Saturday, February 25, 2023

Reflections on the Mass: The Gloria, Part 2

In the second part of the Gloria, we proclaim the truths of our Lord Jesus Christ. We lift up our faith into worship, marveling in awe at Who Jesus is and what He has done for us.

Lord Jesus Christ, Only Begotten Son,

This is Who Jesus is, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity. He is God incarnate, fully human and fully divine, one divine Person with two natures, in full unity without mixture. This is the truth of our faith. We proclaim it here in awe and wonder.

Lord God, Lamb of God, Son of the Father,

Jesus is God. He is our Lord, fully divine, equal to the Father and the Holy Spirit. Yet He is also the Son of the Father. This is a mystery that our human minds cannot completely comprehend, yet we believe it because God has revealed it.

When Jesus came among us as God-incarnate, He became the Lamb of God. This is how John the Baptist identified Him, and no Jew of Jesus' day would have mistaken the significance. A lamb was a sacrifice. It indicated the people's desire to acknowledge and atone for their sins, to be right with God, to worship Him in the way He desired to be worshiped. But the blood of an animal would never actually atone for sin or fix the damaged relationship between God and humanity. That required something more, Someone more.

You take away the sins of the world, have mercy on us.

Jesus came to truly atone for sins, to reestablish the covenant intimacy between God and humanity through a new covenant. He died on the cross to do it. Now we beg for His mercy, and we are blessed, for He longs to pour it out upon us.

You take away the sins of the world, receive our prayer.

We repeat, marveling once again, that Jesus came to save us from our sins. He has taken away our sins, nailing them to the cross. But are we willing to give them up? We beg Jesus to receive our prayer for His grace so that we can immerse ourselves in His mercy and let go of our sins with true repentance.

You are seated at the right hand of the Father, have mercy on us.

The cross was not the end for Jesus. He died, yes, but He rose again and ascended into Heaven where He is seated at the right hand of the Father to intercede for us always. He opened the gates of Heaven so that we can join Him there. And what is more, we can begin living eternal life now by His grace, especially in Holy Mass as we receive Him, Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity in the Eucharist.

Saturday, February 18, 2023

Reflections on the Mass: The Gloria, Part 1

After the Penitential Rite, we sing the Gloria, at least on Sundays (except during Advent and Lent) and solemnities. The Gloria is a beautiful hymn of praise that allows us to express our awe and wonder before the Holy Trinity as we join the angels and saints in worship.

Glory to God in the highest,

We begin this hymn by echoing the angels who sang over the hills of Bethlehem on the night of Jesus' birth. We give glory to God, meaning that we recognize and proclaim His great glory, basking in it with great joy and striving to immerse ourselves in all the gifts of love He provides for us. We adore God because He is omniscient and omnipotent. We praise His great love. We honor His perfect authority and His immense holiness. We cannot grasp His nature, but we can proclaim His glory.

And on earth peace to people of good will.

We also join the angels in praying for peace to people of good will. Peace here is more than an absence of war or violence. Rather it is the state of being rightly ordered according to God's will. In this kind of peace, there is a completeness. Everything is as it should be: whole and holy.

We praise You, we bless You, we adore You, we glorify You,

We cannot proclaim God's greatness enough. We cannot worship Him enough. We almost stammer as we try. Yet we continue to sing, knowing that God blesses our efforts, weak as they are.

We give You thanks for Your great glory.

As we recite or sing these words, we should sincerely thank God for Who He is and what He has done for us. We can never thank Him enough. We can never even come close. We should be especially mindful of how God's great glory has touched our lives and has transformed us, and we might think, too, of the encounter that we are about to have with our Lord Jesus Christ, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, in the Eucharist. He conceals His glory so that we can receive Him under the appearance of bread and wine, but He is really present, Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. He truly enters into us in His glory.

Lord God, heavenly King, O God, almighty Father.

We then break out into a recital of some of God's many titles. He is our Lord and our God, the King of Heaven. He is so far beyond us that we cannot even imagine. Yet at the same time, He is our almighty Father Who loves us more than we can imagine. He is transcendent and imminent, reigning on high yet stooping down to us in love.

Saturday, February 11, 2023

Reflections on the Mass: The Penitential Rite, Part 2

Last week, we discussed the Penitential Rite at the beginning of Mass, but there are a few more points to make about this important opportunity to humble ourselves before God and ask Him for His mercy and forgiveness.

First, as we pray the Confiteor, we acknowledge that we have committed sins “through my fault, through my fault, through my most grievous fault.” As we speak these words, we strike our breasts three times, one for each repetition of “fault.” This emphasizes our accusation of ourselves and indicates our desire to do penance for our sins.

While the gesture is symbolic, the desire should be real. Our sins leave a sort of “spiritual muck” on us even when God forgives them. Our mortifications and penances help wash the muck away, and they allow us to show God that we are truly and deeply sorry for the ways in which we have offended Him and that we are eager to make things right.

Sometimes the priest will choose to omit the Confiteor. In that case, he may extend the Kyrie with three short prayers between the petitions. The first is “You were sent to heal the contrite of heart.” This reminds us that Jesus has come, was sent by the Father, to heal those who are truly contrite, who are sorry for their sins and desire to avoid sin in the future. Contrition is a requirement for forgiveness, for if we are not really sorry, we will not even be able to accept the mercy God holds out to us. We will block the channels of mercy on our end.

The second prayer is “You came to call sinners.” Jesus has come to call sinners, and we are all sinners. Notice how He seeks us out. He calls us to Him. He wants us to repent and ask for His mercy.

The third prayer is “You are seated at the right hand of the Father to intercede for us.” Jesus prays to the Father for us. Isn't that amazing? He is our Mediator. He unites us to the Father. He asks the Father for mercy for us.

In the Penitential Rite, then, as brief as it may be, we are called to true repentance for our sins and a reliance on God's great mercy and love.

Saturday, February 4, 2023

Reflections on the Mass: The Penitential Rite

Every one of us is a sinner. We all disobey God in thought, word, and action, in what we do and in what we fail to do. That is why we all need God's mercy. The Penitential Rite of the Mass guides us in acknowledging and confessing our sins and begging God for His forgiveness.

It is important to bring our sins before God at the beginning of Mass so that we can clear the air, so to speak. Of course, if we are conscious of any mortal sins, we must always go to Confession and receive absolution before receiving the Eucharist (with contrition and with the firm commitment not to sin again and to make satisfaction for our sins). But even so, we all commit venial sins every day, and this part of the Mass gives us the opportunity to seek and find God's forgiveness.

The priest begins by calling us to “acknowledge our sins, and so prepare ourselves to celebrate the sacred mysteries.” Then he will pause. We should think of how we have failed God and truly repent, placing our sins before Him in the silence of our hearts.

Then the priest will often lead us in the Confiteor, a prayer of confession. We confess to God and to our fellow Christians that we have sinned, even greatly sinned, for every sin is an offense against God that may have been avoided. We confess that we have sinned in thought, word, and deed and in what we have not done but should have done. We admit that it is completely our fault. We have free will, and when we sin, we choose it freely. Then we ask for prayer from the Blessed Virgin Mary, from the angels and the saints, and from our brothers and sisters beside us in the pews. Indeed, we must pray for each other and with each other, for we are all in this battle against sin and this striving for holiness together. And we should be grateful that Mary, the angels, and the saints are willing to pray for us and support us.

The priest now prays (either in English or Greek), “Lord, have mercy. Christ, have mercy. Lord, have mercy,” and we repeat the petitions, joining our verses in our plea for God's forgiveness and our recognition that He is more than willing to provide it to people with contrite hearts.

The rite ends with a prayer from the priest: “May almighty God have mercy on us, forgive us our sins, and bring us to everlasting life.” We respond with a heartfelt “Amen,” knowing how much we need God's mercy and forgiveness that we may be with Him in Heaven forever.