Author Archives: vhoagland

22nd Week of the Year: Readings and Feasts

29 Mon The Passion of St John the Baptist Memorial 1 Cor 2:1-5 (431)/Mk 6:17-29 

30 Tue Weekday 1 Cor 2:10b-16/Lk 4:31-37 

31 Wed Weekday 1 Cor 3:1-9/Lk 4:38-44 

SEPTEMBER 1 Thu Weekday 1 Cor 3:18-23/Lk 5:1-11 

2 Fri Weekday 1 Cor 4:1-5/Lk 5:33-39 

3 Sat St Gregory the Great, Pope, Doctor of the Church Memorial

1 Cor 4:6b-15/Lk 6:1-5 

4 SUN TWENTY-THIRD SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

Wis 9:13-18b/Phlm 9-10, 12-17/Lk 14:25-33

This week we begin reading from the Gospel of Luke and we’ll continue reading from it  till the beginning of Advent. Takes the account of Jesus in the synagogue of Nazareth from Mark’s gospel (Mark 6:1-6),Luke places it at the beginning of Jesus’ ministry in Galilee as a summary of his whole ministry. Initially Jesus was received favorably, then rejected violently. 

From the 21st to the 24th week of this year we read extensively from Paul’s 1st Letter to the Corinthians, written about 51 AD.  It’s a church from Luke’s own time, with strengths and weaknesses. It offers better insight into early church life than any other book of the New Testament; Luke wrote his gospel with churches like the church in Corinth in mind.

The Passion of John the Baptist, August 29th, a feast from 5th century Jerusalem, was celebrated by the 6th century by the churches of the east and west. An ancient feast remembering the beheading of John, foreshadowing the death of Jesus. 

St. Gregory the Great, September 3, is one of the most important popes in the history of the church. “Servant of the Servants of God.” At a time when the Roman Empire was falling apart, Gregory not only kept the Roman church afloat but reached out to peoples afar to bring them the gospel. 

22nd Sunday of the Year c: Eating Together

For this week’s homily please watch the video below.

21st Week: Readings and Feasts

AUGUST 22 Mon Queenship of Mary Memorial 2 Thes 1:1-5, 11-12/Mt 23:13-22 

23 Tue Weekday [St Rose of Lima, Virgin] 2 Thes 2:1-3a, 14-17/Mt 23:23-26 

24 Wed St Bartholomew, Apostle Feast Rv 21:9b-14/Jn 1:45-51 

25 Thu Weekday [St Louis; Saint Joseph Calasanz, Priest] 1 Cor 1:1-9/Mt 24:42-51 

26 Fri Weekday 1 Cor 1:17-25/Mt 25:1-13

Blessed Dominic Barberi, CP  

27 Sat Saint Monica Memorial 1 Cor 1:26-31/Mt 25:14-30 

28 SUN TWENTY-SECOND SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

Sir 3:17-18, 20, 28-29/Heb 12:18-19, 22-24a/Lk 14:1, 7-14 

Readings this week from the 23-24 chapters of St. Matthew describe the fierce opposition Jesus faced from the Pharisees and his condemnation of them.  Commentators remind us that these accounts reveal the conflict Matthew’s church had with the Pharisees, but what is said of the Pharisees can also be said of members of Matthew’s church as well.

We’re also reading from the 2nd Letter to Thessalonians the first few days of this week; then we will read extensively from Paul’s 1st Letter to the Corinthians till the 24th week of the year. Both letters are among the earliest documents describing the early church and are written before the gospels.

Paul’s letter to the Thessalonians answers some questions they raise about the 2nd Coming of Christ and warns against  other “teachers” using Paul’s name, who were deceiving people,  Paul urges the Thessalonians to be faithful to his oral teaching and letters. ( 2 Thessalonians 2: 1-17) 

In Paul’s letters we’re seeing the Pharisees in another way. They’re in the church of every age, including ours.

The Queenship of Mary, August 22, is a memorial related to the feast of the Assumption of Mary into heaven, August 15.

Bartholomew is the apostle celebrated in August. St. Rose of Lima and St. Monica, mother of St. Augustine, are also celebrated this month. 

August 26, the Passionists celebrate the feast of Blessed Dominic Barberi, who received St. John Newman into the Catholic Church.

Reflections on Desiderio Desideravi

In his recent letter Desiderio Desideravi, Pope Francis emphasizes the pastoral importance of the liturgy for the church today. “If the liturgy is ‘the summit toward which the activity of the Church is directed, and at the same time the font from which all her power flows,’ (Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 10), well then, we can understand what is at stake in the liturgical question.” (DD 16)

The non-acceptance of the liturgical reform, as also a superficial understanding of it obstruct growing through the liturgy, Pope Francis says. “We are in need of a serious and dynamic liturgical formation.” (DD 31) That formation takes two forms; formation for the liturgy and formation by the liturgy. “The first depends on the second, which is essential.” (DDS 34)

Resources for formation for the liturgy have been provided by scholars from the beginning of the liturgical movement, the pope says.  “It is  important now to spread this knowledge beyond the academic environment, in an accessible way, so that each one of the faithful might grow in a knowledge of the theological sense of the Liturgy.”  (DD37)

Ordinary people should know what the texts and rites of the liturgy mean and “their anthropologic significance”.  The pope’s phrase “anthropologic significance” means

 that the whole of creation is at “the service of the encounter with the Word: incarnate, crucified, dead, risen, ascended to the Father.” (DD 35) The encounter happens in a sacramental way, the way of the Incarnation, through water, bread and wine, oil and simple human actions. The encounter also happens as we reach out in love to our brothers and sister and, indeed, to the earth itself. 

The church’s ministers and teachers form people for the liturgy, and for that reason the pope urges seminaries and other church institutions dedicate themselves to the work of liturgical formation. Yet, liturgical formation must be a step towards liturgical celebration– to be formed by the liturgy. “Ordained ministers carry out a pastoral action of the first importance when they take the baptized faithful by the hand to lead them into the repeated experience of the Paschal Mystery… The kind of knowledge that comes from study is just the first step to enter into the mystery celebrated. Obviously, to be able to lead their brothers and sisters, the ministers who preside in the assembly must know the way, know it from having studied it on the map of their theological studies but also from having frequented the liturgy in actual practice of an experience of living faith, nourished by prayer — and certainly not just as an obligation to be fulfilled.” (DD36)

In his letter the pope cites certain factors impeding participation in the liturgy today– neo-gnosticism and neo-pelagianism. He sees especially the loss of a sense of symbolism. Unlike St. Francis who saw the sun and recognized its likeness to God, we no longer gaze with wonder at creation. We approach creation in a utilitarian way. How can we regain this sense of wonder, the pope asks? 

“Above all we must reacquire confidence about creation. I mean to say that things — the sacraments “are made” of things — come from God. To Him they are oriented, and by Him they have been assumed, and assumed in a particular way in the Incarnation, so that they can become instruments of salvation, vehicles of the Spirit, channels of grace. ..we must arrange ourselves in their presence with a fresh, non-superficial regard, respectful and grateful. From the very beginning, created things contain the seed of the sanctifying grace of the sacraments.” (DD 46)

Desiderio Desideravi is closely related to Pope Francis’ letter on the environment, Laudato si’. Renewal of the liturgy and renewal of the earth both require respect and confidence in creation itself. Renewal of the liturgy and renewal of the earth go together.

What follows Desiderio Desideravi?

Desiderio Desideravi is not an exhaustive treatment of the liturgy. O2nly “some clues for reflection,” the pope claims. How can we as Christians build “confidence about creation” and recognize its relationship to the Incarnation?

A first step may be to look at our traditional prayers, especially the psalms, the prayerbook of Judaism and of the church. The psalms repeatedly explore the relationship of creation to God and to humanity.

An example is Psalm 148, last psalm for Sunday morning, week 3, in the liturgy of the hours, an anthem to the Creator, based on the cosmology of its day. The psalm praises God from the heavens above to the earth below, for “he commanded; they were made. He fixed them forever, gave a law which shall not pass away.” God is the Creator and Lord of heaven and earth.

The psalm calls all creation, from the greatest to the least, to praise the Creator. Humanity joins the song, from earth’s kings to “old men, together with children.” Humanity never sings God praise alone, separated from the rest of creation. We’re part of a greater song.

Praise the Lord from the heavens, alleluia.

Praise the Lord from the heavens,

praise him in the heights.

Praise him, all his angels,

praise him, all his host.

Praise him, sun and moon,

praise him, shining stars.

Praise him, highest heavens

and the waters above the heavens.

Let them praise the name of the Lord.

He commanded: they were made.

He fixed them for ever,

gave a law which shall not pass away.

Praise the Lord from the earth,

sea creatures and all oceans,

fire and hail, snow and mist,

stormy winds that obey his word;

all mountains and hills,

all fruit trees and cedars,

beasts, wild and tame,

reptiles and birds on the wing;

all earth’s kings and peoples,

earth’s princes and rulers,

young men and maidens,

old men together with children.

Let them praise the name of the Lord

for he alone is exalted.

The splendour of his name

reaches beyond heaven and earth.

He exalts the strength of his people.

He is the praise of all his saints,

of the sons of Israel,

of the people to whom he comes close.

Glory to the Father and to the Son,

and to the Holy Spirit:

as it was in the beginning, is now,

and will be for ever. Amen.

Life-giving Water

God promises to restore Israel from its exile, Ezekiel says in today’s first reading.( Ezekiel 36, 23-38 ) God’s honor and power have been shamed and questioned, not just Israel’s honor and power. And so God say: “I will prove the holiness of my great name, profaned among the nations in whose midst you have profaned it.”

Israel’s re-creation is undertaken by God’s initiative, not human initiative. The waters of Genesis flow again. “I will give you a new heart and place a new spirit within you, taking from your bodies your stony hearts and giving you natural hearts. I will put my spirit within you and make you live by my statutes, careful to observe my decrees.”

“I will sprinkle clean water upon you to cleanse you from all your impurities, and from all your idols I will cleanse you.”

Pope Francis remarked on the sacredness of water in his letter “Desiderio Desideravi.” Water is a pledge of God’s promise of life, to each of us in Baptism and to our world  through sacred history:

“He used water to regenerate humanity through the flood (Ge 6:1-9,29). He controlled it, separating it to open the way of freedom through the Red Sea (cf. Ex 14). He consecrated it in the Jordan, plunging into it the flesh of the Word soaked in the Spirit. (cf. Ma 3:13-17; Mk 1:9-11; Lk 3:21-22) At the end he blended it with the blood of his Son, the gift of the Spirit inseparably united with the gift of the life and death of the Lamb slain for us, and from his pierced side he poured it out over us. (Jn 19:34) And it is into this water that we have been immersed so that through its power we can be inserted into the Body of Christ and with him rise to immortal life. (cf. Ro 6:1-11)” (Desidero Desideravi 13) 

“I will sprinkle clean water upon you to cleanse you from all your impurities, and from all your idols I will cleanse you…This once-desolate land has become like the garden of Eden,” the nations that once ridiculed God’s power will say. The cities once ruined, laid waste and destroyed, are now resettled and fortified.”

God’s promise still stands. We’re reminded of it in the water.

20th Week of the Year: Readings and Feasts

AUGUST 15 Mon THE ASSUMPTION OF MARY INTO HEAVEN

Rv 11:19a; 12:1-6a, 10ab/1 Cor 15:20-27/Lk 1:39-56 

16 Tue Weekday [St Stephen of Hungary] Ez 28:1-10/Mt 19:23-30 

17 Wed Weekday Ez 34:1-11/Mt 20:1-16 

18 Thu Weekday Ez 36:23-28/Mt 22:1-14 

19 Fri Weekday [St John Eudes, Priest] Ez 37:1-14/Mt 22:34-40 

20 Sat St Bernard, Doctor of the Church Memorial Ez 43:1-7ab/Mt 23:1-12 

21 SUN TWENTY-FIRST SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

Is 66:18-21/Heb 12:5-7, 11-13/Lk 13:22-30

The Feast of the Assumption of Mary into heaven stands out among the feasts we celebrate in August. The feast is the oldest and most important of Mary’s feasts in our church calendar. A video homily and explanation of the feast appear on this blog  for August 15.

 Readings from Matthew’s gospel this week are from chapters 19-23: Jesus makes his way to Jerusalem after his extensive ministry in Galilee. On the way he faces increased opposition from the Pharisees and the Sadducees. They’re his obvious protagonists but Matthew also sees opponents of Jesus in the church of his time, and we are meant to see them in our times as well. 

Friday the readings from Ezekiel end with a picture of the temple where God dwells, now free from the political abominations of men. Before the temple was like the private chapel of the king. Now God is king.

St. Bernard is an most important saint, after the Virgin Mary, we celebrate this week.

Ezekiel, Words for Hard Times

jewsinexile
Jewish captives led to Babylon, 6th century BC

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We begin reading the Prophet Ezekiel weekdays at Mass. He was a priest brought captive to Babylon along with King Johoiachin and members of the Jewish elite after the Babylonians crushed the Jewish revolt  in 597 BC. He could be one of those pictured above, on their way to exile .

The Jewish elite taken to Babylon were convinced God would never permit Jerusalem to be destroyed. When it was destroyed, they were just as convinced it would be rebuilt quickly. You’re wrong in both cases, Ezekiel tells them. Jerusalem will be destroyed and it won’t be God’s fault– it’s yours. You are unfaithful leaders.

“Thus says the Lord GOD: Woe to the shepherds of Israel
who have been pasturing themselves!
Should not shepherds, rather, pasture sheep?
You have fed off their milk, worn their wool,
and slaughtered the fatlings,
but the sheep you have not pastured.
You did not strengthen the weak nor heal the sick
nor bind up the injured.”

Jerusalem won’t be restored by your power either, Ezekiel says. It will take time, and it will come in God’s time, not yours, by God’s power, not yours. In the meantime, ask God to take away your hearts of stone and give you natural hearts.

The Jewish leaders didn’t like Ezekiel’s message:

“Son of man, listen! The house of Israel is saying, ‘The vision he sees is a long time off; he prophesies for distant times!’ Say to them therefore: Thus says the Lord GOD: None of my words shall be delayed any longer. Whatever I say is final; it shall be done.”

Hard times lead to impatience, to blaming others, to thinking God is absent, but hard times are blessed times, Ezekiel says, when God is more present than ever. God will save his people.

“Thus says the Lord GOD,”

I swear I am coming… I will claim my sheep…I will save my sheep…
I myself will look after and tend my sheep.” (Ezekiel 34,1-11)

Good words for us today?

19th Week of the Year: Readings and Feasts

AUGUST 8 Mon Saint Dominic, Priest Memorial Ez 1:2-5, 24-28c/Mt 17:22-27 

9 Tue Weekday [St Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, Virgin and Martyr]

Ez 2:8—3:4/Mt 18:1-5, 10, 12-14 

10 Wed St Lawrence, Deacon and Martyr Feast 2 Cor 9:6-10/Jn 12:24-26 

11 Thu Saint Clare, Virgin Memorial Ez 12:1-12/Mt 18:21—19:1 

12 Fri Weekday [St Jane Frances de Chantal, Religious]

Ez 16:1-15, 60, 63 or 16:59-63/Mt 19:3-12 

13 Sat Weekday [Sts Pontian, Pope, and Hippolytus, Priest, Martyrs]

Ez 18:1-10, 13b, 30-32/Mt 19:13-15 

14 SUN TWENTIETH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

Jer 38:4-6, 8-10/Heb 12:1-4/Lk 12:49-53 

Our liturgical calendar this week takes us to distant times and places where we meet a variety of saints and situations.

August 8 we meet St. Dominic, founder of the Dominicans. August 9th to a German concentration camp to remember the heroic death of Edith Stein, Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross. August 10th we’re in 3rd century Rome for the martyrdom of Lawrence the Deacon; August 11th in 13th century Assisi with St. Clare; August 12th in 17th century France remembering St. Jane Francis de Chantal, August 13th to Rome for Pontian and Hippolytus, 3rd century martyrs, August 14th to a German concentration camp again, to remember Maximilian Kolbe.

 A wide variety. The saints teach us the many ways and how many situations God can be served. How are you going to serve God in your day, they ask us?

The liturgy itself is a school open day by day. We learn from it how to live. We also learn that God is with us too in life and death.

The weekday readings from Matthew’s gospel are from chapters 18-19 which describe the care the disciples of Jesus should have for each other’s faith and his departure with them from Galilee for Jerusalem.

Our first readings this week are from the Prophet Ezechiel who is the first prophet to speak from exile, after the Jews were taken captive by the Babylonians in 597 BC. He reminds us that unfavorable times can be hard, but necessary. A time that appears destructive can be transformative. A good message for now?