Express Announcements ~ 29 March 2015

Express Announcements ~ 29 March 2015

* Several additional opportunities for confession have been scheduled this week: Holy Week Monday through Wednesday at 7pm, and between Noon and 3 on Good Friday. There will be no confessions after 3pm on Good Friday.

*  Please make note of our annual Easter Sunday schedule, which is very different. The Church permits only one Vigil, ours will be Holy Saturday night from 8:30–11:30pm. There is no 5pm or 7pm Mass on Holy Saturday. We then joyfully welcome more than 9,000 people to three beautiful Masses on Easter Sunday at the Fredericksburg Expo Center,  8am, 10:15am and 12:30pm. There are no Masses in the church on Easter Sunday, and no afternoon and evening Masses after the 12:30pm Mass.

* Remember someone you love, either living or deceased, with a donation for our beautiful Easter Flowers. Envelopes are available in your envelope packets, in the Church and in the Parish Office.

* SCRIP is on sale this weekend in the Parish Life Center after most Masses. Please use SCRIP and help our school.

From Our Pastor ~ 29 March 2015

From Our Pastor ~ 29 March 2015

Dear Good People of Saint Mary,

Our daffodils decided to bloom for Confirmation this year. Each year I marvel at how those things continue to return, even know how to continue to come back each year. When we were kids, we would wait for the crops to break through the ground, suddenly there would be the slightest green tint to the black soil when we knew that the seeds had sprouted. There is a gardener in each of us, I believe,whether we have a green thumb or not: all of us are called to bring forth new life.

It is the perfect meditation for us this Sunday, especially, as we reflect on the offering that Jesus makes for us in his passion, death and resurrection with the Gospel of Palm Sunday.

Have you ever wondered about the miracle of a seed? It is planted into the earth, the shell of the seed breaks open, a new plant sprouts. Somehow locked inside that seed is the potential of producing maybe dozens of seasons each with thousands of seeds many times over. It has some kind of software in there that knows exactly how the new tree will sprout, grow, anticipate weather and seasons, bloom. It is uniquely its own. It relies upon the environment in which it is planted to survive.

Jesus uses this image about himself, we heard it last weekend in preparation for the proclamation of the Passion this Sunday: unless a grain of wheat falls upon the ground and dies, it remains but a grain of wheat, but if it dies, it produces much fruit… In this way, Jesus entered the earth in his Incarnation, and finally when the fullness of time came he broke open like a seed, on the cross, and all this life came out. The new life that came out is you and me.

Consider Jesus’ image, for a moment. He uses the word “dies” because from our human perspective the seed, as such, ceases to be a seed. But in reality, it has become the end that God really intended for it: life itself. Everything that the new plant is, it owes to the seed who continues to live through it, with it, in it. Do you see where I am going with this? “Through him, with him, in him, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all glory and honor is yours, Almighty Father, forever.” The process of planting life requires the seed, and continues forever with  the same imprint of God’s creative design in the generations of our own humanity. What comfort this can be to those who have lost parents: they live, we are because they gave us life, but that gift has never ended, and they continue to live in us. It is a communion that goes much deeper than mere DNA.

If you will, now allow this meditation to go one step further. For many years I have been frustrated with myself, and I have listened to other peoples’ frustration: however much we try, how hard it is to seek that kind of perfection that belongs to Jesus! Aren’t we supposed to, in a certain sense, become him? It is a level of courage, of humility, of love that goes beyond my limits, however I try.

The fact is, no matter how much we try and fail, we will never have what it takes to become Jesus by our own efforts. Perhaps this is a new look at the whole idea of Justification. I can’t make myself become Jesus. But, as his seed, his dying on the cross, has given me life, he has chosen to become me. Everything I have, I have received from my Father; everything the Father has given to me, I give to you… We are who we are by a special divine DNA from God himself. It is beyond our wildest imagination.

One further thought, it can’t become more literal than it is, right? He chooses to become the Passover meal—the ritual of Passover from death which is the Last Supper united to the Cross on Good Friday—so that we might receive him,the nourishment that gives us life and grows us into new life. We are made one with him in his Cross, we are seeds planted at baptism, to break open with him in offering our life to God the Father through Jesus, with Jesus, in Jesus, so that this life might also break forth and produce fruit a thousand thousands-fold.

Join us this week as we pass, with Jesus, from death to life. The three sacred observances of the Last Supper (Holy Thursday), the Passion of Jesus and Veneration of his Cross (Good Friday) and his Resurrection at Easter are, once and for all, the celebration of who we are in Christ Jesus our LORD. There are no more beautiful and moving liturgies at any other time during the Church year. You are welcome.

God bless you.

Fr. Don

Express Announcements ~ 22 March 2015

Express Announcements ~ 22 March 2015

* Several additional opportunities for confession have been scheduled this week: Tuesday through Friday starting at 7pm. Confessions will continue Holy Week Monday through Wednesday at 7, and between Noon and 3 on Good Friday. There will be no confessions after 3pm on Good Friday.

* Please make note of our annual Easter Sunday schedule, which is very different. The Church permits only one Vigil, ours will be Holy Saturday night from 8:30–11:30pm. There is no 5pm or 7pm Mass on Holy Saturday. We then joyfully welcome more than 9,000 people to three beautiful Masses on Easter Sunday at the Fredericksburg Expo Center, 8am, 10:15am and 12:30pm. There are no Masses in the church on Easter Sunday, and no afternoon and evening Masses after the 12:30pm Mass.

* Don’t forget the final Lenten Ecumenical Prayer Service and Lunch, this Wednesday at noon at Fredericksburg Baptist Church: Rev. Aaron Dobynes, pastor of Shiloh Old Site Baptist Church, is preaching.

* Remember someone you love, either living or deceased, with a donation for our beautiful Easter Flowers. Envelopes are available in your envelope packets, in the Church and in the Parish Office.

* SCRIP is on sale this weekend in the Parish Life Center after most Masses. Please use SCRIP and help our school.

From Our Pastor ~ 22 March 2015

From Our Pastor ~ 22 March 2015

Dear Good People of Saint Mary,

Last week I was in a conversation with someone and we were speaking about music after Mass. This person obviously was not current with all that is being written about liturgy and life (who is?) and was speaking out of her own grassroots spirituality as a Catholic who has gone to Mass all her life. She, as you might imagine, had well established opinions. “I don’t think we should have to sing anything after they take up the collection,” she said. “I just want to pray in silence in the presence of my God, and not have to think about everyone else, what they are thinking of me, or what I’m supposed to be doing.”

I tried my best to explain the reasons behind the music, but I’m not sure I got very far. Opinions can become so strong sometimes that you can still have them and not remember why. We default to lines like, “Well, that’s the way we’ve always done it.” One of my favorites of all time was once when somebody actually said to me, “Well, if Latin was good enough for the Apostles, then it is good enough for me.” (The secret is, of course, that the Apostles didn’t speak Latin. Maybe Peter and Paul, later, when they went to Rome. But the language of the New Testament Scriptures is Greek, maybe some Hebrew.)

It makes me wonder, though, why singing can seem so tentative at times when it should be most robust? For example, the Great Amen at the completion of the Eucharistic Prayer before the Lord’s Prayer—the great Affirmation of the faithful (you) for the prayer that has just been completed—thrice Amen in response to the prayer which began with the angels, “Holy, holy, holy…” It is often barely whispered. Did you know that the book says “the people respond…”? It isn’t the priest’s line, it is the people’s Amen.

I asked my interlocutor if this theory might have merit. “Is this why, do you think,” I asked, “that people don’t respond with the sung Memorial Acclamation at that precise moment that bread and wine is consecrated into the Body and Blood of Jesus: Jesus is now present on the altar.?” “Precisely,” said she, “because we are silent in the presence of the Lord, at this most holy moment.”

My good people, it is at this moment that we are to be overcome with joy, with response. As present to Jesus as he is to us. At that moment we can cry out, “Save us, Savior of the world, for by your cross and resurrection you have set us free!” That isn’t a whispered line! It is called the “Memorial” Acclamation because we acclaim our personal memory of the Great Story of Jesus: suffering, death and resurrection, NOT simply that it happened, but that God loved us so much that he did it for me, for us. Next time you are in the church for your silent moment, pick up the hymnal and find #685. I’m not crazy about the tune, but you could spend a week on the words!

And the moment of consecration isn’t the most holy moment of the Mass. The moment begins with consecration, yes, but isn’t fulfilled until
the last person in the church has received that holy Food! God the Son becomes Man, becomes bread, not to exist as bread, but to be consumed by us. He is waiting, he is hungry. The consecration exists for the moment of Communion. It does no good for God to become present if there is not a desire that fills us to receive him! To be one with him, and in the sacrament, to be his chosen people and become one with each other, too.

Yes, even with the people that you might rather wish weren’t there, with the cell phone or the screaming kids. Even with enemies. It can be a challenge. We are called to be Christ and to find Christ in others, no matter how difficult it may be with all the distractions. Being in Christ to others involves patience and kindness, but it also requires the courtesy to help others to focus. We need to be more mindful of each other, too.

If it is silent prayer time you seek in a silent church in the presence of the Lord, the church building is open all day…pick any time you like whenever Mass isn’t happening. But the Mass is the coming together of the Body of Christ with that great cry to the Father that comes from the Cross, across the chasm of death, the Word which came forth (first half of the Mass) and the word that returns to the Father in the form of Christ who unites himself to us in holy Communion, so that you and I may be caught up in that great offering to God for us and for our salvation.

Music exists for a purpose; it is clearly not for our entertainment. Anyone who has had training in a choir understands. When voices blend in song they can become one voice (in a way that can’t nearly be as perfect as when spoken), and that voice, with no single voice standing out, becomes the voice of Jesus himself. May we be so.

Still, put away the phones.

God bless you.

Fr. Don