Holy Thursday — Mass of the Lord’s Supper

Holy Thursday — Mass of the Lord’s Supper
Exodus 12:1-8,11-14  +  1 Corinthians 11:23-26  +  John 13:1-15

For as often as you eat this bread and drink the chalice, you proclaim the death of the Lord until he comes.

During this Year of the Eucharist, the celebration of the Mass of the Lord’s Supper commands our attention in a unique way.  St. Paul helps focus our attention through the Second Reading.

St. Paul, who was not present at the Last Supper because he was called to be an apostle after Pentecost, records the “institution narrative” of the Eucharist in his first letter to the Corinthians [11:23-25].  The institution narrative—recorded not only by St. Paul but also in the Gospel accounts of Matthew, Mark, and Luke—gives us the words of Jesus from the Last Supper which the priest speaks at the Consecration.

In the mere three verses of his institution narrative, St. Paul does not detail the background of the Last Supper.  Yet he makes several points in the larger passage in which it’s set that help us appreciate the gift of the Eucharist.

St. Paul introduces his institution narrative by establishing a framework for discussion of the Eucharist.  He notes:  “I received from the Lord what I also delivered to you”.  This frame establishes the importance of Sacred Tradition.  The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is not something that the Church makes up.  Even less does the Church reject what has been received.  Less yet does the Church deliver to others something different than what was received.

Another of St. Paul’s points immediately follows his institution narrative.  He first instructs the Corinthians:  “as often as you eat this bread and drink the chalice, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes” [11:26].  The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is, chiefly, a proclamation of Jesus’ death.

Then St. Paul soberly warns the Corinthians of a damning truth.  “Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord” [11:27].  His words not only point to the truth of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist.  His words also admonish believers that the Eucharist must only be received worthily, in the state of grace and free from mortal sin.

He clarifies this truth as he continues.  “Let a man examine himself, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup.  For any one who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment upon himself” [11:28-29].

St. Paul discerned that he was one who was to judge the Corinthians.  Throughout Chapter 11 of his first letter to the Corinthians, he discusses the Corinthians’ sins, sins which were tearing apart the Church:  the Mystical Body of Christ.  God had called Paul to the responsibility of apostleship, and he carried out this responsibility with a sacred purpose.  That purpose was to strengthen the precious gift of the Church, which becomes the Church chiefly by means of the gift of the Holy Eucharist.

Wednesday of Holy Week

Wednesday of Holy Week
Isaiah 50:4-9  +  Matthew 26:14-25

… from that time on he looked for an opportunity to hand him over.

Recent scandals in the Church prompt reflection upon the person of Judas Iscariot.  Why did Jesus ever choose him to be an apostle?  Didn’t Jesus know that Judas would betray Him?  Or is that precisely why He chose Him?

Divine Providence is difficult to parse.  It’s difficult, and perhaps even pointless, for us to reflect upon Judas from God’s providential point of view.  However, the Church does call us to reflect upon Judas from our own point of view:  that is, as sinners like Judas.

Can each of us imagine hearing Jesus say about oneself:  “It would be better for that man if he had never been born”?  Surely such words only apply to the worst of sinners, such as Judas?  In fact, Jesus did not choose Judas for eternal damnation:  rather, Judas chose that for himself.  Likewise, each of us chooses each of our sins.  It’s in the face of one’s sins that one has a choice to remain in sin, or to turn to Jesus as the one through whom we can find forgiveness.  Even and especially in our sins, Jesus wants us to turn to Him.  Yet we remain free until death to make the choices that we will.

Lent 6-3

Tuesday of Holy Week

Tuesday of Holy Week
Isaiah 49:1-6  +  John 13:21-33,36-38

So Judas took the morsel and left at once.  And it was night.

On the last two days of Lent before the Sacred Triduum starts, the Gospel Reading focuses on Judas Iscariot.  Yet while tomorrow’s passage from Matthew looks solely at Judas, today’s passage from John also looks at Peter, another apostle who will betray Jesus.

Jesus is God.  As a divine person, He could at any moment during Holy Week have turned away from the path leading to Calvary.  Even on the afternoon of Good Friday as He hung upon the Cross, He could have miraculously escaped, transporting Himself far away to safety:  indeed, even to Heaven.

All that is to say that Jesus is the primary “actor” in the drama of Holy Week.  The acts that Jesus did or did not carry out during Holy Week determined man’s salvation.  Any other “actor” within this drama is a second-string player.

Why, then, do the Gospel Readings today and tomorrow focus more upon those who betrayed Jesus than on Our Savior Himself?  The answer is that the Church is calling you to recognize yourself in Judas and Peter.

In the sinful persons of Judas and Peter we witness two different types of betrayal:  Judas by deed, Peter by word; Judas with a kiss, Peter by turning his back.  Judas cries, “Hail, Rabbi!”, while Peter cries, “I do not know the man!”

There are many different ways in our lives by which we betray Jesus.  But there is only one way for the chasm between our sins and God’s love to be bridged, and that is Jesus’ self-sacrifice upon the Cross.

Lent 6-2

Monday of Holy Week

Monday of Holy Week
Isaiah 42:1-7  +  John 12:1-11

Here is my servant whom I uphold, / my chosen one with whom I am pleased ….

The Old Testament’s Book of the Prophet Isaiah contains four brief passages called “servant songs”.  Isaiah never names the servant who is described.  But in the earliest years of the Church, these servant songs were sung in praise of Christ, who fulfilled during Holy Week what they proclaim.

The First Reading on Monday of Holy Week presents the first of these four servant songs.  We might imagine God the Father speaking these words of His only-begotten Son, whom He sent from the paradise of Heaven into our world of sin and death.

Jesus is a servant.  All the words that Jesus speaks and all that He does and bears this week reveals Him as a servant.  Yet He’s a servant in a two-fold way, and we ought at the beginning of Holy Week reflect upon both of these.

Whom is Jesus serving through the sacred events of Holy Week?  Secondly, He is serving us.  All that He speaks, does, and suffers is for us:  to bring us salvation.

First, however, Jesus is serving His heavenly Father.  During Holy Week it’s easy for us to lose sight of God the Father.  Our view can become myopic, focused simply upon Jesus saving us.  But in saving us from the power of sin and death, Jesus is preparing us for new life.  This new life is given to us even during our earthly days through the gifts, the fruits, and the grace of the Holy Spirit.  But this new life in this world is only a foretaste of eternal life with our Father in Heaven.  Jesus is serving His Father during Holy Week because God the Father longs for each us to enter into His company.

Lent 6-1

Saturday of the Fifth Week of Lent

Saturday of the Fifth Week of Lent
Ezekiel 37:21-28  +  John 11:45-56

So from that day on they planned to kill him.

This morning’s Gospel Reading bears a sense of anxious anticipation.  Its final verse leaves us on the edge of our pew:  “They looked for Jesus and said to one another as they were in the temple area, ‘What do you think?  That he will not come to the feast?’”

Just a few verses before, St. John the Evangelist explains the reason for the heightened sense of anxiety:  “So from that day on they planned to kill him.”  The motive for this plan of the chief priests and Pharisees is the focus of this morning’s three readings.

Both this morning’s First Reading and Responsorial Psalm come from books of Old Testament prophets:  the First Reading, from Ezekiel; and the Psalm, from Jeremiah.  Both look to Israel’s future, when a shepherd king would reign over a united Israel.  The Responsorial is very strong in describing this shepherd

Yet the language of king is only implied, although in two ways.  First, Ezekiel prophesies about Israel being restored to one kingdom.  However, second and more intriguingly, Ezekiel prophesies that “there shall be one prince for them all”:  not one “king”, but one “prince”.  Twice in the verses that follow, Ezekiel identities David as this prince.  Through the prophet the Lord declares:  “My servant David shall be prince over them, and there shall be one shepherd for them all”; in the Holy Land, Israel shall dwell “with my servant David their prince forever.”

Everything that Ezekiel and Jeremiah prophesy about this shepherd king is fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ.  More specifically, Jesus fulfills His earthly mission as Christ the King upon the Cross on Good Friday.  Jesus is drawing close to “His hour”.  Through the New Passover—the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass—we are able to enter into Jesus’ life and saving mission.

Lent 5-6

Friday of the Fifth Week of Lent

Friday of the Fifth Week of Lent
Jeremiah 20:10-13  +  John 10:31-42

“If I do not perform my Father’s works, put no faith in me.”

Some disagree with the saying, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, claiming that a little is better than none.  They do not see that those having the little often self-righteously and proudly conclude they know it all.

The Pharisees, purported Scripture scholars and experts in the Mosaic Law, fell into this latter category.  When Christ revealed Himself to them as the Messiah, though they had well documented knowledge of the miracles He had performed, they immediately rejected the evidence, accused Him of blasphemy and prepared to stone Him.

What rendered them more dangerous than their intellectual presumption, and perhaps their fear of losing authority and position, was their faithlessness, their lack of God’s light and love.  In this, Christ Jesus is their opposite, and this opposition to the Pharisees is what each of us must imitate:  knowing that in God, we have everything we are, and that all we are, God calls us to give:  for the sake of others, and for the greater glory of God.

Lent 5-5

Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord [C]

Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord [C]
Luke 19:28-40  +  Isaiah 50:4-7  +  Philippians 2:6-11  +  Luke 22:14—23:56

… he humbled himself, / becoming obedient to the point of death, / even death on a cross.

The Roman Missal is the book from which Father offers most of the prayers at Holy Mass.  During most of Holy Mass, it rests upon the altar of sacrifice.  Within this book, in the header for the Fifth Sunday of Lent, it states:  “In the Dioceses of the United States, the practice of covering crosses and images throughout the church from this Sunday may be observed.”

The verb used is “may be observed”.  That begs the question:  ought this practice be observed?  We might also question why this practice may be observed from that particular Sunday of Lent onwards.  Those two questions are related.

The latter question is partly answered by the prayer that the priest prays before the ancient hymn known as the Sanctus (“Holy, Holy, Holy”).  This prayer is called the Preface because it introduces the Eucharistic Prayer.  The Preface changes throughout the Church year, relating the day’s season or feast to the Eucharistic Prayer.

On the weekdays following the Fifth Sunday of Lent—that is, this past week—the Roman Missal directs the priest to pray “Preface I of the Passion of the Lord”.  On the weekdays between Palm Sunday and the start of the Sacred Triduum, the priest prays “Preface II of the Passion of the Lord”.  This focus upon the Passion of the Christ is why these two weeks are traditionally called “Passiontide”.

Passiontide is part of Lent.  We might even say that it’s a gradation of Lent.  Consider:  when you climb an imposing mountain, you ascend in stages.  At the mountain’s base, the climb is easier.  Higher up, the difficulty increases as rock formations and other obstacles present themselves.  But when you reach the mountain’s tree line, an even more serious approach is required, as you cope with rarified air.

To apply that analogy to the Church’s preparation for Easter, the peak of the mountain—the goal of the climb—is the Sacred Triduum:  the three days during which the Church celebrates Jesus’ Last Supper, Death, and Resurrection.  The prior week and a half—Passiontide—is the last stretch of climb in rarified air.  Prior to Passiontide, the majority of the climb stretches from Ash Wednesday until the Sunday before Palm Sunday.  What’s more, in the calendar of the Extraordinary Form of Holy Mass, there is a period of preparation for the Sacred Triduum even before Ash Wednesday:  this period starts on the ninth Sunday before Easter, and is called Septuagesima.

On Palm Sunday, two Gospel passages are proclaimed:  one at the start of Mass and the other at the usual time of the Gospel.  The first Gospel passage this Sunday is easy to hear.  The crowds praise Jesus.  They hail Jesus as their Messiah.  All along, however, Jesus knows that their praise is hollow.  He hears their words, but He knows their hearts.  He knows the climb that stretches out before Him in the week to come.

The events proclaimed in the Passion narrative are the events of Good Friday, the summit of the mount.  Upon Mount Calvary, God the Father sacrifices His Son, Mary sacrifices her Son, and Jesus sacrifices His whole self:  Body and Blood, soul and divinity.  Few of Jesus’ disciples were both able and willing to ascend and remain with Jesus at the top of this mountain.  Few of them had pure faith.

While the Passion narrative is proclaimed on Palm Sunday at the usual time of the Gospel Reading, the Church proclaims the Passion narrative a second time during Holy Week, as part of the Good Friday Liturgy.  There is a difference between these two proclamations, however.  On Good Friday, it is always the Passion narrative from St. John’s Gospel account that’s proclaimed.  On Palm Sunday, the Passion narrative comes from one of the other three Gospel accounts.  These narratives complement each other and focus our attention on different aspects of Jesus’ suffering for us.

Jesus invites you to spend this week with Him as He makes His ascent.  It’s easier for you to praise Jesus this Palm Sunday.  It’s more difficult to share in His self-offering on Mount Calvary, as it demands a more pure faith.  God is calling us to rely solely upon the sight that comes from faith, and to keep the eyes of the soul fixed upon the glory of Christ crucified.

Thursday of the Fifth Week of Lent

Thursday of the Fifth Week of Lent
Genesis 17:3-9  +  John 8:51-59

“Amen, amen, I say to you, before Abraham came to be, I AM.”

While yesterday’s Gospel Reading looked in part upon Abraham, today’s Scriptures double down on this focus.  Today both the First Reading and Gospel Reading look at “our father in faith”.  In fact, it is Abraham as father that is the specific focus.

In the First Reading, God changes Abram’s name to “Abraham”.  This new name can be literally translated as “father of many”.  But God’s own explanation of why he’s bestowing this new name is worth our attention:  “for I am making you the father of a host of nations.  I will render you exceedingly fertile; I will make nations of you; kings shall stem from you.”  You could use any one of these four phrases for meditation, especially in terms of how this call from God to Abraham foreshadows the mission of Jesus Christ, who fulfills Abraham’s call in a new way.

Yet there’s another important aspect of God’s covenant with Abraham that’s not captured by these four phrases.  Later in the First Reading, God vows:  “I will give to you and to your descendants after you the land in which you are now staying, the whole land of Canaan, as a permanent possession”.  The Holy Land for the people of the Old Testament was a geographic place upon the earth, with Jerusalem as its capital, and the Temple at the capital’s center.  This is where we Christians need to understand the “Holy Land” of God’s covenant with Abraham in a new way:  the Holy Land is Heaven; its capital is Christ, the Head of the Church; and the Temple is the Cross on Calvary, from which Christ’s self-sacrifice radiates throughout human history, leading the faithful of Christ’s Mystical Body into the heavenly embrace of God the Father.

Lent 5-4

Wednesday of the Fifth Week of Lent

Wednesday of the Fifth Week of Lent
Daniel 3:14-20,91-92,95  +  John 8:31-42

“… you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”

Historically, freedom for the Jews was based upon two figures of their past.  First, descent from Abraham—their father in faith—was considered the foundation of the People of God.  Second in importance was adherence to the Law of Moses, who led God’s People from slavery in Egypt to freedom in the Promised Land.  Yet the Gospel accounts show that many in Jesus’ day who were living in the Holy Land were in fact slaves.

Jesus, we might say, taught that authentic and lasting freedom comes from adherence to the truth.  More significant than this teaching, however, is  that Jesus revealed Himself to be Truth incarnate.  As we draw closer to Holy Week, we might anticipate Pontius Pilate’s feckless query:  “Truth?  What is truth?”  In our own culture, it’s claimed that truth can be manufactured according to one’s own will, if one even wishes to bother with the idea of “truth”.  The human person, in this false view of reality, is free to manipulate truth at will.  Jesus reveals a much more demanding relationship between truth and freedom.

Jesus declares “to those Jews who believed in him, ‘If you remain in my word, you will truly be my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.’”  Each person who seeks to follow Jesus must reckon with this declaration by first believing in Jesus.  Through belief—that is, through faith—the Christian disciple can remain in Jesus’ word.  In all things, Jesus’ word is a call:  a call to self-sacrifice for the love of God and neighbor.  Living out this truth is the only means by which to find authentic and eternal freedom.

Jesus Christ - "Ecce Homo"