Dear Parishioners:
Jesus calls all of us to live in
communion with Him and one another. The
place we learn how to do this is the Liturgy.
Literally, “liturgy” means “the work of the people.” It refers to the work that is done by a
people in common for the sake of the common good. In our time, we are clearly called to take
what we receive from the Lord at the Liturgy and to share it with the world.
There is a major problem with this
“setup” in our current experience. I am
sure that you can easily recognize what it is….
Many of the people among those “called to serve” are only rarely present
at the Liturgy. Families used to
structure their lives around the weekly effort to live in relationship to the
Church. They would come to confession
together on Saturday afternoons and have one particular Mass that they attended
together as a family on Sunday mornings.
I offer praise and encouragement to the families that still follow this
custom. I realize that it is not always
easy to arrange.
There are families who can be found
at Mass each weekend, even if not all together at the same Mass, nonetheless at
one or the other. A number have taken up
my invitation to bring me a bulletin from another church if they go to Mass
somewhere else. This too is worthy of
praise. Getting to Mass is the most
important thing you can do as a family to keep yourselves Christ-centered.
For those who are not at Mass
regularly: we welcome you when you are here and are happy the Mass is still on
your radar of things to do. We also
invite and encourage you to put it more at the center of your routine. Let the Mass determine your schedule rather
than your schedule determine whether you go to Mass at all.
Culturally, it seems to be in vogue
that once or twice a month is good enough.
It is not. The call of Scripture,
Old and New Testament, is to put God first by weekly attendance at the Liturgy. “Keep holy the Sabbath” means every week –
for us as Catholics, Sunday Mass. The Letter to the Hebrews (10:25 ) reminds us that we ought not to absent ourselves from the assembly
(that is, gathering for Mass) as some do.
We are told that it was Jesus’ own custom to go to the synagogue every
Sabbath and that whenever He was in Jerusalem , He would go to the Temple . The Apostles and disciples of the Lord did
the same and that is where our own Tradition began.
At Mass, we learn to welcome. We hear God’s Word through Scripture. We are fed and nourished by the Sacrament of
the Eucharist. And we hear the call to go
out to all the world. The tools we need
to share Jesus with the world are available to us in the most complete form
always and only at that the Mass.