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25 June 2012

A Few Thoughts on the Greatness of John the Baptist

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Photo courtesy of Fr. Paul McKane.
When the Church honors a man or woman by celebrating a saint’s day, it does so by remembering the day the person died, not when they were born in time. For example, we observe the feast of St. Therese, “the little flower,” on 1 October; she died on 30 September, but that was the feast of St. Jerome, so the date marking her death in the body and completion of her birth into eternity, into Life, is observed the following day. The date of a saint’s birth in time is not part of our public remembering. To the best of my recollection, only three persons are remembered by the Church not only on the day of their death or (in the case of Mary, her “dormition”) but also on the days of birth in this world: Jesus of Nazareth (Christmas), Mary (8 September) and John the Baptist (24 June, or 6 months before the birth of Jesus). Christmas and the Birth of John are solemnities, and so replace any other celebration on that day, even Sunday; Mary’s birthday is not a solemnity, so is not celebrated when it falls on a Sunday. The point I am leading to is this: the Church evidently considers the birth of John to have been a major event pointing to Christ, and honors the Saint and his birth with a solemn high feast.

What is truly special about St. John the Baptizer (John the Baptist), that he is so highly honored in the Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant churches? At least the following, if not much more: John is remembered by the Church as “the forerunner” of Jesus, the one who baptized Jesus (Synoptic tradition) or who pointed him out to his own disciples: “Behold the Lamb of God” (Gospel of John). Second, in light of the biblical narrative, it is fair to say that John is a prophet in the great tradition of Israel--some five centuries after that tradition had effectively died out. To his contemporaries, John must have been seen as extraordinary because no prophet had arisen for centuries; and hence, John was seen as a witness to the “end times,” to a period that would usher in the long-awaited “Messianic age.” As we can tell from the Gospels, John “the Baptizer” was often considered the Messiah. For his part, however, John did not draw attention to himself; he is presented as humbly insisting that he is “only a voice crying out,” and one preparing people for “the great and terrible day of the LORD.” John was a genuine prophet of God and of His Christ, and not absorbed in himself in any way.

However great these roles are, another facet of the mystery of this man unfolds in the Gospel narratives: John is, perhaps without knowing it, a true disciple of Jesus. On the one hand, he asked a real question of Jesus: “Are you the One [Messiah] or should we look for another?” And yet, John was a humble servant of God, who could say of the Christ: “He must increase, but I must decrease.” Although fiery and a preacher of coming Judgment, John is self-effacing, a true man of God. Indeed, John is so truly a holy man that Jesus himself can say of him: “There is no man born of woman who is greater than John the Baptizer.” John is no cardboard saint, no “good little boy.” Although to us John remains a highly complex and perplexing figure, Jesus saw the man, John, as a most humble and true servant of the living God. Dare we say that Jesus saw and heard in John the God he called “Father.”

08 June 2012

Praying on the Feast of Corpus Christi

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Photo courtesy of Fr. Paul McKane.
The prayers of the Church for Corpus Christi, as written in the Sacramentary used by the priest at the altar, are simple and clear, as befits public prayer. It is good to see that the heavy hand of abstract doctrinal expression has not been used on Corpus Christi, as it was used on last week’s feast of the Most Blessed Trinity. The prayers of the divine office for Corpus Christi, and the Sequence which we can pray on this day, were written by perhaps the most brilliant mind the Catholic Church ever produced: St. Thomas Aquinas. What is evident is that as intelligent and learned as St. Thomas was, he communicated the truth of the faith in simple language in his preaching and in public prayer. Indeed, his prayers come from the heart, and are intended to speak to and for all of the faithful. The Preface appearing in the new Sacramentary for the Holy Trinity, heard last week tried to teach doctrines, rather than open us up to the Mystery we call God. Prayer is far greater than doctrine, for it is an act of love.

Note that for today’s feast of the Body and Blood of Christ, the prayers offered do not employ the language of technical theology, and we are spared lessons about “transubstantiation” and “confecting the Sacrament,” and so on. Rather, we hear beautiful and rich prayers that are wise, not intellectualistic: “Grant, O Lord, that we may delight for all eternity in that share in your divine life, which is foreshadowed by our reception of your precious Body and Blood.” Well done! Every faithful Catholic, and other Christians as well, can pray these words from the heart, because they are truthful and genuine prayer, rather an attempt at “doctrinal purity.” Implicitly, this prayer speaks a highly important truth: That the goal of the Eucharistic celebration is nothing less than “sharing in Your divine life.”

The gift of the Eucharist is priceless, in part because it keeps before the eyes of faith the profound truth that “I AM with you always, even to the end of the ages.” The Eucharist reminds the faithful visibly that the same God fully present in Jesus Christ is present here and now in his consecrated Body and Blood, and in the faithful who come to commune with the living God and with one another in love and truth. The Eucharist continues the divine act of “Incarnation,” of God-becoming-flesh. All of this, and more, is expressed in today’s opening prayer: “Lord God, who in this wonderful Sacrament have left us a memorial of your Passion, grant us, we pray, so to revere the sacred mysteries of your Body and Blood that we may always experience in ourselves the fruits of your redemption. Through Christ our Lord, Amen.” Come, let us share the feast.

02 June 2012

On The Feast Of The Most Holy Trinity

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Photo courtesy of Fr. Paul McKane

In my youth, my family attended various churches, and in most of them I occasionally heard about “the most blessed Trinity” as a summary doctrine about God: “God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit.” Never did I hear that teaching publicly denied or even intelligently explained; it was just taken for granted as a given, a fixture, a rock in the ocean. When I began to seek the truth about God, and find spiritual life in the midst of a swirling, tumultuous society in the 1960’s and 1970’s, what drew my attention and response was the gospel about Jesus Christ, his life and death and resurrection. As for discussions of “the Trinity,” I found the attitude expressed in the spiritual classic, The Imitation of Christ, to be on the right track: “I would rather love the Trinity than define it.”

As we mature in our understanding of Christian faith and practice, we probably do not give much thought to the dogma of the Trinity, but we know not to deny its truth. On the other hand, we may--and should--long for the presence of the living God, and not be content with a mere assent to the “doctrines of the faith.” A human being with faith seeks communion with the Divine, and cannot rest content in doctrinal or creedal formations of “the faith.” Our desire indeed is “to love and serve the LORD,” and not to think that we have figured God out. Perhaps without being aware of our attitude, most of us agree with Thomas a Kempis, that we long to love God. For as we grow in grace, we know well that “knowledge puffs up, but love builds up.”

Then the questions emerge: “Do I truly love God, or do I merely give lipservice?” “Do I long for God’s friendship, or am I too immersed in the passing things and activities of this world?” “What do I do to cultivate friendship with God, and not be content to be a mere `church-going Christian?’”

For my part, I am still listening to the question of the Apostle Paul, which breaks through mere doctrinal formulations to the truth of spiritual experience: “Let me ask you this: Did you receive the Holy Spirit by works of the law or by hearing with faith?"