Saturday, April 28, 2012

The Mass Explained in New Orleans


What a joy it was to be with the good folks of New Orleans who have been reading THE MASS EXPLAINED over the past several months!  I am deeply grateful to Archbishop Aymond for the opportunity to reflect in print and in person with these wonderful and faithful Catholics who seek to learn how to more deeply participate in the holy and living sacrifice which is the Mass!
If you would like to download a PDF copy of the slides I used in my two talks, just click here and here.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

The Mass is Our Life: New From CatholicTV

This morning we just started filming a new program for CatholicTV called The Mass is Our Life!  This production is a commentary on the Mass for use in adult education and RCIA programs.  Editing and more shooting will continue over the next couple of months.  Stay tuned to this blog for more details!

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

GIRM WORKSHOP AT THE PASTORAL CENTER IN BOSTON

Today I was honored to gather with a great group of Priests and Deacons at the Archdiocesan Pastoral Center in Braintree.  If you would like a copy of the slides used in my presentation on the General Instruction of the Roman Missal, please click here.  For the “Quiz Slides” on rubrics of the Roman Missal, please click here.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

THE COLLECTS OF EASTER: THE THIRD SUNDAY


"May your people exult forever, O God, in renewed youthfulness of spirit, so that, rejoicing now in the restored glory of our adoption, we may look forward in confident hope to the rejoicing of the day of resurrection."

We're on our third week of meditating on the Easter mysteries...21 days down and 29 to go!  The Easter season is the longest of all the seasons of the Church year, but maybe that's because there's just so much to think about!

In today's Collect, for example, we hear a word we have not used since the Easter Vigil.  Did you hear it?  It's the very first word of the Paschal proclamation sung on the Easter night:  Exult!

Now we have heard it before in the form “exhalation,” that is to rejoice in an extraordinary way.  Exaltation is an almost unconstrained form of rejoicing.  The Easter Proclamation, or Exultet, as it is often called, actually uses three words for our reaction to the Resurrection of the Lord.  The first is Exult:

Exult, let them exult, the hosts of heaven,
exult let Angel ministers of God exist,
let the trumpet of salvation sound aloud our mighty King’s triumph!

This is followed by a slightly less intensive word: be glad!

Be glad, and let earth be glad, as glory floods her,
Ablaze with light from her eternal King, let all corners of the earth be glad,
knowing an end to gloom and darkness.

The song then switches to the most moderate of words: Rejoice!

Rejoice, let mother Church  also rejoice,
a raid with a lighting all of his glory,
 let this holy building shake with joy,
filled with the mighty voices of the peoples.

Three weeks after the deacons saying that hymn before the Paschal candle, the Church reminds us of the boundless joy with which she receives the news of her Salvation. It is a rejoicing which rekindles the joy of our youth, as the psalmist tells us. It is the reason why we celebrate Easter every year, and indeed every Sunday, that all might grasp and rightly understand in what font they have been washed, by whose Spirit they have been reborn, by whose Blood they have been redeemed.”

I sometimes fear that we live in a world devoid of real joy, entertained by the passing pleasures which masquerade as perfect joy. We so often anesthetize ourselves from our fears and sorrows rather than seeking the face of God through the cross of Jesus Christ and through the way of suffering unto death in love for the other.

It is the difference between the real and the counterfeit, the authentic and the fake, really living and just seeking to be alive.

That’s why we have the Easter season, a time to teach us how to rejoice; time to remind us who we are, where we have come from, and what we were made to be.

So rejoice you chosen people, you royal priesthood, you people set apart! For God has consecrated you as his own. You have been washed clean by his precious blood. Rejoice! Be glad! And exult in his mercy!

Saturday, April 14, 2012

KNIGHTS OF MALTA IN CONNECTICUT

It was a delight to be with the Knights of Malta in Greenwich, Connecticut today.  The topic of my talk was: The Roman Missal: Maintaining the Catholic, the Apostolic, the Roman Faith.


If you would like a PDF copy of the slides from my talk, just click here.

Several of you inquired concerning my book, DVDs and other resources.  Just consult the column to the right of this posting.  Links to these and other resources are found right below my bio.

God bless you for all your goodness!

Thursday, April 12, 2012

COLLECTS OF THE ROMAN MISSAL: SECOND SUNDAY OF EASTER


"God of everlasting mercy, who in the very recurrence of the paschal feast kindle the faith of the people you have made your own, increase, we pray, the grace you have bestowed, that all may grasp and rightly understand in what font they have been washed, by whose Spirit they have been reborn, by whose Blood they have been redeemed."

The Second Sunday of the Easter Season has several names.  The older names are Domnica in Albis or WhitSunday.  This refers to the fact that today, one week after they were baptized at the Easter Vigil, the neophytes removed the white garments with which they were clothed in Baptism.

In more recent times, by the inspiration of Saint Faustina, this Sunday is also called Divine Mercy Sunday, recalling the mercy that flows from the Paschal sacrifice of Christ which is a the heart of the Easter Feast.

It's also called Thomas Sunday, since the Gospel reflects on the Lord’s post-resurrection appearance to the doubting disciple.

The Collect, which comes to us from the Missale Gothicum in the twentieth century, reflects all three of these themes in a curious way.  It sees the purpose of our annual Easter celebrations as not just a meditation on our white garments, our need for mercy, and our need to cast way all doubts, but on the source of Baptism, the author of mercy and the cause of our faith.

That's why the last three lines of the prayer speak of the font, the Spirit, and the Blood, in other words Baptism, mercy, and Eucharist.  But it prays that we might understand what lies behind the font in which we are washed, the Spirit in whom we are reborn, and the Lord by which we have been redeemed.  The font is an encounter with the Lord, by which he incorporates us into his life.  The mercy of God is dispensed by joining us to his Paschal death and rising. The Blood which has redeemed us not only washes away our sins, but also makes us one with the one who shed it. In other words, it is not the action of redemption that we get out of the cross, which should be the center of our joy, but the encounter with the living God who offers himself for our salvation.

The face of Christ is, for us, a constant reminder of the meaning of Easter, for like the women at the tomb, we long to see him.  Like Saint Thomas we long to touch him and to proclaim with our whole heart and soul: my Lord and my God!

Seminary Homily for Thursday in the Octave of Easter

It’s that time of year again in the seminary, this First Week of Easter, a time in which we can relate to the disciples in the upper room, on the Road to Emmaus, and by the Sea of Galilee.  Indeed, we are often just like them...  
We fear.  As we prepare for a new summer assignment, we’re afraid what the pastor will be like or whether we’ll be up to the task.  As we prepare for finals, we’re afraid we really don’t understand Heideggerian metaphysicas, the doctrine of concommitance, the perfect peraphrastic.  Will I be alone in front of that piece of paper, or will Jesus be there?
We fear.  As we prepare for a pastoral year, we wonder whether being away from these halls will strngthen or weaken the sense that God is calling me to be a Priest.  Can I really do it?  Will it turn out all right?  Will I be alone in that parish, or will Jesus be there?
We fear.  Just a few weeks from Ordination, as it finally seems, maybe for the first time, all too real.  People will be confessing their sins to me!  Christ will be speaking to them through my lips and transforming bread and wine into his Body and Blood through my hands.  Will I be up to it?  Will I know what to do?  Will I be a good Priest?  Will I be alone at that altar, or will Jesus be there?
We fear.  In just eleven weeks I will become Rector.  Will I be a good father to you, my brothers and sons?  Will I be anywhere near as wise as my predecessor and friend?  Will I be patient and quiet when I should listen?  Will I be fair and just?  Will I speak the hard truth, with kindness and conviction.  Will I be alone in this place, or will Jesus be here?
We’re so often like the disciples, locked behind the doors of our fears, hoping that he’s risen for us love, but more often trembling at the fantasms of imaginary ghosts.
And then, suddenly, it’s Easter.  And he’s standing in our midst and he’s whispering into our hearts: “Peace be with you. "Why are you troubled? And why do questions arise in your hearts?”  Come, and recognize me in the breaking of the bread.  Eat my Body and Drink my Blood.  And I will to live in you and you in me.  And I shall be with you always, until the end of time.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

2012 Telly Award Nomination

Father Reed has informed me that "The New and Eternal Word" (my series on CatholicTV)  has been nominated for a Telly award!

If you would like to vote for the series, just click here.

Thank you!

The Collects of the Roman Missal: Easter

O God, who make this most sacred night radiant with the glory of the Lord’s Resurrection, stir up in your Church a spirit of adoption, so that, renewed in body and mind, we may render you undivided service.


The first Collect of the Easter Season speaks of adoption.  To the average Catholic, such a term does not immediately bring to mind the celebration of Easter Sunday.  But other than Alleluia, there is probably no other work more appropriate to Easter Sunday night than the other word beginning with A: adoption.

The Easter Vigil in the Holy Night, as it is called on the new Roman Missal, is the privileged time for the celebration of the sacrament of Baptism, when the enlightened go down into the tomb with Christ, die with him, and are reborn to eternal life.

It is through Baptism that we are joined to Christ's Paschal dying and rising and become sons and daughter of God our Father.  Saint Paul talks about this in his letter to the Romans:  "...those who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God. For you did not receive a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you received a spirit of adoption, through which we cry, “Abba,* Father!” (Romans 8:14).

Abba is the word which Jesus used for his Father in heaven.  It is the word he uses when he teaches us how to pray to our Abba in heaven and the word he uses when he sweats blood in the Garden of Gethsemane: “Abba, take this cup away from me...but not my will, but yours be done.”

Through the Cross of Christ, we have become sisters and brothers of The Lord Jesus who, in his paschal rising, is "the firstborn of many brothers." And as brothers of the Lord, we have become adopted sons of the one Father. 

Saint Paul continues: "The Spirit itself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ, if only we suffer with him so that we may also be glorified with him.(Roman 8:15)

We are, therefore, sons and daughter of our heavenly Father and the brothers and sisters of Christ.  This is our essential identity as the Baptized.  That's why Saint Paul began so many of his letters by greeting the faithful as the adelphoi, the brothers and sisters.  That's why the a priest greets us so often as brothers and sisters.  For in becoming brothers and sisters of the Lord, we have become the adopted children of our Heavenly Father.

So, this year, as we stand with the newly Baptized at the Easter Vigil, let us be renewed in the knowledge of who we have become when first our bodies were washed in the bath of regeneration and we were joined to Christ our brother.  Trusting in the infinite love of Our Father in heaven, let us then rededicate ourselves to an undivided service of him and to his Church.


Pope Benedict XVI on the Priesthood of Jesus Christ

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

At this Holy Mass our thoughts go back to that moment when, through prayer and the laying on of hands, the bishop made us sharers in the priesthood of Jesus Christ, so that we might be “consecrated in truth” (Jn 17:19), as Jesus besought the Father for us in his high-priestly prayer. He himself is the truth. He has consecrated us, that is to say, handed us over to God for ever, so that we can offer men and women a service that comes from God and leads to him. But does our consecration extend to the daily reality of our lives – do we operate as men of God in fellowship with Jesus Christ? This question places the Lord before us and us before him. “Are you resolved to be more united with the Lord Jesus and more closely conformed to him, denying yourselves and confirming those promises about sacred duties towards Christ’s Church which, prompted by love of him, you willingly and joyfully pledged on the day of your priestly ordination?” After this homily, I shall be addressing that question to each of you here and to myself as well. Two things, above all, are asked of us: there is a need for an interior bond, a configuration to Christ, and at the same time there has to be a transcending of ourselves, a renunciation of what is simply our own, of the much-vaunted self-fulfilment. We need, I need, not to claim my life as my own, but to place it at the disposal of another – of Christ. I should be asking not what I stand to gain, but what I can give for him and so for others. Or to put it more specifically, this configuration to Christ, who came not to be served but to serve, who does not take, but rather gives – what form does it take in the often dramatic situation of the Church today? Recently a group of priests from a European country issued a summons to disobedience, and at the same time gave concrete examples of the forms this disobedience might take, even to the point of disregarding definitive decisions of the Church’s Magisterium, such as the question of women’s ordination, for which Blessed Pope John Paul II stated irrevocably that the Church has received no authority from the Lord. Is disobedience a path of renewal for the Church? We would like to believe that the authors of this summons are motivated by concern for the Church, that they are convinced that the slow pace of institutions has to be overcome by drastic measures, in order to open up new paths and to bring the Church up to date. But is disobedience really a way to do this? Do we sense here anything of that configuration to Christ which is the precondition for all true renewal, or do we merely sense a desperate push to do something to change the Church in accordance with one’s own preferences and ideas?

But let us not oversimplify matters. Surely Christ himself corrected human traditions which threatened to stifle the word and the will of God? Indeed he did, so as to rekindle obedience to the true will of God, to his ever enduring word. His concern was for true obedience, as opposed to human caprice. Nor must we forget: he was the Son, possessed of singular authority and responsibility to reveal the authentic will of God, so as to open up the path for God’s word to the world of the nations. And finally: he lived out his task with obedience and humility all the way to the Cross, and so gave credibility to his mission. Not my will, but thine be done: these words reveal to us the Son, in his humility and his divinity, and they show us the true path.

Let us ask again: do not such reflections serve simply to defend inertia, the fossilization of traditions? No. Anyone who considers the history of the post-conciliar era can recognize the process of true renewal, which often took unexpected forms in living movements and made almost tangible the inexhaustible vitality of holy Church, the presence and effectiveness of the Holy Spirit. And if we look at the people from whom these fresh currents of life burst forth and continue to burst forth, then we see that this new fruitfulness requires being filled with the joy of faith, the radicalism of obedience, the dynamic of hope and the power of love.

Dear friends, it is clear that configuration to Christ is the precondition and the basis for all renewal. But perhaps at times the figure of Jesus Christ seems too lofty and too great for us to dare to measure ourselves by him. The Lord knows this. So he has provided “translations” on a scale that is more accessible and closer to us. For this same reason, Saint Paul did not hesitate to say to his communities: Be imitators of me, as I am of Christ. For his disciples, he was a “translation” of Christ’s manner of life that they could see and identify with. Ever since Paul’s time, history has furnished a constant flow of other such “translations” of Jesus’ way into historical figures. We priests can call to mind a great throng of holy priests who have gone before us and shown us the way: from Polycarp of Smyrna and Ignatius of Antioch, from the great pastors Ambrose, Augustine and Gregory the Great, through to Ignatius of Loyola, Charles Borromeo, John Mary Vianney and the priest-martyrs of the 20th century, and finally Pope John Paul II, who gave us an example, through his activity and his suffering, of configuration to Christ as “gift and mystery”. The saints show us how renewal works and how we can place ourselves at its service. And they help us realize that God is not concerned so much with great numbers and with outward successes, but achieves his victories under the humble sign of the mustard seed.

Dear friends, I would like briefly to touch on two more key phrases from the renewal of ordination promises, which should cause us to reflect at this time in the Church’s life and in our own lives. Firstly, the reminder that – as Saint Paul put it – we are “stewards of the mysteries of God” (1 Cor 4:1) and we are charged with the ministry of teaching, the (munus docendi), which forms a part of this stewardship of God’s mysteries, through which he shows us his face and his heart, in order to give us himself. At the meeting of Cardinals on the occasion of the recent Consistory, several of the pastors of the Church spoke, from experience, of the growing religious illiteracy found in the midst of our sophisticated society. The foundations of faith, which at one time every child knew, are now known less and less. But if we are to live and love our faith, if we are to love God and to hear him aright, we need to know what God has said to us – our minds and hearts must be touched by his word. The Year of Faith, commemorating the opening of the Second Vatican Council fifty years ago, should provide us with an occasion to proclaim the message of faith with new enthusiasm and new joy. We find it of course first and foremost in sacred Scripture, which we can never read and ponder enough. Yet at the same time we all experience the need for help in accurately expounding it in the present day, if it is truly to touch our hearts. This help we find first of all in the words of the teaching Church: the texts of the Second Vatican Council and the Catechism of the Catholic Church are essential tools which serve as an authentic guide to what the Church believes on the basis of God’s word. And of course this also includes the whole wealth of documents given to us by Pope John Paul II, still far from being fully explored.

All our preaching must measure itself against the saying of Jesus Christ: “My teaching is not mine” (Jn 7:16). We preach not private theories and opinions, but the faith of the Church, whose servants we are. Naturally this should not be taken to mean that I am not completely supportive of this teaching, or solidly anchored in it. In this regard I am always reminded of the words of Saint Augustine: what is so much mine as myself? And what is so little mine as myself? I do not own myself, and I become myself by the very fact that I transcend myself, and thereby become a part of Christ, a part of his body the Church. If we do not preach ourselves, and if we are inwardly so completely one with him who called us to be his ambassadors, that we are shaped by faith and live it, then our preaching will be credible. I do not seek to win people for myself, but I give myself. The Curé of Ars was no scholar, no intellectual, we know that. But his preaching touched people’s hearts because his own heart had been touched.

The last keyword that I should like to consider is “zeal for souls”: animarum zelus. It is an old-fashioned expression, not much used these days. In some circles, the word “soul” is virtually banned because – ostensibly – it expresses a body-soul dualism that wrongly compartmentalizes the human being. Of course the human person is a unity, destined for eternity as body and soul. And yet that cannot mean that we no longer have a soul, a constituent principle guaranteeing our unity in this life and beyond earthly death. And as priests, of course, we are concerned for the whole person, including his or her physical needs – we care for the hungry, the sick, the homeless. And yet we are concerned not only with the body, but also with the needs of the soul: with those who suffer from the violation of their rights or from destroyed love, with those unable to perceive the truth, those who suffer for lack of truth and love. We are concerned with the salvation of men and women in body and soul. And as priests of Jesus Christ we carry out our task with enthusiasm. No one should ever have the impression that we work conscientiously when on duty, but before and after hours we belong only to ourselves. A priest never belongs to himself. People must sense our zeal, through which we bear credible witness to the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Let us ask the Lord to fill us with joy in his message, so that we may serve his truth and his love with joyful zeal. Amen.

Mass of the Lord's Supper
Holy Thursday, 2012

Looking for Him Who Looks for You - A Good Friday Homily

Usually it is Christ who does the seeking.
Seeking Lost Sheep
He seeks out lost sheep.  The ones caught in the brambles.  The ones entirely separated from the flock.
I used to know a family who raised sheep, and their kids, in high school at the time, were part-time shepherds.  They would sit out in the field, sometimes late into the night, watching their sheep.  And while they never saw a vision of angels announcing good news to them, they did have some rather interesting insights into the profession of shepherding.
A sheep, they once told me, needs to be rescued when it gets lost, because when the sheep becomes frightened its joints lock up and it becomes literally petrified with fear.  That’s why the good shepherd needs to pick the sheep up and place him on his shoulders, and carry him home.  Because the lost sheep is petrified with fear.
  • Petrified by emptiness and by a breathless attempt to grab for all the gusto he can get out of life, anesthetizing the fear with another drink, or another hundred shares, or a more prestigious title;
  • Petrified by a frantic attempt to break free from the brambles of his own self-deception, who can’t keep track of the lies anymore and lives in dread fear of being found out;
  • Petrified by a loneliness so deep it screams into the darkness in the middle of the night, so petrified it will grab onto anyone or anything to make believe that lust is love and lies are truth;
There are a lot of sheep who stand petrified by their own sin out there, and even in here on this Friday we call good.  Sheep who look desperately from side to side and all around and suddenly realize that they have wandered so far from the flock that no GPS could ever get them home, no God, they’re convinced, could ever forgive them!  No sacrifice, they’re certain, could ever save them.  No words, they’re determined, could ever do them any good.
Which is why it is usually Christ, “with unhurrying chase, And unperturbèd pace..,” who does the seeking.
Seeking Lost Souls
And the one thing he seeks most fervently, even more than he seeks the lost sheep, is the lost soul of the lost sheep.  With a certain divine desperation, Christ seeks out the soul of the lost sinner, that he might repent and live.
The great print artist Fritz Eichenburg, who with Ade Bethune brought so much to the Catholic Worker movement in its earliest days, once crafted a brilliant print of a be-haloed figure rummaging through a trash bin by the side of the road.  When Dorothy Day first saw it she was convinced of its meaning.  Surely, this is Jesus, she declared enthusiastically, the hungry beggar among us, looking for something to eat amidst all the old fish-wrap we’ve thrown away.
No, Eichenburg told her.  It is not Jesus in the poor man rummaging for food.  No, we are the trash can in which Jesus is rummaging.  He is rummaging through all the trash of our poor, sinful, selfish lives, looking for something worth while, something of value.
For there is nothing God desires more than our holiness, our ability to reflect his love in our lives.  It is why he made us in his own image and likeness and why he was incarnate of the Blessed Virgin Mary.  
Christ seeks our salvation with a real desperation.  He seeks it preaching on the hills of Galilee.  He seeks it falling on bloodied knees as he walks the the via dolorosa.  He seeks it as he offers the perfect sacrifice on the altar of the cross.
So desperately does he desire to save us that he offers his very life in ransom for us.  This just Abel does not just offer the fruit of his labor, but the blood in his veins.  This modern day Melchizedek, does not just offer bread and wine, but his body and blood.  God did not send an angel to spare his only-begotten Son, but gave him up to be offered for us on Calvary hill.
He desires nothing so much as to offer himself in ransom for our sins: This innocent lamb, who randoms the flock by laying down his life.  He, the priest and the victim, the giver and the gift, offers the perfect sacrifice of love unto death, death on a cross.
Seeking Christ
Which leads us to the five first words of Christ in John’s account of his Blessed Passion.
There they are, this enormous crowd of temple police and soldiers, armed with clubs and swords, goes out to the Garden, where Judas has told them Jesus would be found with his disciples.  It was the middle of the night. And Jesus goes out to meet them armed with five words: “Who are you looking for?”
He says the same to us this Friday afternoon.  Who are you looking for?  
And each one of us can answer him.
  • A young teenager might say, I’m looking for someone to inspire me. someone to make sense of my life…to lead me, advise me, and guide me to be happy and successful and content.
  • The old man is looking for someone to take away the pain of his body and the loneliness of his soul.  Someone who can remove the fear that gnaws at him every time he things of getting sick and dying.  
  • Another one is looking for someone to take away the guilt which he’s carried on his back like a bag of bricks for so many years.  It was stupid and wrong and sinful, and he’s never been able to forgive himself…he needs someone to lift those sins off his shoulders.
  • And then there’s the young mother who is looking for someone to watch over her kids or maybe lighten her load, as she works three jobs, one for each kid.  She’s looking for someone who will help her to sleep all night without waking up worrying about the next day’s burdens.
  • And then there’s that guy who is looking for someone to answer all those questions he has about life…and to show him how to solve the problems of the world…to feed the poor, and heal the sick, and end the violence which he knows makes no sense.
  • There’s the accomplished businessman, who has all the money he needs, but feels strangely empty inside,
  • And there’s the alcoholic, at the bar down the street who’s fallen into his bottle for the umpteenth time,
  • And the middle aged woman whose breast cancer is back and needs a miracle
  • And the guy who’s been dumped again and feels desperate and alone, and needs someone to love him…
  • And each one of us….
Look deep in your heart, my fiends, and hear Jesus’ voice asking you today: Who are you looking for?
Whomever you seek…whatever the pain of your heart that cries out to heaven…the one who has been seeking you down every alley and detour hangs from the cross for you today.
  • He hangs there dying, to teach us how to live.
  • He hangs there rejected, to teach us how to love.
  • The nails, filed sharp by our sins, piece the wrists of his body.  But we are forgiven by him, for we know not what we do.
  • The crown of thorns, pierces his flesh, but the blood that drips down cleanses all it touches from darkness and sin.
  • From his side, pierced by the lance of our sins, blood and water flow out, not as a harbinger of death, but as the beginning of newness of life.  For those who are baptized in that water will never die.  And those who drink of that blood will live forever.
  • By his blessed passion upon that cross, by his suffering, we are healed of every brokenness, freed of every sin, and the bonds of death are, once and for all, broken.
Who are you looking for? You are looking for the Shepherd who has been looking for you, the Christ, the Son of the Living God: Who by his holy cross, has redeemed the world.