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Archive for April, 2011



23
Apr

A Light in the Darkness

“There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty for ever beyond its reach.”

-JRR Tolkien, Return of the King

For me, this quote from The Lord of the Rings captures so beautifully the hope we experience on this day. While we wait for the Ressurection of the Lord, we hope and we pray. We look for signs, we experience the fruits of Lent, we participate in the Liturgy to end the week of weeks.

Like the small star in the quote above, Christ become visible and we realise his triumph over death.

Nothing more to say really!

22
Apr

“Why aren’t we ascending into Heaven? Oh, right — the sins.”

Bah I wrote a great post last week on politics but looks like I either didn’t press the right button to post it, or God didn’t like it and caused an internet fail. Oh well, societies’ loss.

Anyhow today being Good Friday I imagine most people will be out attending the Good Friday service, having a quiet prayerful day of reflection and prayer, and staying away from the computer, soooo there’s not too much to say really. I’m sure we’re all aware of the solemnity and gravity of today (although why it’s called ‘Good’ Friday always mystified me as a child) so I don’t need to say anything further on the subject.

So instead I will regale any reader unfortunate enough to be on today about another reason why smokers ruin it for non-smokers. Besides the poisons they are taking into their bodies, and the passive smoke they so generously share with all and sundry, there’s also the time they spend trying to buy cigarettes. Just pick the one you always have and buy it. Don’t stand at the till confusing the shopkeeper and holding up the line. Some of us have important things to do.

Somewhat uncharitably, this impatience of mine also manifests itself when I’m in the line for Confession. Sometimes I only have my lunch hour to spare and some dude / dudette decides to spend agggges in the confessional. Well it’s not my place to mentally tell them to hurry up because they are probably doing some first class reconciling with God. But I can’t help but be moved to annoyance sometimes. Maybe I should be praying more during this pre-confession time.

Oh and another thing, it does worry me sometimes having a priest I know hearing my confession. I mean I guess they’re not supposed to take things to heart, or hold your sins against you. But they’re only human right? Surely they’ll remember some things and maybe, just maybe at the back of their minds they’re secretly holding it against you. Or maybe not.

Anyway, wishing you all a prayerful vigil until Easter.

21
Apr

Reflection from the Pope (and what a Pope) for Holy Week

I think this is worth a post in and of itself. From Our Holy Father for this years Holy Week. Enjoy and Happy Easter everyone!

Dear brothers and sisters,
we have now reached the heart of Holy Week, the fulfillment of our Lenten journey. Tomorrow we enter the Paschal Triduum, the three holy days on which the Church commemorates the mystery of the passion, death and resurrection of Jesus the Son of God, having made ??man in obedience to the Father, becoming like us except sin (cf. Heb 4:15), has agreed to totally fulfill his will, to deal with our passion and love for the cross to make us partakers of his resurrection, so that in him and through him we can live forever, in the consolation and peace. I therefore urge you to accept this mystery of salvation, to participate intensively in the Easter Triduum, the fulcrum of the liturgical year and time of special grace for every Christian, I invite you to look in these days of recollection and prayer, so as to draw more deeply this source of grace. In this regard, in view of the upcoming holidays, every Christian is invited to celebrate the Sacrament of Reconciliation, a moment of special attachment to the death and resurrection of Christ, in order to participate more fruitfully in the Holy Easter.

Holy Thursday is the day which commemorates the institution of the Eucharist and the ministerial priesthood. In the morning, each diocesan community, gathered around the Bishop in the Cathedral Church celebrates the Chrism Mass, which is blessed with the sacred chrism, the oil of catechumens and the oil of the sick. Since the Easter Triduum and for the entire liturgical year, these oils are used for the Sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation, the priestly and episcopal ordination and the anointing of the sick, in what is revealed as the salvation, transmitted by the sacramental signs , who came from the Paschal Mystery of Christ, in fact, we are redeemed through His death and resurrection and, through the Sacraments, will draw from that same source of salvation. During the Chrism Mass, tomorrow is also the renewal of priestly vows. Throughout the world, every priest renews the commitments it has taken on the day of ordination, to be totally dedicated to Christ in the exercise of sacred ministry in the service of others. We support our priests with our prayers.
On the afternoon of Holy Thursday actually begins the Easter Triduum with the memory of the Last Supper, when Jesus instituted the memorial of his Pasch, fulfilling the Jewish Passover rite. According to tradition, every Jewish family, gathered at table on the feast of Easter, eating the roasted lamb, recalling the liberation of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt, so in the upper room, aware of his impending death, Jesus, the true Paschal Lamb, offers himself for our salvation (cf. 1 Cor 5:7). Saying the blessing over the bread and wine, he anticipates the sacrifice of the cross and expresses its intention to perpetuate its presence among the disciples, under the appearances of bread and wine, he makes himself present in a real way with his body and his blood shed. At the Last Supper, the Apostles are made ??ministers of this sacrament of salvation to them Jesus washes the feet (cf. Jn 13:1-25), inviting them to love one another as he loved them, giving their lives for them. Repeating this gesture in the Liturgy, we are called to testify effectively the love of our Redeemer.

On Holy Thursday, finally, ends with Eucharistic adoration, in memory of the Lord in the Garden of Gethsemane. Leaving the upper room, He withdrew to pray alone before the Father. In that moment of deep communion, the Gospels relate that Jesus experienced great anguish, suffering such as to make him sweat blood (cf. Mt 26,38). Aware of his imminent death on the cross, He felt a great anxiety and the proximity of death. In this situation, it is also an element of great importance for the whole Church. Jesus said to her: Stay here and keep watch, and this appeal to the supervisory concerns precisely this moment of anxiety, threat, where will the treacherous [traitor], but concerns the whole of Church history. It ‘a permanent message for all time, because the drowsiness of the disciples was not only the problem at hand, but the problem is the whole story. The question is what this sleepy, what would be the supervision to which the Lord invites us. I would say that drowsiness is the story of the disciples on a certain the insensitivity of the soul to the power of evil, the evil of insensitivity throughout the world. We do not want to leave too upset by these things, we want to forget: we think that it might not be so serious, and we forget. It is not only insensitive to the hurt, when we should watch for good, to fight for the power of good. It is insensitive to God: this is our very sleepy, and this insensitivity to the presence of God that makes us insensitive for evil. We do not hear God – disturb us – and so we do not hear, of course, the evil force and remain on the road to our comfort. The worship night of Holy Thursday, to be vigilant with the Lord, should be just the time for us to reflect on the sleepy disciples, the defenders of Jesus, the apostles, one of us, we do not see, do not want to see the full force of the evil, and we will not enter into his passion for good, for God’s presence in the world, for the love of neighbor and of God

Then the Lord began to pray. The three apostles – Peter, James, John – sleep, but sometimes I wake up and hear the chorus of this prayer the Lord: “Not my will but your be realized. ” What is this my will, what is this your will, which the Lord speaks? The mine will be “who should not die,” that he be spared this cup of suffering is the human will, human nature, and Christ feels, with full awareness of his being, life, the abyss of death, the fear of nothingness, this threat of suffering. And he more than us, that we have this natural aversion to death, this natural fear of death, yet most of us feel the abyss of evil. He feels, with the death, including all suffering humanity. He feels that this is the cup must drink, has to drink himself, to accept the evil in the world, everything is terrible, the aversion to God, all sin. And we can understand how Jesus, with his human spirit, and terrified face of this reality, which perceives in all its cruelty to my will would not drink the cup, but my will is subject to your will, the will of God , the will of the Father, who is also the true will of the Son. And so Jesus becomes, in this prayer, the natural aversion, the aversion against the glass, against his mission to die for us, his will becomes the will of God in nature, in a “yes” to God’s will Man itself is trying to oppose the will of God, that it intends to follow his own will, to be free only if it is standalone, opposes its independence against the heteronomy to follow the will of God This is all the drama of humanity. But in truth this is wrong and this autonomy to enter into God’s will is not an opposition to itself, is not a slave who rapes my will, but in truth and love has come, for good. And he pulls our will, which is opposed to God’s will, which seeks autonomy, we will pull this up at the will of God This is the drama of our redemption, Jesus pulls up our will , all of our aversion to the will of God and our aversion to death and sin, and unites with the will of the Father: “Not my will but your own . ” In this transformation of the “no” to “yes”, this will insert the creature in the will of the Father, He transforms and redeems humanity. It invites us to join in this movement: out of our “no” and enter “yes” to the Son. My will is there, but crucial is the will of the Father, because this is the truth and love.

Another element of this prayer seems important to me. The three witnesses have preserved – as it appears in the Bible – the Hebrew or Aramaic with which the Lord has spoken to the Father, called him “Abba, Father. But this formula, “Abba,” is a familiar form of the word father, a form that is used only in a family that has never been used against God Here we see Jesus as he speaks in the depths of your family, truly speaks as the Son with the Father. Let the mystery of the Trinity: the Son who speaks to the Father and redeems humanity.

Further observation. The Epistle to the Hebrews has given us a profound interpretation of this prayer of the Lord, in this drama of Gethsemane. This Epistle tells us that, the tears of Jesus, this prayer, this cry of Jesus, this anguish, this is not simply a concession to the weakness of the flesh, as it were. Just like that makes the job of High Priest, because the High Priest must bring the human being, with all his problems and sufferings of God at the Epistle to the Hebrews says, with all these cries, tears, sufferings, prayers, the Lord has brought our reality to God (cf. Heb 5.7 ff). It uses this Greek word ” prosferein , “which is the technical term for what to do for the High Priest offering to bring up his hands.

Just in this drama of Gethsemane, where it seems that God’s strength is no longer present, Jesus fulfills the function of the High Priest. It also says that in this act of obedience, that is, the shape of the natural human desire to the will of God is perfected as a priest. It uses a new technique to sort the word priest. Just like that really becomes the High Priest of humanity and thus opens the door to heaven and resurrection.
If you think about this drama of Gethsemane, we can also see the great contrast between Jesus in his distress, his suffering, in comparison with the great philosopher Socrates, who remains peaceful, with no disturbance before death. And this seems ideal. We can see this philosopher, but the mission of Jesus was different. His mission was not this total indifference and freedom, his mission was to bring him in all our suffering, all the human drama. And why this humiliation of Gethsemane is essential to the mission of the Man-God. He carries our grief, our poverty, and transforms it according to the will of God that opens the gates of heaven, open heaven: this tent of the Blessed Sacrament, which so far has closed the man against God, is open for this suffering and obedience. These observations on Holy Thursday, for our celebration on the night of Holy Thursday.

On Good Friday we will remember the passion and death of the Lord, worship the crucified Christ, sharing in his sufferings with penance and fasting. Turning “look on him whom they have pierced” (cf. Jn 19:37), we can draw from his pierced heart that pours out blood and water as a source, from that heart from which flows the love of God for every person receiving the his Spirit. Then we accompany Jesus on Good Friday we also going up Calvary, let us be guided by Him to the cross, we receive the offer of her slain body. Finally, on the night of Holy Saturday, we will celebrate the solemn Easter Vigil, in which we announced the resurrection of Christ, his definitive victory over death that challenges us to be in him new men. By participating in this holy Sleep, Night focus of the entire liturgical year, we will remember our baptism, in which we too have been buried with Christ and rise with Him to participate in the banquet of heaven (cf. Rev 19.7 – 9).

Dear friends, we tried to understand the mood in which Jesus lived the moment of extreme test, to grasp what that guide their actions. The criterion that has guided every one of Jesus throughout his life has been a strong desire to love the Father, being one with the Father, and to be faithful, and this decision to respond to his love led him to embrace, in any single factor, the Father’s plan, to do just the design of love entrusted to unite all things in him, to bring everything to him. In reviving the Holy Triduum, we dispose ourselves to welcome into our lives to God’s will, knowing that God’s will, even if it lasts, contrary to our intentions, we find our true good, the way of life. The Virgin Mother, guide us on this journey, and we obtain from her divine Son the grace to spend our lives for the love of Jesus, in the service of others.

20
Apr

Standing on the threshold

So we stand upon the threshold of the great Easter triduum. What thoughts pass through our minds as we anticipate the days ahead? What might have passed through Our Lord’s mind on this day some 2000 years ago?

 

Was it that feeling one gets at the end of a long time of preparation, when there is no more time to prepare or make ready oneself and others for the events about to transpire – that feeling at the top of the highest point of a rollercoaster when you know it is too late to turn back, and all there is to do is wait?

Might Our Lord have felt anything of peace, such as in the calm before the storm, waiting with acceptance and trust for what is going to take place? After the overwhelming jubilation of Palm Sunday, what might Our Lord have felt and known on this day, knowing what events would be put in motion tomorrow, and how it would inevitably end?

Knowing it all, yet heading into it willingly, like a lamb to the slaughter – can any person help but tremble at the enormity of His sacrifice, and the enormity of His undying love.

 

19
Apr

Ordo Hebdomadae Sanctae

In this post I wanted to spend some time in looking at the changes to the liturgies of Holy Week, instituted by Pius XII in 1955.  It will hopefully be an interesting and informative exercise, although I cannot promise that it will provide much robust discussion!

There is a full discussion of the various changes at the New Liturgical Movement Website, for those who are interested.

I wanted to draw attention to one aspect of the Holy Week liturgies prior to 1955, which is the Holy Thursday service.  In this liturgy, two large hosts are consecrated, one of which is placed into a chalice, which is then covered with a pure linen cloth, tied with a ribbon around the node of the chalice.  It is this host which is taken to the altar of repose at the conclusion of the liturgy.

This is a beautiful expression of Christ drinking to the full the chalice his Father has given him.

I think we have lost much of the beautiful symbolism of the Roman rite.  Here is one very clear example.  There are others, of course – do have a read of the changes to Holy Week in 1955 – it’s a very interesting journey.

18
Apr

The Great Communicator

A short post on a very great blog – The Gospel in the Digital Age.

The GDA blog is written by Timothy Dolan , Archbishop of New York. Its a personal blog written by the Archbishop himself on a whole range of topics.

I heard this great man speak at St Patrick’s Cathedral in New York a few years ago, at his very first mass as Archbishop. I’ve been captivated by his blog ever since.

He’s been called the Grand Communicator, one of the most media-savvy bishops of our time, and an “intellectual with a special gift for relating realistically to modern life”.

He’s also been praised for how he dealt with sex abuse in his dioceses. Dolan was among the first bishops to meet not just with survivors of sexual abuse individually but also with their advocacy groups.

The Archbishop’s openness is a wonderful tool for young people and a great gift to the Church. I often wonder why the Vatican can’t be so media savvy, using technology and social media to get the Message out.

One of the best things about his blog is that its firsthand, open, insightful and often challenging. its the Archbishop’s edition of Being Frank. One of his best pieces was when he was confronted as a sex abuser.

Truly a wonderful man.

St Timothy, pray for us.

17
Apr

Two degrees – all the possibilities!

In a conversation last year with a young woman who I had just met I mentioned that I was discerning religious life. Her eyes lit up. This woman was not a Catholic but told me that one of her good friends from school had just entered a religious order. She exclaimed “now I know two of you!”

I didn’t think too much of it at the time – I knew several people who were discerning religious life so it wasn’t a big deal for me - but as I mentioned this conversation to some of the sisters in the States last month (who also happened to know the religious sister who the young woman had mentioned to me!) one of them told me how exciting this was that a non-Catholic would know two faithful Catholics who were willing to give their life for what they believe. I explained to the sisters the idea of there being two degrees of separation in New Zealand (compared to six degrees of separation on average world wide). They told me how much of a blessing this is for New Zealand – all the possibilities! I had never really thought about how exciting this idea could be in terms of evangelisation in our country. Imagine what kind of an impact this can make considering a lot of evangelisation happens through relationships.

To be honest I had become a little disconcerted about evangelisation in New Zealand as society here just seems so secular and indifferent compared to places like the United States (from my experience) but now, because of that short conversation, I see so many opportunities.

As I was pondering this today the intro of Pinky and the Brain was running through my head – you’ve gotta think big!