Reigion Pages 41-50
Reigion Pages 41-50
Reigion Pages 41-50
Liturgy
The liturgy of a sacrament always makes present something that Jesus said or
did. That is why a readingabout Jesus from the Bible is part of each sacrament.
These scripture passages about Jesus are always accompanied by a ritual action.
For example, in the sacrament of the anointing of the sick, the priest reads a
story of Jesus healing someone.
Then the priest lays hands on the sick person and anoints the person's head and
hands with oil. In the sacrament of marriage, a story from the Bible about love
and commitment is followed by a man and a woman's words of commitment to
each other.
Together, the word of God and the ritual action effectively make the two into a
married couple.
In the rituals of the liturgy, Christians turn to Jesus so that his death and
resurrection can enter into all the areas of life. That iswhy participating in
liturgy is so powerful. Through the participants, God's work in Christ comes
alive in people today.
Rite of Initiation
How does someone become a Catholic?
The story of Laura at the beginning of the chapter tells us. When she was an
infant, her parents took her to church to be baptized. Through the ritual actions
and words of baptism, she became a Christian and a member of the Catholic
Church. For full initiation into the Church, a person is baptized, is confirmed
(chrismated), and receives the Eucharist.
Baptism
In its most basic form, baptism involves a priest or deacon pouring water over
the person's head and saying, "I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." This action and these words make real what
they signify: the baptized person receives a new identity and new life in God—
he or she becomes Christian.
Confirmation
The sacrament of confirmation is celebrated through the laying on of hands and
the anointing with perfumed oil to signify the gift of the Holy Spirit.
It completes baptism (Catechism of the Catholic Church, #1288-1289).
Eucharist
Baptism and confirmation are the first steps of initiation into the Catholic faith.
Initiation is completed and continued in the Sunday Mass. The Catholic Church
calls the Mass or Eucharist the "fount and apex of the whole Christian life"
(Constitution on the Church, #11).
Living a fully Christian life takes a lifetime; it is a never-ending journey.
The Sunday Mass is the constant companion on this journey.
The liturgy of the Mass has hardly changed since the third and fourth centuries.
The structure of the Mass is both simple and complex. It consists of two parts:
the Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of the Eucharist. The leaderof the
assembly is first the bishop and, in his absence, the priest.
During the Eucharist, everyone who is present participates. At the beginning of
the Eucharistic Prayer, the priest (or bishop) says to the people, "Lift up your
hearts." The people respond, "We lift them up to the Lord." In other words, they
say, "We are ready!" People stay active throughout the prayer, responding aloud
to the words of the priest and singing "Amen" at the end. Through the
Eucharistic Prayer, the whole Church prays that the Holy Spirit will unite all
people in one body and one spirit and heal all divisions among people. The
highlight of participation is the rite of Communion, where the people eat and
drink the gift of the Body and Blood of Christ. By participating in the Eucharist,
Catholics are affirming and committing themselves to God's great act of saving
and reshaping the world in the image of Jesus Christ.
Time is a mysterious thing. It governs our lives and affects everything we do.
Yet, if we were to ask, "What is time?" we would find it hard to answer the
question.
Time pervades everything, including religion. Countries organize time by
setting workweeks and time for leisure, civic holidays, and days of
remembrance. For countries, and for people, who work to benefit society and to
earn money to survive, it is largely the economy that shapes time.
In contrast, religions organize time through rituals. Rituals shape how we mark
time, how we live out our traditions, and what we expect for the future. Rituals
show what people think is important, what preoccupies them.
For religions, the sacred shapes time.
Each religion has a certain time set aside for the sacred: for example, for
Muslims, it is Friday; for Jews, it is Shabbat (Saturday); for Christians, it is
Sunday. A religion may follow five-day weeks, seven-day weeks, or nine-day
weeks. It has "high" times or seasons, with special feasts and celebrations, and
"low" times, when nothing out of the ordinary happens. Some of these special
times are marked by the Sun, others by the Moon. Rituals highlight these times
and allow participants to celebrate them. The rituals marking sacred times return
in cycles, whether that is once a year or every 20 years.
The regular recurrence of sacred times, and the repetition of rituals, makes
sacred time appear unchanging; it is time out of time. Although the rituals do
not change, over time the participants do. They change because their constant
participation in the rituals makes them become more andmore what their
religion is all about.
This rhythm of time enables people to grow to maturity as a member of their
religion.
Easter
In the Western Churches, Easter is celebrated on the first Sunday after the full
Moon following the spring equinox. Because of the importance of the death and
resurrection of Jesus, the celebration of the Paschal Mystery begins with Mass
on Holy Thursday evening and ends with evening prayer on Easter Sunday.
This celebration is called the Triduum.
The most solemn liturgy takes place on Holy Saturday night. It is called the
Easter Vigil. It begins with the lighting of the Paschal candle. During the Vigil,
new members are baptized, confirmed, and admitted to Eucharist. The Vigil
begins in darkness until the light of the risen Christ is brought into the church.
On Easter Sunday, Catholics greet each other with "Christ is risen!
Alleluia!" The response is "He is risen indeed! Alleluia!" Because Easter is so
important, the Easter season lasts for 50 days. It ends with the feast of
Pentecost, when Jesus sent the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Triduum
The three days of Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Vigil
A time of staying awake and waiting before a great feast; at the Easter Vigil,
Christians stay awake with Jesus in the tomb to be present at his resurrection
Christmas-Epiphany (Theophany)
The other major feast after Easter is Christmas-Epiphany, which celebrates the
birth of Jesus and the arrival of the Magi to pay homage to him. In the Western
Church, the birth of Jesus is celebrated on December 25. The Eastern Church,
using the Julian calendar, celebrates it on January 7.
This feast is by far the most popular of the Christian feasts. It continues to be
celebrated as a feast of gift-giving and of the family in Western countries for
Christians, and for many people who are non-practising Christians.
Feasts of Mary and the Saints Because God's call for Mary to be the mother of
Jesus connects her intimately to the ministry and person of Jesus, the Church
celebrates a number of feast days honouring Mary. In Mary, the Church sees the
best example of whatthe work of Christ can do in a human being. In Mary,
Catholics see what they hope to be (Catechism of the Catholic Church, #1172).
Alongside Mary, the Church remembers the martyrs and other saints who lived
as Christ did. Among them are a number of Canadian saints: the Canadian
Martyrs (eight Jesuit priests killed by the Iroquois in the 1640s), St. Marguerite
d'Youville, St. Marguerite Bourgeoys, Blessed Marie de l'Incarnation, Blessed
Kateri Tekakwitha, and Blessed François de Laval.
Because saints resemble, in different ways, the person of Christ, Catholics often
turn to the saints in prayer to intercede with God. The saints remain part of the
Church. Together with all the baptized, they form the communion of saints.
Central Beliefs
Rituals Shape the Beliefs of a Religion
By now, it is obvious that rituals communicate something important.
They contain a message. Those who take part in rituals act out this message.
The Chinese family described earlier in this chapter left a place open at the table
for an ancestor in order to symbolize a belief. For the Chinese, setting a place at
the table for their ancestors is a central religious ritual.
Rituals seek to communicate things that words alone cannot convey. For this
reason, rituals always involve both words and actions. To signify the
importance of and their belief in the Trinity, Catholics sign themselves with the
sign of the cross.
Religious beliefs are usually learned by participating in rituals. Over time, they
become part of life. By entering into the rituals of religion, we enter the world
where the rituals make sense.
Liturgical rituals help us look beyond our everyday lives. They reveal truths that
transcend us, that are bigger than we are. They reveal the holy. The sound of
choir and organ, or guitar and flute; the church bells; the light shining through
the stained glass windows; the prayers; the statues of saints and biblical figures;
the open space; the incense; the taste of the transformed bread and wine at
Communion—all these point to something out of the ordinary. In these
moments, religions express their deepest convictions about what is ultimately
true.
The Creed
During the Mass, the Creed sums up the Bible's story of God. Catholics recite
the Creed each Sunday after the homily to express what they believe and who
they are as a faith community. The Creed is like a story with three parts.
I believe
We tend to interpret "I believe" to mean "I accept that something is true." But,
that is not the original meaning.
To say "I believe in God" does not mean "I believe that there is a God." To say
"I believe in God" is more like a promise or a pledge. It means
"I promise or I pledge that from this moment I set my life, love, heart, and
mind, my whole being, on God and on God alone." People make this promise
because they love and trust God.
I believe in God, the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth ...
First, Catholics pledge themselves to the Father. The name "Abba" (an Aramaic
word), or "Father," is the name Jesus used when he spoke to God in prayer.
Jesus's whole ministry was about revealing who the Father is.
For Jesus, God (Abba, Father) is a Father like no other. "Call no one your father
on Earth," he said, "for you have one Father-the one in heaven" (Matthew 23:9).
For Jesus, God (Abba, Father) is a parent who loves his children fiercely and
will always care for them. This God is the creator of heaven and Earth, the
maker of all things, visible and invisible.
I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord ...
The heart of the Creed is about
Jesus Christ. The Creed sums up what the scriptures say about Jesus. Jesus is
the Father's only Son and the Lord.
The Creed highlights Jesus's life in six points. Catholics pledge themselves to
Jesus Christ because he is the Word of the Father, the one through whom God is
revealed. In other words, there is nothing more to see in God than what we see
in Jesus Christ. He is the full appearance of God.
Notice that the Creed speaks only about the beginning and the end of the story
of Jesus. The emphasis is on his death and resurrection. Here, the mystery of
God is revealed for Catholics. Here, God entered into the human drama of
suffering and death.
Catholics see the cross of Jesus as the symbol of God's love.
I believe in the Holy Spirit ...
The third part of the Creed is about the Church's commitment to the Holy Spirit.
The Spirit is the bond of love between the Father and the Son. It is the Spirit of
God that dwells in human hearts and acts in the rest of creation.
The Spirit is known as "the gift."
The Nicene Creed—the longer creed that Catholics say at Mass—calls the Spirit
"the Lord and giver of life." That is why the Spirit is also called love. The Spirit
is where love happens.
The Spirit as God's power of love is revealed when two people can finally
forgive each other; when people find joy again in living; when life overcomes
death. The Spirit makes alive today in the community of Catholics what Jesus
brought to life in his time: God's kingdom of justice, peace, and joy.
When Catholics pledge themselves to the Holy Spirit in the Creed, they also
promise to respect, protect, and promote all living things.
Morality
As we just saw, the rituals of religion express people's ultimate beliefs. They
also teach people how to act. In some religions, moral teachings are quite
explicit, and sometimes there are many of them. In Judaism, for example, the
Torah contains 613 laws. Moral teachings make it clear how a religion sees the
world. They tell believers how to live in the world. They also tell what kind of
people they should become.
If in a ritual we pledge ourselves to the holy, we are expected to live in a
way that is holy. All religions expect this commitment from the people who take
part in their rituals. Practising Muslims are expected to live as faithful Muslims.
Practising Catholics are expected to live as faithful Catholics.
Morality is an important part of the rituals of a religion. Each religion follows a
moral order that is unique to that religion. The ritual or liturgical life of each
religion shapes that religion's moral teachings in a certain way.
Catholic Liturgy and Morality
The Catholic faith, too, promotes a specific moral or ethical view of life through
its rituals, especially the Mass. In the Mass, the teachings on morality are
mostly found in the readings from scripture.
Catholic moral teaching is based on both philosophy and theology: on
philosophical positions and theological reflections (see Catechism of the
Catholic Church, #1877-1942).
Here are three examples of the Catholic tradition and morality as shaped
through the scriptures:
1. Catholicism is first of all a celebration of God's love of humans and the
world. The focus is not onhuman sin, although the Church admits sin is
there. The focus is on God's grace, God's reaching out to people in love.
The scriptures say that God has an intense desire for human well-being
and health. To express this idea, the scriptures use the word "salvation."
God wants all to be saved, that is, made whole and complete.
2. The main attitude of Catholics is to be grateful for the gift of love at the
heart of all existence.
Catholic worship or liturgy is to give praise and thanks and to live a life
of thanksgiving and generosity, mirroring for others the love God has for
them. They are to be generous to others—especially the poor—as God is
generous.
3. The highest expression of this response is found in the Sermon on the
Mount (Matthew 5:1-7:29).
Followers of Jesus must "be perfect ... as your heavenly Father is perfect"
(Matthew 5:48).
Philosophy
Literally, "love of wisdom"; the study of what is true, good, and beautiful in
human existence, the use of reason to seek truth and knowledge
Theology
The study of God
Family Life
Catholics and Family Life
Although much of Catholic faith is centred on the parish, where most ritual life
(baptism, Eucharist, weddings, and funerals) takes place, the family and the
home also play key roles. In the Catholic tradition, marriage is a sacrament.
This means that a Catholic couple—in their life together and with their family—
are to show both the faithfulness of Christ and the sort of love that Jesus had for
people. For Catholic families, the Gospel of Jesus acts as a trusted guide.
The Second Vatican Council called the family a "domestic church"
(Constitution on the Church, #11).
From the first moment of life, a child learns how to love through the love he or
she receives from parents, siblings, and relatives. The home is sometimes
portrayed as the school of faith, hope, and love. Catholic parents are encouraged
to teach their young children how to live, love, and pray, and, when they are
ready, how to take part in the Sunday Eucharist and in the life of the Church.
A Catholic Home
A Catholic home does not always look different from other homes. But, often
Catholic symbols will be prominently displayed in it: a cross or crucifix on the
wall, a palm branch left over from Palm Sunday, an icon, a little shrine with
house patron saints, a statue of Mary or a favourite saint, a rosary. Some
families use symbols when celebrating the great feasts of the Church, especially
Easter and Christmas. At Easter, they may paint Easter eggs; at Christmas, they
may set up a nativity scene and decorate their home with lights.
As well as showing their faith through visible symbols, Catholics are urged to
pray together. Many families pray before meals, because every meal is a
memory of the Eucharistic meal, where Christ gave himself to his followers.
Many homes also have a bedtime ritual where parents tell stories and say
prayers with their children.
A ritual such as this strengthens the bonds between family members and, at the
same time, strengthens each person's relationship with God.
Catholic Education
Religion, for Catholics, is a public act that aims to touch all life andlearning.
The Catholic Church says that parents have the right to choose their children's
education. In many countries-including some Canadian provinces—parents can
educate their children in the Catholic faith by sending them to a Catholic school.
In the 1960s, the pope and the world's Catholic bishops prepared a famous
document in which they said, "The future of humanity lies in the hands of those
who are strong enough to provide coming generations with reasons for living
and hoping" (The Church in the Modern World,
#31). Catholic schools work to contribute to society in this way.
The most important prayer for Catholics is the prayer that Jesus taught his
disciples. After Jesus had prayed for a whole night, thedisciples asked him to
teach them to pray. The prayer is called the Lord's Prayer. Catholics pray it at
Mass to begin the Communion rite.