“It’s Worth Revisiting” Wednesday - May Tomorrow Not Just Be Another Routine Holy Thursday

Thanks to the generosity and encouragement of Allison Gingras and Elizabeth Riordan, Catholic bloggers take the time each week to re-post their favorite articles on “It’s Worth Revisiting” Wednesdays.


Go there now (and every Wednesday) and let these authors bless and challenge you in Faith journey.


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Here is what I am sharing this week:


May Tomorrow Not Just Be Another Routine Holy Thursday

(Originally published on April 2, 2012)

(A somewhat updated version of several posts from previous years)

(Image source: Wikimedia Commons)
According to St. Pius X, our sanctity depends in large measure on the holiness of our priests. This Holy Thursday then is an appropriate time to reflect on our priests, the imperative that the Eucharist be the source, center and summit of their lives and ours, and our duty as lay men and women to treasure, encourage and support them.

We begin by recalling how eloquently St. Gregory of Nazianzus, Doctor of our Church, wrote of what it is to be a priest:

 “We must begin by purifying ourselves before purifying others; we must be instructed to be able to instruct, become light to illuminate, draw close to God to bring Him close to others, be sanctified to sanctify, lead by the hand and counsel prudently…I know God’s greatness and man’s weakness but also his potential. The priest is the defender of Truth, who stands with angels, gives glory with archangels, causes sacrifices to rise to the altar on high, shares Christ’s priesthood, refashions creation, restores it in God’s image, recreates it for the world on high and, even greater, is divinized and divinizes.”
In 1962 Venerable Fulton J. Sheen, advised his fellow priests that they “become significant to their fellow men not by being ‘a regular guy’ but by being ‘another Christ’.” He foresaw the failings of his brother priests, as “a want of lively faith in the Divine Presence.” He was just as astute to recognize “the sanctity of the priesthood starts there too.” He warned prophetically that “every worldly priest hinders the growth of the Church; every saintly priest promotes it.” He prayed that God would make each of His priests “alter Christus”. That too should be our prayer.

The perspectives of St. Gregory and St. Pius X and the observations of Archbishop Sheen remain as valid and essential for us and our priests today as when they first shared them. Zeal for the salvation of souls cannot be replaced with a misguided emphasis on community organizing and social justice issues. The Fathers of Vatican Council II made this clear when they wrote in Gaudium et Spes that “Christ did not bequeath to the Church a mission in the political, economic or social order: the purpose he assigned to it was a religious one.” The physical well-being of people (a notable goal and obligation for all) must of necessity be secondary to their eternal salvation.

 No one expresses this vital truth more clearly than St. John Chrysostom:

 “Zeal for the salvation of souls is of so great a merit before God, that to give up all our goods to the poor, or to spend our whole life in the exercises of all sorts of austerities cannot equal the merit of it. There is no service more agreeable to God than this one. To employ one's life in this blessed labor is more pleasing to the Divine Majesty than to suffer martyrdom. Would you not feel happy if you could spend large sums of money in corporal works of mercy? But know that he who labors for the salvation of souls does far more; nay, the zeal of souls is of far greater merit before God…than the working of miracles.”

Our priests are under enormous pastoral and administrative burdens and are, have been and will continue to be viciously and relentlessly subjected to spiritual attack by the Evil One who knows full well that without priests there will be no Eucharist. We can not allow that to happen.

They, like each of us, are human and prone to sin. Sadly, some of them have grievously sinned and exposed a foul stench within their midst. Fortunately, the majority of our priests have not succumbed to such filth. But our priests can faithfully fulfill their role as “another Christ” only with the grace of God – abundant grace flowing to all priests for whom the Eucharist is the source, center and summit of their priestly lives, who treasure offering the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass daily, who spend time before the Blessed Sacrament each day, and who have developed a deep and trusting relationship with and devotion to our Blessed Mother.

They need our prayers, our support and encouragement. Never a day should pass by without each of us getting on our knees, thanking God for the faithful priests he has sent and will be sending to help us on our path to personal sanctification and eternal salvation and asking Him to provide them with all they need to be faithful to their vocation and successful against the attacks of the Evil One.  

If we do all that, in God’s perfect timing, each of us will be able to say about all our priests, the same thing one lawyer reportedly said when, after returning from seeing St. John Vianney in Ars, someone asked him what he had seen there: “I saw God in a man.”

Do not let this day end without trying to rediscover a greater sense of awe and amazement for the Eucharist. For many, music, especially sacred music, is a powerful tool through which to do so. There are arguably no more beautiful and moving Eucharistic hymns than those composed by St. Thomas Aquinas – Panis Angelicus, Pange Lingua, Tantum Ergo and Adore te Devote. You will hear some of them at the evening’s Mass of the Lord’s Supper. But will you really be in a position to truly savor and appreciate them?

Do yourself a favor. After you get home and the chores are completed and the kids are tucked away for the night, go to a quiet place where you can give your undivided attention to these majestic masterpieces composed by the Angelic Doctor. Click each of the hymns highlighted in the previous paragraph, one by one. “But you have linked to the Latin versions,” you say, “and I don't understand that language.” Relax. Your heart does. Just ask God to allow these melodies and their Latin lyrics to penetrate your entire being and bring the great Eucharistic mystery alive in your heart, mind and soul.

Awesome and amazing, aren’t they?

P.S. It's okay to cheat and listen to them now - what a great preparation for tomorrow!

Comments

  1. This post and another post about conversion has got me thinking that I really struggle to find the same awesomeness in Holy Week compared to the year that I converted. The last couple years I feel like the harder I try, the more I am let down.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Crystal
      You Holy Week experience in the year you converted was a special unique gift from God. It was meant, I believe, to strengthen you and encourage you on your daily walk of on-going conversion. Treasure those memories. We can not expect repetitive blessings like the one you received. God wants us to trust Him even when don't "feel" Him with us. Next year, just relax and accept what God sends you. He will bless you in a different way.
      Thank you for visiting and commenting.

      Delete
  2. Michael, I couldn't agree more! There is such a great need to pray for our priests who are not only shepherding their flock, but dealing with the finances, called upon at all hours, while running short on staff and backup. Oh, and Panis Angelicus is one of my favorites!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you Elizabeth for stopping by and commenting. Our priests must attach themselves to the Eucharist and the Rosary and we in turn must storm heaven on their behalf. God bless.

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