Monday, October 31, 2011

Notes on 6th Grade Catechism

I was watching Sunday Night with Fr. Benedict Groeschel on EWTN & pondering what approach I will take toward presenting the Faith to my 6th graders this year. This meditation settled on me.

The Gospel calls us to a life of utmost joy in the Spirit of God. It calls us to achieve our ultimate fulfillment by contemplating & striving towards union with God. The call of the Gospel is a truly radical one – it calls us to truly be whom we are meant to be: “Man fully alive.” I know there are people who believe that man is nothing than an animal that lives a short, brutal life, & then finally dies; but I genuinely believe the vast majority of people recognize, but are scared to death of this call to such inconceivable glory, & so settle for a lower, more earthly calling which seems more graspable, both in thought & reality.

The world today calls us to a life of conformity & consumerism, to be consumed by the things that we are assured we must have if we want to be happy. Yet isn’t there always a new thing to have? So this happiness is always a step beyond us. The world wants to force you into certain channels, certain mindsets, & certain lifestyles where it neutralize your will & freedom, & drain you of your humanity & your money. In the world we engage in projects that, while possibly good in themselves & can bring temporal success, are easily turned into idols that consume us & draw us away from the only thing that ultimately matters, our immortal souls’ communion with God.

I know this is not said well & that there is much more to say, but I want to teach this to my students in some way. Through the grace of God, I just barely escaped the jaws of the world, & I’m not out of the woods yet. I hope they will not fall for false & destructive happinesses, but recognize & cling to the happiness of God for their whole lives.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Hymns of the Breviary - Jam Morte Victor

Perfect for the Rosary month of October - a hymn in honor of the Glorious Mysteries from Hymns of the Breviary...

Jam Morte Victor by Fr. Augustine Ricchini, O.P.

Now Christ, the Conqueror of death,
Breaks sin's enslaving chain,
And rising from the tomb returns,
And opens heaven again.

Awhile beheld by mortal men,
He rises from their sight;
Ascending to the Father's throne,
He reigns in equal light.

His promised gift unto His own
He sends forth from above,
And rains the Holy Spirit down
In fiery tongues of love.

The Virgin, freed of mortal weight,
Is borne than stars yet higher,
And with glad melody is hailed
By each Angelic choir.

Our Mother's gentle brow now shines
With crown in starry sheen,
As nigh her Son, in light enthroned,
She reigns creation's Queen.

O Jesu, born of Virgin bright,
All glory be to Thee,
With Father and with Paraclete,
Through all eternity.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

In the Beginning by J. Ratzinger - Homily 4, Part 2

The first Adam through his disobedience brought a legacy of sin & death upon all his children, who to this day have continue to seek a replacement for God & to build a paradise on earth without his help, an effort that always brings hellish tragedy & leaves man himself degraded.  The New Testament offers a remedy for our situation.

As noted earlier, the Church reads the Old Testament, not exclusively for its own sake, but as the story of God’s revelation of himself to his people, a revelation fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ.  Therefore, we can see that the catastrophic fall of the first Adam into sin & death in the Old Testament gives way to the atoning sacrifice of the second Adam in the New, a sacrifice that reconciles God & man & brings new life.  Man was originally created to be in a relationship of love with God; in Christ, this relationship is not only possible again, but reaches new & previously unimagined heights.

Ratzinger notes that, “Jesus Christ goes Adam’s route, but in reverse.  In contrast to Adam he is really “like God.”  But this being like God… is being a Son, & hence it is totally relational… Therefore [he] does not hold graspingly to his autonomy… [but] he becomes a slave… he does not go the route of power but that of love (p.75).”  So, from the beginning, man has asked “Who am I?”  “What is my purpose?”  “Does my life have meaning?”  “For what was I made?”   Not “for what,” but “for whom.”  He was not made to be alone or autonomous.  He is made to be a son, even a son of God.

But how can the new Adam undo the damage caused by the first one & bridge the chasm between God & man?  How do we receive our sonship?  The answer is the Cross: “…the place of [Christ’s] obedience, is the true tree of life…. now approachable… and… the true pole of the earth, by which it is itself once more set aright (p.76).”  The first man was not allowed to eat of the fruit of the tree of life lest “he live forever (Gen 3:22),” but now by way of Christ’s obedience, man is welcomed to approach the divine.  His destiny in Christ is now to be “partakers of the divine nature (2 Pet 1:4).”

And now, something quite surprising: “Therefore the Eucharist, as the presence of the cross, is the abiding tree of life, which… to receive it, to eat of the tree of life, thus means to receive the crucified Lord & consequently to accept… his life, his obedience, his ‘yes’… It means to accept the love of God… our truth – that dependence on God which is no more an imposition from without than is the Son’s sonship.  It is precisely this dependence that is freedom, because it is truth & love (pp.76-77).”

Were you expecting that!?!  To start with the words of the creation of the world & end up with the Flesh & Blood of Christ Jesus in the Eucharist that is offered & received at every Mass?  Will this change your view of the sacred Scriptures?  The way that you approach Holy Communion?  Your relationship with God?  Ratzinger ends his fourth homily with the hope that his listeners “be touched by the words of Jesus in their entirety: ‘The kingdom of God is at hand; repent, and believe in the gospel’ (Mark 1:15).”

Photo of Christ as the Tree of Life taken at Munich's Marienplatz. in 2008.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Victory!


Note Pope St. Pius V at the left, leading the Catholic world in praying the Rosary for Our Lady's intercession for victory against the Turks.

Meditating on the Gospel events of Jesus in the Rosary will surely secure our victory over those enemies that seek to separate us from Christ, as well.

These photos were taken at one of the most glorious places on earth: the Basilica Notre Dame de Fourvier overlooking Lyon, France.








Sunday, October 2, 2011

See the golden sun arise!

A beautiful hymn for Thursday Lauds taken from the book Hymns of Breviary

Lux ecce surgit auria

See the golden sun arise!
Let no more our darkened eyes
Snare us, tangled by surprise
In the maze of sin!

From false words and thoughts impure
Let this Light, serene and sure,
Keep our lips without secure,
Keep our souls within.

So may we the day-time spend,
That, till life's temptations end,
Tongue, nor hand, nor eye offend!
One, above us all,

Views in His revealing ray
All we do, and think, and say,
Watching us from break of day
Till the twighlight fall.

Unto God, the Father, Son,
Holy Spirit, Three in One,
One in Three, be glory done,
Now and evermore.

- Prudentius (d.413)