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Thursday, 27 February 2020

Marks of a disciple of Jesus: Rooted in the Word


Marks of a disciple of Jesus: Rooted in the Word 2 Timothy 3:16-17 (NKJV) All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for [a]instruction in righteousness, 17 that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work. You cannot separate a true disciple of Jesus Christ with the bible. They always walk together. The bible is Gods word to us in fact, it is so important that God says that heaven and earth will pass away but his word will never pass away. You cannot claim to be a disciple of Jesus Christ yet you have no connection and love for his word. It is through this word that our minds are renewed and our faith is activated and strengthened day by day. Through this word we are corrected and aligned to the will and purposes of God. It is through this same word that we gain understanding of who God is and the promises he has declared over our life. Without the word then a believer cannot walk in victory. The psalmist says; thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path, meaning that when we as disciples of Jesus walk in the word then we are always walking in the light knowing which direction to go.

FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT YEAR A Theme: Be aware of evil


FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT YEAR A Theme: Be aware of evil Few among us will dispute the fact that the world is fraught with evil. Newspapers, radio or television broadcasts offers adequate proof of its presence. War, victims of violence, millions of refugees and all types of abuse demonstrates pervasive evil in human society. While existence of evil is somehow unavoidable, its origin and the tragedies it produces have been the subject of debate for centuries. Contemporary analysts attribute its ills which plague us into conflict to ideologies and economic imbalances. At the beginning of this Lenten season, the Church invites us to reflect on the reality of evil and see how we can overcome it. First reading: Genesis 2:7-9, 3:1-7 As part of the primeval history, we encounter in the first eleven chapters of Genesis Yahwistic and Priestly traditions which assert that God was caring for human beings beyond measure. However evil as we view it today was not absent as Genesis presents answers to some of life’s basic questions about why this world, its creatures and humankind die, feel pain, suffer and are hostile. Why hard work and perspiration, and why peoples of this earth are estranged from one another. Each of these questions is explored and solutions are proffered, not on the basis of scientific investigation, archaeological discoveries or chronicled historical developments but rather in a language of myth, poetic and theology. In fact, to expect scientific and strict historical accuracy from Genesis is to miss the point. In today’s text, the truth consists in the fact that evil exists in this world because there is aitia, a Greek which means cause and loggia which means reason. Using traditional themes and motifs which were prevalent in the neighboring cultures e.g. garden, tree of life, serpent, flood, ark, tower, the biblical authors fully presented truth to their audience in strict monotheism which was a distinctive mark of Israel’s faith. As portrayed by today’s reading, man/Adam was formed by God from the clay of the earth/ damah and enlivened by the very breath of God with the intension that humanity should live in happiness. Unfortunately today’s reading does not include Genesis 2:15-25 wherein God instructed humanity not to eat of the tree ‘of the knowledge of good and evil’ meaning that right from the start, God was attentiveness about humanity’s welfare. More importantly, the omitted passage also narrated the formation of woman as man’s ezer, his treasured helpmate whose equality with man God acknowledges. Though duly instructed and warned of the consequences of their actions, human beings freely chose to determine their future apart from God. Having surrendered their original integrity of original justice for which they had been created they plunged themselves into the problem of unending evil. As we consider the times we have surrendered our integrity depriving ourselves of justice, we are encouraged to be careful about evil in our world rather than behaving as if evil was fiction. Second reading: Romans 5:12-19 When the participants at the second Vatican Council reflected upon the condition of humanity they acknowledged that, “man has inclinations toward evil as he finds himself incapable of battling its assaults successfully, thus finding self-bound by its chain” Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World No.13. In his Epistle to the Romans, Paul refers to these evil chains as reign of sin, condemnation and death only broken by Jesus Christ. Using Adam as type and Christ as antitype, Paul says human sin and its consequences are only challengeable by Christ’s saving action. Though sin and evil came from one person; he was able to infect the rest of humanity thus causing all of us to sin cf. Romans 5:12. The Council of Trent understood this as original sin committed by Adam and inherited by all of humanity cf. 5th session, canons 2, 4. Later in his letter, Paul will clarify his point by describing the consequences of Adam’s sin as an inclination to evil which is in every human person cf. Romans 6:12. All the same this universal contagious environment of evil and its innate tendency which is also called concupiscence does not negate personal responsibility and culpability. Just as Adam freely chose to surrender his original integrity, each of us is capable of freely following suit. Only with Jesus, is this chain reaction broken and the situation reversed because His saving action is a gift cf. Romans 5:16. Gospel: Matthew 4:1-11 Ordinarily, the English word temptation connotes seduction to evil, enticement to sin and inclination to take the wrong path. In Greek, however, the term used by Matthew to describe Jesus’ experience in the wilderness is peirazein, which means to test. Just as tempered steel is tested to ascertain its strength and resistance to stress and strain, so the experience of Jesus was intended to ascertain his strength and ability to withstand difficulties. Temptation is not meant to lead us into sin but to enable us to conquer it, to prove we are not bad, weak but good, stronger, purer and finer. Temptation is not the penalty of being a human person; it is instead meant to provide us the glory of being the real person God appreciates. In each of his three confrontations with the tempter, Matthew portrays Jesus as the New Israel. Just as God had called Israel out of Egypt to be his people, so God called Jesus out of Egypt; see Matthew 2:15. Just as God led his people through the sea to the desert where they remained for forty years, so did Jesus come up from the baptismal waters and depart to the desert for forty days and nights cf. Matthew 3:16, 4:1. Whereas Israel’s experience in the desert was marked by repeated failures and infidelities, Jesus remained faithful. Jesus first temptation recalled God’s gift of manna to Israel in the desert cf. Exodus 16:4-8 and tested him in his capacity as the Son of God. Would he use his powers as the Son of God to play the role of a political and social messiah by feeding a hungry mankind? Jesus’ response, a citation of Deuteronomy 8:3 indicated that God’s word and will would be his food and the sustenance which he, in turn, would offer to hungry humankind. The second temptation, also a test of Jesus’ authentic sonship, recalled the wilderness incidents wherein Israel complained against God and annoyed Moses into asking God for a show of power saying, “Is the Lord among us or not?” Exodus 17:7. Refusing to test God or to force his hand, Jesus’ replied by citing another text in it fullness, “You shall not put the Lord your God to the test, as you did at Massah” Deuteronomy 6:16 Then in the third test, Jesus is offered a vision of all the world’s kingdoms in their splendor. No doubt here that Matthew intended to remind all who would reflect on this message to remember two scripture texts; one which described Moses atop Mount Nebo surveying the Promised Land in Deuteronomy 34:1-4, and the other referring to an enthronement psalm which described God giving his messiah-son-king the nations of the earth as an inheritance in Psalm. 2:6-8. Jesus’ response, again from Deuteronomy 6:13 recalled Israel’s dalliances into idolatry. Refusing to worship his tempter, Jesus remained a faithful Son of the Father. Later in the gospel, when Peter attempted to divert Jesus from his Father’s saving plan, Jesus would dismiss him just as he did the tempter, ‘Away with you Satan’. Not ended here, Jesus’ testing as God’s Son would be reprised during his passion “If you are the Son of God, come down from the cross” Matthew 27:40. But Jesus was not to be deterred from his Father’s will. Today at the outset of Lent, Matthew offers us a lesson in resistance to evil and reminds us to keep the promise. Application Lent is a season of penance set apart by Mother Church in memory of the forty days when our Lord Jesus was tempted in the desert, we fast with Him as a means for our sanctification. Beginning on Ash Wednesday, the Lenten Season offers us a time to fasting and prayer so as to gain spiritual strength in order to resist all forms of temptations. Make this Lent to be a time to firmly say, ‘Away with you Satan’! This Lent should makes each one of us to sincerely profess that I believe in One God the Father Almighty, Creator of Heaven and Earth and Jesus Christ his only Son Our Lord and my saviour. Fr Paulino Mondo

HOMILY ASH WEDNESDAY THEME: BE PURIFIED AND BE RECONCILED TO GOD


HOMILY ASH WEDNESDAY THEME: BE PURIFIED AND BE RECONCILED TO GOD My brothers and sisters in Christ, today we are entering a new season, one of penance and mortification. Together, we have gathered here to celebrate ‘Ash Wednesday’, the first of forty days of the Lenten Season that precedes Easter. On this special occasion, we are called to be reconciled to God. Through the sacramental of ashes that is symbolic of penance, we are reminded that we as sinners are but dust and ashes cf. Genesis 18:27 Today, in preparation for the joy of Easter that approaches, we need to call upon the mercy of the Lord Jesus, asking Him for His blessings and forgiveness for the Heavenly Father does not want us to die but to live with the risen Christ who reigns forever and ever. As such, through the grace of God and the power of the Holy Spirit, we ought to prepare ourselves to celebrate the death and glorious Resurrection of Christ our Saviour by being cleansed from our sins through a renewal of spirit. The spiritual practice of applying ashes on oneself as a sign of sincere repentance goes back thousands of years. Frequently in the days of the old and the New Testament, as we have heard from the readings of the Scriptures during the past year, when someone had sinned, had to dress in sack clothes and cover self with ashes cf. Jeremiah 6:26.The rite that we are observing today arises from that custom as a form of spiritual practice for observing public penitence. Church history tells us that the liturgical practice of applying ashes on one's forehead during the Lenten Season goes back as far as the eight century. This was accompanied by different forms of fasting, prayer, sacrifice and charity towards others. The writings of St. Leo, around 461 A.D, tell us that during the Lenten Season, he exhorted the faithful to abstain from certain food to fulfill with their fasts the Apostolic institution of forty days. We who happen to live in the age of consumerism, this form of prayer is important since it will assist us to reflect on the gift of life and of one another. First reading: Joel 2:12-18 As we heard during today’s first reading from the Book of Joel, the Lord God calls upon us to return to Him with all our hearts, with fasting, weeping and mourning. We are told to split apart our hearts, not our clothing. In the days of the Old Testament, many tore their clothing as a sign of repentance. But, while some tore their clothing to demonstrate an exterior sign; they just stopped at that. There was no true repentance because inside them their hearts of stone had not changed! They had not let go of their worldly ways to embrace holy. To practice sincere repentance, the Lord God tells us to change our hearts. We are called to examine our most inner self; those evil ways that we have to let go once and for all. During this holy season we ought to remember that the Lord God is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love. He will not punish us if we are sincere and if we are willing to turn away from our sins. God is not a God of punishment but a God of love to those who strive earnestly to walk in His righteous ways. Prophet Joel reminds us that our sanctification in the likeness of God is not just for a few people. It is for all of us who have placed our faith in Christ on the day we received the Sacrament of Baptism. The following reminders need to provoke our hearts as we are told to assemble the aged, to gather the children, and even the breast fed infants. Joel even goes further to propose what would sound impossible that let the bridegroom leave his room and the bride her canopy. This is a very powerful command that includes everyone, of all ages! This is the holy season when the ministers of the Church beg the Lord, asking Him on behalf of the people, to show His mercy upon humanity. This is the time when the ministers of the Church remind the Lord of His promises made to Abraham, our spiritual father, that we will inherit the Promised Land, the eternal Kingdom of God. The practice of reminding the Lord God of His promises is to draw His pity upon us who are weak sinners. It is in doing so that He will not forget us. It is also a moment to assure us that we will not be mocked by those who say, ‘Where is your God?’ For our Lord God keeps His promises. He will save those who walk in righteousness in daily communion with Him. In this era of the joy of the Gospel, we need to gaze our eyes on the one who alone can save us and that is Lord God ever loving. Second reading: 2 Corinthians 5:20-6:2 During this second reading, we heard St. Paul appealing to us on behalf of Jesus to be reconciled to God. God the Father sent His only begotten Son, Jesus Christ, to die for us on the cross. He who was without sin took our place and was treated as a sinner, so we might become righteous in the eyes of God. What a horrible death we deserved; the death that Christ endured for us is beyond telling. All this was possible because of God’s divine love for us. Today once again, God reminds us that He heard our cries that were raised to Heaven. By hearing us from heaven, God has helped us to secure our salvation. Now is the time for us to show our appreciation towards this act of love by walking in His righteousness so that we may inherit the salvation that we have asked of Him and which He is granting to us through His infinite care and mercy. This is a wonderful invitation that we should not let pass by us. Gospel: Matthew 6:1-6, 16-18 How do we walk in righteousness? Jesus answered that question during today’s Gospel according to Matthew. We walk in righteousness by not continuing to live in our worldly ways but by embracing a spiritual mind so that we mature in Christ through the grace of God the Father and the power of the Holy Spirit. Jesus warns us against hypocrisy common to those who are pious so that they may be seen by others. He says that they have received their rewards through those who admired them and praised them for it. For them, there is no reward from God the Father in Heaven. During this Lenten Season, our piety must manifest private and privileged time between the Lord God and ourselves. We must experience a transformation of our whole being beyond going to Church. We must walk with Christ in our lives every minute of the day, from the time we rise in the morning until the time we go to bed at night. Equally, when you sacrifice by giving to the Church or by reaching out to someone in need, your left hand must not know what your right hand is doing. Do it privately and then forget about it. If you give a larger contribution to the Church so you can receive a larger reward, then you may be missing the point. Important must be as Christ is instructing us that our right hand must not knows what our left hand is doing. Meaning, our right hand is giving while our left hand is waiting to receive its benefit. If you decide to increase your time of prayer during the Lenten Season, do not do it in open space during the busy hours so that others will see you and applause your piety. If that is the case, then such a behavior will make you will receive your reward on earth by those who will praise you for your demonstrations. Rather when you pray, go into your bedroom, close the door and pray to God the Father in private so the Heavenly Father may see you in private and reward you accordingly. If you decide to fast, do not overdo it to the extent that you look weak and sick so the others will notice that you are fasting. Fast to the degree that you can manage, always being cheerful and looking healthy so no one but God will know that you are fasting. Then, God the Father will reward you. All this is intended to assist us to be reconciled to God! These are the guidelines that the Church has received from God so the faithful may experience true repentance in order to receive Divine mercy and forgiveness. As you enter the Lenten Season, remember these words every day! Practice them! And I assure you that God shall reward you! Application This is a privileged time for all of us to make a deep examination of conscience so that we can repent and receive the good news of our salvation. Repentance is not only a favor that God is granting us but an opportunity to renew our lives for the better. This is also a time of deep reflection that leads us to mortification and fasting. In disciplining our bodies we become better people. Lent is also an occasion of cheerful almsgiving, because the Lord loves a cheerful giver cf. 2Corithians 9:7. It is in giving that we receive and in loving we are born into eternal life. Fr Paulino Mondo

THE OBSERVANCE OF LENT AND THE SIMPLE EXPLANATION OF WHAT IT IS


THE OBSERVANCE OF LENT AND THE SIMPLE EXPLANATION OF WHAT IT IS The penitential season of Lent is the period of forty days beginning on Ash Wednesday. It is a season of the Church year which commemorates the forty days Jesus fasted and prayed in the wilderness before he began his public ministry of preaching for repentance. Six Sundays are within the season, the last, Passion Sunday, marks the beginning of Holy Week. Holy Thursday begins the Triduum “three days” before Easter day, which includes Good Friday and Holy Saturday. Pre-Lenten Season Prior to the Second Vatican Council, the pre-Lenten penitential season began on the Sunday three weeks before the beginning of Lent, called Septuagesima. The word Septuagesima (seventieth) was a supposed to be a reminder of the seventy years of the Babylonian captivity of the Jewish people, and thus of our captivity in sin, although this Sunday was actually only sixty-three days before Easter. The succeeding pre-Lenten Sundays were called Sexagesima and Quinquagesima. Just as in Lent, violet vestments were worn and the Alleluia was omitted from Mass. The liturgical changes initiated by the Council removed this anticipated pre-Lenten penitential season, however, and the Church returned to the earlier practice of beginning Lent on Ash Wednesday. The Sundays between Epiphany and the beginning of Lent are now in the season called Ordinary Time. Carnival in Liturgy Carnival is from the Latin Carnevale or "farewell to meat," and it is a time of joyful feasting and fun. The practice of celebrating carnival probably began in ancient times when the Sunday a week before the beginning of Lent was called Dominica Carnevala, or "farewell to meat Sunday". Suggestions for Family Activities on Tuesday before Ash Wednesday Families can make this Tuesday a spiritual time of preparation for Lent by going to confession where this is possible this is a sort of spiritual pantry cleaning. Decide on Lenten sacrifices appropriate to the age of each child, reminding them that our souls need this spiritual exercise to gain strength for living as Christians, just as our bodies need exercise to remain healthy. Our sacrifices are like a gift offered to God, and all real gifts 'cost' the giver something. Our Lenten spiritual preparations should not be confined to giving up things. We should "take on" things, extra prayers, especially family prayers. If your family has not already established some form of family prayer, Lent is a good time to begin. If you have not established the habit of praying together as a family, and in our busy times it is difficult, do set aside some time this Lent to do it. Fathers and mothers can plan together what form this will take -- whether as simple as saying the Angelus every night after supper, or as elaborate as reciting Psalms daily together in the evening. What ever is put aside in form of sacrifice has to be passed on in charity to those most in need. Ash Wednesday and the Lenten Fast The main current of Lent must flow through the interior human person, through hearts and consciences. The essential effort of repentance consists in this. In this effort the human determination to be converted to God is invested with the predisposing grace of conversion and, at the same time, of forgiveness and of spiritual liberation. This reflection by Pope John Paul II in Lent of 1979, recorded in a collection of his meditations, ‘The Light of Christ’, indicates the attitude with which we should approach our observance of this penitential season, a season which begins with a sign of repentance so ancient as to be almost lost in antiquity, and continues with penitential action equally ageless. Putting ashes on our heads as a form of penitence is a practice inherited from Jewish tradition. The ashes imposed on our foreheads on Ash Wednesday are a reminder of our unworthiness and sinfulness which corrupts stains and leads us to death (we return to the dust from whence we came.) Ashes remind us of our original sin and our need of redemption; our need to be cleansed of sin and made worthy of Salvation. Fasting and Penance Today The Code of Canon Law number.1250-1251 states that Fridays throughout the year and in the time of Lent are penitential days for the entire Church. Although fasting usually refers to any practice of restricting food, there is a distinction, in the Church, between fast that is, limiting food to one full meal a day and abstaining from eating meat. Abstinence from meat on Fridays as the universal form of penance on all Fridays should be encouraged since there are several excuses for not fulfilling our observations. We may choose another way of observing the Church's requirement for acts of penance on Fridays, but we are not to neglect the original traditions for the sake of personal preferences. Both fast and abstinence are required on Ash Wednesday, Good Friday and Easter Vigil. Farewell to Alleluia and Gloria During the penitential seasons of the Church, the Gloria and the Alleluia are not said or sung. The Gloria is sung only at the Mass on Holy Thursday, usually with great ceremony, organ, trumpets, and often with the ringing of bells. After the singing of the Gloria, musical instruments are to be kept silent until the Alleluia at the Easter Vigil. Catholic families are encouraged to imitate this solemn silence by not playing instrumental music in their homes at this time. Suggestions for families Lent is a time for each of us to increase our knowledge of the ‘faith that is in us’ in order that we can fulfil our vocation as Christians to extend this rich blessing of faith to others. We accomplish personal renewal and revitalization of our faith through penance, prayer and instruction. Fasting The value of self-denial must be learned early in a person's life. Lent provides an excellent opportunity to teach our selves and the children the necessity of self-denial in our permissive society. A spirit of fasting can include restriction of luxuries such as television watching, shopping and going out with friends. We can give away clothing or possessions to those in need or we can give time to the Lord by volunteering our services. Special prayers and devotions Whenever possible we can go to daily Mass, and pray more often alone or with family members. Children could make a memories card or banner to be ‘veiled during Lent’ and displayed prominently during the Easter season. Initiate a practice of saying extra prayers at family meals. One ancient prayer which reminds us of the multifaceted nature of penance is the following prayer said by the Eastern Church during the Lenten fast. Read passages in Scripture which help to explain the meaning of fasting and of penance in our lives. For study and reflection Families might develop a Lenten reading program to replace some of the television shows we have given up for Lent. Also, reading aloud from the Bible or from a Catholic classic every evening for half an hour can be a way of fostering family conversation about the Catholic faith. During Lent we should divide our reading into three parts: something for the mind, something for the heart, something for the soul. Laetare Sunday The Fourth Sunday of Lent is called Laetare (Rejoice) Sunday, from the first words of the liturgy. Since it is in the middle of Lent, like Gaudete Sunday midway through Advent, Laetare reminds us of the Event we look forward to at the end of the penitential season. As on Gaudete Sunday, rose-colored vestments may replace violet, symbolizing, the Church's joy in anticipation of the Resurrection. Passiontide Passiontide is the last two weeks of Lent, when the readings and prayers of the liturgy focus on the Passion of Our Lord. The word passion in the Christian sense does not mean an intense emotion; it refers to the historical events of Jesus' suffering and death. Although for several Centuries the Fifth Sunday of Lent was known as Passion Sunday; after the Second Vatican Council this name was restored to the Sunday at beginning of Holy Week, formerly called Palm Sunday. As a penitential season of the Church, Passiontide is evidently even more ancient than Lent. Devotions and Prayers for Passiontide Among the traditional devotions of Passiontide are saying the Stations of the Cross, praying the Rosary, meditating on the five Sorrowful Mysteries, and saying the five prayers in honour of Christ's five wounds. It is fitting, during this season, that we remember Mary and her in-expressible grief at the suffering and death of her Son. Another ancient devotion for this season was The Seven Sorrows (Dolors) of Mary. Christian believers appealed to Mary, the Mother of Sorrows who publicly shared in her Son's suffering on the road to Calvary, taking all things upon herself-concern, affliction and sorrow. This devotion listed the Seven Sorrows of Mary as: 1. The prophecy of Simeon, 2. The flight to Egypt, 3. The loss of the Child Jesus in the temple, 4.His way of the Cross, 5. His Crucifixion, 6. The piercing of His heart on Calvary, and 7. His burial in the tomb. Passion Sunday Holy Week is the most solemn and intense period of worship in the Christian faith, begins with Passion Sunday, the Sunday before Easter. In spite of the spiritual gravity of Holy Week, it begins with joy; for on this Sunday, the Church celebrates Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem which foretells the victory of His Resurrection and His return to earth in glory; and with the first reading of the Passion in the liturgies of Holy Week, the Church begins her commemorative pilgrimage with her Lord on His way to Calvary. Blessed Palms The blessing and distribution of palms takes place on Passion Sunday, and altar decorations are palm branches rather than flowers. The palms are solemnly blessed by the priest, and each worshipper holds the blessed palm during the singing of the ancient hymn, Gloria Laus/All Glory, Laud and Honour” and during reading of the Passion. Palm Procession According to the account of a fifth-century Spanish pilgrim to the Holy Land, Passion Sunday Mass was celebrated in Jerusalem at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. After this the people were invited to meet again in the afternoon at the Mount of Olives, in the Church of Eleona the grotto of the Our Father”. They then proceeded to the Church of the Ascension for a service consisting of hymns and antiphons, readings and prayers, where at five o'clock in the afternoon the Gospel and the palms were read and the procession set out for the city. The people responded to the antiphons with the acclamation, "Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord," as we say even today. Holy Week Holy Week has been held in great reverence since the very early years of the Church. No other Christian observance has interested the world so much as Holy Week. For the rituals of the Church during these few days of each year, so complex and so laden with meaning, emphatically and prophetically proclaim to the entire world the liberating and redeeming and perpetual truth of the Gospel, the Good News that Christ has died, Christ is risen and Christ will come again. Although in our time and nation the Church's only required food fast is to restrict meals (fast) and to abstain from meat (abstinence) on Good Friday, we learn from medieval Church documents that Christians observed a strict fast from Monday of Holy Week to the cock-crow of Easter Day. A very strict fast was usually observed from Thursday evening to Easter morning. Confession and the Easter Duty The discipline of fasting from food is not the only nor is even the primary way in which we must prepare our entire selves, body and soul to receive the benefits of our Saviour redeeming sacrifice. Physical fasting is not enough. This is what the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council, like the early Fathers of the Church, tried to teach us with the emphasis on personal awareness of how we have offended God and need His forgiveness. As Blessed John Paul II said “The awareness of sin, in which the person knows before whom and towards whom he is guilty, is an indispensable pre-condition for obtaining the objective value of forgiveness. This is because He against whom the sin is committed and who is therefore offended is also the Father who has the power to forgive it.” This is what the Church invites and implores us to do during Holy Week. The Triduum In the Triduum, or Three Days that is: Holy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday; the Church gives us a singularly dramatic, intense and richly symbolic expression of the very heart of Christian belief. Even in our unspiritual time and culture, the Triduum and Easter re-affirms the essence of the Church's central beliefs in the strongest possible way which penetrates the deepest recesses of the human heart, and calls forth a response from all, young and old, rich and poor, and in every state of life. By participating in the liturgy of the Church and by increasing our own observance of these holy days, we can deepen our understanding of these Events in the history of Salvation. Holy Thursday Holy Thursday is the most complex and profound of all religious services, saving only the Easter Vigil. It celebrates both the institution by Christ himself of the Eucharist and of the institution of the sacerdotal priesthood as distinct from the 'priesthood of all believers; for in this, His last supper with the disciples, a celebration of Passover, He is the self-offered Passover Victim, and every ordained priest to this day presents this same sacrifice, by Christ's authority and command, in exactly the same way. The Last Supper was also Christ's farewell to His assembled disciples, some of whom would betray, desert or deny Him before the sun rose again. There is such an abundance of symbolism in the solemn celebration of the events of Holy Thursday; layer upon layer, in fact that we can no more than hint at it in these few words. It has inspired great works of art and literature. Family Activities for Holy Thursday The family can prepared a Christian adaptation of a Passover Seder, simple enough for use in families with young children. This special meal stresses the Christian significance of elements of the traditional Jewish Passover meal (seder) as it may have been celebrated in our Lord's time. It is neither a re-enactment of the Last Supper, nor a Jewish service. Holy Thursday’s emphasis on ritual washing also gave rise to the ancient tradition of spring cleaning, evidently related to the Jewish custom of ritually cleaning the home in preparation for the Feast of Passover. Adults and children who are old enough to accompany their parents can return to Church after Mass for a period of Adoration. The Stations of the Cross The Stations of the Cross continue to be a popular devotion in both the Eastern and Western Churches. It was developed during the Crusades when the knights and pilgrims began to follow the route of Christ's way to Calvary. This devotion spread throughout Europe and was promulgated by the Franciscan friars in the 14th and 15th centuries. Eventually, the Stations of the Cross became an important catechetical tool, and the popularity of this devotion inspired some of the greatest examples of medieval Christian art. Some scholars believe that medieval miracle plays, which were essentially tableaux of Christ's life, developed from the sculptured representations of the Stations of the Cross in the great Churches. These scenes from the Way of the Cross have provided inspiration for many of the world's greatest works of visual art. During Lent and Holy Week most parishes have a service of Stations at least once. It is worth taking children to this so that they can participate with other Catholics in this timeless and very moving devotion. Good Friday On Good Friday, the entire Church fixes its gaze on the Cross at Calvary. Each member of the Church tries to understand at what cost Christ has won our redemption. In the solemn ceremonies of Good Friday, in the veneration of the Cross, in the chanting of the 'Reproaches', in the reading of the Passion, and in receiving the pre-consecrated Host, we unite ourselves to our Saviour, and we contemplate our own death to sin in the Death of our Lord. The liturgical observance of this day of Christ's suffering, crucifixion and death evidently has been in existence from the earliest days of the Church. No Mass is celebrated on this day, but the service of Good Friday is called the Mass of the Pre-sanctified because communion which had already been consecrated on Holy Thursday is given to the faithful. We can see that the parts of the Good Friday service correspond to the divisions of Mass: 1. The liturgy of the Word - reading of the Passion. 2. The intercessory prayers for the Church and the entire world, Christian and non-Christian. 3. Veneration of the Cross 4. Communion, or the Mass of the Pre-Sanctified. Some churches hold prayer services during the three hours of Christ's suffering on the Cross. It would be appropriate to observe a period of silence at home, for devotional reading and private prayer for example no radio, television, especially between the hours of noon and three o'clock in the afternoon. The Cross In the symbol of the Cross we can see the magnitude of the human tragedy, the ravages of original sin, and the infinite love of God. Lent is a particularly appropriate time to attempt to penetrate the true meaning of this sacred image through prayerful contemplation; and to study the traditions surrounding the Christian symbol of the Cross. Looking at the Cross in prayer helps us truly to see it. It is fitting that Christians glorify the Cross as a sign of Christ's resurrection and victory over sin and death. But we should remember each time we see a cross that the Cross of Jesus' crucifixion was an emblem of physical anguish and personal defilement, not triumph of debasement and humiliation, not glory of degradation and shame, not beauty. It was a means of execution, like a gallows or a gas chamber. What the Son of God endured for us was the depth of ugliness and humiliation. We need to be reminded of the tremendous personal cost of love. As Lent advances we contemplate the redeeming Mystery of the Cross which aids the Church in her pursuit of the renewal of the faithful. The Sign of the Cross is a visible sign of one's belief in Christ and of one's hope in the redemption which flows from His Cross. Accompanied by the invocation of the Trinity (Doxology), "In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit", making a sign of the cross is a simple and beautiful form of Christian devotion. By making this sign both in public and in private we affirm our faith in Christ crucified and ask for His blessing and protection. It is also a gesture of reverence to the Blessed Sacrament. Holy Saturday Holy Saturday (in Latin, Sabbatum Sanctum), the day of the entombed Christ,' is the Lord's Day of rest, for on that day Christ's body lay in His tomb. We recall the Apostle's Creed which says “He descended unto the dead.” It is a day of suspense between two worlds, that of darkness, sin and death, and that of the Resurrection and the restoration of the Light of the World. For this reason no divine services are held until the Easter Vigil at night. Ideally, Holy Saturday should be the quietest day of the year. Nightfall on Holy Saturday is time for joy and greatest expectation because of the beautiful liturgy of the Easter Vigil, often referred to as the Mother of all Holy Vigils, or the Great Service of Light. As with Christmas, the secular aspects of the Easter season threaten to overwhelm its religious significance. And as in Advent, which is a penitential season also, the solemnity of the events we celebrate during Holy Week risk being obscured by the advance preparations which we may make for the joyous celebration of Easter. As Catholics, we need to keep this in mind, and not put out the Easter decorations before Easter. Holy Week and especially the Triduum. Holy Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday are so rich with meaning that we must be careful not to lose any of it, and to make our observances fit the solemnity or the celebration. By any festive celebration, Easter is our greatest cause of rejoicing. Take advantage and follow keenly all preparation. The Easter Vigil The night vigil of Easter signifies Christ's passage from the dead to the living by the liturgy which begins in darkness “sin, death” and is enlightened by the fire and the candle representing Lumen Christi ‘the Light of Christ’ just as the Church, the Mystical Body of Christ, the community of believers, is led from spiritual darkness to the light of His truth. Christ's baptism, which our own baptism imitates, is represented during the liturgy by the blessing of the water of baptism by immersing the candle representing His Body into the font. During the liturgy we recall God's sparing of the Hebrews whose doors were marked with the blood of the lamb; we are sprinkled with the blessed water by which we were cleansed from original sin through Christ's sacrifice, and we repeat our baptismal vows, renouncing Satan and all his works. We rejoice at Christ's bodily resurrection from the darkness of the tomb; and we pray for our passage from death into eternal life, from sin into grace, from the weariness and infirmity of old age to the freshness and vigour of youth, from the anguish of the Cross to peace and unity with God, and from this sinful world unto the Father in heaven. Easter Day and Easter Season With these joyous words Christians have greeted one another on Easter Day for nearly two thousand years. And every Easter the words proclaim anew the faith and hope of every Christian in the Good News of God's profound love of mankind, a love which conquers death. Whenever Christians greet one another with these exultant phrases we affirm the unity of believers throughout all times and ages until He comes again in glory. Every Christian family can establish the custom of exchanging this historic greeting, which is also a profession of faith, on Easter morning. It would set an appropriate tone of rejoicing for the entire day. Mass on Easter Day is the most splendid and exuberant celebration of the Church. For this is the Sunday of Sundays, the day of Resurrection of Christ, the centre and foundation of our faith. As St. Paul said, “If Christ has not risen, then your faith is vain” 1 Cor. 15:14, 17. Thus Easter is the pinnacle of all feasts of the Church year which began with Advent, or the expectation of the coming of the Messiah, sent by God to provide the means for our Salvation. The culmination of the entire liturgy is the Easter feast. Families who attend Mass on Easter Day join millions of Christians all over the world, past and present in joyous affirmation of our redemption through the love of Christ, our hope of salvation, and our faith in the resurrection from the dead and the life of the world to come. Although the Easter Vigil and Mass fulfils the obligation for Easter Mass, the Easter Day celebration is a highlight that many will not want to miss, and it is permissible to attend both. Alleluia Every element of the festive celebration of Mass on Easter Day resounds with the great Alleluia; the triumphant word of praise for God of men and angels. Alleluia (or hallelujah) is a Hebrew word adopted by the Christian Church. Another familiar Hebrew word is amen, ‘so be it’ Hallel is the greatest expression of praise in Hebrew. Combined with Jah, the shortened form of the name of God, JHVH meaning ‘I AM’, it becomes Hallelujah. Alleluia is a Latinized spelling. The Lord's Day Every Sunday is a celebration of the Day of the Lord’s Resurrection. Every celebration of Mass commemorates all the Easter Mysteries, the Lord's Supper at which Christ instituted the Eucharist, the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross and His Resurrection, the historic events on which Christianity is based. And each Sunday celebrates the Descent of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost (fifty days after Easter) which established the Church. Every Sunday, then, is a “little Easter”. Every Sunday is Christ's feast day. This is why the Sundays during Lent are excluded from the forty days of penance; why no saints' feast days on the Church's calendar are celebrated on Sunday; and, likewise, why no funeral Masses may be conducted on the Lord's Day. All Catholics are seriously obliged to participate in the Church's celebration of Mass on Sundays. Octave of Easter and Paschal Tide The celebration of the feast of Easter, like that of all great feasts of the Church, continues for eight days, or an octave. During the week following Easter Sunday various post-resurrection appearances of Christ are celebrated in the liturgy. The Octave ends on the first Sunday after Easter, which is known as Low Sunday. This name is apparently intended to convey the contrast between this day and the great Easter festival which preceded it, as well as to indicate that, as the Octave Day, it is part of the Easter feast but in a lower degree. This Sunday is also known as "Dominica in albis depositis," in reference to the fact that those who had been baptized on Easter Eve laid aside their white baptismal robes for the first time on this day. The time from the end of the Octave of Easter to the eighth day after Pentecost is called Paschal Tide. The two great feasts celebrated during this time are Ascension and Pentecost. Feast of the Ascension The feast of the Ascension is celebrated on the fortieth day after Easter Sunday, commemorating the Ascension of Christ into Heaven and His completion of the work of our redemption. The liturgy on this day celebrates the entry of Christ into heaven with our human nature glorified, and the pledge of our glorification with Him. In the past processions outside the church were held on this day to imitate Christ's leading the Apostles out of the city to the Mount of Olives, and to commemorate the entry of Christ into heaven. After the Gospel on this day the Paschal Candle is extinguished. Pentecost Pentecost, from the Greek word for ‘fiftieth’, commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit on the Apostles fifty days after the Resurrection. It is also called Whitsunday. This feast is very ancient, dating back to the first century. The Vespers Hymn for this feast is the Veni, Creator Spiritus ‘Come, Creator Spirit’ and the sequence for the Mass is the Veni sancte Spiritus “Come, Holy Spirit”. Red vestments are worn to commemorate the love of the Holy Spirit, or to represent the tongues of fire. Throughout the Easter Season, the Regina Coeli/Queen of Heaven” is said as the mealtime Angelus prayer. Fr. Paulino Mondo

Wednesday, 5 February 2020

Grave is Empty


I am healed and Made whole I am loved I am great I am blessed I am rich and wealthy I have a new life I will see the goodness of the Lord I am favored I am forgiven I am redeemed I have been remembered I am anointed I have holy spirit I have grace I have christ in me I sit in heavenly places I am receiving miracles I am beautiful I am connected I have Gods compassion I will see the kindness of God May the name of God be praise God is exalted I praise you Jesus

Dishonesty is expensive


Keep fighting the good fight


Revelation‬ ‭2:3 “I know you are enduring patiently and bearing up for my name’s sake, and you have not grown weary.” Chapters two and three of Revelation are letters written to seven churches that the Apostle John oversaw in the Mediterranean area known as Turkey today. The first letter, which includes the verse above, goes to the church of Ephesus, by far the biggest of all the churches on the list. John is telling them that Jesus sees them enduring patiently and holding fast for Jesus’ sake. Those words had to be a salve to their souls and deep encouragement to the weary troops. They were standing for the truth, and no one noticed except God. Finish the Race You may feel worn down and like it’s not worth it going on but take heed to Jesus’s words. He sees your faithfulness and how you stand for Him. It hasn’t gone unnoticed, and He wants you to keep going, to finish the race. At times it may seem impossible and not worth it. Don’t be discouraged; it is. You have a reward waiting for you in heaven that supersedes anything earth has to offer. Keep going forward. God Sees Your Perseverance Ephesus didn’t have it all together. John gets on their case for leaving their first love, Jesus. It’s okay; you don’t have it all together either. God’s sanctification process can right the ship and get you going in the right direction. Don’t give up because you are comparing yourself to others. You can only see what is on the surface. God sees your heart, and He is pleased with you. If you fall, pick yourself up and keep walking. If you are headed in the wrong direction, repent of your sins and let Jesus clean you up. Keep fighting the good fight.