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Catholic Caucus: Sunday Mass Readings, 11-20-11, Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ The King
USCCB.org/New American Bible ^ | 11-20-11 | New American Bible

Posted on 11/19/2011 8:52:26 PM PST by Salvation

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The Restoration of the Reign of Christ the King (Catholic Caucus)
Cowardly Relativism, Kingly Truth
Jesus Christ is King: Thanksgiving and Advent
Reflection: Christ the King, Thanksgiving and Advent
Feast of Christ the King

Excerpts from Pope Pius XI's 'Quas Primas' (On the Kingship of Christ)
Poland erects gigantic statue of Christ the King
Christ, The King of the Universe
King of Kings and Lord of Lords [Solemnity of Christ the King]
Christ Our King! Now And Forever!
Christ the King, with images of the Interrogation of Christ by Pilate
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The Reign of Christ the King QUAS PRIMAS (On the Feast of Christ the King)
Christ the King

61 posted on 11/20/2011 7:05:00 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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WDTPRS The Last Sunday: Beg His help. Beg His mercy. Praise Him for His gifts.

This is the Last Sunday of the liturgical year.  Though it is numerically the 23rd Sunday after Pentecost, in the traditional Roman calendar, we use the texts from the 24th Sunday, which is always the Last Sunday of the liturgical year … even when it isn’t.

We also call today “Stir Up” Sunday, because of the first words of the Collect.  This is the day when families in England would stir up the ingredients for the Christmas Pudding, so that it could season a while against the day of its coming.

COLLECT (1962MR):
Excita, quaesumus, Domine,
tuorum fidelium voluntates:
ut, divini operis fructum propensius exsequentes;
pietatis tuae remedia maiora percipiant
.

This is an ancient prayer, occurring in the Liber sacramentorum Augustodunensis a 9th century manuscript variation of the Gelasian Sacramentary. This prayer survived in the ministrations of the Consilium as the Collect for the 34th Week of Ordinary Time, used during the week after the Sunday celebration of the Solemnity of Christ the King.  Thus, it stays in the same place in the liturgical year that it occupied before the changes.

Our rousing Lewis & Short Dictionary says excito means “to raise up, comfort; to arouse, awaken, excite, incite, stimulate, enliven”.   Propensius is a comparative adverb of propendeo, which thus means “more willingly, readily, with inclination”.  As we have seen many times before, pietas when attributed to God is less “piety, duty” than it is “mercy”.  Exsequor is “to follow to the end, to pursue, follow; to execute, accomplish, fulfill”.  Percipio is “to get, obtain, and receive”.

The two comparatives, propensius and maiora, set up a proportional relation between the grace-filled pursuit, on our part, and the extent of the effects of the remedy.  The greater our earnestness, which is itself prompted by God’s work in us, the more will we receive His mercy.

LITERAL TRANSLATION:
Rouse up, we beseech You, O Lord,
the wills of Your faithful,
that they, pursuing more earnestly the fruit of the divine work,
may obtain the more greatly the remedies of Your mercy.

A SMOOTHER TRANSLATION:
Stir up the will of your faithful, we pray, O Lord,
that, seeking more eagerly the fruit of your divine work,
they may find in greater measure
the healing effects of your mercy
.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):
Lord,
increase our eagerness to do your will
and help us to know the saving power of your love.

Noooo… I didn’t make that up or get the wrong day.

NEW CORRECTED ICEL (2011):
Stir up the will of your faithful, we pray, O Lord,
that, striving more eagerly
to bring your divine work to fruitful completion,
they may receive in greater measure
the healing remedies your kindness bestows
.

You can see from this the difference between a formal equivalence approach and a dynamic equivalence.   Which do you prefer?

Keep in mind that this is for the last Sunday of the liturgical year.

This is a threshold for crossing into a new Advent.

Advent is more than a preparation for the coming of the Christ Child at Bethlehem.  It really points to the Second Coming of the Lord at the end of the world, when all will be laid bare and the cosmos will be unmade in fire.  In the Epistle for this Mass Paul tells the Colossians to persevere in every fruitful good work (in omni opera bono fructificantes).

In the Gospel from Matthew 24, Jesus describes the “abomination of desolation” from Daniel and the antichrists and the end times, the hour of which we do not know.  This is the pericope in which Christ says He will appear like lightening in the East.  The Secret asks God to free us from earthly desires (cupiditates) and the Postcommunion asks for healing of whatever is directed to vices (medicatio).  This is a fitting theme for the end of the year and the threshold of the new.

Making connections within the texts for Mass helps me drill into a possible source for this prayer’s imagery.

There is a sermon of St. Pope Gregory I “the Great” (+604) on Matthew 20:1-16 about the man who hires day-laborers at different hours of the day.  Gregory uses an allegorical key to interpret the different hours the man came to hire workers as being the ages of a man’s life.  The parable of the Lord is also eschatological. It describes the reward the Lord gives for doing His work, regardless of the moment of the calling in history.  The work to be done is more than likely harvest work, bringing in the fruits of the growing season.  This parable applies to the late-coming Gentiles as well as the early-coming Jews, just as it is meant for individuals who experience conversion even late in life.

In the parable Jesus has a man identify those sitting idle without work: they will obviously receive no good wage at the end of the day.  Without work, they will be poor, in straights.  In the sermon there is a phrase which is echoed in the Collect:

“For whoever lives for himself and is sated by his own pleasures of the flesh, is rightly called ‘idle’ (otiosus), because he is not pursuing the fruit of the divine work (quia fructum diuini operis non sectatur).” (Hom. XL in Evangelia, I, 19, 2)

The verb sector is “to follow continually or eagerly”. In the Collect the priest prays that we will with God’s help be the opposite of “idle”, namely, that we will be not merely earnest or intent, but even more eager (propensius).   The references to “fruits” and “work” in the Mass texts and the parallel of concepts in the sermon with those of the Collect, suggest to me a connection. We know that many of our ancient Latin prayers were authored at the time of Pope Gregory and before.

We are in need of healing and actual graces.  Baptism gives us an initial healing and justification, but wounds of Original Sin remain in our body, mind and will.  God gives us grace to move and strengthens us to do His will, which has healing and saving consequences.  To the extent that God gives us grace and to the extent we cooperate with His guidance and helps, the greater will be our present healing and consolation and our reward when the Lord comes like lightening from the East.

Beg His help.  Beg His mercy.  Praise Him for His gifts.


62 posted on 11/20/2011 7:14:22 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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Archdiocese of Washington

On my daily commute, I pass by Holy Redeemer Catholic Church on New York Avenue in the District. One morning, from my comfortable car as

I sipped my coffee, I saw in the church doorway a rough-looking homeless man who had obviously spent the night there. And to my shame, I have to confess that my first thought was: “Thank God I don’t have to deal with that.”

Today’s gospel reminds me, as it reminds all of us, that we do have to deal with that- or with “them,” to be more precise. As we heard, Christ our King calls us to serve him by feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, visiting prisoners, caring for the sick, and welcoming the stranger. Our tradition refers to these as the “Corporal Acts of Mercy.”

Throughout his ministry, Jesus taught that there can be no real relationship with him if we neglect the poor and ignore the needy. Unfortunately, we don’t always take our Lord’s words seriously enough. As  Fr. Benedict Groeschel once wrote: “I am astonished when I see so many sincere Christians afraid or disinclined to find (Jesus) where he teaches he can be found, namely, among the poor.”

If we don’t avoid the poor and needy outright, we can sometimes avoid our responsibility to help them by “spiritualizing” our response. What I mean by this is expressed by a well-known anonymous passage. It says, “I was hungry, and you formed a humanities groups to discuss my hunger. I was imprisoned, and you crept off quietly to your chapel and prayed for my release. I was naked, and in your mind you debated the morality of my appearance. I was sick, and you knelt and thanked God for your health. I was homeless, and you spoke to me of the spiritual shelter of God’s love. I was lonely, and you left me alone to pray for me. You seem so holy, so close to God. But I am still very hungry and lonely and cold.”

We hear things like this, and we probably feel a little bit guilty. We think of all the people we aren’t helping, and we feel frustrated. The needs are so great, and we don’t even know these people. Just what does Jesus expect us to do?

Jesus invites us to begin at home. You and I learn to love one another and to meet each other’s needs from our families. The expression “Charity begins at home” has a great

deal of truth to it. We’ll likely not have the compassion and generosity we need to serve

the poor and the needy unless we first learn and practice those virtues in the community of our relatives and friends.

Possibly we grew up in families in which members served one another and the community. Hopefully, we have learned to be servants from them. However, it is very possible that we did not, especially since we live in such a selfish culture. The first sentence of a very popular Christian book is: “It’s not about you.” The author says this because our culture so often tells us: It is about you! Our culture breeds selfishness. And selfish people aren’t inclined to serve the needs of others.

This selfishness can be reinforced by some of the choices families make today. Because their kids are so over-scheduled with sports, clubs, and other activities, their parents feel guilty about giving them chores. The effect of this, however, is that kids don’t learn to serve the needs of the family by helping around the house. All of their activities are about their development, their advancement, and their amusement, and not about the common good. And they become selfish. So if you have children at home, I strongly encourage you to give them age-appropriate chores.

Another simple thing families can do to teach and create an atmosphere of service can be done around the dinner table. Each family member, one at a time, thanks the other family members for the ways they had served them or met their needs that day. For example: “I’m grateful to Charlie for helping me pick up my toys. I’m grateful to Mommy for helping me with my homework. I’m grateful to Dad for taking me to Cub Scouts. I’m grateful to Winnie for having been so cooperative when it was time to leave the playground.” Doing this reinforces the idea that family members should cooperate with each other, help each other, and serve one another. We did this in my family after having been introduced to it at a family retreat, and it was a real blessing to us.

I would encourage you to think today about your families and friends in light of Jesus’ words in today’s gospel. Hopefully they’re adequately fed and clothed. If they are, then those needs have been met. But there are so many other needs. Needs that maybe we don’t recognize. Needs that maybe we’ve been ignoring. For instance: Do they need to be nourished by our presence? Are they starving for our affection? Do they hunger for our forgiveness? Have we stripped them naked by our insults and negativity? Do they need to be clothed with our encouragement and affirmation? Have they become strangers to us? Do we need to welcome them back into our lives? Do they feel

imprisoned by dehumanizing jobs or the overwhelming demands of family life? Do we need to visit them with our help, understanding, and compassion? And when they’re sick, how do we respond? Is it an inconvenience to us? Do we get annoyed? Or do we heal them with our attention and loving care?

These are just some of the needs of those we love. And when we learn to serve them by meeting these needs, we’ll come to find ourselves far more willing and open to serve the needs of others, as Christ has commanded us to do. Instead of saying, “Thank God I don’t have to deal with that” maybe we’ll say “Thank God I can!”


63 posted on 11/21/2011 6:40:27 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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http://resources.sainteds.com/showmedia.asp?media=../sermons/homily/2011-11-20-Homily%20Fr%20Gary.mp3&ExtraInfo=0&BaseDir=../sermons/homily


64 posted on 11/27/2011 9:34:11 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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