest Holy Water. Delbert was planning on celebrating Easter joy by his drowning in the love of God into which he had been baptized years before. He was imagining the warm sun as how God has loved him and his Lakota People for centuries.

REFLECTION:

The readings today are full of Easter excitement. Peter is speaking to a crowd of Jewish spectators who have come to witness the man whom Peter and John had cured from paralysis. He had been begging for money, but the two apostles could not give them silver or gold, but rather a recovery of his mobility through the Holy Spirit.

Peter begins his speech with a kind of Scripture lesson. He reminds them that the God of their religious fathers, the Patriarchs, has revealed Jesus to be the servant of the Scriptures.

Peter reviews how the listeners had been complicit in the handing over of this Servant to His death. There is within Peter’s proclamation, not a condemnation, but a call to receive what God has done after considering what his listeners had done. Peter ends with a comforting call to repentance and life offered through Jesus Whose death and resurrection was written in their Holy Scriptures. He invites his listeners to drown themselves in the forgiveness of Christ, Who before He was born, was buried prophetically in their own sacred writings. This Christ, the Servant of Suffering, once buried in a tomb, now is alive and giving life to all who believe.

This Easter season, for the liturgies of Sunday, we do not hear of the two men walking rejectedly away from Jerusalem toward their home town of Emmaus. What we do hear in today’s Gospel is the story they are relating to their companions about how Jesus met them in their broken dreams and in the “breaking of bread”. Their excitement is that of two persons who have just come out of the best movie they had ever seen.

I personally have never failed to grow tired listening to friends as they relate some film they have just seen. It does lose something in the translation. If I enjoy anything it is the experience of two people who have seen the movie together and keep interrupting each other with details which really don’t assist my unenjoyment. Well, here are these two returning veterans from the battle of faith in Jerusalem these latter days and behold who does the interrupting. I doubt the listeners to the excited fellows were bored with their resurrectional stories. In a sense we are being introduced to a kind of Sunday liturgy.

The congregation has listened to the word which brings Jesus alive. Then Jesus appears in a Eucharistic display. Jesus does admit that He is a challenge to their believing. The Greeks for whom Luke is writing mainly, do not believe in the resurrection of the body, so Luke has to stress this central mystery. Jesus offers them His body with its wounds and then eats fish to show He is not a ghost. The liturgy ends with a little scriptural review of how the prophets and psalms had indicated His death and Resurrection. The liturgy ends with a Rite of Dismissal, that those who have been witnesses are to announce the call to repentance and the announcement of God’s mercy, beginning from right where they are.

If I ever get in charge of redesigning the Eucharistic liturgy I would begin with the Rite of Sending! Now I know that there are many who just cannot wait to begin sharing the Good News so they leave the congregation before the liturgical Rite of Dismissal. I admire their zeal. For the others who stick around, I would have a little silent reflection time about such topics as “to whom are you sent?” “To whom are you to extend forgiveness?” “What gifts have you been given to distribute?” I might have everybody write down their reflections and then the presider would bless them and announce loudly “The world is waiting, your families are waiting, and the needy are waiting! Go in peace to continue the mass as people who are sent beginning right where you are!”

“Let all the earth cry out to God with joy; praise the glory of His name; proclaim His glorious praise, Alleluia.”

Friday, April 17, 2009

Sunday Reading Reflections:

Second Sunday of Easter / Divine Mercy Sunday, Year B
Sunday, April 19, 2009

Some of us remember when we spoke of the Sundays 'after' Easter. The terminology has changed and we now speak of the Sundays 'of' Easter. In other words, we now recognise that the liturgical readings and prayers for each Sunday between Easter and Pentecost invite us into a different movement of the one great symphony of resurrection faith.

Acts 2:32-35

In this passage, Luke presents an idealised picture of the post resurrection Jerusalem community-all things in common and the gospel received with great respect. This picture has a particular resonance in the aftermath of the Victorian bushfires and the Queensland floods. We respond with love and generosity in times of crisis. How can we continue to live this gospel message in 'ordinary time'?


John 20:19-3


The first scene in today's gospel has the disciples hiding behind closed doors 'for fear' of those who had handed Jesus over to be executed by the Roman authorities. Jesus appears among them, offers a greeting of peace, and tells them that he has been sent by God, his 'Father'.

They receive from him the gift of the Holy Spirit. He sends them in turn to bring peace and to mediate the forgiveness of God through the power of the Spirit.

The story invites us as believers to place ourselves in the shoes of the earliest disciples. It invites us to receive the gift of the Spirit, to emerge from behind the doors that close us in on ourselves, and that prevent us from rising above the fear of reprisals in the pursuit of justice and peace.

The second and third scenes in today's gospel focus on Thomas who is not with the other disciples when Jesus first appears in their midst.

Thomas is not exactly the trusting type. He seems to trust only his own first hand experience.

We all know people like Thomas. They test our patience because they seem to lack imagination. Then they make big statements when they come around to understanding what everyone else has known for a while.

If we think, however, that those who hear in the first place are any better than Thomas, we need to note that the doors are still closed eight days down the track! The simple fact of knowing has not dispelled the fears.

Even those who do believe and trust need a bit of time to take the gospel message to heart.

by Sr. Veronica Lawson RSM (East Ballarat)

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Easter Triduum Reflection:

THE EASTER TRIDUUM
By Fr. Anscar Chupungco, OSB




1. "On the third day he rose again from the dead". From this article of faith the church developed the observance of the Easter Triduum.

a. St. Ambrose (Letter 23) writes: "It is necessary that we observe not only the day of Christ's passion, but also the day of his resurrection, so that we may have a day of bitterness as well as day of joy. This is the holy Triduum in which Christ suffered, was buried, and rose again". Hence, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. St. Augustine (Letter 55) explains: This is "the most holy Triduum of the Savior crucified, buried, and risen again".

b. Toward the seventh century the Roman Church introduced the memory of the Lord's Supper on Holy Thursday with an evening Mass. By the tenth century Holy Thursday came to be regarded as part of the Triduum, which meant that Sunday was excluded from it. Vatican II has made a compromise, by extending the concept of Triduum to the evening of Holy Thursday.

2. From the time of Tertullian in the third century Good Friday and Holy Saturday were days of fasting, while Easter was the day for feasting. The two days of fasting were an immediate preparation of the catechumens for baptism, with the Christian community observing the fast with them. Fasting was from sunrise to sunset. Because Holy Communion was considered to break the fast Mass was not celebrated on Good Friday and Holy Saturday.

a. Today the church prescribes only two days of fasting: on Ash Wednesday, when the public penitents began their preparation for the sacrament of reconciliation which they would receive on Holy Thursday, and on Good Friday, when the Bridegroom was taken away from us (cf. Lk 5:35). "Let the paschal fast be kept sacred. Let it be observed everywhere on Good Friday and, where possible, prolonged throughout Holy Saturday, as a way of coming to the joys of the Sunday of the resurrection with uplifted and welcoming heart" (SC 110).

b. People fast for various motives: because of poverty, asceticism, protest, or cosmetic reason. The Good Friday fast is our way of expressing sorrow over the suffering and death of Christ, and of showing our union with those who on this day and even on Easter Sunday are forced to fast on account of poverty.

3. Feasting begins on Easter vigil when candidates are baptized, when the Christian community renews its baptismal promises, and when the risen Christ hosts the Easter table of his body and blood. Easter Sunday is the day of days, which is extended to eight days (octave), as if these were still Easter Sunday. In antiquity this was insinuated to by the practice of the neophytes who wore their white baptismal garment for eight days. The preface for the entire week makes us repeat daily: "On this day, when Christ became our paschal sacrifice"

HOLY THURSDAY

1. Until the seventh century the Roman Church ended the Lenten observance on Holy Thursday morning with the reconciliation of public penitents by the bishop in the presence of the faithful. These were penitents that had been chosen on Ash Wednesday for reconciliation. As sign of penance they had been covered with ashes on Ash Wednesday and dressed in sackcloth.

The 13th century rite of reconciliation was dramatic. Penitents waited outside the church while the archdeacon pleaded for them. He addressed the bishop in these words: “Holy Father, the time for reconciliation of penitents has come. There is water for baptism, and there are tears for penance”. Baptism was called the “first penance” (meaning first conversion or “metanoia”). By baptism the candidate crossed the water of rebirth; through tears of compunction the penitent obtained reconciliation.

2. At midday the Mass was celebrated during which the holy oils were consecrated by the bishop. Today this is known as Chrism Mass, though the other oils (for catechumens and for the sick) are also blessed. Since the time of Pope Paul VI the Chrism Mass has become a significant occasion for priests to renew their priestly commitment.

3. In the evening another Mass was celebrated. It would seem that by the tenth century this Mass commemorated the Last Supper. Eventually this evening Mass and the entire day of Holy Thursday became part of the Easter Triduum to the extent of dislodging Easter Sunday. The reform of Vatican II has included Easter Sunday and extended the Triduum to the evening of Holy Thursday. Thus the Triduum opens grandly with the commemoration of the Lord’s Supper.

4. The washing of feet existed by the middle of the fifth century in Jerusalem whence it was adopted by the other Churches in the East and the West. The papal household toward the seventh century practiced it after the evening Mass, but it did not form part of the liturgy until the reform of Vatican II. After washing the feet of his household the pope partook of supper in the company of the poor: the Eucharist overflowed in a meal with the people with whom Jesus wanted to be identified, namely the poor and the marginalized.

It is important to see the connection between the Eucharist and the washing of the feet. The washing of the feet is not merely a dramatic representation of what Jesus did at the Last Supper. In the Gospel of John, which does not contain the story of the institution of the Eucharist, the washing of the feet is the concrete symbol of what the Eucharist is all about: humble service. The washing of the feet is a graphic symbol and image of the Eucharist.

Holy Thursday used to be called Maundy Thursday (Maundy is an English version of the Latin “mandatum” or command). It is the day when the Church recalls the Lord’s command at the Lat Supper to “do this in memory of me”. In the gospel of John this command is expressed in the other command “to wash each other’s feet” as sign of mutual service. Thus Holy Thursday is Maundy Thursday because of the double command of the Lord to celebrate the Eucharist in his memory and to express the meaning of the Eucharist by serving each other in the spirit of his love and sacrifice.

To express concretely the meaning of the washing of the feet, the Church urges us on this day to offer gifts in cash or kind for the poor (this is the only day of the year when this is explicitly mentioned in liturgical books). On Holy Thursday we reflect on this command in favor of the poor in the mixing of wine and water, in the collection for the poor, and in the sharing in communion where we receive a small piece of bread to symbolize that we eat less so that the poor may have something to eat.

It is a practice to have the “twelve apostles”. There is no reason why they should not be representatives of the different sectors of the community. Three things should be noted: 1) it is not necessary to have twelve (the number can be more or less than twelve); 2) they are to be male persons, as the Church discipline requires; and 3) they should be morally respectable.

5. The reposition of sacred hosts not consumed during Mass was an ancient practice, which was later solemnized on Holy Thursday toward the thirteenth century when Pope Urban IV introduced the feast of Corpus Christi.

6. The stripping of altar cloths was an ancient practice to signify the end of the Eucharistic celebration, in the same way as we remove table cloths after a solemn dinner. Today the stripping of the altar cloth is taken to symbolize the stripping of Christ at his passion, but there is no historical basis for this.

GOOD FRIDAY OF THE LORD'S PASSION

A. The Celebration of the Lord's Passion

1. The celebration of the Lord's passion on Good Friday is not done in the form of a Eucharistic celebration because of the ancient tradition of fasting.

2. The celebration takes basically the form of a liturgy of the word with the veneration of the cross and Holy Communion. The central part of the celebration is the proclamation of the passion as recorded in the Gospel of John. Through this the events of Christ's suffering and death are recalled and in some way made present to the assembly.

3. The celebration takes place at about three o'clock in the afternoon, the time when Christ died on the cross. The hour of the celebration attempts to coincides with the hour of Christ's death. We are dealing not only with an anniversary but also with the reality of the here-and-now.

B. The Liturgy of the Word

1. Toward the eighth century the liturgy of the word on Good Friday in Rome consisted of the following elements: prostration of the celebrant before the altar and silent prayer, two scriptural readings each followed by a responsorial psalm, the proclamation of the passion of Christ, and general intercessions. The liturgy of Vatican II follows this format very closely.

a. It should be kept in mind that the liturgy of the word is the central part of the Good Friday celebration. It is the Church's way of recalling and re-experiencing the greatest event in salvation history: the Church recalls and re-experiences by narrating the event.

b. The format is dialogical: for on this day, as on every occasion when the word of God is proclaimed in the liturgy, God speaks to his people and Christ continues to proclaim his gospel of suffering and death for us. Hence, we have the readings of the word of God (or proclamation), homily (or corresponding explanation), and general intercessions (or the community's response to God's proclaimed word).

2. The proclamation of the passion narrative on Good Friday is an ancient tradition in the church. In the fourth century a pilgrim from southern France, by the name of Egeria, describes how the bishop of Jerusalem read the passion of our Lord in the church of Golgotha amidst the loud wailing and weeping of the assembly. The reading of the passion is the heart of the entire liturgy. Since the Middle Ages it has been a tradition to sing it and hence to assign roles for the narration, for Christ, and the other parts.

With realism St. Augustine explains in one of his Good Friday homilies: "As we recall the passion of Christ, we see him, as it were with our eyes, nailed on the cross". Following the Mystery Theology of the Benedictine scholar Odo Casel, we may say that the event on that Friday witnessed by our Lady and the beloved disciple as they stood at the foot of the cross becomes a living reality or present to us, as we read the passion narrative. Christ is present in his word, and with him also the event of his passion and death.

3. The general intercessions conclude the liturgy of the word. The format follows the ancient usage of the Church of Rome, namely: the priest sings the introduction or invitation, then all kneel in silent prayer of petition, and the priest sings the prayer in behalf of all.

a. In the dialogical plan of the liturgy of the word the general intercessions are the assembly's response to God who has proclaimed his word. On Good Friday the general intercessions match the importance of the moment by the solemnity of their structure and the breadth of the intentions. The Good Friday general intercessions are the propitious moment to pray for the important and pressing needs of the Church and the whole world. As St. Teresa of Avila would say: when the world is on fire, we cannot pray for little things.

b. In the inaccuracy of our human tongue we could say that after the reading of the passion narrative, whereby we present to the Father what his Son has done for us and for the world, we make our petitions with confidence that he will not refuse them on account of the merits of his Son.

C. The Veneration of the Cross

1. The veneration of the cross is like a sequel to the proclamation of Christ's passion and death.

a. In the fourth century in Jerusalem the wood of the cross, discovered by Empress Helena, was venerated on Good Friday. Egeria recounts that the bishop and people bowed before the true cross and kissed it. In the seventh century the practice was introduced in Rome, where a relic of the true cross was kept in the Basilica of the Holy Cross. It should be noted that the object of veneration was not the image of Christ on the cross, but the wood of the cross.

b. In the twelfth century the cross was gradually uncovered, as part of the general scheme of dramatization. In the ninth century the antiphon "This is the wood of the cross on which hung the Savior of the world" was sung to accompany this rite. It will be recalled that on Passion Sunday or the Sunday before Palm Sunday the crucifixes and sacred images were covered, to heighten the sense of desolation and to dramatize the gospel reading assigned for that Sunday: Jn 12:36: "When Jesus had said this, he departed and hid himself from them [Jews]".

2. The Reproaches and the Trisagion were introduced in Rome in the ninth century to accompany the veneration of the cross.

a. The Reproaches add to the veneration of the cross a human touch. They make us profoundly aware of the human side of the passion of Christ. During his passion Christ never uttered a word of reproach, never a word of bitterness. He was led to the cross and crucified like a meek lamb being led to the slaughterhouse.

b. The Reproaches then should be regarded as a poetic form that expresses not any bitterness from the part of Christ but our own confession of guilt. The Reproaches are the self-reproach of a conscience stricken by grief at the sight of Christ nailed on the cross. We may read it in a reverse manner: "My Savior, what have you done for me? How have you offended me? You led me out of Egypt, from slavery to freedom, but I led you, my Savior, to the cross".

c. On the other hand, the Trisagion (thrice holy): "Holy is God, holy and strong, holy immortal one" is an affirmation of Christ's divinity. It balances the human aspect of the crucifixion of Christ, as depicted by the words of the Reproaches, by proclaiming that the suffering Christ is God. Even in his moment of utter humiliation Christ never ceased to be the Son of God. Our faith tells us that on the cross it was God who offered his human life for us.

3. Good Friday alludes to the first Friday when Adam was created; it alludes to the tree of paradise on account of which Adam fell into sin of disobedience. According to the rabbinic tradition, Adam who was created on Friday also sinned and died on a Friday. By dying on the wood of the cross (the tree) on Calvary (the "mountain" of paradise) on Friday Jesus became the new Adam.

4. In the patristic tradition, especially in the thinking of St. Augustine, Christ is the new Adam who slept the sleep of death on Calvary; from his side there flowed out blood and water, that is the Church itself, in the manner of Eve who was formed by God from the side of Adam as he slept in paradise. Good Friday commemorates not only the sacrifice and death of the new Adam, but also the birth of the new Eve, the Church. When Christ died, the Church was born, in order to continue the work Christ began. It is difficult to think of Christ and his sacrifice without thinking of the Church, his bride.

D. Holy Communion

1. Holy Mass is not celebrated on Good Friday because of the ancient discipline of the paschal fast: Holy Communion was considered to break the fast. However by the eighth century the practice of giving communion was introduced in the parish churches in Rome, although holy Mass was even then not celebrated. With the holy week reform of 1955 the practice of giving Holy Communion on Good Friday became universal. The thinking that Mass is not celebrated on Good Friday because Christ himself celebrated the sacrifice on the cross on this day has no theological value.

2. The Holy Communion we receive on Good Friday has a particular significance. It stresses our union with him whose body was pierced, "broken" for us, on the cross. Our union with Christ is a sharing in his suffering and death, before it is a sharing in his glorious resurrection.

HOLY SATURDAY

1. "On the sixth day God completed all the work he had been doing, and on the seventh day he ceased from all his work" (Gn 2:2). The patristic literature explains this passage in the light of Christ's mystery. Christ entered Jerusalem on the first day of the week to begin the work of the new creation, completed it on the sixth day when he died on the cross, and rested on Saturday from his work. Holy Saturday is the day of Christ's rest, as he lay buried in the tomb.

a. An ancient homily on Holy Saturday reads: "What thing is this? Today a great silence has fallen on earth, and with it also solitude. There is great silence, because the King sleeps; the earth trembled and was silent, because the Lord slept in the flesh... God died in the flesh".

b. Silence, gravity of demeanor, and recollection are the characteristic traits of Holy Saturday. These are external expressions of our awe and admiration at what Christ has done. In churches the only sound that can be heard is the chanting of the divine office. The altar is left bare and the holy mass is not celebrated. Holy communion is given only as viaticum to the dying. In many countries in Latin America Holy Saturday is observed as a day of near absolute silence and of refrain from unnecessary movements.

2. On Holy Saturday the Church waits at the Lord's tomb, meditating on his suffering and death. In the middle ages it was the custom to venerate the holy sepulcher on this day. The spirit of Holy Saturday is magnificently captured by the concluding chorus of J.-Sebastian Bach's Passion according to St. Matthew: "We sit by your grave with tears on our eyes, and to you we whisper: have a restful sleep, have a restful sleep".

EASTER VIGIL, THE MOTHER OF ALL VIGILS

1. According to the ancient tradition of the Church, this night is spent in watching and prayer in honor of the Lord. We are reminded to have our lamps burning ready, to be like the servants awaiting their master's return, so that when he arrives and finds us wide awake, he will seat us at the table of his body and blood.

a. St. Augustine called the Easter vigil the mother of all vigils, because all the other vigils we celebrate in the course of the year (Eucharistic vigils, vigils for the dead, etc.) draw their meaning from it and in some way prolong its effect. St. Augustine writes: "While we keep vigil on this night during which we recall to mind the burial of our Lord, we want our vigil to coincide with the time when he slept for us. Thus in the very night when he slept we keep vigil. During the time of his sleep we solemnize a vigil, so that when finally we have arisen for the eternal vigils, he may keep vigil for us".

2. The Easter vigil is arranged in four parts: the service of light, the liturgy of the word, the liturgy of baptism and renewal of baptismal vows, and the liturgy of the Eucharist. The central parts of the entire celebration are the baptismal and Eucharistic liturgy. While the season of Lent centered on the word of God for conversion, penance, and preparation for baptism, Easter centers on the sacraments of baptism and the Eucharist.

A. The Service of Light

1. Light is an integral and symbolic part of Easter vigil. First, we recall the creation of light at the dawn of time, when God said: "Let there be light". By his resurrection Christ became the light of the world. Second, we use light to signify that those who have been baptized have become light in the Lord. St. Justin Martyr called baptism "Photismos" or illumination. And it is said of Emperor Constantine that he lit torches all over the city of Constantinople on Easter vigil to honor those who were baptized.

a. The blessing of fire on Easter vigil seems to have originated sometime in the eighth century. The fire which had been kept burning since Good Friday (the ancient did not use matches and had to nurse fire constantly) was brought out to light the lamps and candles to be used on Easter vigil. Soon the fire became a symbol of the light at the time of creation and of the light of the risen Christ.

b. The blessing of fire, like the blessing of water, is meant to show that this material element is now an instrument of grace, a reminder of God's presence and intervention in our earthly world.

2. In antiquity the lighting of lamps and candles was part of the office of the "lucernarium" which was a type of vigil prayer before an important feast. The lighting of the paschal candle is a solemn form and a remnant of that office of the "lucernarium".

a. The celebrant traces the sign of the cross, the Greek letters alpha and omega, and the current year, saying: "Christ yesterday and today, the beginning and the end, alpha and omega, all time belongs to him and all ages". These words are a profession of the Church's faith that by his resurrection Christ has gained absolute dominion over all ages; he is the key to the Christian understanding of the everything in the universe. The current year is written on the paschal candle to signify that this year is also the year of the Lord, that is, it belongs to him.

b. The insertion of the five grains of incense in the paschal candle is now optional. The practice came from an erroneous interpretation of the Latin "incensum" which can mean either lighted candle or ornamented with incense. The grains of incense are now interpreted as the symbols of the five wounds of Christ: "By his holy and glorious wounds may Christ our Lord guard us and keep us".

c. At the procession the deacon or priest proclaims "Christ our light" three times, as he spreads light around him from the paschal candle. The paschal candle now represents Christ who is our light. The procession led by the lighted paschal candle reminds us of the Exodus of the chosen people. The column of fire guided them on their way toward the Promised Land. We too are guided by Christ on our Exodus from the slavery of sin to the freedom of God's people.

3. The "Exultet" or Easter proclamation is a fourth-century hymn attributed to St. Ambrose of Milan. It is a solemn proclamation of Christ's resurrection that took place on this night. This is why the "Exultet" focuses its attention on the night. This night was in fact the night of the Exodus, the night of baptism, the night of the resurrection. In other words, the Easter night is the compendium of the chief events that God has accomplished in us.

With poetic indulgence the "Exultet" exclaims in words that show the immensity of God's love when he gave away his Son as well as the immeasurable grace, thanks to Adam's sin, of having Christ as our Redeemer: "Father, how wonderful your care for us! How boundless your merciful love! To ransom a slave you gave away [Latin: tradidisti, meaning betrayed!] your Son. O happy fault, O necessary sin of Adam, which gained for us so great a Redeemer!"

B. The Liturgy of the Word

1. The present-day liturgy of the word offers nine readings including the epistle and the gospel. Before the sixth century the number of readings in Rome was six. After this the number became 12 or in the Lateran Basilica 24, because the 12 readings were in Latin and Greek for the benefit of the Greek-speaking faithful in Rome.

2. The readings, which precede baptism, are meant to give to the catechumens a final instruction on the history of salvation. For the faithful these readings sum up the major works of God in the history of salvation, namely: creation, sacrifice of Abraham, passage through the Red Sea, the new Jerusalem, salvation offered to all, fountain of wisdom, a new heart and a new spirit. Finally, the epistle explains the meaning of Christian baptism, while the Gospel proclaims that Christ is truly risen.

a. Looking closely at the Old Testament readings, we are able to gather the chief topics: creation, Exodus, church, universality of salvation, baptism as wisdom, and baptism as new life. Or in short, creation and salvation.

b. But the readings are not meant to be taken merely as a review of the things God accomplished in the history of salvation. The prayer that follows every reading affirms that what God did in the past he still does today, that what he promised to Abraham and through the prophets he now fulfills in the sacrament of baptism. The difference is that the fulfillment is more wondrous than the promise itself.

d. After the last reading from the Old Testament the Gloria is sung and the church bells are rung festively. After the epistle the Alleluia is intoned solemnly. From then on, until Lent, the Gloria and the Alleluia will constantly remind us of this night of nights, of this mother of all vigils.

C. The Liturgy of Baptism and Eucharist

1. Baptism and Eucharist are the two sacraments that culminate our Lenten, Holy Week, and Easter Triduum observance. This is not the place to discuss these two sacraments, nor is it possible to do it on account of their vastness. There is, however, one aspect that needs to be stressed here, even if only in a partial way, namely: the renewal of baptismal vows.

2. A complete celebration of Easter vigil includes the sacraments of baptism, confirmation, and communion, or in short, the sacraments of Christian initiation. The entire Lenten season and the plan of the Easter vigil, especially the readings, are all directed to the celebration of baptism. Several attempts in the past have asked that there be baptism, even of children, on Easter vigil, precisely in order to have an integral celebration.

3. In the absence of baptism, therefore, something is missing in the wholeness of the Easter vigil celebration. But this is filled in by the renewal of baptismal vows by the assembly. In a sense, for the Christian community this is the culminating point of the entire Lenten observance. That is why, the renewal of baptismal vows should be given greater care, planning, and catechesis. For us who are already baptized, the renewal of baptismal vows mean that we commit ourselves, in the words of St. Ambrose, "to cling to the cross of Jesus Christ, to cling to his nails, and not to allow the devil to lure us down from the cross".

EASTER SUNDAY

1. "Christ is risen!" and the response "He is truly risen!". This is the greeting among Oriental Christians for fifty days, until Pentecost. In fact, the fifty days of Easter are like one long and endless day of rejoicing. The season of Easter culminates in the solemnity of Pentecost, just as the resurrection of Christ culminated in the bestowal of the Holy Spirit.

2. Alleluia fills the liturgy of the Mass and the liturgy of the hours. Alleluia is the typical Easter acclamation that resounds during the season. To heighten it the Roman Church (from the sixth century) did not sing the Alleluia from Ash Wednesday to Easter Vigil. This Roman practice was questioned by the Oriental Churches and became one of the items of controversy between Rome and the Orthodox Churches as late as the fourteenth century.

3. The Gloria is another Easter component. Although its opening lines refer to the song of the angels on Christmas night, it was originally associated with Easter. There was a time in the sixth century when it was sung only at the bishop’s Masses and was allowed to priests only on Easter.

4. For fifty day the paschal candle and the image of the Risen Christ are kept in the sanctuary. The paschal candle is best positioned beside the ambo and is lighted in all Masses and baptisms during the Easter Season.

5. The spiritual and liturgical richness of Easter Vigil has affected only in a limited way the celebration of Easter Sunday in terms of solemnity. Except for the possibility of renewing the baptismal vows on Easter Sunday Masses and the chanting of the Easter sequence, the liturgy is practically reduced, in some places, to that of an ordinary Sunday. Perhaps the Salubong, which is considered the culmination of Filipino Holy Week, has something to do with the mentality that Easter celebration ends with the Salubong.



Fr. Anscar J. Chupungco is the Director of the Paul VI Institute of Liturgy in Barrio San Jose, Malaybalay, Bukidnon. The above article is part of the lecture he gave during the Liturgy Conference on Semana Santa held in the Institute on March 1-7, 2009.

Thursday, April 02, 2009

Sunday Gospel Reflections:

Palm Sunday
Rev. Fr. Shannon M. Collins

"Hosanna Filio David: Benedictus qui venit in nomine Domini, Rex Israel..."

All the ceremonies of Palm Sunday — the blessings of the palms, the procession, and the sung Hosannas, are instituted by Holy Mother Church to recall that triumphant entrance of Christ into Jerusalem on that day. He is truly the King of Kings and Lord of Lords Who is deserving not only of these holy palms being placed before Him in praise, but of our hearts and minds submitting to His Holy Rule and His Most Sweet Yoke. But know that within a few days these Hosannas were replaced by blasphemies and insults — give us Barabbas — crucify Him... — from palm branches to whips and cat-o-nine tails — from being placed on a beast of burden to being thrown down upon a Cross — from garments being laid before His path to His garments being divided and lots being cast for His vesture — from being hailed as king to being crucified as a slave — we have no king but Caesar.

In the Old Mass or the Old Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church a very symbolic thing was done during the procession. The priest, deacon, altar boys, and the people would march towards the Church with their branches. When they came to the front doors of the temple, they found them closed while angelic hymns were heard from within. The Cross bearer would then knock against the doors of the Church with the bottom of the processional cross. Yes, open these doors. O gates, lift high your heads grow higher ancient doors. Let Him enter, the King of Glory.
You see, the procession of Christ into the Old Jerusalem is really a symbolic entrance into the heavenly Jerusalem. For thousands of years, the gates of heaven were closed to the human race after the fall of Adam. Only a New Adam could open what was closed. Christ is the one and only Savior of the human race. God has destined us for acquiring salvation through our Lord, Jesus Christ — there is no other name given to men under heaven than that of Jesus by which we are to be saved — I am the Way, He stated, and no one, no one comes to the Father but through Me. Christ is the one and only Shepherd that can lead the flock to the verdant pastures. He is the one and only General Who can lead the troops through the Arch of Triumph. He is the one and only Physician Who can heal fallen man.

But the doors, the gates of heaven would only be opened by the key of His Cross. Only by striking against those doors with the Holy Wood of the Cross could they be thrown open. As we enter into the most Holy Week in the Church's calendar, let us who honor our King and Lord today, not reject Him on Good Friday. Let us as members of the New Israel, the People of God which is the Catholic Church, not reject Him as did the People of God in the Old Testament by enlarge — He came unto His own and His own received Him not. May we who vowed at Baptism to reject Satan and Sin and to embrace Christ and His Holy Cross, live out this commitment until we pass through those same heavenly gates.

MESSAGE FROM THE HOLY FATHER: POPE BENEDICT XVI

The Holy Father's Monthly Intentions for the year 2010:

http://www.hyscience.com/archives/Pope20Benedict20XVI_1.jpg

SEPTEMBER 2010


The Word of God as Sign of Social Development

General: That in less developed parts of the world the proclamation of the Word of God may renew people’s hearts, encouraging them to work actively toward authentic social progress.

The End of War

Missionary: That by opening our hearts to love we may put an end to the numerous wars and conflicts which continue to bloody our world.

RCAM NEWS:

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CELEBRATION OF THE SOLEMNITY OF CORPUS CHRISTI
Parents of Priests' Day

PARENTS AND FAMILY OF PRIESTS
(On the Year for Priests)

Archdiocese Recognizes Parents of Priests

Photogallery
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Ministry of Liturgical Affairs
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About Us:

Philippines
"IN THE BEGINNING WAS THE WORD ..." (John 1:1) The Word service proclaims, not only the contents of the readings, but also the bigger reality that God speaks continually to his people that we are called to a dialogue with God and with one another. To proclaim their inspired content in the midst of the worshipping community is a ministry entrusted to a few. The manner of proclamation is important for the delivery of the message in order to enable the community to enter into the spirit of the Word. The magnificence of this ministry cries out for the excellence that the Word of the Lord deserves. As lectors at the Mass we transmit that Word to human hearts and minds. The readings remind the people of the vision of the Christian community . . . of the things that truly matter.