13th Sunday of Ordinary Time
June 28, 1992
CollectHoly Cross, Fairfield, Conn.
Since I was taking part in a workshop for Salesian Cooperators this past weekend, I didn't have a chance to preach. Here's an old one that in some respects is a bit dated but in other respects is still timely. The Bishop Gregory quoted near the end is our new archbishop in D.C.; at the time he was still bishop of Belleville, Ill.
“Father, you call your children to walk in
the light of Christ” (Collect).
We hear this call to walk in the light of
Christ thru the sacred scriptures and thru the sacred liturgy. We respond to the call thru that same liturgy
and thru the way we live,
Liturgy, i.e., the public, communal worship
of God’s people, is, therefore, of paramount importance to our discerning the
light of Christ and walking in it. It is
the junction box that brings to us the power of God’s word and makes the juice
flow into our daily lives so that our lives may be in harmony with God’s word
and give him praise.
Because liturgy is so pivotal to the life of
the Church, the Fathers of Vatican II were concerned that it be reformed and
renewed. What did they do? What has the Church done since 1962 to reform
and renew the liturgy so that it might work better for us to praise God in
Christian assembly and walk in the light of Christ from day to day?
1. Vatican II issued a Constitution on the
Sacred Liturgy; in fact, this was the Council’s very 1st document (out of an
eventual total of 16), showing both the fundamental importance that the Church
attaches to the liturgy and the general agreement that the bishops reached,
relatively quickly, on the principles set out in this constitution. Then, both during and after the Council, a
steady stream of decrees and encouragements came forth from Rome and the NCCB
to implement the wishes of the Vatican Council.
2. The Vatican Council decreed that the
liturgy could be offered in vernacular languages, altho Latin remains the
Church’s official tongue and is still encouraged for public use, e.g., in
Gregorian chant and in large international gatherings. But since 1964 we’ve been able to celebrate
Mass, all the sacraments, and the Divine Office in English. We can understand better what we’re saying to
God and what God is saying to us.
3. The Vatican Council and its follow-up have
put great importance on our participation in the liturgy. No longer can we be passive spectators,
watching the priest pray in our name, or saying our private prayers while the
Church’s supposed public, communal worship goes on in isolation at the front of
the church. Instead, we hear and speak
and sing together, interacting with the priest, Christ in our midst. He prays in our name, but we affirm the
prayer by our responses and acclamations.
Choirs still have their purpose, but it’s important also for us to praise
God in song together, to ask mercy together.
Singing the national anthem brings us together as an American
people. Singing hymns brings us together
as God’s people.
4. All of the Church’s liturgical books have
been revised; most of them have been completely overhauled: the sacramentary, the lectionary, the
sacramental rituals, the Divine Office or Liturgy of the Hours, the martyrology
or official listing of the saints day by day, the book of blessings. The 1st stage of this revision has been
completed for all of the books except the martyrology (which has a lot of
historical difficulties to be resolved), and in some cases 2d revisions have
been done.
This 2d stage of revision is based on our
ongoing experience of worshipping together in our own language late in the 20th
century. It includes cultural
adaptations and is influenced also by what other Christian churches are doing
in their liturgical reforms. In the U.S.
we’re now using the revised Rite of Funerals and the revised Lectionary for
Masses with Children. Our bishops are
deep into the revision of our 2 Mass books, the sacramentary and the
lectionary.
One minor change that the bishops have just
decided upon is to be implemented at once: to conclude the OT and NT readings
by proclaiming, “The word of the Lord,” rather than, “This is the word of the
Lord,” as we’ve been doing since the 1960s.
There are several reasons for this, including:
1. It’s a more accurate rendering of the
Latin verbum Domini, and it also
parallels how the other European languages like Spanish and Italian render it.
2. One of the administrators in the bishops’
liturgy office in Washington told me it’s also intended to discourage readers
from raising the lectionary dramatically while saying, “The word of the
Lord.” It’s not the book but the Scripture
just proclaimed orally that is the word of the Lord.
3. There is a certain parallelism with the
simple sacramental proclamation, “The body of Christ,” reflecting Christ’s
presence in his word and in his sacrament.
We’ve seen many changes great and small in
the way we worship. Perhaps some have
been less helpful to us than others. But
the Church will continue to evaluate and adapt her liturgy so that it may
always enable us, God’s children, to walk in the light. Bp. Wilton Gregory, the chairman of the
Bishops’ Committee on the Liturgy, put it this way:
You are well aware of how
far we have come in the renewal of the worship of the Church during the past
quarter century. We have seen the
revision, that is, the restoration and renewal, of nearly all the liturgical
books, their translation into English, Spanish and, in some cases, one of the
many languages of Native Americans. But
it is clear that transforming liturgical rites does not necessarily guarantee
the transformation of the lives of the baptized, especially their spiritual
lives. We now have revised editions of
the liturgical books, but the purpose of the liturgical reforms is not new
books, but new lives, lives that are restored, reformed, and renewed.*
*BCL
Newsletter 27 (1991), 37.
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