Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Pope Benedict XVI’s Vespers Homily on Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul

I was not able to celebrate this Solemnity well yesterday as I was engaged all day (literally, from 5:30 a.m. till 9:30 p.m.) in activities relating to my grandmother's funeral. It's times like these that I am so thankful for Zenit and their consistent translation and publication of homilies and speeches from our beautiful Holy Father. Following is their translation of his Vespers homily for the Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul:

VATICAN CITY, JUNE 28, 2010 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the homily Benedict XVI delivered today during the vigil for the Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul, held at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls.

* * *

Dear Brothers and Sisters!
 
With the celebration of the first vespers we enter into the solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul. We have the grace of doing so in the Papal Basilica named after the Apostle to the Gentiles, recollected in prayer near his tomb. Because of this, I would like to focus my brief reflection on the perspective of the missionary vocation of the Church. In this line are the third antiphon of the psalm that we prayed and the biblical reading. The first two antiphons are dedicated to St. Peter, the third to St. Paul and it says: "You are the messenger of God, Holy Apostle Paul: you proclaimed the truth in the whole world."

And in the brief reading, which treats of the initial direction of the Letter to the Romans, Paul introduces himself as "called to be an apostle, set apart for the Gospel of God" (Romans 1:1). Paul's figure, his person and his ministry, his whole existence and his hard work for the Kingdom of God, are completely dedicated to the service of the Gospel. Perceived in these texts is a sense of movement, where the protagonist is not man, but God, the breath of the Holy Spirit, which drives the Apostle onto the roads of the world to take the Good News to all: the promises of the prophets are fulfilled in Jesus, the Christ, the Son of God, who died for our sins and rose for our justification. Saul is no longer, Paul is, and what is more, it is Christ who lives in him (cf. Galatians 2:20) and wishes to gather all men. If then the feast of the Holy Patrons of Rome evokes the twofold tension between unity and universality that typifies this Church, the context in which we find ourselves this evening calls us to favor the second, allowing ourselves, so to speak, to be won over by St. Paul and by his extraordinary vocation.
 
When he was elected Successor of Peter, at the height of the unfolding of the Second Vatican Council, the Servant of God Giovanni Battista Montini chose to bear the name of the Apostle to the Gentiles. Within his program of action of the Council, in 1974 Paul VI convoked and assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the topic of evangelization in the contemporary world, and about a year later he published the apostolic exhortation "Evangelii Nuntiandi," which opens with these words: "There is no doubt that the effort to proclaim the Gospel to the people of today, who are buoyed up by hope but at the same time often oppressed by fear and distress, is a service rendered to the Christian community and also to the whole of humanity" (No. 1). The timeliness of this expression is striking. Perceived in it is all the particular missionary sensibility of Paul VI and, through his voice, the great conciliar yearning to evangelize the contemporary world, a yearning that culminated in the decree "Ad Gentes," but which permeates all the documents of Vatican II and that, even earlier, animated the thought and work of the council fathers, gathered to represent, in a way never before so tangible, the worldwide diffusion reached by the Church.
 
Words are not adequate to explain how the Venerable John Paul II, in his long pontificate, developed this missionary projection, which -- it is always recalled -- responds to the nature itself of the Church, which with St. Paul can and must always repeat: "For if I preach the Gospel, that gives me no ground for boasting. For necessity is laid upon me. Woe to me if I do not preach the Gospel! (1 Corinthians 9:16). Pope John Paul II presented "live" the missionary nature of the Church, with the apostolic journeys and with the insistence of his magisterium on the urgency of a "new evangelization": "new" not in the contents, but in the interior impulse, open to the grace of the Holy Spirit who constitutes the force of the new law of the Gospel and who always renews the Church; "new" in the search of ways that correspond to the force of the Holy Spirit and are adapted to the times and the situations; "new" because necessary also in countries which have already received the proclamation of the Gospel. Evident to all is that my predecessor gave an extraordinary impulse to the mission of the Church, not only -- I repeat -- by the distances covered by him, but above all by the genuine missionary spirit that animated him and that he left in legacy at the dawn of the third millennium.
 
Taking up this legacy, I have been able to affirm, at the beginning of my Petrine ministry, that the Church is young, and open to the future. And I repeat it today, near the sepulcher of St. Paul: The Church is an immense force of renewal in the world, not because of her strength, but because of the force of the Gospel, in which the Holy Spirit of God breathes, the God Creator and Redeemer of the world. The challenges of the present age are certainly beyond human capacities; they are the historical and social challenges, and with greater reason, the spiritual challenges. At times it seems to us pastors of the Church that we are reliving the experience of the Apostles, when thousands of needy persons followed Jesus, and he asked: What can we do for all these people? They then experienced their impotence. But Jesus had in fact demonstrated to them that with faith in God nothing is impossible, and that a few loaves and a few fish, blessed and shared, could satiate all. But it was not -- and is not -- only hunger for material food: There is a more profound hunger, which only God can satiate.

Man of the third millennium also desires an authentic and full life, he has need of truth, of profound liberty, of gratuitous love. Also in the deserts of the secularized world, man's soul thirsts for God, for the living God. Because of this John Paul II wrote: "The mission of Christ the Redeemer, entrusted to the Church, is still very far from its fulfillment," and he added: "a look on the whole of humanity demonstrates that such a mission is still at the beginning and that we must commit ourselves with all our strength to its service" ("Redemptoris Missio," No. 1). There are regions in the world that still wait for a first evangelization; others that received it but need more profound work; others still in which the Gospel put down roots a long time ago, giving place to a true Christian tradition, but where in the last centuries -- with complex dynamics -- the process of secularization has produced a grave crisis of the sense of the Christian faith and of belonging to the Church.
 
In this perspective, I have decided to create a new organism, in the form of pontifical council, with the specific task of promoting a renewed evangelization in countries where the first proclamation of the faith already resounded, and where Churches are present of ancient foundation, but which are going through a progressive secularization of society and a sort of "eclipse of the sense of God," which constitutes a challenge to find the appropriate means to propose again the perennial truth of the Gospel of Christ.
 
Dear brothers and sisters, the universal Church faces the challenge of the new evangelization, which asks us also to continue with commitment the search for the full unity among Christians. An eloquent sign of hope in this connection is the custom of the reciprocal visits between the Church of Rome and that of Constantinople on the occasion of the feasts of their respective patron saints.

Because of this, today we welcome with renewed joy and gratitude the delegation sent by Patriarch Bartholomew I, to whom we address the most cordial greeting. May the intercession of Sts. Peter and Paul obtain for the whole Church ardent faith and apostolic courage, to proclaim to the world the truth of which we all have need, the truth that is God, origin and end of the universe and of history, merciful and faithful Father, hope of eternal life. Amen.

[Translation by ZENIT]

Monday, June 28, 2010

Novitiate Reading

I mentioned previously that for the novitiate I would like to bring some good books of poetry with me. I am really looking forward to a period of non-academic reading, and I think poetry fits in perfectly with the rhythm of silence that will occur during this intensive year of spiritual formation. So based on some recommendations as well as some books that I already owned, this is what I'm bringing with me, poetry-wise, in no particular order:

John Donne, The Complete English Poems

Robert Browning, Selected Poems

John Milton, Paradise Lost and Other Poems

Walt Whitman, Selected Poems

Dylan Thomas, Collected Poems

Rumi, The Book of Love: Poems of Ecstasy and Longing, translated by Coleman Barks

Gerard Manley Hopkins, The Major Works

Lord Byron, The Major Works

Emily Dickinson, The Complete Poems

Wallace Stevens, The Palm at the End of the Mind

William Shakespeare, The Complete Works
 

As far as spiritual reading goes, I primarily want to focus on reading Scripture, including reading the NT in Greek as much as possible, but I'll also be bringing St. Augustine's Confessions in Latin (which will enable me to continue working on my Latin), St. Teresa of Avila's Complete Works, Thomas a Kempis' The Imitation of Christ, Fr. Martin Laird's Into the Silent Land (he will also be coming to the novitiate for a week to teach a seminar on contemplative prayer), St. Louis de Montfort's True Devotion to Mary, St. Therese of Lisieux's Story of a Soul, and St. Catherine of Siena's The Dialogue, and Pope Benedict XVI's Jesus of Nazareth, and St. John of the Cross' The Complete Works, a bunch of Thomas Merton, The Cloud of Unknowing, and St. Francis de Sales' Introduction to the Devout Life. Mind you, I don't anticipate reading them all, but those are the sort of bare minimum books that I want to have with me. The rest of my ever-growing library I will be storing at my parents' house for the year.

I want next year to be as non-academic as possible, so I'm leaving the Summa at home, because otherwise I'll be tempted to spend the entire year reading only that, and I'm leaving home basically any books that are primarily theological or philosophical. I'll be bringing a fiction book or two, also, including The Brothers Karamazov, The Lord of the Rings triology, and perhaps Canterbury Tales. The only truly academic exercises that I'm planning on undertaking regularly are working on my Greek, Latin, and French. I'd like to really shore up and solidify those three languages before going on to Hebrew and another modern language, probably Italian (since I plan on doing doctoral work in Rome, if not seminary itself).

Anyway, I'm mostly writing this out so that I have it on record somewhere, so that when I'm packing I won't have to worry about making too many decisions. Other than those books, I'll just be going out there with the necessary clothing, some writing materials, and that's about it. In between now and August 13 when I leave, I've got some good time to spend with my family, and I'll be living at an Augustinian parish in Old City Philadelphia, which will be awesome. Final exams are Wednesday, and then I am officially done the last of my undergraduate work, which also is awesome, and weird.

And so that's my life.

Grandmom's Eulogy

Tomorrow is Grandmom’s funeral, and I’ve been asked to deliver a brief eulogy, which I wanted to post in tribute to her:

Rose Hallman was many things to many people. She was Grandmom, she was Mom, she was Aunt Rose, she was Mrs. Hallman, and to her beloved Jimmy she was simply Rosie. But to me, she was always Big Mama, and I was her little Michael. The irony is obvious, of course, being that I was about a foot taller than her by the time I entered kindergarten. In these past few days I have spent some time thinking about that, and how in reality it was but one of the many ironies that defined her life and her character.

Though her stature was tiny, to all who knew her she was indeed larger than life. Though her body frequently failed her, and physically she was often weak, even frail, we all know her by her indomitable spirit, and we all know her as a pillar of strength. Life was often rough to Grandmom, and yet if we were forced to come up with just one single identifying characteristic, many of us would point to her sweetness.

And how could we not speak of her beautiful smile, a smile so radiant that its brightness could penetrate any darkness, no matter how deep and how thick. Maybe that was her secret, that whenever the turbulence of life would have overwhelmed anyone else, she simply smiled, placed her unwavering trust in Jesus and in the prayers of His Blessed Mother, and marched forward.

Life was demanding of Big Mama, yet no demands could ever match the generosity of her heart. She took joy in giving of herself, whether it was spending time with her grandkids, taking us to Sesame Place or the Zoo (where we learned all about the elephants opening their pocket books), or just having the family over for dinners that were always amazingly and seemingly effortlessly put together. She so deeply loved her husband, her sister and brother, her parents, her children, her grandchildren, her great-grandchildren, her nieces and nephews, and to be with family was the greatest joy of her life.

Grandmom had a strong devotion to the Blessed Mother, and she loved to pray the Rosary. What many people do not know is that she almost always prayed nothing but the Joyful Mysteries, and if you think about it, this makes perfect sense, because these are the mysteries that speak so much of humility, of generosity, of simplicity and poverty of spirit, of faithful love, in other words, of all of the virtues that she possessed in abundance.

Grandmom was a fighter, to be sure, and her strength to fight most certainly was rooted in the strength of her faith. In her many sufferings she always so wonderfully imitated the Cross of Jesus Christ, and through her faith she has taught us all something special about the Cross. She has taught us that the Cross of Jesus Christ is that place in space and time where death is transformed, where sadness is transfigured in beauty, and where the experience of suffering becomes an encounter with divine love.

To speak of Grandmom's strength, her faith, and her fighting spirit, it is impossible here not to say something about Grandpop. The fidelity he has shown to their marriage vows, taken over sixty years ago, the vow to be with her through sickness and in health, till death, is such a source of inspiration. Grandpop's love for his sweet Rosie compelled him always to push her to keep fighting, and fight she did. I had such a privilege of being with her quite a bit during her final days, and watching Grandpop, this war veteran and a mountain of toughness, find a way, in a room full of family, friends, nurses, to somehow be all alone with his Rosie, kissing her, whispering in her ear, stroking her, loving her, and it is just the most beautiful thing I have ever seen, and I am so thankful for the opportunity to have witnessed such love and such devotion.

It should come as no surprise then that on the day that Grandmom died, at the moment of her death we experienced here a storm unlike anything most of us have ever seen. For simultaneously while heaven exploded in exultation at the homecoming of one of its most beautiful and holy souls, earth cried out in agony at the loss of one of the most precious treasures it has ever known. The collision of heaven's joy and earth's agony was so great that an epic storm resulted, and for so many, the passing on of one of our brightest lights caused darkness to consume the land, just as sadness consumed our hearts.

Finally, St. Augustine once preached that it is out of necessity that we mourn at the loss of our loved ones, but we do not mourn as those who have no hope. Rather, we keep always in our hearts the truth that our faith teaches, which is that we will indeed meet again in a new and glorious day. And so there is one final thought I would like to share about this hope. As Christians we take comfort knowing that heaven is her destiny now, yet even heaven is not the end of her journey, for as Christians we profess belief in the resurrection. While this belief always comes to my mind when considering death, it has been especially profound in thinking about Grandmom, for in the resurrection, for Big Mama there will be no more contradiction. That strong, indomitable spirit which carried her through this life will finally have that glorified body able to keep up. It is knowing and trusting in the fulfillment of this promise that for me so greatly strengthens my own faith in our loving and merciful God.

Grandmom, we love you, we miss you terribly. We ask you please to keep praying for us, and we look forward in joyful anticipation for that day when we see you again.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Pope Benedict XVI on the Liturgy

Following is the text of an address delivered by the Holy Father on the nature of the liturgy. This is one of Joseph Ratzinger's great areas of expertise, and an area of Catholic faith to which he has devoted a great amount of his writing, his preaching, his study, and his pontificate has been defined particularly by his desire to see the restoration of the beauty and solemnity of the Roman liturgy. Here is the address, delivered June 15 at the Basilica of St. John Lateran:

Dear Brothers and Sisters!
 
The Psalm says: "Behold, how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity!" (Psalm 133:1). It really is like this: it is a profound motive of joy for me to meet again with you and share the great good that the parishes and the other ecclesial realities of Rome have realized in this pastoral year. I greet with fraternal affection the cardinal vicar and I thank him for the courteous words he addressed to me and for the diligence he dedicates daily to the governance of the diocese, in supporting priests and the parish communities. I greet the auxiliary bishops, the entire presbyterate and each one of you. I address a cordial thought to all those who are sick and in particular difficulties, assuring them of my prayer.
 
As Cardinal Vallini recalled, we are engaged, since last year, in the verification of ordinary pastoral care. This evening we will reflect on two points of primary importance: "Sunday Eucharist and Testimony of Charity." I am aware of the great work that the parishes, the associations and the movements have realized, through meetings of formation and encounter, to deepen and live better these two fundamental components of the life and the mission of the Church and of every individual believer. This has also fostered that pastoral responsibility that, in the diversity of ministries and charisms, must be diffused ever more if we really want the Gospel to reach the heart of every inhabitant of Rome. So much has been done, and we thank the Lord; but still much remains to be done, always with his help.
 
Faith can never be presupposed, because every generation needs to receive this gift through the proclamation of the Gospel and to know the truth that Christ has revealed to us. The Church, therefore, is always engaged in proposing to all the deposit of the faith; contained in it also is the doctrine on the Eucharist -- central mystery in which "is enclosed all the spiritual good of the Church, namely, Christ himself, our Pasch" ("Presbyterorum Ordinis," No. 5) -- doctrine that today, unfortunately, is not sufficiently understood in its profound value and in its relevance for the existence of believers. Because of this, it is important that a more profound knowledge of the mystery of the Body and Blood of the Lord be seen as an exigency of the different communities of our diocese of Rome. At the same time, in the missionary spirit that we wish to nourish, it is necessary to spread the commitment to proclaim such Eucharistic faith, so that every man will encounter Jesus Christ who has revealed the "close" God, friend of humanity, and to witness it with an eloquent life of charity.
 
In all his public life, through the preaching of the Gospel and miraculous signs, Jesus proclaimed the goodness and mercy of the Father towards man. This mission reached its culmination on Golgotha, where the crucified Christ revealed the face of God, so that man, contemplating the Cross, be able to recognize the fullness of love (cf. Benedict XVI, "Deus Caritas Est," No. 12). The sacrifice of Calvary is mysteriously anticipated in the Last Supper, when Jesus, sharing with the Twelve the bread and wine, transforms them into his body and his blood, which shortly after he would offer as immolated Lamb. The Eucharist is the memorial of the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ, of his love to the end for each one of us, memorial that He willed to entrust to the Church so that it would be celebrated throughout the centuries. According to the meaning of the Hebrew word "zakar," the "memorial" is not simply the memory of something that happened in the past, but a celebration which actualizes that event, so as to reproduce its salvific force and efficacy. Thus, "the sacrifice that Christ offered to the Father, once and for all, on the Cross in favor of humanity, is rendered present and actual" (Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, No. 280). Dear brothers and sisters, in our time the word sacrifice is not liked, rather it seems to belong to other times and to another way of understanding life. However, properly understood, it is and remains fundamental, because it reveals to us with what love God loves us in Christ.
 
In the offering that Jesus makes of himself we find all the novelty of Christian worship. In ancient times men offered in sacrifice to the divinity the animals or first fruits of the earth. Jesus, instead, offers himself, his body and his whole existence: He himself in person becomes the sacrifice that the liturgy offers in the Holy Mass. In fact, with the consecration of the bread and wine they become his true body and blood. Saint Augustine invited his faithful not to pause on what appeared to their sight, but to go beyond: "Recognize in the bread -- he said -- that same body that hung on the cross, and in the chalice that same blood that gushed from his side" (Disc. 228 B, 2). To explain this transformation, theology has coined the word "transubstantiation," word that resounded for the first time in this Basilica during the IV Lateran Council, of which in five years will be the 8th centenary. On that occasion the following expressions were inserted in the profession of faith: "his body and his blood are truly contained in the sacrament of the altar, under the species of bread and wine, because the bread is transubstantiated into the body, and the wine into the blood by divine power" (DS, 802). Therefore, it is essential to stress, in the itineraries of education of children in the faith, of adolescents and of young people, as well as in "centers of listening" to the Word of God, that in the sacrament of the Eucharist Christ is truly, really and substantially present.
 
The Holy Mass, celebrated in the respect of the liturgical norms and with a fitting appreciation of the richness of the signs and gestures, fosters and promotes the growth of Eucharistic faith. In the Eucharistic celebration we do not invent something, but we enter into a reality that precedes us, more than that, which embraces heaven and earth and, hence, also the past, the future and the present. This universal openness, this encounter with all the sons and daughters of God is the grandeur of the Eucharist: we go to meet the reality of God present in the body and blood of the Risen One among us. Hence, the liturgical prescriptions dictated by the Church are not external things, but express concretely this reality of the revelation of the body and blood of Christ and thus the prayer reveals the faith according to the ancient principle "lex orandi - lex credendi." And because of this we can say "the best catechesis on the Eucharist is the Eucharist itself well celebrated" (Benedict XVI, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation "Sacramentum Caritatis," No. 64). It is necessary that in the liturgy the transcendent dimension emerge with clarity, that of the mystery, of the encounter with the Divine, which also illumines and elevates the "horizontal," that is the bond of communion and of solidarity that exists between all those who belong to the Church. In fact, when the latter prevails, the beauty, profundity and importance of the mystery celebrated is fully understood. Dear brothers in the priesthood, to you the bishop has entrusted, on the day of your priestly Ordination, the task to preside over the Eucharist. Always have at heart the exercise of this mission: celebrate the divine mysteries with intense interior participation, so that the men and women of our City can be sanctified, put into contact with God, absolute truth and eternal love.
 
And let us also keep present that the Eucharist, joined to the cross and resurrection of the Lord, has dictated a new structure to our time. The Risen One was manifested the day after Saturday, the first day of the week, day of the sun and of creation. From the beginning Christians have celebrated their encounter with the Risen One, the Eucharist, on this first day, on this new day of the true sun of history, the Risen Christ. And thus time always begins again with the encounter with the Risen One and this encounter gives content and strength to everyday life. Because of this, it is very important for us Christians, to follow this new rhythm of time, to meet with the Risen One on Sunday and thus "to take" with us his presence, which transforms us and transforms our time. Moreover, I invite all to rediscover the fecundity of Eucharistic adoration: before the Most Holy sacrament we experience in an altogether particular way that "abiding" of Jesus, which He himself, in the Gospel of John, posits as necessary condition to bear much fruit (cf. John 15:5) and to avoid our apostolic action being reduced to sterile activism, but that instead it be testimony of the love of God.
 
Communion with Christ is always communion also with his body, which is the Church, as the Apostle Paul reminds, saying: "The bread which we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread" (1 Corinthians:16-17). It is, in fact, the Eucharist that transforms a simple group of persons into ecclesial community: the Eucharist makes the Church. Therefore, it is fundamental that the celebration of the Holy Mass be effectively the culmination, the "bearing structure" of the life of every parish community.

I exhort all to take better care, also through apposite liturgical groups, of the preparation and celebration of the Eucharist, so that all who participate can encounter the Lord. It is the Risen Christ, who renders himself present in our today and gathers us around himself. Feeding on Him we are freed from the bonds of individualism and, through communion with Him, we ourselves become, together, one thing, his mystical Body. Thus the differences are surmounted due to profession, to class, to nationality so that we discover ourselves members of one great family, that of the children of God, in which to each is given a particular grace for common usefulness. The world and men do not have need of a another social aggregation, but have need of the Church, which is in Christ as a sacrament, "which is sign and instrument of the profound union with God and of the unity of the whole human race" ("Lumen Gentium," No. 1), called to make the light of the Risen Lord shine on all people.
 
Jesus came to reveal to us the love of the Father, because "man cannot live without love" (John Paul II, "Redemptoris Hominis," No. 10). Love is, in fact, the fundamental experience of every human being, what has given meaning to daily living. Nourished by the Eucharist we also, following the example of Christ, live for Him, to be witnesses of love. Receiving the Sacrament, we enter into communion of blood with Jesus Christ. In the Hebrew conception, blood indicates life; thus we can say that being nourished by the Body of Christ we receive the life of God and learn to look at reality with his eyes, abandoning the logic of the world to follow the divine logic of gift and gratuitousness.

St. Augustine recalls that during a vision he thought he heard the voice of the Lord who said to him: "I am the nourishment of adults. Grow up, and you will eat me, without, because of this, my being transformed into you, as the nutriment of your flesh; but you are transformed into me" (cf. Confessions VII, 10, 16). When we receive Christ, the love of God expands in our innermost self, modifies our heart radically and makes us capable of gestures that, by the expansive force of good, can transform the life of those that are next to us. Charity is able to generate an authentic and permanent change of society, acting in the hearts and minds of men, and when it is lived in truth "it is the principal propelling force for the true development of every person and of the whole of humanity" (Benedict XVI, Encyclical Caritas in Veritate, 1). For the disciples of Jesus, the testimony of charity is not a passing sentiment, but on the contrary it is what molds life in every circumstance. I encourage all, in particular the Caritas and Deacons, to be committed in the delicate and essential field of education to charity, as permanent dimension of personal and community life.
 
This City of ours asks of Christ's disciples, with a renewed proclamation of the Gospel, a clearer and more limpid testimony of charity. It is with the language of love, desirous of the integral good of man, that the Church speaks to the inhabitants of Rome. In these years of my ministry as your Bishop, I have been able to visit several places where charity is lived intensely. I am grateful to all those who are engaged in the different charitable structures, for the dedication and generosity with which they serve the poor and the marginalized. The needs and poverty of so many men and women interpellate us profoundly: it is Christ himself  who every day, in the poor, asks us to assuage his hunger and thirst, to visit him in hospitals and prisons, to accept and dress him. A celebrated Eucharist imposes on us and at the same time renders us capable of becoming, in our turn, bread broken for brothers, coming to meet their needs and giving ourselves. Because of this, a Eucharistic celebration that does not lead to meet men where they live, work and suffer, to take to them the love of God, does not manifest the love it encloses. To be faithful to the mystery that is celebrated on the altars we must, as the Apostle Paul exhorts us, offer our bodies, ourselves, in spiritual sacrifice pleasing to God (cf. Romans 12:1) in those circumstances that require dying to our I and constitute our daily "altar." Gestures of sharing create communion, renew the fabric of interpersonal relations, marking them with gratuitousness and gift, and allowing for the construction of the civilization of love. In a time such as the present of economic and social crisis, let us be in solidarity with those who live in indigence to offer all the hope of a better tomorrow worthy of man. If we really live as disciples of the God-Charity, we will help the inhabitants of Rome to discover themselves brothers and children of the one Father.
 
The very nature of love requires definitive and irrevocable choices of life. I turn to you in particular, dearly beloved young people: do not be afraid to choose love as the supreme rule of life. Do not be afraid to love Christ in the priesthood and, if you perceive in your heart the call of the Lord, follow him in this extraordinary adventure of love, abandon yourselves with trust to him! Do not be afraid to form Christian families that live faithful, indissoluble love open to life! Give witness that love, as Christ lived it and as the magisterium of the Church teaches, does not take anything away from our happiness, but on the contrary it gives that profound joy that Christ promised to his disciples.
 
May the Virgin Mary accompany the path of our Church of Rome with her maternal intercession. Mary, who in an altogether singular way lived communion with God and the sacrifice of her own Son on Calvary, enable us to live ever more intensely, piously and consciously the mystery of the Eucharist, to proclaim with the word and life the love that God has for every man. Dear friends, I assure you of my prayer and impart my heartfelt Apostolic Blessing to you all. Thank you.
 
[Translation by ZENIT]

The Radical Call of Christ

I have been remiss on following up with my readings of the Holy Father's discourses, but today from Zenit I found this gem, his Angelus message given today in Rome. It speaks so beautifully of the radical call to follow Jesus Christ, and the new dimensions of the Kingdom of God that Christ has opened. Finally, the Holy Father here makes an appeal to contemplate the love of the divine-human heart of Jesus Christ. Here it is, it's brief and well worth the read:

Dear brothers and sisters!

The biblical readings of this Sunday's Holy Mass give me the opportunity to take up again the theme of Christ's call and its demands, a theme which I also reflected on a week ago on the occasion of the ordination of new presbyters of the Diocese of Rome. In fact, whoever has the fortune to know a young man or young woman who leaves their family, their studies or work to consecrate himself or herself to God, knows this well, because he has before him a living example of radical response to the divine calling. This is one of the most beautiful experiences that one has in the Church: seeing the Lord's action in people's lives, touching it with one's hand; experiencing that God is not an abstract entity, but a Reality so great and powerful that he can fill man's heart in a super-abundant way. He is a Person who is alive and near, who loves us and asks us to love him.

The evangelist Luke presents us with Jesus as he is on the road to Jerusalem and meets some men, probably young men, who promise to follow him wherever he goes. He shows himself to be very demanding with them, informing them that "the Son of man" -- Jesus himself, the Messiah -- "has no place to lay his head," that is, he does not have his own stable place to live, and that whoever chooses to work with him in God's field cannot change his mind (cf. Luke 9:57-58, 61-62).

To another, Christ himself says: "Follow me," asking him to completely sever his familial bonds (Luke 9:59-60). These demands might appear too harsh, but in reality they express the newness and absolute priority of the Kingdom of God that is made present in the Person himself of Jesus Christ. In the final analysis it is the radicality that is owed to the Love of God, whom Jesus is the first to obey. Whoever renounces everything, even himself, to follow Jesus, enters into a new dimension of freedom that St. Paul defines as "walking according to the Spirit" (cf. Galatians 5:16). "Christ has freed us for freedom!" the Apostle writes, and explains that this new form of freedom acquired for us by Christ consists in being "in the service of each other" (Galatians 5:1, 13). Freedom and love coincide! Obeying one's own egoism, on the contrary, leads to rivalry and conflict.

Dear friends, the month of June, characterized by devotion to the Sacred Heart of Christ, is already coming to an end. Indeed on the feast of the Sacred Heart we renewed our commitment to sanctification together with the priests of the whole world. Today I would like to invite everyone to contemplate the divine-human heart of the Lord Jesus, to draw from the source itself of God's Love. Whoever fixes his gaze upon that pierced Heart that is always open out of love for us, senses the truth of this invocation: "Lord, you are my only good" (Responsorial Psalm), and is ready to leave everything to follow the Lord. O Mary, who answered the divine call without holding anything back, pray for us!


 

[Translation by Joseph G. Trabbic]

Archbishop Chaput on Evangelization and the Renewal of the Liturgy

Following is the text of a wonderful address by Archbishop Chaput of Denver on evangelization and the renewal of Catholic liturgy. I encourage all, particularly those concerned with the present state of Catholic liturgy, to consider what the Archbishop has to say here:

Glorify God by your life: evangelization and the renewal of the liturgy

Archbishop Chaput reflects on questions of evangelization and the renewal of Catholic liturgy. He examines the key issues of today's liturgical worship within the context of American culture. Where does the Catholic liturgy fit in a culture which prizes technology, science and material proof, but has lost the vocabulary to understand humanity's oldest and deepest need: faith in an unseen God?

I'm very honored to be here tonight. This annual lecture reminds us that the Church in Chicago has played an historic role not only in the renewal of the liturgy, but also in the evangelization of America.

The vision of Cardinal Mundelein and Cardinal Stritch, along with the pioneering efforts of priests like Msgr. Hillenbrand and lay apostolates like the Catholic Family Movement, bore lasting fruit. They gave the Church an infusion of apostolic energy that nearly a century later still informs our worship and our Catholic witness in this culture.

So I'm happy to pay tribute to that. But the fact that this Institute is celebrating its 10th anniversary also reminds us that the Chicago legacy is being carried on with zeal and intelligence under the leadership of my friend, Cardinal Francis George.

I'm a member of the bishops's Committee on Divine Worship and I've been honored to work with Cardinal George on the next major development in the liturgical renewal—the English translation of the new edition of the Roman Missal, which we begin implementing in the United States sometime next year.

But I'm not here to talk about the new Missal tonight. I've been asked to speak on the broader questions of evangelization and the renewal of the liturgy, and I will.  I do need to mention one caveat, though:  The thoughts I offer you tonight are mine alone.  I don't speak for any of my brother bishops, or for the bishops' conference; and I'm very happy to defer to Cardinal George's judgment in all matters Catholic.

I want to start our conversation in an unlikely place. The scene is Mainz, Germany, April 1964. Just a few months earlier, in December 1963, Vatican II had published its groundbreaking document on the liturgy. Sacrosanctum Concilium was rightly hailed as the distillation of the practical and theological genius of the liturgical movement.

These were heady days, and the group gathering in Mainz for the Third German Liturgical Conference was understandably in a self-congratulatory mood. One of their friends, a pioneering theologian in the continental liturgical movement, could not join them. That friend was Father Romano Guardini, author of the now classic work, The Spirit of the Liturgy.

Though he couldn't be there, Guardini sent a long open letter that was read to the conference. In it, he praised the work of Vatican II as a testimony that the Holy Spirit was alive and guiding the Church. He saw Sacrosanctum Concilium opening a new phase in the liturgical movement.

But the bulk of his letter was a complex meditation on the meaning of worship. And in his final lines he offered an opinion that left people stunned. He wrote:

"Is not the liturgical act, and with it all that goes under the name 'liturgy,' so bound up with the historical background—antique or medieval or baroque—that it would be more honest to give it up altogether? Would it not be better to admit that man in this industrial and scientific age, with its new sociological structure, is no longer capable of the liturgical act?"i 

Guardini's remark caused quite a stir. But there's no evidence that theologians or liturgists ever took his concerns seriously. Let me say that I do. I think he put his finger on one of the key questions of mission in his time, and also in ours.

What Guardini meant by the liturgical act was the transformation of personal prayer and piety into genuine corporate worship, the leitourgia, the public service that the Church offers to God. He recognized that the Church's corporate prayer was very different from the private prayer of individual believers.

The liturgical act requires a new kind of consciousness, a "readiness toward God," an inward awareness of the unity of the whole person, body and soul, with the spiritual body of the Church, present in heaven and on earth. It also requires an appreciation that the sacred signs and actions of the Mass -- standing, kneeling, singing and so forth -- are themselves "prayer."

Guardini believed that the spirit of the modern world was undermining the beliefs that made this liturgical consciousness possible. His insight here is that our faith and worship don't take place in a vacuum. We're always to some extent products of our culture. Our frameworks of meaning, our perceptions of reality, are shaped by the culture in which we live – whether we like it or not. 

I want to engage Guardini's challenge in our current American context. Let's consider some of the evidence: We live in a society where the organizing principle is technological progress, conceived in narrow, scientific and materialistic terms. Our culture is dominated by the assumptions of this scientific and materialistic worldview. We judge what is "true" and what is "real" by what we can see, touch and verify through research and experimentation.

In this kind of culture, what meaning can there be for the traditional Catholic notion that the human person is created in the image of an invisible God; that the person is a creature of body and soul, infused with "the Spirit of sonship"ii  through the liturgy and the sacraments?

In practice, almost nothing of what we believe as Catholics is affirmed by our culture. Even the meaning of the words "human" and "person" are subject to debate.  And other tenets of the Catholic worldview are aggressively repudiated or ignored.

The question becomes:  What implications does all this have for our worship -- in which we profess to be in contact body and soul with spiritual realities, singing with the angels and saints in heaven, receiving the true Body and Blood of our once dead and now risen Lord on the altar?

Here's another datum:  We're surrounded in our daily lives by monuments to our power over nature and necessity. The trophies of our autonomy and self-sufficiency are everywhere -- buildings, machines, medicines, inventions. Everything seems to point to our capacity to provide for our every need through our own know-how and technology.

Again the question becomes:  What does this do to the central premise of our worship -- that we are creatures dependent upon our Creator, and that we owe thanksgiving to God for every good gift, beginning with the gift of life?

We can ask the same questions about our mission of evangelization. We preach the good news that this world has a Savior who can free us from the bondage of sin and death. What can our good news mean in a world where people don't believe in sin or that there is anything they need to be saved from? What does the promise of victory over death mean to people who don't believe in the existence of any reality beyond this visible world?

So is Guardini right?  Does modern man seem incapable of real worship?  I think so. But the more important question for us is this: If he is right, what are we going to do about it?

One of the few people who have wrestled with the issues Guardini raised is a Chicago priest who's made his own important contributions to the liturgical and intellectual renewal of the Church, Father Robert Barron.

Barron puts the issue this way: "The project is not shaping the liturgy according to the suppositions of the age, but allowing the liturgy to question and shape the suppositions of any age. Is the modern man incapable of the liturgical act? Probably. But this is no ground for despair. Our goal is not to accommodate the liturgy to the world, but to let the liturgy be itself -- a transformative icon of the ordo of God." 

Barron suggests that in the post-conciliar era, the professional Catholic liturgical establishment opted for the former path, trying to adapt the liturgy to the demands of modern culture. I would agree. And I would add that time has shown this to be a dead end. Trying to engineer the liturgy to be more "relevant" and "intelligible" through a kind of relentless cult of novelty, has only resulted in confusion and a deepening of the divide between believers and the true spirit of the liturgy.iii

I'm not here to reargue old debates. We need to be looking forward to Jesus Christ. That means we need to take up the challenge implied in Guardini's question. The next great task of the liturgical renewal is to build an authentic Eucharistic culture, to instill a new sacramental and liturgical sensibility that enables Catholics to face the idols and suppositions of our culture with the confidence of believers who draw life from the sacred mysteries, in which we have communion with the living God.

We need to discover new ways to enter into the liturgical mystery; to realize the central place of the liturgy in God's plan of salvation; to truly live our lives as a spiritual offering to God; and to embrace our responsibilities for the Church's mission with a renewed Eucharistic spirituality. 

I hope the rest of my talk will offer a small contribution to this next task of our renewal.  I have four points I'd like to make.

The first is this: We need to recover the intrinsic and inseparable connection between liturgy and evangelization.

Liturgy is both the source of the Church's mission and its goal. This was the teaching of Christ and the practice of the early Church. And it was reaffirmed by Vatican II.

Sacrosanctum Concilium says this: "The liturgy is the summit toward which the activity of the Church is directed; at the same time it is the font from which all her power flows. For the aim and object of apostolic works is that all who are made sons of God by faith and baptism should come together to praise God in the midst of his Church, to take part in the sacrifice, and to eat the Lord's Supper."iv

This is a beautiful vision of life lived from the Eucharist and for the Eucharist. This should be the foundation not only for our thinking about the liturgy but for our pastoral strategies as well. The reason we evangelize is in order to bring people into communion with the living God in the Eucharistic liturgy. And this experience of communion with God, in turn, impels us to evangelize.

In this regard, the Novus Ordo, the new order of the Mass promulgated after the council, has been a great blessing to the Church.  Our liturgy gives us the zeal for the evangelization and sanctification of our world. The vernacular has opened up the liturgy's content in new ways.  It has encouraged active, creative participation by all the faithful -- not only in the liturgy but in every aspect of the Church's mission.

By the way, for the record, I'm also very grateful that the Holy Father has allowed wider use of the older Tridentine form -- not because I personally prefer it, in fact I find the Novus Ordo, properly celebrated, a much richer expression of worship; but because we need access to all of the Church's heritage of prayer and faith.

So my first point is that we cannot look at the liturgy as something distinct from our mission. Our worship of God in the Mass is meant to be an act of adoration, submission and thanksgiving. It's also meant to be loving acceptance of our vocation as disciples. That's why every Eucharistic liturgy ends on a missionary note -- we are sent out, commissioned to share the treasure we have discovered with everyone we meet.

Here's my second point: The liturgy is a participation in the liturgy of heaven, in which we worship in Spirit and truth with the worldwide Church and the communion of saints.v

This may be the most neglected dimension of the liturgy today.  If our liturgies strike us as pedestrian, narrowly parochial, too focused on our own communities and needs; if they lack a powerful sense of the sacred and the transcendent, it's because we have lost the sense of how our worship participates in the heavenly liturgy.

To appreciate this a little more, we should recall the legend of how Christianity came to Russia. The story goes that around 988, Prince Vladimir I of Kiev was searching for a national religion. He sent ambassadors to neighboring countries to seek out the respective virtues of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. During the course of their fact-finding journey the prince's men had occasion to attend a Eucharistic celebration in the great Church of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople.

They were overcome with awe. They went back home and filed this report: "We came to the Greeks, and we were taken to the place where they worship their God. … We do not know whether we have been in heaven or on earth. … We know only that God dwells there among men."vi  Not long after that, Vladimir was baptized and exhorted all his countrymen to be baptized too.

The source for this story is ancient, and many historians today believe the account is apocryphal. But even so, it illuminates the cosmic and missionary dimensions of the liturgy. 

The Eucharist, as the Prince of Kiev's men were said to have experienced it, is a cosmic liturgy that unites the worship of heaven with our worship here on earth. In the Divine Liturgy, the Kingdom comes on earth as it is in heaven. Heaven and earth are filled with the glory of God. This is what we believe, but I'm not sure how many believers actually live it.

We see the heavenly liturgy in the Book of Revelation. Remember how Revelation begins. St. John is "in the Spirit on the Lord's Day." In other words, he was celebrating the Eucharist on a Sunday when he was given a vision of the worship of heaven and the world to come.vii 

The book is filled with liturgical and sacramental imagery. At one point John sees an uncountable multitude from every tribe, tongue, people and nation worshipping before the Eucharistic Lamb. The climax of the book is the coming of "a new heaven and a new earth" and the announcement: "Behold, the dwelling of God is with men."

There are two points I want to make here: First, our worship is an icon of heavenly things, a window through which the reality and destiny of our lives is glimpsed.

Second, the heavenly liturgy is the key to the universality of the Church's mission. In the Catholic vision of history, God's plan of salvation is destined to culminate in a cosmic liturgy in which all creation gives praise and glory to God, the Creator of all things. We have a foretaste of the liturgical consummation of history every time we celebrate the liturgy on earth.

This truth should transform the way we worship. It should move us with gratitude that our God would grant us the privilege of joining the angels and saints who worship before him. It should make us strive for liturgies that are reverent and beautiful, and that point our hearts and minds to things above.

This truth should also change the way we think about our public witness in this culture. We're called to testify to Jesus Christ, to make his teachings known, to fight against all that violates God's holiness and justice. And we need to understand our mission in the light of God's larger plan, conceived before the foundation of the world.

The ultimate purpose of our witness is to prepare the way for the cosmic liturgy in which all humanity will adore the Creator. Our work takes part in this redemptive plan in which Christ continues to reconcile all things, until that day when every knee in heaven and on earth shall bend in worship, and God is "all in all," as St. Paul put it.viii

Here's my third point: We need to strive to recover and live with the same vibrant liturgical and evangelical spirituality as the early Christians.

Some of the worst liturgical ideas since the council have been based on a woolly romanticizing about what the early Christians believed and how they worshipped. It has been argued, for example, that the early Church had no sacramental priesthood and that the Eucharist was celebrated with limited ritual, essentially as a meal shared among friends.

I won't take the time here to rebut these claims. The problem with all such nostalgic-primitivist reconstructions can be summed up in one thought: Nobody risks torture and death for a meal with their friends. And torture and death were the frequent penalty for being caught celebrating the Eucharist in the world of the early Church.

There are countless stories we could point to. One that especially moves me comes from the year 304, during Diocletian's great persecution. A congregation in Abitina, a village near Carthage, was rounded up. The account of their torture, written by a witness just a few years after the fact, is brutally raw and graphic. What shines out is the people's Eucharistic faith.

Interrogated about why he disobeyed the Emperor's decree, a young lector named Felix said this: "As if one could be a Christian without the Mass or the Mass could be celebrated without a Christian! … The Christian exists through the Mass and the Mass in Christians! Neither can exist without the other. … We celebrated the glorious assembly. We gathered to read the Scriptures of the Lord at the Mass."ix 

We notice in this confession the same themes we've been talking about. The Mass for these disciples is no mere meal. It's a "glorious assembly," a heavenly liturgy. This liturgy defines their identity as Christians. And it also defines the identity of the Church; so much so that one of Felix's fellow martyrs would confess: "We cannot live without the Mass."

This is the kind of faith that should inspire our worship. And this is the kind of faith that our worship should inspire. Can we really say today that we're ready to die rather than not celebrate the Mass?

The liturgy can only inspire us if we make it the heart of our days. And that's a task for us in this room. The centerpiece of a new Eucharistic culture has to be the Sunday celebration of the Mass. There is no greater sign of our culture's impact on the Eucharist than the fact that we no longer see Sunday as the first day of the week but as the final day of our "weekend."

Jesus Christ rose from the dead on "the first day of the week."x  That's why the first Christians hallowed Sunday as the "weekly Easter," the Day of the Lord. That's why we should too.

The Mass should be the spiritual offering we make to begin each week, not something we try to "fit in" among our leisure activities before we have to return to work on Monday. Even this subtle change in outlook could have a deep impact on the way we worship and the way we live our faith in the world.

My fourth and final point is this: The liturgy is a school of sacrificial love. The law of our prayer should be the law of our life. Lex orandi, lex vivendi. We are to become the sacrifice we celebrate.

It is striking how many stories of the first Christian martyrs -- especially the stories of bishops and priests -- are told in what we might call a "Eucharistic key." The classic is the martyrdom of the elderly bishop Polycarp. The whole account unfolds along the lines of a liturgy. Polycarp even delivers a long prayer that is modeled after the Eucharistic canon of the Mass.

Finally Polycarp asks, again echoing the prayer of the Mass: "May I be received this day … as a rich and acceptable sacrifice." The account continues with his being roasted alive. The witnesses testify that they smell, not burning flesh, but the aroma of breaking bread.xi

The other classic example is St. Ignatius, the bishop of Antioch. In prison where he was awaiting his execution by being fed alive to dogs, he wrote: "God's wheat I am, and by the teeth of wild beasts I am to be ground that I may prove to be Christ's pure bread."xii

But not only the martyrs should see themselves as a Eucharistic offering. You and I should do the same. So should every baptized believer. Again and again we read in the New Testament that we are all called to offer ourselves to God as a living sacrifice of praise, that we are to make ourselves a perfect offering, holy and acceptable to God.xiii

This is a foundation stone to the Catholic belief in the priesthood of all the baptized. The early Christians believed they were heirs to the vocation given to Israel—to be a "chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation."  By the priesthood of our lives, all baptized believers are to offer, not the blood-sacrifice of animals, but the sacrifice of our hearts, the symbol of our lives, in imitation of Jesus Christ.

We make our sacrifice of praise first and foremost in the Eucharist. This is the meaning behind the council's call for the "active participation" of the laity in the liturgy.xv  This expression unfortunately has been taken as a license for all sorts of external activity, commotion and busy-ness in our worship. That's not at all what Vatican II had in mind.
 
"Active participation" refers to the inner movement of our souls, our interior participation in Christ's action of offering of his Body and Blood. This requires silent spaces and "pauses" in our worship, in which we can collect our emotions and thoughts, and make a conscious act of self-dedication. We are to "lift up our hearts," and in contrition and humility place them on the altar along with the bread and wine.

But our work does not stop in the Mass.

Everything in our days -- our work, our sufferings, our prayer, our ministries -- everything we do and experience is meant to be offered to God as a spiritual sacrifice.  All of our work for the unborn child, the poor and the disabled; all of our work for immigration justice and the dignity of marriage and the family: All of it should be offered for the praise and glory of God's name and for the salvation of our brothers and sisters.  

This is another great teaching of the council that we have yet to integrate into ordinary Catholic spirituality. In Lumen Gentium, the council taught that all our works "together with the offering of the Lord's Body … are most fittingly offered in the celebration of the Eucharist. Thus, as those everywhere who adore in holy activity, the laity consecrate the world itself to God."xvi

All that we do -- in the liturgy and in our life in the world -- is meant to be in the service of consecrating this world to God.

So my friends, we have come full circle.

This is the answer to Guardini's challenge. You are the answer to Guardini's challenge.

The liturgical act becomes possible for modern man when you make your lives a liturgy, when you live your lives liturgically -- as an offering to God in thanksgiving and praise for his gifts and salvation. You are the future of the liturgical renewal. 

The liturgical act becomes possible for modern man when you see your lives and work in light of God's plan for the world, in light of his desire that all men and women be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth.xvii

The mystery we celebrate with the angels and the saints must take root deep in our lives and personalities. It must bear fruit. Each of us must make our own unique contribution to God's loving plan -- that all creation become adoration and sacrifice in praise of him.

Thank you for your attention tonight.  And it's fitting that we should conclude and go forth in the words of one of the new dismissal prayers of the new Roman Missal. So let our prayer for each other tonight be this: "Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by your life."


 

Endnotes:

i. See the account in Robert Krieg, Romano Guardini: A Precursor of Vatican II (Notre Dame, 1997), 87–90. A unofficial translation of Guardini's letter can be found at: http://www.jknirp.com/guardf.htm.

ii. cf. Rom. 8:15.

iii. Robert E. Barron, Bridging the Great Divide: Musings of a Post-Liberal, Post-Conservative Evangelical Catholic (Rowan & Littlefield, 2004), 66; cf. Chap. 5: "The Liturgical Act and the Church of the 21st Century."

iv.
Sacrosanctum Concilium, 10.

v. cf. Sacrosanctum Concilium, 8, Lumen Gentium 50; Catechism, 1090, 1111, 1136, 1187, 1326, 2642.

vi.
The Rus Primary Chronicle (Cambridge: Mediaeval Academy, 1953); cf. Ratzinger, Pilgrim Fellowship of Faith (Ignatius, 2005), 90–91.

vii. Rev. 1:9.

viii. 2 Pet. 3:13; Eph. 1:10, 23; 1 Cor. 15:28; 2 Cor. 5:19; Col. 1:18, 20 Phil. 2:5–12.

ix.
Patrologia Latina, vol. 8, col. 696; the Latin dominico is sometimes translated "the Lord's Day" or "Lord's Supper." But  the form is a kind of slang, suggesting "Mass"; cf. Mike Aquilina, Fire of God's Love: 120 Reflections on the Eucharist (Servant, 2009), 13.  

x. Mark 16:2, 9; Luke 24:1; John 20:1.

xi. Martyrdom of Polycarp, 9, in The Acts of the Christian Martyrs, trans. Herbert Musurillo (Clarendon, 1972).

xii.
To the Romans, 4.

xiii. cf. Rom. 12:1; 1 Pet. 2:5: Heb. 9:14; 13:15, 16.

xiv. cf. 2 Pet. 2:9; Rev. 1:6; Exod. 19:4.

xv. cf. Sacrosanctum Concilium, 14 (Latin: actuosa participatio). 

xvi. Lumen Gentium, 34.

xvii. cf. 1 Tim. 2:4.

Dylan Thomas

I've been reading The Collected Poems by Dylan Thomas for the past few days. I love his style, it's so furious, and I find myself moved in a way that I don't understand. At the same time, if I'm being honest, mostly I have no idea what the heck he's talking about. His imagery is so dense to me, and it's really difficult for me to cut through it and come to an understanding of what he's really saying. At first that bothered me, but then I remembered that I prefer to attend liturgy in Latin, and that it is precisely the contemplative dimension of not-knowing that often strikes to my heart.

But I'll never be able to write like that. I have no mind for that sort of imagery. It's about much more than knowing how to write, or having skill as a writer. For someone like Thomas, it is clear to me that he sees the world through symbols and metaphors, and I believe it is because of that that he found a particular insight into the human heart, an insight that continues to escape me because my thinking is so linear and literal. I don't know if Thomas was Catholic, but his writing is deeply sacramental, and that moves me.

I know I never posted more about this, but Grandmom passed on Thursday. The funeral is Tuesday morning. I'm delivering the eulogy before the Liturgy of the Word begins. I'll be working on that most of the rest of the day. One thing that has struck me, and that I'll be sure to include, is how my grandmom always had this incredibly radiant and strong spirit, which was trapped inside a body wracked with weakness and infirmity for over fifty years. While death always turns my mind towards the resurrection, it is especially comforting for me to know that when the dead are raised in glory, my grandmom will finally have the body that matches the soul.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Confounded

So crowded is this solitude I cannot get away
From the chaos of my wanderings throughout this endless day
I seek no word of comfort, for that comfort will delay
The darkness that I long for, that illuminating way

The silence is so noisy that I cannot hear a thing
A cacophony of echoes in an evil key does sing
The future is what haunts me and to the past I cling
Yet the present bell will free me if I only let it ring

Infinite depths so shallow when I only care to wade
The pressure of submersion in this ocean I evade
The piercing of the urchins from the land cannot invade
I must protect this vessel so the depths do not pervade

So alone I man this beach, yet no man am I alone
The me I am down there, up here a soulless clone
So draw me, Lord, out beyond this foam
And perhaps one day upon your reef will my heart roam

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Part III of Pope Benedict XVI's Catechesis on St. Thomas Aquinas

On the Summa Theologiae
"In the School of the Saints, Let Us Be Enamored" of the Eucharist
VATICAN CITY, JUNE 23, 2010 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave today during the general audience in St. Peter's Square.

* * *

Dear brothers and sisters,

Today I would like to complete, with a third part, my catechesis on St. Thomas Aquinas. Even after more than 700 years since his death, we can learn much from him. We were reminded of this also by my predecessor, Pope Paul VI, who, in an address given at Fossanova on Sept. 14, 1974, on the occasion of the seventh centenary of St. Thomas' death, asked: "Master Thomas, what lessons can you give us?" And he answered thus: "Trust in the truth of Catholic religious thought, as he defended it, explained it, [and] opened it to the cognitive capacity of the human mind" (Insegnamenti di Paolo VI, XII [1974], pp. 833-834). And, on the same day, in Aquino, still referring to St. Thomas, he affirmed: "All of us, who are faithful children of the Church can and must, at least in some measure, be his disciples!" (Ibid., p. 836).

Hence, let us also put ourselves in the school of St. Thomas and of his masterpiece, the Summa Theologiae. It was never finished and yet it is a monumental work: It contains 512 questions and 2,669 articles. It is coherent reasoning, in which the application of human intelligence to the mysteries of the faith proceeds with clarity and depth, interlacing questions and answers, in which St. Thomas deepens the teaching that comes from sacred Scripture and from the Fathers of the Church, above all St. Augustine. In this reflection, in the encounter with true questions of his time, which are often also our questions, St. Thomas, also using the methods and thought of ancient philosophers, in particular of Aristotle, thus arrives at precise, lucid and pertinent formulations of the truth of the faith, where truth is a gift of faith, [where it] shines and becomes accessible to us, through our reflection. However, such effort of the human mind, Aquinas reminds us with his very life, is always illumined by prayer, by the light that comes from on high. Only one who lives with God and with the mysteries can also understand what they say.

In the Summa of theology, St. Thomas begins from the fact that there are three different modes of the being and essence of God: God exists in himself; he is the beginning and end of all things, and thus all creatures proceed from and depend on him, and God is present through his grace in the life and activity of the Christian, of the saints; finally, God is present in an altogether special way in the Person of Christ really united here with the man Jesus, and operating in the sacraments, which flow from his redemptive work.

Because of this, the structure of this monumental work (cf. Jean Pierre Torrell, La "Summa" di San Tommaso, Milan, 2003, pp. 29-75), research with a "theological look" at the fullness of God (cf. Summa Theologiae, Ia, q. 1, a. 7), is articulated in three parts, and is illustrated by the Doctor Communis himself -- St. Thomas -- with these words: The main purpose of sacred doctrine is that of making God known, not only in himself, but also inasmuch as he is beginning and end of things, and especially of the reasoning creature. In the attempt to explain this doctrine, we will first treat of God; then of the movement of the creature toward God; and finally of Christ who, inasmuch as man, is for us the way to ascend to God" (Ibid., I. q. 2). It is a circle: God in himself, who comes out of himself and takes us by the hand, so that with Christ we return to God, we are united to God, and God will be all in all.

Hence, the first part of the Summa Theologiae studies God in himself, the mystery of the Trinity, and God's creative activity. In this part we also find a profound reflection on the authentic reality of the human being inasmuch as he issued from the creative hands of God, fruit of his love. On one hand we are a created, dependent being -- we do not come from ourselves; but, on the other, we have a true autonomy, so that we are not only something apparent -- as some Platonic philosophers say -- but a reality willed by God as such, and with value in itself.

In the second part St. Thomas considers man, driven by grace, in his aspiration to know and love God to be happy in time and in eternity. Firstly, the author presents the theological principles of moral action, studying how, in man's free choice of carrying out good acts, reason, will and passions are integrated, to which is added the strength that the grace of God gives through the virtues and gifts of the Holy Spirit, as well as the help that is given also by the moral law. Hence the human being is a dynamic being that seeks himself, he seeks to become himself and, in this connection, seeks to do acts that build him up, make him truly man; and here the moral law, grace and one's reason, the will and the passions come in. On this foundation St. Thomas delineates the physiognomy of the man who lives according to the Spirit and thus becomes an icon of God. Here Aquinas pauses to study the three theological virtues -- faith, hope and charity -- followed by the acute examination of more than 50 moral virtues, organized around the four cardinal virtues -- prudence, justice, temperance and fortitude. He then ends with a reflection on the different vocations in the Church.

In the third part of the Summa, St. Thomas studies the mystery of Christ -- the way and the truth -- by which we can return to union with God the Father. In this section he writes pages as yet unparalleled on the mystery of the incarnation and passion of Jesus, adding afterward a thorough treatise on the seven sacraments, since in them, the incarnate divine Word extends the benefits of the incarnation for our salvation, for our path of faith toward God and eternal life. He remains almost materially present with the realities of creation; he thus touches us in what is most intimate.

Speaking of the sacraments, St. Thomas pauses particularly on the mystery of the Eucharist, for which he had a very great devotion, to the point that, according to ancient biographers, he used to lean his head on the tabernacle, almost as if to hear the beating of the divine and human Heart of Jesus. In one of his works commenting on Scripture, St. Thomas helps us to understand the excellence of the sacrament of the Eucharist, when he writes: "The Eucharist being the sacrament of the passion of our Lord, is also an effect of this sacrament, it not being other than the application in us of the passion of the Lord" (In Ioannem, c.6, n. 963). Let us understand well why St. Thomas and other saints celebrated the Holy Mass shedding tears of compassion for the Lord, who offers himself in sacrifice for us, tears of joy and of gratitude.

Dear brothers and sisters, in the school of the saints, let us be enamored of this sacrament! Let us participate in the Holy Mass with recollection to obtain its spiritual fruits, let us nourish ourselves on the Body and Blood of the Lord, to be incessantly nourished by divine grace! Let us willingly and frequently converse, face to face, in the company of the Most Blessed Sacrament!

All that St. Thomas illustrated with scientific rigor in his major theological works, such as the Summa Theologiae and the Summa contra Gentiles, was also explained in his preaching, addressed to students and the faithful. In 1273, a year before his death, during the whole of Lent, he preached in the San Domenico Maggiore Church in Naples. The content of those sermons was collected and conserved: They are the booklets in which he explains the Symbol of the Apostles, interprets the prayer of the Our Father, illustrates the Decalogue and comments on the Hail Mary. The content of the preaching of the Angelic Doctor corresponds almost entirely to the structure of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. In fact, in catechesis and in preaching, at a time like ours of renewed commitment to evangelization, these fundamental arguments must never be lacking: that is, what we believe, and here is the Symbol of the faith; what we pray, and here is the Our Father and the Hail Mary; and what we live as biblical revelation teaches us, and here is the law of love of God and of our neighbor and the Ten Commandments, as explanation of this mandate of love.

I would like to propose some simple, essential and convincing examples of the content of the teaching of St. Thomas. In his booklet on the Symbol of the Apostles he explains the value of faith. Through it, he says, the soul is united to God, and something like a shoot of eternal life is produced; life receives a sure orientation, and we overcome temptations easily. To those who object that faith is nonsense, because it makes one believe something that does not fall under the experience of the senses, St. Thomas gives a very articulated answer, and recalls that this is an inconsistent doubt, because human intelligence is limited and cannot know everything. Only in the case that we could know perfectly all visible and invisible things, would it then be genuine nonsense to accept truths purely on faith. However, it is impossible to live, St. Thomas observes, without trusting the experience of others, where personal knowledge does not reach. Hence it is reasonable to have faith in God who reveals himself and in the testimony of the Apostles: they were few, simple and poor, dismayed by the Crucifixion of their Teacher; and yet many wise, noble and rich persons were converted in a short time upon listening to their preaching. It is, in fact, a historically striking phenomenon, to which with difficulty one can give any other reasonable answer, other than that of the Apostles' encounter with the Risen Lord.

Commenting on the article of the Symbol regarding the incarnation of the Divine Word, St. Thomas makes some considerations. He affirms that Christian faith, when it considers the mystery of the incarnation, is reinforced; hope rises more trustingly, with the thought that the Son of God came among us, as one of us, to communicate to men his own divinity; charity is revived, because there is no more evident sign of the love of God for us than seeing the Creator of the universe make himself a creature, one of us. Finally, considering the mystery of the incarnation of God, we feel our desire inflamed to reach Christ in glory. Using a simple and effective analogy, St. Thomas observes: "If the brother of a king was far away, he certainly would long to live next to him. Well, Christ is our brother: hence, we must desire his company, become one heart with him" (Opuscoli teologico-spirituali, Rome, 1976, p. 64).

Presenting the prayer of the Our Father, St. Thomas shows that it is perfect in itself, having all the five characteristics that a well made prayer should have: trusting and tranquil abandonment; appropriateness of content, because -- St. Thomas observes -- "it is quite difficult to know exactly what it is appropriate to ask and what not, from the moment that we are in difficulty in face of the choice of desires" (Ibid., p. 120); and then the appropriate order of requests; fervor of charity; and sincerity of humility.

St. Thomas was, as all the saints, a great devotee of Our Lady. He described her with a beautiful appellative: Triclinium totius Trinitatis, triclinium, that is, place where the Trinity finds its rest, because, due to the Incarnation, the three divine Persons dwell [in her] and experience delight and joy to live in her soul full of grace as in no other creature. Through her intercession we can obtain all help.

With a prayer, which traditionally is attributed to St. Thomas and that, in any case, reflects the elements of his profound Marian devotion, we also say: "O blessed and sweet Virgin Mary, Mother of God ... I entrust my whole life to your merciful heart. ... Obtain for me, oh my most sweet Lady, true charity, with which I will be able to love with all my heart your Most Holy Son and you, after him, above all things, and my neighbor in God and for God."

[Translation by ZENIT]

[The Holy Father then greeted the people in several languages. In English, he said:]

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

In our catechesis on the Christian culture of the Middle Ages, we turn once more to the teaching of Saint Thomas Aquinas. The Summa Theologiae, his masterpiece, reflects Thomas' serene confidence in the harmony of faith and reason, and in the ability of reason, enlightened by faith, to come to an understanding of God and his saving plan. The Summa treats of the Triune God in himself, in his work of creation, and in the person of Jesus Christ, the incarnate Son, whose humanity is the means by which we return to the Father. Thomas illustrates the working of divine grace, which perfects our natural gifts and enables us, through the practice of the virtues and the gifts of the Holy Spirit, to attain the eternal happiness for which we were created. His description of Christ's saving work stresses the importance of the seven sacraments, and especially the Eucharist. These great theological truths are also reflected in Thomas' preaching which in a clear and simple way presents the mysteries of the faith, the content of Christian prayer, and the demands of a moral life shaped by the natural law and the Gospel's new commandment of love. With the Angelic Doctor, let us pray for the grace to love the Lord with all our heart, and to love our neighbour, "in God and for God."

I offer a warm welcome to the numerous student groups present, and in a special way to those taking part in the programmes sponsored by the Foyer Unitas Lay Centre, the Anglican Centre of Rome and the Midwest Theological Forum. I also thank the choirs for their praise of God in song. Upon all the English-speaking visitors, especially those from Scotland, Norway, Sweden, Australia, Indonesia, Japan, Singapore, the Bahamas and the United States of America, I invoke God's abundant blessings.

©Copyright 2010 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana

[In Italian, he said:]

I now greet young people, the sick and newlyweds. Today is the liturgical memorial of St. Joseph Cafasso and the 150th anniversary of his death. May the example of this engaging figure of an exemplary priest, to whom I would like to dedicate next Wednesday's catechesis, help you, dear young people, to experience personally the liberating force of the love of Christ, who renews profoundly the life of man; may he sustain you, dear sick, to offer your sufferings for the conversion of those who are prisoners of evil; may he encourage you, dear newlyweds, to be a sign of the fidelity of God also with mutual forgiveness, motivated by love.

[Translation by ZENIT]

Part II of Pope Benedict XVI's Catechesis on St. Thomas Aquinas

BENEDICT XVI

GENERAL AUDIENCE

Saint Peter's Square
Wednesday, 16 June 2010

[Video]

Saint Thomas Aquinas (2)

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Today I would like to continue the presentation of St Thomas Aquinas, a theologian of such value that the study of his thought was explicitly recommended by the Second Vatican Council in two documents, the Decree Optatam totius on the Training of Priests, and the DeclarationGravissimum Educationis, which addresses Christian Education. Indeed, already in 1880 Pope Leo XIII, who held St Thomas in high esteem as a guide and encouraged Thomistic studies, chose to declare him Patron of Catholic Schools and Universities.

The main reason for this appreciation is not only explained by the content of his teaching but also by the method he used, especially his new synthesis and distinction between philosophy and theology. The Fathers of the Church were confronted by different philosophies of a Platonic type in which a complete vision of the world and of life was presented, including the subject of God and of religion. In comparison with these philosophies they themselves had worked out a complete vision of reality, starting with faith and using elements of Platonism to respond to the essential questions of men and women. They called this vision, based on biblical revelation and formulated with a correct Platonism in the light of faith: "our philosophy". The word "philosophy" was not, therefore, an expression of a purely rational system and, as such, distinct from faith but rather indicated a comprehensive vision of reality, constructed in the light of faith but used and conceived of by reason; a vision that naturally exceeded the capacities proper to reason but as such also fulfilled it. For St Thomas the encounter with the pre-Christian philosophy of Aristotle (who died in about 322 b.c.) opened up a new perspective. Aristotelian philosophy was obviously a philosophy worked out without the knowledge of the Old and New Testaments, an explanation of the world without revelation through reason alone. And this consequent rationality was convincing. Thus the old form of the Fathers' "our philosophy" no longer worked. The relationship between philosophy and theology, between faith and reason, needed to be rethought. A "philosophy" existed that was complete and convincing in itself, a rationality that preceded the faith, followed by "theology", a form of thinking with the faith and in the faith. The pressing question was this: are the world of rationality, philosophy conceived of without Christ, and the world of faith compatible? Or are they mutually exclusive? Elements that affirmed the incompatibility of these two worlds were not lacking, but St Thomas was firmly convinced of their compatibility indeed that philosophy worked out without the knowledge of Christ was awaiting, as it were, the light of Jesus to be complete. This was the great "surprise" of St Thomas that determined the path he took as a thinker. Showing this independence of philosophy and theology and, at the same time, their reciprocal relationality was the historic mission of the great teacher. And thus it can be understood that in the 19th century, when the incompatibility of modern reason and faith was strongly declared, Pope Leo XIII pointed to St Thomas as a guide in the dialogue between them. In his theological work, St Thomas supposes and concretizes this relationality. Faith consolidates, integrates and illumines the heritage of truth that human reason acquires. The trust with which St Thomas endows these two instruments of knowledge faith and reason may be traced back to the conviction that both stem from the one source of all truth, the divine Logos, which is active in both contexts, that of Creation and that of redemption.

Together with the agreement between reason and faith, we must recognize on the other hand that they avail themselves of different cognitive procedures. Reason receives a truth by virtue of its intrinsic evidence, mediated or unmediated; faith, on the contrary, accepts a truth on the basis of the authority of the Word of God that is revealed. St Thomas writes at the beginning of his Summa Theologiae: "We must bear in mind that there are two kinds of sciences. There are some which proceed from a principle known by the natural light of the intelligence, such as arithmetic and geometry and the like. There are some which proceed from principles known by the light of a higher science: thus the science of perspective proceeds from principles established by geometry, and music from principles established by arithmetic. So it is that sacred doctrine is a science, because it proceeds from principles established by the light of a higher science, namely, the science of God and the blessed" (ia, q. 1, a.2).

This distinction guarantees the autonomy of both the human and the theological sciences. However, it is not equivalent to separation but, rather, implies a reciprocal and advantageous collaboration. Faith, in fact, protects reason from any temptation to distrust its own abilities, stimulates it to be open to ever broader horizons, keeps alive in it the search for foundations and, when reason itself is applied to the supernatural sphere of the relationship between God and man, faith enriches his work. According to St Thomas, for example, human reason can certainly reach the affirmation of the existence of one God, but only faith, which receives the divine Revelation, is able to draw from the mystery of the Love of the Triune God.

Moreover, it is not only faith that helps reason. Reason too, with its own means can do something important for faith, making it a threefold service which St Thomas sums up in the preface to his commentary on the De Trinitate of Boethius: "demonstrating those truths that are preambles of the faith; giving a clearer notion, by certain similitudes, of the truths of the faith; resisting those who speak against the faith, either by showing that their statements are false, or by showing that they are not necessarily true" (q. 2, a.3). The entire history of theology is basically the exercise of this task of the mind which shows the intelligibility of faith, its articulation and inner harmony, its reasonableness and its ability to further human good. The correctness of theological reasoning and its real cognitive meaning is based on the value of theological language which, in St Thomas' opinion, is principally an analogical language. The distance between God, the Creator, and the being of his creatures is infinite; dissimilitude is ever greater than similitude (cf. DS 806). Nevertheless in the whole difference between Creator and creatures an analogy exists between the created being and the being of the Creator, which enables us to speak about God with human words.

St Thomas not only based the doctrine of analogy on exquisitely philosophical argumentation but also on the fact that with the Revelation God himself spoke to us and therefore authorized us to speak of him. I consider it important to recall this doctrine. In fact, it helps us get the better of certain objections of contemporary atheism which denies that religious language is provided with an objective meaning and instead maintains that it has solely a subjective or merely emotional value. This objection derives from the fact that positivist thought is convinced that man does not know being but solely the functions of reality that can be experienced. With St Thomas and with the great philosophical tradition we are convinced that, in reality, man does not only know the functions, the object of the natural sciences, but also knows something of being itself for example, he knows the person, the You of the other, and not only the physical and biological aspect of his being.

In the light of this teaching of St Thomas theology says that however limited it may be, religious language is endowed with sense because we touch being like an arrow aimed at the reality it signifies. This fundamental agreement between human reason and Christian faith is recognized in another basic principle of Aquinas' thought. Divine Grace does not annihilate but presupposes and perfects human nature. The latter, in fact, even after sin, is not completely corrupt but wounded and weakened. Grace, lavished upon us by God and communicated through the Mystery of the Incarnate Word, is an absolutely free gift with which nature is healed, strengthened and assisted in pursuing the innate desire for happiness in the heart of every man and of every woman. All the faculties of the human being are purified, transformed and uplifted by divine Grace.

An important application of this relationship between nature and Grace is recognized in the moral theology of St Thomas Aquinas, which proves to be of great timeliness. At the centre of his teaching in this field, he places the new law which is the law of the Holy Spirit. With a profoundly evangelical gaze he insists on the fact that this law is the Grace of the Holy Spirit given to all who believe in Christ. The written and oral teaching of the doctrinal and moral truths transmitted by the Church is united to this Grace. St Thomas, emphasizing the fundamental role in moral life of the action of the Holy Spirit, of Grace, from which flow the theological and moral virtues, makes us understand that all Christians can attain the lofty perspectives of the "Sermon on the Mount", if they live an authentic relationship of faith in Christ, if they are open to the action of his Holy Spirit. However, Aquinas adds, "Although Grace is more efficacious than nature, yet nature is more essential to man, and therefore more enduring" (Summa Theologiae, Ia-IIae, q. 94, a. 6, ad 2), which is why, in the Christian moral perspective, there is a place for reason which is capable of discerning natural moral law. Reason can recognize this by considering what it is good to do and what it is good to avoid in order to achieve that felicity which everyone has at heart, which also implies a responsibility towards others and, therefore, the search for the common good. In other words, the human, theological and moral virtues are rooted in human nature. Divine Grace accompanies, sustains and impels ethical commitment but, according to St Thomas, all human beings, believers and non-believers alike, are called to recognize the needs of human nature expressed in natural law and to draw inspiration from it in the formulation of positive laws, namely those issued by the civil and political authorities to regulate human coexistence.

When natural law and the responsibility it entails are denied this dramatically paves the way to ethical relativism at the individual level and to totalitarianism of the State at the political level. The defence of universal human rights and the affirmation of the absolute value of the person's dignity postulate a foundation. Does not natural law constitute this foundation, with the non-negotiable values that it indicates? Venerable John Paul II wrote in his Encyclical Evangelium Vitae words that are still very up to date: "It is therefore urgently necessary, for the future of society and the development of a sound democracy, to rediscover those essential and innate human and moral values which flow from the very truth of the human being and express and safeguard the dignity of the person: values which no individual, no majority and no State can ever create, modify or destroy, but must only acknowledge, respect and promote" (n. 71).

To conclude, Thomas presents to us a broad and confident concept of human reason: broadbecause it is not limited to the spaces of the so-called "empirical-scientific" reason, but open to the whole being and thus also to the fundamental and inalienable questions of human life; and confidentbecause human reason, especially if it accepts the inspirations of Christian faith, is a promoter of a civilization that recognizes the dignity of the person, the intangibility of his rights and the cogency of his or her duties. It is not surprising that the doctrine on the dignity of the person, fundamental for the recognition of the inviolability of human rights, developed in schools of thought that accepted the legacy of St Thomas Aquinas, who had a very lofty conception of the human creature. He defined it, with his rigorously philosophical language, as "what is most perfect to be found in all nature - that is, a subsistent individual of a rational nature" (Summa Theologiae, 1a, q. 29, a. 3).

The depth of St Thomas Aquinas' thought let us never forget it flows from his living faith and fervent piety, which he expressed in inspired prayers such as this one in which he asks God: "Grant me, O Lord my God, a mind to know you, a heart to seek you, wisdom to find you, conduct pleasing to you, faithful perseverance in waiting for you, and a hope of finally embracing you".


To Special Groups

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

I am pleased to greet the English-speaking visitors present at today's Audience, especially the many parish and student groups. I offer a warm welcome to all who have come from Hong Kong, Pakistan, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. Upon all of you I invoke God's Blessings of joy and peace!

Lastly, I greet the young people, the sick and the newlyweds. Dear young people, may you always find in Christ present in the Eucharist the spiritual nourishment to advance on the path of holiness; may Christ be for you, dear sick people, a support and comfort in trial and in suffering; and for you, dear newlyweds, may the sacrament that has rooted you in Christ be the source that feeds your daily love.

© Copyright 2010 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana