Liturgy
This link will keep 'parishioners-at-large' in touch with current creative liturgy sources and resources that respect a variety of 'traditions' within the Church.
COMMONWEAL Magazine
A 'lay' Catholic weekly publication with an accent on an intelligent analysis and commentary on curent issues, trends and concerns of interest to Catholics.
National Catholic Reporter
A national Catholic lay newspaper covering events not usually covered or presented with a clerical bias in the local diocesan press or but of concern and interest to Catholics.
Survivos' Network for those Abused by Priests or Religious
A National Network of self-help support groups for people abused by clergy or religious.
Bishop Accountability
Vital information about the disclosure of sexual abuse and related issues affecting Catholics in the pew and the manner in which Bishops continue to exempt themselves from accountability
Voice of the Faithful
A 'movement' of lay Catholics 'inspired' by the abuse scandal calling for greater accountability of bishops to 'Catholics in the Pew.'
+ 33rd Week in Ordinary Time
Keep hope alive!
Readings: Revelation 5:1-10 Psalm 149:1-6, 9 Luke 19:41-44
_As Jesus drew near Jerusalem, he saw the city and wept over it, saying, “if this day you only knew what makes for peace – but now it is hidden from your eyes.” [Luke 19:41]
In Christian liturgy and literature, he Church has often been referred to as “the new Jerusalem” and heaven as “the new and eternal Jerusalem.” I think it’s a good simile. If you have ever been to the old section of Jerusalem, you surely would have noted the appropriateness of this comparison. Ancient Jerusalem is still very much in evidence if not literally, surely in its ambiance. A walk from the site of the ancient praetorium to Calvary – now well within the city limits – will surely give you a sense of what it may have been like when Jesus made that last fateful journey.
Today Jerusalem is truly an international city and bears within its womb and walls, the extremes of every race and religion. Jews still narrate the story of the great exodus and Christians break the bread of Eucharist while Islamic temples broadcast their ancient chants from minarets that echo through the streets in the wee hours of the morning.
This is the city over which Jesus wept not because it did not make him king but because it did not recognize its day of visitation, that is to say, its moment of opportunity. In reading a passage such as this, we need to put away preconceived notions about our understanding of Jesus’ messianic role in the light of its Christological evolution in Christian teaching today. Jesus was not about establishing new religious structures but about announcing the universality of God’s love – for Jews and gentiles, male and female, of every race and nation.
Would it be accurate to state that Jesus is weeping not just over Jerusalem but over our war torn world? And yet one cannot fail to see signs of hope on the horizon. Bernard Lonergan, Carol Rahner and Carl Jung support this very Christian notion that it is in our moments of deepest despair that a new wisdom emerges leading to a common vision of a new world in which love and respect overcome evil and injustice. Is it possible that in the midst of the turmoil in which our world seems enmeshed people of good can bring that vision to reality not through confrontation but through collaboration?
Daily Scripture Archive»Life has eternal consequences
Several years ago a colleague of mine in a presentation to our diocesan lay ministers and prospective deacon candidates unpacked what he referred to as a “survival kit” for Catholics.
The first item that he pulled out of his bag was a Bible. He said to them: “Don’t just read this book but get to know its author real well. It’s full of survival stories for people who are serious about life on this earth and intent of life in the hereafter.”
Some people read the Bible and come to some rather bizarre conclusions. Many of us study the Bible with the aid of a commentator or commentary, which is always preferred but I wonder how well we know the ‘author’ of the Bible. I sometimes have the feeling that even some commentators have not spent much time with the author.
The Scriptures contain many survival stories and what we might call survival prophecies. Malachi “the realist” is author of one of the survival prophecies. His name means messenger. It was his task to describe what the “Day of the Lord” might be like for the just as well as for the unjust. It was his contention that the behavior of believers has everlasting consequences. The day of the Lord’s coming was a euphemism for the end times for all or the end of life for the individual.
In another section of his prophecy, using metaphors, Malachi enumerated issues that would determine if the day of the Lord would be experienced as a “blazing oven” of retribution or the “healing rays of the rewarding sun.” The list includes laxity among the clergy, shallow worship among the congregation, the withholding of tithes, insincere religious practice, and social injustice, the last of which was considered an essential component of sincere faith and worship.The implications of this list are clearly reflected in the New Testament, especially in Matthew, Chapter 26, in which the measure of final judgement is the manner in which we have treated our neighbor. Jesus insisted that the love of God and love of neighbor cannot be separated.
Luke’s Gospel connects many of the apocalyptic stories bouncing around Jewish communities at the time of Jesus and shortly thereafter. Luke combined these stories with the sayings of Jesus and created his own survival stories, an example of which we have just heard.
The temple at the time of Jesus was one of the wonders of the world—a spectacular achievement. Josephus the Jewish historian described it in these words: “…lacking nothing that could astound either mind or eye. For, being covered on all sides with massive plates of gold, the sun shone upon it with a radiance so fiery that people straining to look at it were compelled to avert their eyes, as from the rays of the sun.” It was almost as if it mirrored the face of God. Like the Titanic, the ship that “not even God could sink,” there was nothing or no one who could destroy the temple.
It was against this background that Jesus’ words are quoted by Luke in today’s gospel passage. It doesn’t take much to appreciate the listener’s shock at Jesus’ prediction. Of course, when Luke wrote these words, the temple had already been destroyed in a savage attack by Rome. It is said that well over a hundred thousand people were slaughtered in the attack.
Luke was making the point that the dominion of God could not be destroyed because God’s dominion was not confined to the temple. It was to be found in the incarnate presence of God in Jesus. “Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.” He was referring of course to the temple of his body, not the temple of gold and stone. The people did not understand this “reality check” voiced by Jesus.
Those who live in the dominion of God must be prepared to forsake all earthly power and surrender to the power of God. This of course is an overstatement of a point to make the point. Our final destiny will not be determined on the beauty of the “temple” but on the beauty of the living temples not made of stone. St. Paul calls the “Church” the “Body of Christ” made not from brick and mortar but from living stones. We are temples of the Holy Spirit.
In our wildest imagination, who would have thought that the World Trade Towers could crumble on September 11, 2001? It surely was not the work of God any more than the destruction of Jerusalem was the will of God. God is not a savage warrior but a saving redeemer who builds up what the nations destroy.
Nations still bear arms “for the sake of the Gospel” and I suppose our present warfare can only be justified as blind madness in the face of absolute madness. War is the ultimate denial of the realities that sow the seeds of hatred and our young pay the price.
November signals the beginning of the end of the Liturgical year. Advent signals the beginning of a new year of grace. We are challenged to re-think our membership in the dominion of God and re-commit ourselves not to the building of an earthly kingdom but to a building not made of stones by human hands; to a community made of human hearts by God. It’s a costly investment of time and energy but one that has everlasting consequences.
As we continue to struggle with the Gospel of peace, we pray that the God of peace will prevail in the hearts of all people and that the teaching of Jesus will dominate our pursuit of justice.
Those who walk with Christ may lose their lives but they can never lose their soul.
)