Sunday, January 22, 2012

THE SUNDAY COLLECTS: FOURTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

Let's take a look for a few moments at the Collect or Opening Prayer for the Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time.


Grant us, Lord our God, that we may honor you with all our mind, and love everyone in truth of heart.


Pope Gelasius
This seemingly simple little prayer is among the oldest of all the prayers we use at Mass. It’s first found in the old Leonine or Vernonese Sacramentary, sometime in the seventh century. But in all probability, the prayer is even older than that. One scholar suggests it was written by Pope Gelasius, which moves it back a couple hundred more years. And that’s where things get interesting.
Pope Gelasius is believed to have written or collected a considerable number of prayers which eventually find their into the Mass. The one we prayed today was originally written for January 29, 495. That’s right: by coincidence that was 1,517 years ago today!
But January 29th had a specific significance in those days...it was just before the ancient Roman pagan festival of the Lupercalia. It was an ancient rite which was the last of the old pagan rites to be suppressed by the Christian religion, and before Gelasius took them on, it involved all kinds of strange public rites with lots of sex and violence.
And it may be that Pope Gelasius wrote this prayer as a kind of antidote to the sex and violence of these ancient superstitions. That’s not where our minds should be, he’s saying. We should use our minds to honor God: to worship him.
That’s not where are hearts should be. We should use our hearts to love everyone in truth.
We may not have public pagan festivals replete with X-rated rites, but we do live in a culture that seems obsessed with sex and violence: sex which seldom has anything to do with love and violence born of selfishness and uncaring greed.
So, maybe, the Church preserves this ancient prayer to say to a world that worships pleasure and uses sex as a form of entertainment: give your mind not to self- serving fantasies and pornographic perversions: but to the honor of God, whom we should worship with every bit of our minds!
And stop using and abusing people as if they were your playthings, stop selling your heart to the latest cheap entertainment or the highest bidder, but love everyone in truth of heart: the truth that God is love and we have been made in his image and likeness to love everyone, from the greatest to the least, from the most lovable to the most despicable, from the most attractive to the ugliest, from the richest to the poorest, from the most deserving to the least deserving: that our hearts might be true to the love for which we have been made!
So, even though we don’t run around in goat skins, whipping and molesting each other in an orgy of violent paganism, we still need to hear Pope Gelasius’ prayer:


Grant us, Lord our God, that we may honor you with all our mind, and love everyone in truth of heart. 

THE SUNDAY COLLECTS: THIRD SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

Let's take a look for a few moments on the Collect or Opening Prayer for the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time.


Almighty ever-living God, direct our actions according to your good pleasure, that in the name of your beloved Son we may abound in good works.


This Collect is from the ancient Gregorian Sacramentaries and addresses God in the same way as last week’s Collect: Almighty and ever-living God.
But while last week we asked for peace, this week we ask God for something quite different. We ask him that we might be good, that we might “abound in good works.”
Abound is a funny word. It means to be found in great quantities. We pray, then, not just that we might do good works, but that our life might be jam packed with them!


Theresa and Goodness
You’ve known people who “abound in good works.” People like Mother Theresa, a saint who lived in our own day. From the time she got up until the time she went to bed, her day was filled with loving people and leading others to love. Ora et labora, as Saint Benedict says in his rule: By prayer and by good works we live the good live of the follower of Christ.
And notice that we ask God to make our actions good, according to his good pleasure. It reminds us of Saint Paul in the opening verses of his letter to the Ephesians” ‘God our heavenly Father has predestined us for adoption as his Sons through Jesus Christ,’ and then Saint Paul uses the same curious phrase we hear in today’s Collect: ‘such was his will and pleasure.”

The Face of Christ
God, who desires not the death of the sinner, but that he repent and live, desires our salvation. He wants us to be happy, to truly learn to love, to live in the image and likeness of our Creator. That’s why he sends his only Son as our Savior, and by his paschal dying and rising makes us brothers of the Lord Jesus and Sons of our Father in heaven.
How can we do good, then? Only through the name of Jesus. Without his grace, we are nothing. But with his grace we can do anything by the will and pleasure of a God who comes to save us from sin.


Almighty ever-living God, direct our actions according to your good pleasure, that in the name of your beloved Son we may abound in good works. 



Friday, January 20, 2012

NEW RECTOR-ELECT OF SAINT JOHN'S SEMINARY

BISHOP KENNEDY TO BE NAMED
Episcopal VICAR FOR THE NEW EVANGELIZATION

MONSIGNOR MORONEY NAMED
RECTOR-ELECT OF SAINT JOHN’S SEMINARY


Braintree, MA (January 19, 2012) -- Cardinal Seán O’Malley, OFM Cap. announced today that, effective July 1, 2012, Bishop Arthur L. Kennedy, Ph.D., S.T.L., Rector of St. John’s Seminary, will become Episcopal Vicar for the New Evangelization of the Archdiocese of Boston.  In addition, the Cardinal has appointed Msgr. James P. Moroney, S.T.L. as Rector-elect of St. John’s effective July 1, 2012.

Cardinal Seán said, “Bishop Kennedy and Msgr. Moroney have been effective and committed leaders in the Church.  We are blessed by their willingness to assume these new roles in their priestly ministry and for their dedication to helping the Church build a faith community of love and compassion for all of God’s people.”   

Bishop Arthur Kennedy – Episcopal Vicar for the New Evangelization

Bishop Kennedy has served as Rector of St. John’s Seminary since July 2007.  In those five years he has been instrumental in significantly increasing the number of seminarians enrolled, advancing the Cardinal’s goal of expanding the seminary to a regional presence, enhancing the seminary’s status of national prominence in its academic and faith formation programs while establishing new programs that prepare seminarians and lay leaders for the future.  This past March 2011, the Cardinal and Bishop Kennedy announced the establishment of a new institute of faith formation at Saint John’s Seminary.  Embracing and expanding the seminary's current offerings for the laity as well as for permanent deacons and professed religious, the new institute is called the Theological Institute for the New Evangelization (TINE).  The TINE program includes Master Arts in Ministry, Certificates in Catechisis, Scripture, and Apologetics, a new degree program (the Master of Theological Studies for the New Evangelization), and scholarship funding for these programs through the Promise for Tomorrow Fund.

In his new capacity, Bishop Kennedy will develop, oversee and promote programs for awakening and strengthening the Catholic Faith in the Archdiocese of Boston, including the Theological Initiative for the New Evangelization.  Such promotion of the New Evangelization is, in the words of Pope Benedict XVI “necessary for the Church: it cannot be overlooked; it is an expression of her very nature.” (Apostolic Letter Ubicumque et Semper)

“We look forward to the new and creative ways in which Bishop Kennedy will bring his vast experience in promoting the Catholic Faith in universities and seminaries to the service of evangelization in the Archdiocese of Boston,” Cardinal Seán said.  “I am fully confident that his indispensable role in the revitalization of Saint John’s Seminary over the past five years will serve as a prelude to a revitalization of catechetical efforts and other forms of promotion of Catholic identity throughout the Archdiocese of Boston.”


Bishop Kennedy said, “I am grateful to Cardinal Seán for the opportunity to undertake this new office on his behalf and that of the Archdiocese of Boston.  It has been a privilege to serve as Rector of St. John’s Seminary these past five years and to be part of the exciting rebirth of this wonderful institution, a rebirth made possible because of the Cardinal’s efforts and commitment to vocations and faith formation.  We have a unique opportunity to continue to engage an aggressive and spiritual rebirth of our local Church and I hope to be of some assistance to the Cardinal in meeting this goal he has established for the Archdiocese.”

Bishop Kennedy was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Boston in 1966 and spent the following eight years of service at parishes in Methuen and East Boston, in 1974 Cardinal Medeiros granted him permission him to accept a position as a member of the theology faculty at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. When the university later established a Catholic Studies program, Bishop Kennedy was named a faculty member in that department, and was also Director of Master of Arts in theology program at St. Paul Seminary. In recent years he has served as chair of the Theology Department at St. Thomas and Executive Director of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Secretariat for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs.

In September 2010 he was ordained by Cardinal Seán as an Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Boston along with Auxiliary Bishop Peter Bishop Peter J. Uglietto, S.T.D.  They were appointed Auxiliary Bishop’s in June 2010 by the Holy Father.  Bishop Kennedy will have an office at the Pastoral Center. 

Msgr. James Moroney – Rector-elect, St. John’s Seminary

The Cardinal also announced that Msgr. James P. Moroney will succeed Bishop Kennedy as the twentieth Rector of Saint John’s Seminary in Brighton, Massachusetts on July 1, 2012.  Cardinal Seán expressed his gratitude to Bishop Robert J. McManus, Bishop of Worcester, for his willingness to release Msgr. Moroney for this important work.

Msgr. Moroney, a Priest of the Diocese of Worcester for the past thirty-two years (ordained in 1980), is currently professor of Sacred Liturgy at Saint John’s Seminary and also serves as Executive Secretary of the Vox Clara Committee.  Msgr. Moroney previously served as rector of the Cathedral Church of Saint Paul in Worcester, pastor of Mary Queen of the Rosary Parish in Spencer, Massachusetts, and as Executive Director of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat for the Liturgy.

Having attended the North American College for Seminary, he pursued graduate studies at the Pontifical Gregorian University, the Pontifical Liturgy Institute at Saint Anselmo’s, and the Catholic University of America. A past chairman of the Federation of Diocesan Liturgical Commissions, Msgr. Moroney served as Executive Director of the USCCB Secretariat for the Liturgy from 1996-2007. Pope John Paul II appointed him as the fourth American to serve as a consultor to the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments since the Second Vatican Council. Pope Benedict XVI has reappointed him as a consultor to that Congregation. Msgr. Moroney is a frequent lecturer on liturgical matters, having addressed close more than 20,000 priests and deacons in recent years at the invitation of more than a hundred bishops.

Msgr. Moroney said, “I am very grateful to Cardinal O’Malley for his confidence in me and particularly honored to succeed Bishop Kennedy, who has revitalized and strengthened Saint John’s Seminary in an extraordinary way over the past five years.  I am filled with joy at being called to pastor these future shepherds of the Church.  They are men filled with a burning desire to give their lives to Christ and his Church, and characterized by that hope which opens hearts to the will of God.  In addition, I look forward to seeking the wise counsel of Bishop Kennedy, our wonderful Faculty, and the Priests of the Archdiocese in the coming months as we prepare to build on the great foundation established by the nineteen rectors who have gone before me.  

Most Rev. Robert J. McManus, S.T.D., Bishop of Worcester and a member of the Board of Trustees for St. John Seminary said, “In my own name and that of his brother priests in the Diocese of Worcester, I offer congratulations to Msgr. Moroney on his appointment as rector of St. John Seminary.  He has been and continues to be a wonderful resource to our diocese in liturgical matters and also for his pastoral acumen. I am confident that he will bring a vision of the priesthood to his seminarians that will prove to be a great blessing for our all our dioceses which utilize this seminary for years to come.”

Msgr. Moroney is a frequent lecturer in liturgical matters, having addressed the presbyterates of 110 dioceses in recent years.  He is author of the recently revised The Mass Explained: An Introduction to the New Roman Missal and host of The New and Eternal Word on the Catholic Television Network.

The Cardinal expressed his confidence that Msgr. Moroney would bring “his extensive experience in teaching priests and seminarians throughout the United States to the work of promoting the service of Saint John’s Seminary to the Bishops of New England and, indeed, the Catholic world.  His longstanding work for the Holy See and the Bishops of our country has prepared him in a wonderful way for his new role as Rector of the Seminary community.”

Saint John’s Seminary was founded in 1884 and today prepares seminarians for twelve dioceses and five religious communities.  As a result of unprecedented growth, the number of seminarians at Saint John’s has tripled in the past five years and it is presently full.

St. John’s Seminary History

Established by Archbishop John J. Williams in 1883 as the Boston Ecclesiastical Seminary, the school was chartered by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to grant degrees in philosophy and divinity, with the first class being admitted in the fall of 1884. More than 3000 priests have received their formation and education at St. John’s Seminar and have served the Church in the Archdiocese of Boston and in more than fifty dioceses around the world, as well as in the Holy See and in the military.

Master of Arts in Ministry Program

In 2000, St. John’s Seminary began offering the Master of Arts in Ministry Program for laity seeking to serve the Church or to deepen their knowledge and understanding of the faith. Almost 60 students have received their degrees in the first six years of the program and are now working as pastoral associates, religious educators, campus ministers, youth ministers, and hospital chaplains.

Fully Accredited

St. John’s Seminary is a fully accredited member of the regional accrediting agency, the New England Association of Schools and Colleges, and of the national professional accrediting agency, the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada.

About the Archdiocese of Boston: The Diocese of Boston was founded on April 8, 1808 and was elevated to Archdiocese in 1875. Currently serving the needs of nearly 2 million Catholics, the Archdiocese of Boston is an ethnically diverse and spiritually enriching faith community consisting of 291 parishes, across 144 communities, educating approximately 42,000 students in its Catholic schools and 156,000 in religious education classes each year, ministering to the needs of 200,000 individuals through its pastoral and social service outreach.   Mass is celebrated in nearly twenty different languages each week. For more information, please visit   www.BostonCatholic.org


St. John’s Seminary Facts

1.     St. John’s Seminary opened on September 22, 1884
2.     First class: 32 seminarians (1884)
3.     Current enrollment: 112 seminarians preparing for the priesthood (including 70 from Boston enrolled at St. John’s Seminary and Blessed John XXIII in Weston, MA)
4.     Dioceses currently represented at St. John’s Seminary: Boston; Manchester, NH; Portland, ME; Burlington, VT; Fall River, MA; Springfield, MA; Archdiocese of Hartford, Diocese of Providence, Diocese of Worcester; Hanoi and Hung Hoa, Vietnam
5.     Countries represented by seminarians enrolled in St. John’s Seminary: 14

Previous Rector’s

1. Rev. John B. Hogan, S.S. (1884-1889/1894-1901)
2. Rev. Charles B. Rex, S.S. (1889-1894)
3. Rev. Daniel E. Maher, S.S. (1901-1906)
4. Rev. Francis P. Havey, S.S. (1906-1911 )
5. Rt. Rev. John B. Peterson (1911 -1926)
6. Rev. Charles A. Finn (1926-1933)
7. Rt. Rev. Joseph C. Walsh (1933-1938)
8. Rt. Rev. Edward G. Murray (1938-1951)
9. Rt. Rev. Thomas J. Riley (1951-1958)
10. Rt. Rev. Matthew P. Stapleton (1958-1965)
11 . Rt. Rev. Lawrence J. Riley (1965-1966)
12. Rev. Msgr. John A. Broderick (1966-1971)
13. Rev. Robert J. Banks (1971-1981)
14. Most. Rev. Alfred C. Hughes (1981-1986)
15. Rev. Thomas J. Daly (1986-1991)
16. Rev. Msgr. Timothy J. Moran (1991-1998)
17. Most. Rev. Richard G. Lennon (1999-2002)
18. Rev. John A. Farren, O.P. (2003-2007)
19. Bishop Arthur L. Kennedy, Ph.D., (2007-July 1, 2012)

Monday, January 9, 2012

THE SUNDAY COLLECTS: SECOND SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

I invite you to reflect with me for a few moments on the Collect or Opening Prayer for the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time.
Almighty ever-living God, who govern all things, both in heaven and on earth, mercifully hear the pleading of your people and bestow your peace on our times.
The Collect for today is first found in the Eighth century Hadrianum Sacramentary and was restored to the Liturgy by Pope Paul VI in 1970 using exacting the same words as this ancient source. It tells us a lot about God and his relationship to us....a lot that we take for granted.
The first thing we hear is something we’ve learned from the time that we were little: that God is Almighty. He can do anything. He can move any mountain. He can solve any problem. He can right any wrong. Indeed, he can even forgive any sin!
The second thing we hear is that God is Ever-living. Now there’ a word for you: ever-living. He always was. And always will be. And he is!
An ever-living and Almighty God. That’s the kind of God you want on your side....and there’s the theme of the rest of the Collect.
This Almighty and ever-living God has a specific relationship with us, his creation. He governs heaven and earth. This God is not some kind of cosmic watch-maker, who winds up the universe and watches it tick away until the watch stops. No, this Almighty and Ever-living God governs the earth...he gets involved....he cares!
And even more, he loves the people he has created. They are his. And when they plead with him for his mercy, the know their hopes will be fulfilled. That’s why we ask him to mercifully hear the pleading of his people and bestow peace on our times.
How desperately should we plead! With terrorists sneaking bombs onto planes in their underwear, with I.E.D.s going off every day in Afghanistan, with murderous cartels exploding violently just south of the border....we plead for his mercy and beg for peace!
And even closer to home, with kids shooting each other over drugs, with spouses taking out restraining orders every day, and with even little children being beaten and abused and abandoned...we plead for his mercy and beg for his peace!
Should we work for peace, to eliminate the abuse, the hate, the neglect and the violence. Yes! Remember Pope Paul VI: If you want peace, work for justice! That’s the teaching of the Church.
But we should also pray for peace, to the Father of all mercies, the all mighty and ever-living God, who loves us enough to send his only Son to be our Savior.
Almighty ever-living God, who govern all things, both in heaven and on earth, mercifully hear the pleading of your people and bestow your peace on our times.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

THE SUNDAY COLLECTS: EPIPHANY OF THE LORD

I invite you to reflect with me for a few moments on the Collect or Opening Prayer for the Epiphany of the Lord.


O God, who on this day revealed your Only Begotten Son to the nations by the guidance of a star, grant in your mercy that we, who know you already by faith, may be brought to behold the beauty of your sublime glory. 


The celebration of Epiphany comes, for us, near the end of the Christmas Season. But as this ancient Collect reminds us, the Feast of the Epiphany is actually a lot older than Christmas!


The Collect in its present form comes to us from an eighth century Gregorian Sacramentary. And it’s fascinating the way it connects the star and the Magi to us!
The name Epiphany, the epiphany, means the revelation or the showing of the Messiah to the world he has come to save. You can see that rather obviously as Mary hold the Christ child up for the adoration of the Magi: Balthasar, Melchior, and Caspar representing all the nations of the world.


But how did this showing come about? How did the Magi find their way to the Christ child who had been born into their world? Well, every school child knows the answer to that question: the were guided by a star! Without the star, they never would have found him...just like a pillar of fire led the way for the Israelites to leave the slavery of Egypt, a bright star led the way for the nations to find their Savior.

Now that’s where the prayer comes in. For it begins by recalling that the star led the nations to the Only-begotten-Son of God. But it then asks the question: how do we find him? How do we find the Lord who promised to remain with us until the end of time?
And the answer is by faith. In his great mercy, God has planted the light of faith in our hearts: the faith first lit in the heart of the Blessed Virgin and of the Apostles and handed down through the ages as the great treasure of the Church. That faith leads us, we modern-day Magi, to find the Christ.


And what do we find, when we are led by this faith? We find the beauty of the sublime glory of God. For when we look upon the face of God, when we see Jesus, we see that bright shining glory which is pure love, pure goodness, pure light.


And at that moment, when we stand before the glory of God, all we can do is imitate the Magi and bow down very love....as the hymn says: “Come, let us adore him!”
So where does the light of faith lead us to behold this sublime glory? It leads us to the heart of the Church, where we eat his Body and drink his Blood, gazing upon his glory. It leads us to the every person who is poor or sick or abused or afraid or imprisoned or alone. It leads us to the quiet of our room where we kneel before the cross and bow our heads and adore him in that place deep within our hearts.


You know they’ve been singing Adeste Fideles since before the American Revolution, and some claim its opening lines are almost seven hundred years old: Adeste fideles laeti triumphantes: O come, all ye faithful, Joyful and triumphant!


O God, who on this day revealed your Only Begotten Son to the nations by the guidance of a star, grant in your mercy that we, who know you already by faith, may be brought to behold the beauty of your sublime glory.


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