Mass Instruction IV: Entrance Procession, Sign of the Cross and Greeting

Mass Instruction IV: Entrance Procession, Sign of the Cross and Greeting

Mass Instruction III: Preparation for Mass

Mass Instruction III: Preparation for Mass

Homily for the Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Homily for the Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year A

Mass Instruction II: Posture and Words

I’d hoped to transcribe at least the Mass Instruction homilies, but haven’t gotten around to it. Perhaps it’ll happen one day.

Mass Instruction II: Posture and Words

Homily for the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time

Homily for the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year A

Mass Instruction I: What is the Mass?

As part of the preparation for the new translation of the Roman Missal, I’m starting a series of homilies on the Mass itself. For the first homily, I discuss briefly what the Mass is, as well as the importance of attending Holy Mass.

Mass Instruction 1: What is the Mass?

No text right now, just the audio. Hopefully the text will be typed up and posted in the next couple days.

Homily for the Feast of the Holy Family

Today, on this first Sunday after Christmas, the Church holds up the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph for our remembrance and honor, but also as the example for family life in the world today.

When looking at the Holy Family, two key aspects jump out as important for us to notice. First, they were open to God’s will for their lives. Mary showed this openness by following God’s will and becoming the Mother of God, and Joseph followed God’s will by accepting the pregnancy, even if he didn’t understand it at first. Likewise, in today’s Gospel, we see Joseph being open to God’s will by taking the family to Egypt in order to avoid Herod’s murderous wrath.

Second, the Holy Family practiced their faith, and ensured that it was passed on to Jesus. In the Gospels, we know of at least 2 times that the family went to the temple to perform the temple rituals, and tradition has that they were active in the synagogue in Nazareth.

In our culture today, it’s good that we spend a day focusing on family life. According to the Second Vatican Council, in it’s document Lumen Gentium, “The family is, so to speak, the domestic church. In it parents should, by their word and example, be the first preachers of the faith to their children; they should encourage them in the vocation which is proper to each of them, fostering with special care vocation to a sacred state.” (LG 11) By calling the family the “domestic Church”, the Second Vatican Council shows the great importance of families.

Notice the parallels between the quote from Vatican II and the characteristics of the Holy Family I outlined earlier. The Council calls parents to “be the first preachers of the faith to their children,” which parallels Mary and Joseph practicing their faith and passing that faith on to Jesus. Likewise, the Council says that parents “should encourage [children] in the vocation which is proper to each of them, fostering with special care vocation to a sacred state,” which shows an openness and acceptance of God’s will for the family and individual family members.

This second point is of great importance, especially in light of the low numbers of vocations to the priesthood and religious life. Parents can make or break a religious vocation. I personally know several people that delayed their discernment to a vocation for some time because they felt or knew that their parents were opposed to a religious vocation. In addition, many will not consider a vocation to the priesthood or religious life if their parents don’t encourage them to discern a vocation.

You might have heard someone say, “Families are the foundation of our culture and nation,” which is very much true. Families are also the foundation of the Church. If families in a parish are vibrant, active, and faithful, you’ll have a vibrant and active parish, but if families aren’t strong in the practice of their faith, the parish suffers and dies.

Right now, we need active and faithful families, because we live in a culture that is attacking families. Look at the popular TV shows: few, if any show a traditional, functional family life. Instead, the TV shows promote “alternative lifestyles” and sexual promiscuity. Unmarried partner benefits are becoming available through corporations, so one’s live-in partner can receive the same benefits as a spouse. Gay marriage movements are cropping up throughout the country, seeking to make homosexual unions equal to normal, heterosexual marriages.

At the same time all this is going on, there is a disregard or even a desire to dispose of family members seen as inconvenient. Elderly family members who are too difficult to care for are dumped off into a nursing home and never visited again. I worked in a nursing home throughout my high school years, and many residents never saw or heard from their families more than once a year, at best. Of course, we’ve dealt with abortion over the past 40 years, and now euthanasia is becoming legalized throughout the United States, especially here in Montana where it was legalized by judicial decision. If the family member isn’t wanted any more, or in the way, dispose of them.

A very troubling way that families are attacked is through the glut of no-fault divorces. Let’s make this clear: there are legitimate reasons for divorce, such as physical abuse. Getting an abused spouse and children away from the abuser is a good thing, and should be encouraged. The problem is with divorces that end due to “irreconcilable differences”. No difference is irreconcilable if the couple is willing to work together to overcome them. Irreconcilable differences is a code phrase for two people who are unwilling to bend their wills for the good of the other.

Instead, St. Paul tells us how a successful marriage should be: “Wives, be subordinate to your husbands, as is proper in the Lord. Husbands, love your wives, and avoid any bitterness toward them.” Now, poor St. Paul gets a bad rap for this passage, and unjustly. People see “wives, be subordinate to your husbands” and immediately think that women should be lorded over by their husbands. That’s not the case. In the second sentence, St. Paul says, “Husbands, love your wives.” True love is a total giving of yourself to others, just as being subordinate is a total giving of your will to others. St. Paul is saying that both husbands and wives need to give themselves to each other totally, 100%. Marriage is not a 50/50 proposition.

In our culture today, we need families who will follow these principles and the example of the Holy Family, because we need to defend the family. To do so, families need to live the Catholic faith openly, and without apology. Parents, what you believe should not be a secret to your children. We need to pass on our faith to the next generation, because parents truly are the first preachers of their children. Parents need to encourage children in living out their faith, especially in discerning a call to the priesthood or religious life. Finally, we all need to support movements to defend marriage, families, and human life.

The Holy Family truly is our example in this defense of family, and should be the example for all families. Families need to live up to that example for the sake of their family, for the sake of the Church, and for the sake of the world.

Homily for Christmas Day

The days of Advent are over. For 4 weeks, we waited in joyful anticipation for the celebration of Our Lord’s birth. Now, we join together to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, the Light of the World, who frees us from the darkness of sin and brings us the joy promised by God the Father.

We come together in this beautifully lit and decorated church with all the Christmas lights and candles to remember the light of Christ shining throughout the world. John the Baptist “came for testimony, to testify to the light, so that all might believe through him.” This is the light that “shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it,” in the words of St. John’s Gospel. This is the light that we recall at the Easter Vigil, and is symbolized by the Easter candle shining in the darkened church.

This light did not come into the world with a grand show, but rather under humble, simple means. This King of Kings and Lord of Lords came into the world as a child born to humble parents, not great rulers. His coming was announced to shepherds in a field, not to noblemen and women in mighty palaces. For the great majority of people alive at the time of Our Lord’s birth, it went completely unnoticed.

Yet, His coming was truly a glorious event worthy of great rejoicing. We remember the birth of Our Lord Jesus Christ because He came into the world to free us from the darkness of sin. Just as lighting a single candle can break the darkness of night, the coming of Jesus Christ, the Light of the World, breaks the darkness of sin in our lives. When we look at the beautiful Christmas lights that we use to decorate as we celebrate this special and blessed season, we should always remember that Jesus, the Light of the World, shines through the darkness of sin in our lives the way those lights shine through the darkness of night.

The Advent season is over, and today we begin the celebration of the Christmas season. Note that we are just now beginning the Christmas season, not ending it. May we spend this season joyfully praising Jesus Christ, the Light of the World who came into the world to save us, for “all the ends of the earth will behold the salvation of our God.”

Homily for the Thirty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time

There’s a lot of seeking going on in today’s Gospel. Zacchaeus, a rich tax collector, was seeking Our Lord, going so far as to climb a tree to see Him. Our Lord tells us that He came “to seek and to save what was lost.” With this talk of Zacchaeus and Our Lord seeking and finding what they were looking for, we should ask ourselves, “What are we seeking for?”
In our lives, there’s always something we’re seeking. We’re always looking for something different or something we feel is missing from our lives. We might not be able to put into words what we’re looking for, but there’s always a desire that we can’t quite seem to quench totally. We can fulfill it temporarily by buying more stuff or entering into a new relationship or friendship, but it never goes completely away.
What we’re seeking, though imperfectly, is the true joy that comes from unity with God, our Heavenly Father. In the deepest part of our souls, we realize that none of us are ever perfectly content in this life. Yes, things and other people can provide temporary satisfaction and emotional happiness for a time, but this satisfaction and happiness is fleeting compared to the fulfillment and joy that comes, in the words of St. Paul, when “the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in you, and you in Him, in accord with the grace of our God and Lord Jesus Christ.”
While this true fulfillment and joy comes from receiving Jesus with joy, as Zacchaeus did, we can become lost in our seeking and convince ourselves that the fleeting satisfaction and happiness that comes through the world are enough. We can convince ourselves that we no longer need to seek for God, and turn our focus on the things of the world.
While we might turn away from God, no longer seeking Him, He does not give up on us. Instead, Our Lord seeks after us, inviting us to join him, just as he did with Zacchaeus. God truly does love us, and wants what is best for us, as the first reading says, “For you love all things that are and loathe nothing that you have made; for what you hated, you would not have fashioned.” God created us out of love, and gave us His Son to show us the path for our lives that is best for us.
Because God loves us, He wants us to return to Him whenever we stray. As the Book of Wisdom says, “you have mercy on all, because you can do all things; and you overlook people’s sins that they may repent.” When we turn away from God and seek the fleeting satisfaction and happiness in the world, we easily fall into the trap of sinful actions and desires. To pull us out of this trap, God “rebukes offenders little by little, warning them and reminding them of the sins they are committing, that they may abandon their wickedness and believe in you, O Lord.”
This rebuke is not God being vindictive or done out of spite, but rather out of love. God rebukes us just as a parent might discipline a child out of love. A parent who truly loves their children would never allow a child to do wrong without some form of punishment. This punishment is given out of the parents’ love and desire to care for their children.
In the same way, God truly loves us and wants us to have everything that is right and good for us. His Son, our Lord Jesus Christ is constantly seeking for us, calling us back to Him when we go astray. In response, we need to make St. Paul’s prayer our own: “that our God may make you worthy of His calling and powerfully bring to fulfillment every good purpose and every effort of faith, that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in Him, in accord with the grace of our God and Lord Jesus Christ.” May we be able to pray that daily, and to constantly seek after His face.