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Showing posts with label Feast of Corpus Christi 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Feast of Corpus Christi 2013. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

Father Rutler - The Feast of Corpus Christi

A weekly column by Father George Rutler.

There is a curious study in an academic journal of psychology. The study — titled “Intelligence” — claims that we in the twenty-first century have an average IQ fourteen points lower than the Victorians, a calculation based on how long the brain takes to react. The scientist author claims that this is the result of a backward form of natural selection, with the most intelligent people tending to have fewer children (usually for the wrong reasons), while others now tend to live longer. Some of this smacks of the false science of eugenics, but it does strike at what has been called chronological arrogance, which assumes that people today are smarter than those of the past.

This arrogance is a form of perpetual adolescence, as it thinks the elders of the past were not very bright. But the very existence of civilizations attests to the fact that we have inherited what we did not invent. In 1676, Isaac Newton wrote: “If I have seen a little further, it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants.” This is the common sense that is common only to uncommon minds. The theologian John of Salisbury said the same thing in 1159: “We are like dwarfs sitting on the shoulders of giants. We see more, and things that are more distant, than they did, not because our sight is superior or because we are taller than they, but because they raise us up, and by their great stature add to ours.”

The gigantic theological minds gave us the doctrine of the Holy Eucharist, and less subtle minds in our time find it hard to accept because they will not stand on their shoulders. Or, nearly as bad, thinkers of modest stature may end up shrinking the magnificent Scholastic teaching on Eucharistic transubstantiation into a cloying caricature, with images of a baby Jesus curled up in the Tabernacle, and invitations to pop into church to say “a quick hello to Jesus.” The great Eucharistic doctors never separated the Body and Blood of Christ from the mystery of the Holy Trinity. Saint Catherine of Siena never thought of measuring IQs, and she is a Doctor of the Church even though she was practically illiterate. On the Feast of Corpus Christi we should pray as she did:

O Trinity! Eternal Trinity! O, Fire, abyss of Love!
Would it not have been enough to create us
after your own image and likeness,
causing us to be re-born through grace
and by the Blood of Your Son?

Was it still necessary that You should give us even
the Holy Trinity as food for our souls?
Yes, Your love willed this, O Eternal Trinity.
You gave us not only Your Word through
Redemption and in the Eucharist.
But You also gave us Yourself
in Your fullness of Love for Your creature.
Truly the soul possesses You
Who are the supreme Goodness.


Sunday, June 2, 2013

Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ



Worldwide Holy Hour

Today Pope Francis will lead a worldwide hour of Eucharistic adoration the Vatican has announced.


Cathedrals all across the world will hold an hour of Eucharistic adoration at the same time, inviting the faithful to pray for the Pope's intentions. The worldwide session of adoration will take place from 5 to 6 this afternoon in Rome, and cathedrals worldwide will synchronize their vigils to match that time. The Pope has asked the universal Church to pray for two intentions during the hour of adoration:
  1. For the Church spread throughout the world and united today in the adoration of the Most Holy Eucharist as a sign of unity. May the Lord make her ever more obedient to hearing his Word in order to stand before the world `ever more beautiful, without stain or blemish, but holy and blameless.' That through her faithful announcement, the Word that saves may still resonate as the bearer of mercy and may increase love to give full meaning to pain and suffering, giving back joy and serenity.

  2. For those around the world who still suffer slavery and who are victims of war, human trafficking, drug running, and slave labor. For the children and women who are suffering from every type of violence. May their silent scream for help be heard by a vigilant Church so that, gazing upon the crucified Christ, she may not forget the many brothers and sisters who are left at the mercy of violence. Also, for all those who find themselves in economically precarious situations, above all for the unemployed, the elderly, migrants, the homeless, prisoners, and those who experience marginalization. That the Church's prayer and its active nearness give them comfort and assistance in hope and strength and courage in defending human dignity.
The worldwide hour of Eucharistic adoration is one of two initiatives for the Year of Faith, announced on May 28 by the Pontifical Council for the New Evangelization. 

Westminster Cathedral Choir - Panis Angelicus