Archive for the 'The Holy Eucharist' Category

Giving Our Lives Away for Souls

March 28th, 2013

Today our community and all of the you have entered into the most sacred days of the Church Year. We have many beautiful monastic customs during the sacred Triduum. One of these is a communal gathering of our intentions for our spiritual children. Earlier today our Superior shared with us the following words of encouragement…

    After making the Lenten journey with the whole Church—and ours was certainly a strenuous journey!!— we have come now to the blessed days of the Paschal Triduum.

We, the “daughters of the Passion and brides of Christ Crucified”, feel ourselves prompted from deep within to spend these days of the Sacred Triduum as Our Lord’s close companions and helpmates. We can also be a great help to one another by trying to maintain silence and recollection as much as possible, and helping out where others need our help–either in the care of the sick, or food preparation, sacristy work and so forth. As for the correspondence work, we can let that go until next week. These days are too precious to spend them on anything that is not really necessary.

We know from our community sharings on Bl. John Paul’s encyclical on the Eucharist, that the Pascal Triduum is, as it were, concentrated in the Holy Eucharist.

So the Last Supper, Good Friday, Holy Saturday and Easter Sunday are all “concentrated” in the Holy Eucharist.  We are mysteriously and really made present to them at every Mass.  And we know and believe–also from Pope John Paul’s encyclical, that there is a mysterious “oneness in time” between that first Triduum 2000 years ago and today.  We could meditate on these truths til our dying day and never exhaust their magnificent riches.

In these sacred rites, there will be a oneness in time between the Last Supper, Good Friday, Holy Saturday and Easter Sunday.  We will truly be there!  And we know from Church teaching that we are not play acting, we are not spectators.  We are participators, we are really and truly taking part in and reliving these events with the Church, as the liturgy makes them present in a unique way.

Jesus wants to celebrate His Passover here with us in our monastery, with us, His brides, closest companions and helpmates in the work of redemption.  We want our hearts to be like His.  His great Heart has the whole world gathered into it and embraced in saving love.  Before He offered His sacrifice on the cross, He made His intentions, and we read them in chapter 17 of John’s Gospel.

We too, before entering the Triduum, make our intentions– we gather into the embrace of our prayer, our new Holy Father, and also Benedict XVI, our bishops, priests, religious, laity, our families and their crying needs, all our Oblates and Associates and friends, all Passionists, our benefactors, all who need and ask our prayers, all who attend our services, etc. – we gather them all up and carry them in our hearts into the liturgy, into our prayers and sacrifices of these precious days, pleading the Passion of Jesus, His wounds, His Precious Blood, His own bitter sufferings for them.  Let us not forget the wonderful doctors and nursing personnel who generously care for us, our employees, etc.  Our hearts are to be as wide as the Heart of Jesus!

Just as Jesus is never possessive or stingy–keeping anything only for Himself–so we literally give our lives and prayers away for souls, for the intentions of the Hearts of Jesus and Mary.  Spending time with Him, gazing at Him, at His suffering Face, His Sacred Heart, His strong virtues, and uniting ourselves with Him in His humility and obedience, His love for souls—all of this not only sanctifies us, but is a saving work for the Church and the world.

So let’s be generous during these days, trying our best also to give of ourselves fully in the liturgy.

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Christmas in our Passionist Monastery

January 9th, 2013

“Can we keep the Christmas tree up a bit longer…?  Perhaps we can put it on wheels and bring it out at certain times of the year…”

:)

So went the conversation last night during our evening recreation. We LOVE the Christmas Season!  We hate to see it end.

Below are some snapshots of our Christmas-Epiphanytide…

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Singing Christmas Carols and wearing those zany hats loaned by our sweet Oblate Veda!

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One Sister enjoys Christmas music on a subdued Sunday afternoon while working on a Jane Wooster Scott puzzle – a snow scene of course!

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Blessed be God this year we have Epiphanytide – that week between Epiphany and the Baptism of the Lord in which to continue to partake of the rich liturgical readings and hymns.

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And to continue to make many visits to the holy crib…to meditate on the Word made Flesh – the whole “reason for the season”. We have several nativity scenes throughout the monastery. Today we took this one down…until next year!

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We also enjoyed a visit with some of our seminarians of the Diocese of Owensboro, KY

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My…them Texan boys sure know how to make a snowman…out of 1/2 inch of snow fall! Sr. Rose Marie’s brothers had to run those balls of snow up and down the hill many times to pack in that much snow!
There are those zany hats again…

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The nativity scene in our library…a beautiful gift from
another of our Passionist Oblates!
Nice photo from Sr. Rose Marie’s dad!

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Our Lord Jesus Christ…truly present in the Most Blessed Sacrament. How full of wonderment we have been as we revisit His great love for us in assuming flesh and becoming a little child and then remaining with us in the
Sacrament of His Holy Love!

O Sacrament Most Holy
O Sacrament Divine
All praise, all thanksgiving
be every moment Thine

 

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Passionist Articles

May 2nd, 2012

Well…I can hardly believe it!

I created a widget in the side bar of this blog OVER A YEAR AGO called “Interesting Passionist Articles”, featuring PDF articles written by or about Passionist life in the Institute on Religious Life Magazine of September/October 2010.

Just last week it came to my knowledge that I linked to every one of those articles incorrectly! (Yes, I can believe I made this mistake) But I can’t believe that none of you, my dear friends, caught my mistake!

Please let me know if you find any other broken links on this blog site. I’ll gladly correct them if I can.

And I hope you’ll check out the articles in the side bar.

The Prefaces for Easter pray that we be “overcome with Paschal joy”…that is our prayer for you during this Eastertide!

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Praying for our Nation

February 27th, 2012

Do you want to come to the aid of our nation during these perilous times? Along with being educated on the issues of the HHS Mandate and contacting Congress, our Bishops are also asking us to pray and fast for our nation during this critical moment in our history.  Here is an opportunity to put that into action.

Our monastery will be hosting a second evening of prayer for our nation and its upcoming elections in one week – March 6th to be exact.  If you are local we hope you can join us and bring your family and friends. If not, please do join us in spirit!

Here are the details…

Tuesday, March 6th 6:30 – 8 p.m.

Preacher – Father of Mercy – Fr. Louis Caporiccio

Prayers – Rosary, Divine Mercy Chaplet, Consecration of our Nation to the Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart of Mary and more

Prayer before our Lord Jesus in the Most Holy Eucharist is very efficacious. When we pray before the Blessed Sacrament we are united with Jesus in a special way. We are not only in the presence of his Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity but in the Eucharist, as in Heaven, Jesus is forever fixed in his greatest act of self-gift. Let us be united in his perfect act of prayer for our nation.

Last month we had about 100 participants. Help us exceed that number this month!  See you next week!

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Rediscover the Splendor of the Liturgy

October 30th, 2011

       

How’s about a blog entry regarding how you beautiful ladies are transitioning for the new missal and your thoughts regarding the changes it brings. Are there any materials you’ve found particularly helpful as you prepare?

~ A request from one of our Texan friends!

All of us Sisters have been looking forward to the implementation of the Revised Roman Missal on November 27, 2011, the First Sunday of Advent and the beginning of the Church Year. I have been counting down the weeks for some months now! We have had MUCH choir practice and have learned a couple of very beautiful new Masses. We have also brushed up on some of the Latin Masses. When our two new Roman Missals arrived the Sisters gathered around them “oohing” and “ahhing” all during recreation.

Here are some reasons we are joyfully anticipating the changes

  • It is an opportunity to enhance our worship of God and deepen our participation in the sacred mysteries of the Liturgy.
  • The new translation of the Mass preserves more fully the theological tradition captured throughout the centuries in the liturgy. It also clearly communicates the many biblical allusions and vital theological concepts that are expressed int he Latin original and were lost in the first translation
  • The translation as a whole uses more “heightened” style of English that is less conversational and nobler in tone. This style more closely parallels the Latin text and helps us express an even greater reverence and humility in praying to God in the Mass.
  • It’s a unique moment in the English-speaking world to catechize about the Holy Mass!
  • As baptized Christians, as nuns, we want to grasp with greater and greater depth the meaning of what we say and do every day at Mass – so that we can more generously give ourselves to God in the liturgy and encounter him more fully, especially in Holy Communion.

This is a unique moment in our Church! This is THE most significant liturgical development for English-speaking Catholics since Vatican II! It is an opportunity to delve more deeply into these sacred mysteries that can become mechanical when done out of habit one’s entire life. These changes will take us out of our routine and provide an opportunity to ponder anew “why we say what we say and do what we do in the Mass.”

I hope you are growing in a sense of excitement about the upcoming changes like we are.

Here are some resources you might find helpful…

I have been reading articles in various periodicals as they come into the monastery, i.e. National Catholic Register, diocesan newspapers, Catholic magazines, etc.

Several weeks ago I read an excellent article by Fr. Jeremy Driscoll, OSB on the Mass Collects.

I was excited to see that Fr. Driscoll knows his stuff – for he is an advisor to the Vox Clara Commission. So, for my study period I googled his name and found some talks he gave on the New Roman Missal (I’ve only listened to the first part of #10 but it sounds promising) – perhaps you might benefit from them too.

Book: Biblical Walk Through the Mass (by Dr. Edward Sri – looks good but I have not read it)

DVD: New Roman Missal by Msgr. Moroney – Executive Secretary of the Vox Clara Committee – EXCELLENT

Dr. Edward Sri helped me articulate my thoughts above through A Guide To The New Translation of The Mass

May the Mass changes beginning during this Advent Season help you to experience the Mass as never before and lead you into a more fruitful worship experience.

Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Hosts!

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Spiritual Mothers of Priests

May 9th, 2011

   I know, I have been neglectful about blog posting lately. Woe is me…

   Last week we were blessed by the presence of some of the priests from Region V of the National Catholic Diocesan Vocation Directors. It was such a blessing to have their priestly presence among us! Their guest speaker Mr. Sam Alzheimer of Vianney Vocations shared some effective strategies for promoting priestly vocations.

   Their time here brought to our minds the urgent need to pray and sacrifices for our priests. Keeping this in mind, and also recalling that yesterday was Mother’s Day, I thought you would be interested in the following meditation by our novice Sr. Cecilia Maria on the aspect of our Spiritual Motherhood and how we support our priests and seminarians through our life of prayer and sacrifice.  (Speaking of seminarians – Sr. John Mary received today the invitation for her brother’s transitional diaconate ordination – Blessed be God!)

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Passionist Mother of Priests

    It is no secret that Passionist Nuns – indeed, all Passionists – honor with particular and fond devotion Mary, the Mother of Jesus and our Sorrowful Mother. For us she is model and exemplar, patroness and queen, teacher and aid; at her station at the foot of the Cross, we discover the fullness of our own vocation. We are to be so united with the Mother of the Crucified that her loving vigil on Calvary is realized in our daily lives. But what is the nature of this vigil, that it may still be kept two thousand years after Christ rose victorious from the grave? The answer lies in the fact that it marked not merely a crucifixion, but a sacrifice, and that as Mary accompanied her Son, she not only comforted a victim but also supported a priest.

    The hours of Jesus’ Passion are the climax of His earthly mission of redemption, the consummation of the perfect outpouring of love which He began at the Incarnation. At no other moment in the thirty-three years that He walked among us is His heavenly priesthood so clearly manifested. Even as he hangs helpless on those beams of pain, he presides unchallenged over a most solemn sacrifice. The crimson vestments which He donned even as the scourges fashioned them from His flesh, with terrible beauty show forth the nature of this High Priest. He not only offers sacrifice; He is the victim offered. His hour having come, in power and love He lays down His life for His friends.

    Mary’s vocation as the mother of this High Priest also reaches its climax on Calvary, but to understand it fully, we must trace its beginnings. She keeps her vigil on Calvary with the full awareness that by her fiat (“amen” in Hebrew) she prepared this Lamb for the sacrifice. At the angel’s Annunciation, the humble handmaid of the Lord became mother of the Messiah; because of her co-operation, “when He came into the world, He said: Sacrifice and offering you did not desire, but a body you prepared for me” (Heb 10:5). Without Mary’s “yes,” there would have been no Body for the Christ to offer upon the Cross. We can easily understand, too, that this fiat was lived daily in the life of this mother as it is for all mothers. Her loving “yes” at His conception became a loving yes as He took nourishment from her breasts, as He toddled His first shaky steps clinging to her hands, as He learned to speak, to pray, to sing by imitating the sounds from His mother’s mouth. As the Messiah “advanced in wisdom and age and favor before God and man”(Lk 2:52), the fiat of His mother was a constant, often hidden support, silently aiding and accompanying Him toward His goal.

    In his Passion of the Christ, Mel Gibson illustrates beautifully how Mary lives out her motherhood of the High Priest during the Passion itself. One line from the movie perfectly encapsulates her role: in the courtyard of the high priest, Mary glimpses the abuse following the condemnation of Jesus, and she murmurs, “So it begins. Amen, Adonai. Amen.”  Truly, it will be her participation at Calvary that will sound the Great Amen to this Mass.

    By her presence, prayer, and union of mind and will with His own, the mother of the Victim-Priest gives support, strength, and endurance to her Son. She accompanies Him with a compassionate fiat-amen as He suffers the scourgings, as He stumbles under the weight of the Cross, as He is stripped, as He is nailed to the wood. A true mother, she feels keenly in her heart every wound, every blow, every insult which fills her Son’s chalice of suffering; indeed, though she did not hear aloud the familiar offertory words, “Pray that my sacrifice and yours may be acceptable to God the Almighty Father” (Order of Mass), she embodies the perfect response. As surely as her dying Son offers His own life in sacrifice to the Father, He offers hers who stands below in loving sorrow, whose fiat-amen once gave Him life in order that He might lay it down for the sake of all mankind.

The pieta statue in our cemetary on Palm Sunday morning

    Perhaps the most striking depiction of Mary’s motherhood of the High Priest is in the Pietá, that scene in which she reverently cradles the crucified Christ in her arms. Even after He has spent all, after His offering is completed, she continues the offering in her soul and body as she with her whole being cries out the eternal Amen which completes His sacrifice. Jesus Christ having offered Himself “once for all,” His mother is the first to extend through time her participation in it. If she can be seen as a monstrance at the beginning of His priestly oblation, when He first became incarnate in her womb, she can just as surely be seen as a monstrance at the end of His oblation, as she lifts up with her own hands and heart what the High Priest can no longer physically lift up Himself.

    From the Gospel narrative itself, we know that Mary is not the mother of the High Priest only, but mother of all priests. When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple there whom he loved, he said to his mother, “Woman, behold, your son.” Then he said to the disciple, “Behold, your mother.” With these words, Jesus gives His mother to the Apostle John. Alone of the Twelve to approach this altar, perhaps John is the first to understand that he has been given a share in his Master’s priesthood, that he and his brothers are to continue through time the sacrifice that Christ has offered once for all eternity. Perhaps as he witnessed Jesus being lifted up between heaven and earth, he began to understand the significance of the Supper they had shared the night before in the upper room. We do not know.

    But we do know that John, representing all ordained priests, on Calvary received the High Priest’s mother as his own. For him, for the other apostles, and for every priest of Jesus Christ through the ages, Mary is a mother precisely as she was for her Son. She prepares them for their own shares in the Passion and comforts them as they suffer. She strengthens them as they encounter their own weakness, and is the hidden support of prayer behind their every action. She is eternally the Sorrowful Mother on Calvary, eternally embodying the fiat-amen at the Mass celebrated “once for all” and extended through time at the hands of her priestly sons.

Our dear friend Fr. Brandon Williams and chaplain Fr. Ray Clark

Fr. Brandon gives us his blessing

    It is into this fiat-amen of the Mother of Priests that we are called as Passionist Nuns. As we become ever more united with her at the foot of the Cross, we are drawn into her motherhood; we too are given “St. Johns” to nurture, comfort, strengthen, support. Our lives become fruitful, and though we may never meet our children “in the flesh,” by our daily fidelity to our monastic life we raise up priests to God and proclaim the Great Amen to their Mass. 

Former Owensboro diocesan seminarian and now Dominican soon-to-be-priest, Rev. Br. Austin Litke

    I give thanks and praise for the privilege of being called to such a vocation, and I pray that the Lord will continue to raise up priestly souls – sons and mothers! – who will extend His Sacrifice of Love throughout the world.

The Sisters with Deacon Matthew Hardesty and our dear discerning friend – both residing in the Louisville archdiocese. Deacon Matt made many retreats here during his seminary days.

Our dear Passionist Fr. Fred Sucher

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Evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper

April 19th, 2011

Continued Holy Week meditations by Mother Catherine Marie, C.P.

Holy Thursday

Evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper

    Today, the daytime hours are an immediate preparation for the Easter Triduum which begins during the Mass of the Lord’s Supper.  Lent is over.  And those who have lived in the rhythm of the liturgy have been prepared during the long weeks of prayer and penance to celebrate the Paschal Mystery in deep faith and love.  The daytime hours of Holy Thursday complete our spiritual preparation.

The Washing of the Feet

In our monastery, preserving the ancient monastic tradition even of women’s monasteries, the superior  washes the feet of the community members during a Mandatum ceremony.  Then at the evening Mass, the priest washes the feet of 12 men in the sanctuary.

This ancient practice of the washing of the feet gave Holy Thursday the name, “Maundy Thursday”.  Maundy is a corruption of mandatum (command), referring to the words of Christ: “A new commandment I give you, that you love one another.”

The washing of the feet is a sign and symbol of servant love, the love Jesus told us to imitate: “If I washed your feet–I who am Teacher and Lord–then you must wash each other’s feet.  What I just did was to give you an example.  As I have done, so also you must do.”  (John 13:14-15)  The whole point of the washing is that the love of Christ for us should prompt our love for one another.

The custom of washing the feet was of Jewish origin, dictated by dusty roads and dirty streets.  The early Church which developed outside of Palestine, did not continue this practice.  It is recommended for the first time at the Council of Toledo in 694, and after this not again until the 9th century.

The practice came into the monasteries which observed it with solemnity from the 12th century on.  Then it passed over into cathedrals and royal courts.  In the reform of 1955 it was inserted for the first time into the Mass of Holy Thursday.

Historical Background of Holy Thursday

Although the celebration of Holy Thursday is very ancient, it did not originally form part of the Triduum. The original Triduum was Good Friday, Holy Saturday and Easter Sunday.  Together they made one feast, as St. Augustine referred to them.  Holy Thursday was seen as a day of preparation, a day for the reconciliation of the penitents, so they could celebrate the Paschal mystery.  And the holy chrism was consecrated on that day.

But very early in Church history this day was associated with the institution of the Eucharist.  Already by the 4th century it was called “in coena Domini” – that is, the “Thursday of the Lord’s Supper”.  An even older name in some places is: “Natale Calicis” – the “Birthday of the Chalice.”

The Lord, having loved those who were his own, loved them to the end.  Knowing that the hour had come to leave this world and return to the Father, in the course of a meal he washed their feet and gave them the commandment of love.  In order to leave them a pledge of this love, in order never to depart from his own and to make them sharers in his Passover, he instituted the Eucharist as the memorial of his death and resurrection, and commanded his apostles to celebrate it until his return; thereby he constituted them priests of the New Testament.

(CCC #1337)

    The custom of the solemn celebration of the Eucharist on the evening of Holy Thursday seems to originate in Jerusalem.  St. Augustine himself speaks of celebrating such an evening Mass, at which all, even those who were not fasting, went to Communion.

By celebrating it in the evening we relive the Passover meal Our Lord shared with his disciples on the night when he was betrayed.  It marks the final observance of the Pasch of the Old Testament, and the first celebration of the “new and eternal Covenant” in his blood, the blood of the true Passover Lamb.

Jesus chose the time of Passover to fulfill what he had announced at Capernaum: giving his disciples his Body and his Blood….By celebrating the Last Supper with his apostles in the course of the Passover meal, Jesus gave the Jewish Passover its definitive meaning.  Jesus’ passing over to his Father by his death and resurrection, the new Passover, is anticipated in the Supper and celebrated in the Eucharist, which fulfills the Jewish Passover and anticipates the final Passover of the Church in the glory of the kingdom.

(CCC #1339-1340)

    The Church, the Bride of Christ, lingers over these hours, gratefully honoring Our Lord as He leaves us the legacy of His love in the Holy Eucharist.

This sacrifice is so decisive for the salvation of the human race that Jesus Christ offered it and returned to the Father only after He had left us a means of sharing in it as if we had been present there. Each member of the faithful can thus take part in it and inexhaustibly gain its fruits. This is the faith from which generations of Christians down the ages have lived.

(EE #11)

    The Paschal Triduum….

is gathered up, foreshadowed and concentrated forever in the gift of the Eucharist. In this gift, Jesus Christ entrusted to His Church the perennial making present of the Paschal Mystery. With it, He brought about a mysterious oneness in time between that Triduum and the passage of the centuries. This thought should lead us to profound amazement and gratitude. In the Paschal event and the Eucharist which makes it present throughout the centuries, there is a truly enormous capacity which embraces all of history as the recipient of the grace of the redemption. This amazement should always fill the Church assembled for the celebration of the Eucharist.

(EE #5)

    Holy Thursday helps us realize that we receive the living Bread that has come down from heaven, from a table which is first of all an altar.  Like the Israelites of old, we eat the Paschal Lamb.  By eating this food, we are associated in Our Lord’s sacrifice and it becomes our own.

The Eucharist is the memorial of Christ’s Passover, the making present and the sacramental offering of his unique sacrifice in the liturgy of the Church which is his Body.

(CCC #1362)

    Every Mass is the Paschal Mystery, the Lord’s Passover (transitus Domini).  We are united with him in his dying in order to be united with him in his resurrection.  This is why in this Mass, emphasis is placed on the cross:  “Let us glory in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ….”  Our recalling of him is the recalling of One whose life was poured out in a supreme gesture of love.

In the sense of Sacred Scripture the memorial is not merely the recollection of past events but the proclamation of the mighty works wrought by God for men.  In the liturgical celebration of these events, they become in a certain way present and real.  This is how Israel understands its liberation from Egypt: every time Passover is celebrated, the Exodus events are made present to the memory of believers so that they may conform their lives to them.  In the New Testament, the memorial takes on new meaning.

When the Church celebrates the Eucharist, she commemorates Christ’s Passover, and it is made present: the sacrifice Christ offered once for all on the cross remains ever present.  ‘As often as the sacrifice of the Cross by which Christ our Pasch has been sacrificed is celebrated on the altar, the work of our redemption is carried out.’  Because it is the memorial of Christ’s Passover, the Eucharist is also a sacrifice….The Eucharist is thus a sacrifice because it re-presents (makes present) the sacrifice of the cross, because it is its memorial and because it applies its fruit….The sacrifice of Christ and the sacrifice of the Eucharist are one single sacrifice.

(CCC #1362–1367)

    The Gospel introduces not just a foot washing, but the very work of redemption which is symbolized by the foot washing.  Christ cleanses us of sin, and if he does not wash us through his Passion, we can have no part with him.  (cf Titus 2:14 and I Peter 1:18-20) Holy Thursday’s great lesson is this: the fruit of the Eucharist is union with our neighbor.

Procession and Reservation of the Blessed Sacrament

Until after the year 1000, there was no worship of the reserved Sacrament nor any special symbolism attached to the transfer of the Holy Eucharist away from the altar.  During the Middle Ages this transfer took on much importance and was conducted with an elaborate ritual.  The Churches of Spain and France, under influence of the Church in Jerusalem, began the practice of the nocturnal vigil in honor of the Passion of Our Lord.

In Jerusalem the faithful could visit the places where the events of the Passion took place.  In the West this was impossible, so they centered this nocturnal vigil around the reserved Blessed Sacrament instead.  In true medieval fashion they imitated certain details of the Passion, so that St. Paul of the Cross will refer to the place of reservation as the “holy sepulchre,” the customary name in use in his time.  The sacred Species was wrapped in what they called “the linen shroud” and so on.

Receiving Holy Communion on Good Friday became increasingly rare, and so only one large host was reserved for the celebrant, and this was placed in a chalice covered with a silken cloth.

The procession with lights and incense at the end of the Holy Thursday Mass began in France in the 11th century.  In the late Middle Ages, the adornments proper to Corpus Christi became attached to Holy Thursday, and this is when the singing of the Pange Lingua came in during the procession.  Also elaborate floral arrangements around the tabernacle became the rule.  These practices, praiseworthy in themselves, tended to distract attention from Holy Week to what was secondary.

In the reformed rite, the solemn transfer of the Blessed Sacrament has been retained, and there is no question of returning to the austerity of the early Roman ordos.  The Pange Lingua is retained, and it provides a commentary on the rite itself.  The adoration is to be prolonged at least until midnight.

In our monastic practice, at midnight the flowers are removed and the candles extinguished, although our Sisters continue the adoration two by two until the hour of the community’s private prayer in early morning.  In early morning, the altar itself is dismantled, and the Blessed Sacrament is reserved in a more discreet place.

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The Holiest Week of the Church Year

April 16th, 2011

Holy Week! These blessed days have finally arrived – the culmination of our Lenten preparation. Holy Week in the monastery is a very special time. We seek to have more time for prayer and contemplating the great mysteries of our Faith. This week I hope to share with you some history and spirituality of Holy Week. This is by no means exhaustive but meant to spur you on to participate in these holy days with greater depth and understanding.

The reflections this week are compiled by our Mother Catherine Marie. Her resources are The Meaning of Holy Weekby Reverend William J. O’Shea, 1965 published by The Liturgical Press, The Catechism of the Catholic Church(referred to as CCC) and Ecclesia de Eucharistia by Pope John Paul II (soon-to-be “Blessed”!) This document will be referred to as EE

This may seem like a lot of reading but, believe me, if you desire to enter into this holiest of weeks well-prepared I think these meditations will be of much use to you.  I hope you will return throughout the week for further articles.

Let us begin!

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     Holy Week is at the heart of the entire Church year, the time when more than ever we celebrate the great mystery of our redemption in Christ.  We have prepared for this greatest week of the Church Year by 40 days of prayer, fasting and works of mercy.  During the first week of Lent, the Church placed this prayer on our lips:

Lord, may our observance of Lent help to renew us and prepare us to celebrate the death and resurrection of Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.  Amen.

(Friday, First Week of Lent)

    And now, with the whole Church, we are standing on the threshold of Holy Week.  We dedicate ourselves to prayerfulness, that we may live this week with Christ in union with the Heart of His Mother.  The Catholic Catechism tells us that “all that Christ is—all that he did and suffered for all men—participates in the divine eternity, and so transcends all times.”  (CCC #1085) This means that we can participate in Holy Week as if we had been present when the events first happened.

Historical Background

In the Latin (Western) Church, as early as the 4th century, this was known as “Paschal Week” because the high point of the week is the celebration of the Paschal Mystery, that is, the death and resurrection of the Lord.  The early Christians took over the annual celebration of the Passover, and gave it its Christian meaning.  Christ is the true Paschal Lamb, the fulfillment of the Old Testament type.  “Christ our Passover has been sacrificed.”

In the Eastern Church, this was called the “Great Week” because during it, great and mighty things were done by Our Lord (St. John Chrysostom).  It was in this week that the redemption of the world was accomplished.

Our own term, “Holy Week” has also been in use since the 4th century, for this is the week made holy by the holiest of all actions, and also by the Holy One Himself, Jesus Christ.

St. Ambrose called Good Friday, Holy Saturday and Easter Sunday “the Sacred Triduum.”  Our present day liturgy calls this the “Easter Triduum.”

The Church’s understanding is that the Triduum begins with the Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday evening.  According to the Jewish reckoning of days–a new day begins at sunset, or with the appearance of the first star on the day before.

Therefore, Good Friday has already begun by the time we celebrate Mass on Holy Thursday.  This demonstrates how the Last Supper and the Sacrifice of Jesus on the cross are one and the same redemptive mystery.

From the earliest days of Christianity, the Church has always delighted in celebrating the death and resurrection of Jesus that took place during this time of year.  The Sacred Triduum was the first Christian celebration, solemnity or feast.  Only later did the Church begin to celebrate the other events in the life of Jesus.

The annual commemoration of Holy Week was seen by the early Christians to be so intimately bound up with the Christian life itself, that no one was considered a true Christian who did not actively participate in it!  Not to join with the Christian community and participate in this sacred celebration was considered to be a break with Christianity itself!

     The early Church deeply understood that these sacred events concerned each and every Christian for the following reasons:

  • Each Christian is obliged to give thanks to God for the grace of salvation received through the death and resurrection of Christ.
  • It is through this Holy Week celebration that we lay hold in an ever-deeper way of these gifts of grace.

Theological Background

The celebration of Holy Week is not a mere rejoicing over past events.  It is a true re-living with Jesus of these salvation-filled events.  We relive “the unique event of history which does not pass away.”  (CCC #1085)

This sacrifice is so decisive for the salvation of the human race that Jesus Christ offered it and returned to the Father only after He had left us a means of sharing in it as if we had been present there. Each member of the faithful can thus take part in it and inexhaustibly gain its fruits. This is the faith from which generations of Christians down the ages have lived.

 EE #11

Pope John Paul II says that the Paschal Triduum

is gathered up, foreshadowed and concentrated forever in the gift of the Eucharist. In this gift, Jesus Christ entrusted to His Church the perennial making present of the Paschal Mystery. With it, He brought about a mysterious oneness in time between that Triduum and the passage of the centuries.

This thought should lead us to profound amazement and gratitude. In the Paschal event and the Eucharist which makes it present throughout the centuries, there is a truly enormous capacity which embraces all of history as the recipient of the grace of the redemption. This amazement should always fill the Church assembled for the celebration of the Eucharist.

  EE 5

     Yes, the liturgy of Holy Week is an external observance, but it should also be a true internal experience of what we celebrate, and particularly of the very Jesus whom we celebrate.  The Paschal Mystery is meant to become our own.  We are meant to take part in it as if we had personally been there.  Jesus’ passing over to the Father, His death and resurrection, are communicated to us in a special way during this holiest week of the Church year.

The heart of the Christian life is the living of the Paschal Mystery in its entirety  – that is:  the mystery of continually dying and rising with Christ. (Mystical death and Divine Rebirth as St. Paul of the Cross would have termed it) It is only through immersion in this mystery by baptism, Eucharist and the other sacraments, as well as by prayer and union with Christ, that we can live the Christ-life at all.

When we take an active part in the celebration of Holy Week, we truly share in the experience of Jesus in His Passion, death and resurrection.  We truly lay hold of this mystery, make it more and more our own, and further in ourselves and in the Church, the work of our salvation.

The liturgical rites of Holy Week not only have a unique dignity.  They have a sacramental power and effectiveness to nourish the Christian life.  No other devotion can substitute for them.

(Maxima Redemptionis Nostrae, Nov 17, 1955 – this was the document of the Church on the restoration of the Holy Week liturgy)

In the liturgy of the Church, it is principally his own Paschal Mystery that Christ signifies and makes present.  During his earthly life, Jesus announced his Paschal Mystery by his teaching, and anticipated it by his actions.  When his Hour comes, he lives out the unique event of history which does not pass away: Jesus dies, is buried, rises from the dead, and is seated at the right hand of the Father once for all.  His Paschal Mystery is a real event that occurred in our history, but it is unique: all other historical events happen once, and then they pass away, swallowed up in the past.  The Paschal Mystery of Christ by contrast, cannot remain only in the past, because by his death he destroyed death, and all that Christ is–all that he did and suffered for all men–participates in the divine eternity, and so transcends all times while being made present in them all.  The event of the Cross and Resurrection abides and draws everything toward life.

CCC #1085

Easter is not simply one feast among others, but the “Feast of feasts,” the “Solemnity of solemnities,” just as the Eucharist is the “Sacrament of sacraments” (The Great Sacrament).  St. Athanasius calls Easter “the Great Sunday” and the Eastern Churches call Holy Week “the Great Week.”  The mystery of the Resurrection in which Christ crushed death, permeates with its powerful energy our old time, until all is subjected to him.”

CCC #1169

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Reflections From the New Novice

April 5th, 2011

    On February 2, the feast of the Presentation of Jesus in the Temple and the day dedicated to honoring Consecrated Life in the Church, I received the Passionist habit and a new name. In a simple and moving ceremony, I put aside my secular dress and embraced a new existence as a betrothed bride of Christ, choosing to belong exclusively to the Crucified Lover of our souls. May He who has drawn me here to St. Joseph Monastery be forever praised!

Clothed in the Passionist Habit

    It is, indeed, a great privilege to be clothed in the Passionist habit, and this privilege brings with it great responsibility. This garment is actually a sacramental, blessed by the Church through the hands of a priest so that it may be an outward sign of an interior reality: the clothing of my heart with the Passion of Jesus. I have been given a call to be a witness to the world that Jesus Christ suffered, died, and rose again for our salvation!

    St. Paul of the Cross, our founder, explains that

the Daughters of the Passion, not only by their habit but much more so in their heart, in their mind, and in their labors, should continually mourn out of love for the Crucified Lord, and anoint His most holy wounds by the continual exercise of every virtue.

    Having been clothed in the Passionist habit, I must with my whole life show forth His magnificent love which was willing to be crucified for you and for me. 

Given a New Name…

    Our Lord inspired Mother Catherine Marie, CP, to give as my name Sr. Cecilia Maria of the Body of Christ, a name which holds deep significance for me. I am Cecilia after the early Roman virgin-martyr and after one of the foundresses of our monastery, and I rejoice at the opportunity to learn from St. Cecilia how to sing hymns to the Lord in the oratory of my heart. Our Passionist motto is, “May the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ be ever in our hearts!”; my refrain will forever be, “May the canticle of the Passion be ever in my heart!”

    I am Maria after our Blessed Mother, another holy maiden who lifted up her heart in continuous and joyful song to the Lord. Whether in ecstasy as she carried Him in her womb, or in adoration and offering as she stood at the foot of the Cross, or through all the ages as she raises us up as her spiritual children, the Virgin Mary has always sung a double refrain: “My soul magnifies the Lord,” and “May it be done to me according to your word.” May she grant me a share in her spirit as I embark on this adventure of religious life.

…and title

    My title, “of the Body of Christ,” refers to the three great loves of my prayer life: the Eucharistic Body, the Mystical Body, and the Crucified Body of Christ. Indeed, all three are one – the “whole Christ” who pours Himself out in order to feed us and to draw us into Himself, so that we are offered upon the Cross with Him in an eternal and perfect sacrifice. May my life, poured out in this Passionist cloister as an offering to Him, become ever more united with His, “offered once for all” for the salvation of the world.

    Please pray for me, my dear brothers and sisters in Christ, that I may persevere in my prayers for you.

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Empowered by the Passion of Christ

March 16th, 2011

    In the last blog post I mentioned a few situations in need of prayer, but the list of needs is endless! 

    In our monastery we have a number of prayer bulletin boards throughout the monastery to keep before our eyes the many prayer requests that come to us. We feel our inadequacy before such a need of God’s love and compassion in these situations. Yet, the Passion of Jesus is an endless sea of love and mercy. May He be blessed that through our baptism we have been plunged into His Passion, Death and Resurrection and therefore, His saving mysteries now belong to us! We are empowered by these graces! His prayer is our prayer! And He prays perfectly. Therefore, let us never cease to pray and beg for God’s gracious aid. 

    Saint Paul of the Cross wrote so eloquently about the royal road of suffering and the union we have with Jesus in these sufferings.  The motto of the Passionists flows out of this thought: “May the Passion of Christ be ever in our hearts!” Paul, so in touch with the Catholic theology of redemptive suffering, thought of the Passion not merely as a past event, but as a present sign which we need to contemplate and allow to penetrate us. To be plunged into the Passion of Jesus and empowered by His Resurrection!

The world lives unmindful of the sufferings of Jesus which are the miracle of miracles of the love of God. We must arouse the world from its slumber. His Holy Spirit will teach us how.

~ Saint Paul of the Cross

    We must take time to gaze on the crucifix during the great sufferings of our time. Gaze on Love, gaze on the One who was tortured and murdered for me. Gaze on Him whose wounds cry out, “I love you!”, “I thirst for your love!”

    Let us love Him in the mystery of our sufferings and let us renew the gift of our baptism and unite our self-gift with Christ’s in His offering to the Father for the redemption of the world. The Holy Sacraments, especially Christ - ever present in His total act of self-offering in the Eucharist, will empower us to do just this.

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