Note:
Humanae Vitae Priests is happy to introduce a new member of the
HLI family, Father Bill Bellrose, CPM, who presents the following
announcement:
Seminarians
for Life International, a division of Human Life International,
has posted a new
Blog to help priests and seminarians, which may be found at:
http://semsforlife.blogspot.com/.
The Blog
will not only be informative on current pro-life issues worldwide,
but will also have items practical for parish work. The Blog will
be a quick resource to help answer questions that come up in ministry.
One of the features will be “Saints Quotes,” a help
for homilies and talks. These will be updated frequently, so check
back often! —Father Bill Bellrose
Nuptial
Rest
Sunday anticipates the “wedding feast of the Lamb”
(Rv 19:9)
By Paul Simoneau
It is said that
to truly receive a gift, one must be at rest. Keeping holy the Lord’s
Day, solemnly inscribed in the Third Commandment of the Decalogue,
provides the premiere setting each week for the reclining of the
soul and body in order to receive God’s total gift of love—Christ
in the Eucharist. In fact, Pope John Paul II, in his apostolic letter,
Dies Domini—On Keeping the Lord’s Day Holy,
calls us to recognize Sunday’s “nuptial intensity”
where “God reveals himself as the bridegroom before the bride”
(No. 12).
“If the
first page of the Book of Genesis presents God’s ‘work’
as an example for man,” Pope John Paul II explains, “the
same is true of God’s ‘rest’” (Ibid, No.
11). However, we mustn’t think of God’s rest on the
seventh day as some sort of “divine inactivity,” but
as “… a gaze full of joyous delight” (Ibid). It
is the gaze of the divine Lover upon the beloved. The prophet Hosea
describes the “nuptial rest” that God desires to have
with his beloved saying, “I will make you lie down in safety…
and I will espouse you for ever” (Hos 2:18-19).
Indeed, perhaps
no better nuptial image of rest exists in the human dimension than
in that of the repose of a man and a woman in the sacramental embrace
of marital union. Taken to the higher plane, Sunday represents the
marriage bed for Eucharistic communion—“the Sacrament
of the Bridegroom and Bride” (Mulieris Dignitatem—On
the Dignity and Vocation of Women, No. 26).
In fact, “the
‘sincere gift’ contained in the sacrifice of the cross
gives definitive prominence to the spousal meaning of God’s
love” (Ibid). Pope John Paul II tells us that “In
the Church every human being—male and female—is the
‘Bride,’ in that he or she accepts the gift of the love
of Christ the Redeemer, and seeks to respond to it with the gift
of his or her own person” (Ibid, No. 25).
In every Mass
we hear the words, “This is my body which has been given
up for you.” It is the Heavenly Bridegroom’s total,
free, faithful and fruitful act of justice for love of his Bride,
the Church. Approaching Holy Communion as a “Bride”
and hearing the affirmation, “The Body of Christ,”
we confirm the truth of this nuptial mystery with our “Amen.”
“Holiness
is measured according to the ‘great mystery’ in which
the Bride responds with the gift of love to the gift of the Bridegroom”
(Dies Domini, No. 27). In what better way can we respond
to the Bridegroom’s gift than by making His words our own,
saying, “this too is my body which I offer up to you.”
In so doing, we enter “the depths of God’s ‘rest’
and… experience a tremor of the Creator’s joy…”
(Ibid, No. 17).
On Sundays,
God especially reminds us to “be still and know that I am
God” (Psalm 46:10). Biblically, marital union is spoken of
as knowledge because nothing is closer than that of the knower and
that which is known. We seek, in justice, to know God so that we
can “love and serve God and one another.”
Communion, properly
understood, has both an “invisible dimension,” in and
through Christ and a “visible dimension,” which entails
communion in the teachings of the Church, in the sacraments and
with the Church hierarchy (cf., Ecclesia de Eucharistia—On
the Eucharist in its Relationship to the Church, No. 35).
The grave obligation
to attend Mass each Sunday and on holy days of obligation is precisely
because we can so easily become lost in the horizontal and finite
dimension of our earthly realm and pilgrimage. Sunday then, properly
observed, reorients the heart toward what is infinite.
In the words
of Archbishop Fulton Sheen: “You were made for the great Sacred
Heart and no one but God can satisfy you. Your heart is right in
wanting the infinite, but your heart is wrong in trying to make
its finite companion the substitute for the infinite” (Your
Life is Worth Living, St. Andrews Press, p. 272).
To close with
a play upon the words of Pope Paul VI, “if you want peace…,”
keep the Lord’s Day holy.
Mr. Simoneau directs the Justice and Peace Office for the Diocese
of Knoxville.
Copyright
2008 The East Tennessee Catholic. Reprinted by permission.
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