Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception

Springfield, IL

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St. Lorenzo Ruiz, and Companions

Feast Day: September 28th 

Last week we went with Pope St. John Paul II to Seoul, South Korea for the first canonization outside of Rome of St. Andrew Kim Taegŏn, Paul Chŏng Hasang, and their companions. This week, we have the happy occasion to tag along with him on a different trip, this time the year is 1981, and the great Pope is heading to Manila, Philippines, for the first beatification outside of Rome.  Despite the attempts of the royal family of the Philippines, who had only recently stepped back from the martial law they had been holding over the country (and continued human rights violations that the Pope forthrightly confronted), JPII was there primarily to renew the Church on that archipelago.  

He placed before each and every Christian there the story of Lorenzo Ruiz.  To the largest gathering of Catholics in Asian history – 1 million men, women, and children (it would be surpassed in 1995 when he returned to Manila for World Youth Day, with 5 million in attendance!) – John Paul spoke to the fathers and mothers and sons and daughters attending that Mass and called them to give their life entirely to Christ.  Lorenzo did this as he grew up with a Chinese father and Tagala mother, who taught him his Catholic faith.  He did it as a server and secretary at his parish, and as he learned from and assisted the Dominican friars there.  He did it in marrying Rosario and together raising their three children.  

And Lorenzo did it when in 1636 he was falsely charged with murder and had to flee his family and country.  We have few details of that hurried, and certainly horrible, departure – he left no recorded words to his friends or loved-ones – but Lorenzo chose Christ in the midst of it.  He made his way onto a ship and immediately sought out the solace of his faith, joining a group of Dominican Friars who were on their way to Japan.  Japan at the time was engulfed in places in persecution of the faith, but this group was set to land in the territory of a peaceful shogun.  

This would not be the future offered to Lorenzo.  The ship inadvertently docked at Okinawa in the middle of a hellish anticatholic persecution.  The poor, exiled, now imprisoned father endured a year of torture without renouncing his faith, and ended up dying an excruciating death near Nagasaki, preceded by, and flanked by ordained, consecrated, and lay Catholics, but he – a layman and father – would head the list of their names because of his courageous fidelity.  “Had I many thousands of lives I would offer them all for him. Never shall I apostatize. You may kill me if that is what you want. To die for God—such is my will.”  

Jesus’ words as He approached His own passion are clear: “Whoever wishes to come after me must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me. For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake and that of the gospel will save it.” (Mark 8:34-35)  The fact is that most of us will not be given the grace of martyrdom.  Most of us will not be falsely accused of murder or inadvertently dropped into a horrific persecution.  But Lorenzo never thought he would see those trials either!  We, like him, must choose that no matter the future – and the death – that awaits us, we will lose our life for the sake of the Gospel.  There is no way to heaven except the way of Christ: union with His death, and resurrection.  Will we be known as those who died for Him?

– Fr. Rankin has not yet had the occasion to write about one of his favorite saints, St. Maximilian Kolbe, the Polish Franciscan friar who gave his life in the place of the layman and father, Franciszek Gajowniczek, in the death block at Auschwitz.   Fr. Kolbe, a decade before the concentration camp, but exactly 300 years after Lorenzo was martyred, was not in Poland, but Japan.  Standing on a hillside outside of Nagasaki, where Lorenzo’s blood had watered the first seeds of the faith, and where Kolbe would build a monastery and printing-press to bring the Gospel back to Japan.  That monastery still stands as a testament to both saints, astonishingly surviving the atomic blast that struck the Catholic city.

The Two Ways

Two weeks ago, I introduced our topic for this upcoming year of catechesis for our Family of Faith program (and by extension our entire parish).  That theme is the third section of the Catechism titled “Life in Christ.”  This section provides a thorough catechesis on how we live as Christians in every aspect of our daily lives – thoughts, words, and actions.

Something that I think needs to be set before us at the beginning of this catechesis is the importance of this teaching for our salvation.  In the introductory paragraphs of this section, we read the following:

The way of Christ “leads to life”; a contrary way “leads to destruction.” The Gospel parable of the two ways remains ever present in the catechesis of the Church; it shows the importance of moral decisions for our salvation: “There are two ways, the one of life, the other of death; but between the two, there is a great difference. (CCC 1696)

Maybe you have heard the saying about the Commandments that there is significance to use of the word “commandment.”  The Lord provided us the Ten Commandments, not the Ten Suggestions.  In other words, what the Lord (and by extension, the Church) teaches us on how to live are not just recommendations for us, as though we can pick and choose what we like.  No, the Lord commands these so that by following them, we can have eternal life.  By rejecting them, we risk eternal separation from Him.

In our modern day, people tend to bristle at the suggestion of Hell, that by our actions, we can lose going to Heaven.  Some claim that holding out the threat of eternal punishment was just a tactic for scaring people and keeping them in line so as to control them. And while I agree that we should not try to beat people into submission to obedience through fear, we would be doing the people of God a grave disservice if we were not faithful to teaching the entirety of the Gospel, which clearly warns that there are consequences for not following the commandments of the Lord, consequences in this life, and in the life to come.

While the fear of negative consequences must always be before us, it is better for us to focus on the positive consequences of our choosing to live this life of Christ, the greatest of which is eternal life.  Our topic for next month will be our call to beatitude, which is the beginning of happiness with God in this life, and eternal happiness with Him forever in the fullness of Heaven.  It is our desire for Heaven which should be our primary motivation for how we choose to live, not our fear of Hell, though that should always be present to our minds as well.

We have the opportunity each and every day to choose how to live.  Living the life of Christ is not about a “no” to a laundry list of prohibitions, it is an overwhelming “yes” to Christ, who loves us and has given us the path to follow that will lead us to freedom and joy already in this life and ultimately to eternal life with Him in Heaven.  

Father Alford     

Concupiscence

Following God’s law is hard. Even for Christians who were baptized in infancy, and have lived holy, prayerful lives for many years, following God’s law never becomes automatic. It certainly does become more natural over many years, especially through the development of good habits called virtues. On the contrary, fostering bad habits develops vices. The reason following God’s law is difficult is because we all suffer from concupiscence. 

Concupiscence is an inclination to sin that we have all inherited from our first parents, Adam and Eve. We as human are complicated creatures because we exist as a composite of body and soul. Angels are pure spirits, so they are not subject to physical desires or weakness of mind like we do because of our bodies. (This is also the reason angels no longer fall to become devils and vice versa; they made their decision once and for all). Animals are purely bodies, and although they do have an animal soul, they are never conflicted about how to live their life. They have no spiritual life, so their only goal in life is to fulfill their nature by reproducing and surviving as long as possible. 

I describe angels and animals in this way to show that we are stuck somewhere in the middle. We have souls which are destined to live for eternity, but our physical bodies are destined to corruption. God intentionally made us this way, but when he originally created our first parents, he gave them an additional spiritual gift called “original justice.” Original justice was a gift that would have allowed Adam and Eve to live forever, with true harmony between their bodies and souls. Our first parents experienced no disordered desires at this time, such as the desire to eat more than was good for them. However, when Adam and Eve committed the Original Sin, original justice and friendship with God were lost. Through baptism, God restores us to friendship with him, but we still deal with the effects of Original Sin, one of which is concupiscence. 

If that explanation is confusing, just think of this example. After a delicious and hearty meal, your body is sufficiently nourished and satisfied. However, you still have a strong desire to eat more – just one more bite of dessert, or one last drink. I’m sure we have all experienced this desire to eat more than is good for us, and this is an example of concupiscence. We tend toward things that harm us both physically and spiritually, unless God’s grace stops us from doing so. St. Paul summed this human experience up well when he wrote, “What I do, I do not understand. For I do not do what I want, but I do what I hate” (Romans 7:15). 

God restores us to friendship with him through the sacraments, but he does not take away concupiscence. Why would God allow us to experience the pain and conflict of concupiscence? This can only be understood through the Cross of Jesus. In God’s Providence, it is better for us that we suffer in this way. By fighting against concupiscence through prayer or penitential practices such as fasting during Lent, we can become holier and even share in the suffering of Jesus on the Cross. St. Paul compared Christians with athletes who run to win. Runners deny themselves all sorts of things for the sake of their goal, which is winning the race. The same principle applies to Christians who are fighting against sin for the salvation of the world. 

Concupiscence is not fun, but it is a part of our lives, and there is only one way to deal with it: through God’s grace. Our Weekly articles will be focusing, in large part, on following God’s law for the next several months. This is never meant to be overwhelming or discouraging, but rather to encourage us to rely more fully on God’s grace so that we can all share in the Resurrection of Jesus. 

St. Paul Chong Hasan: How to be Faithful Families

Day: September 22nd

Before we get to the 1780s, let us first turn back to the 1980s.  Pope St. John Paul II, two weeks after Easter in 1989, touched down in Fairbanks, Alaska to refuel before continuing his red-eye flight to Seoul, South Korea (believe it or not, he had already visited Alaska in 1981!)  He would celebrate the first canonization Mass outside of Rome there in Seoul a few days later, to proclaim as saints 103 of the Christians martyred there in the 18th and 19th centuries.  Of the group, the namesake and leader was Fr. Andrew Kim Taegŏn, but the second person always mentioned is that of Paul Chŏng Hasang, a layman, like most of the rest of those martyred.  The Great Pope would stop a few more times before returning to Rome (a 23,000-mile journey, the third-longest of his entire pontificate), but let us remain there in Seoul for a moment. 

200 years before John Paul’s Alitalia jet touched down on the Korean peninsula, Christianity first arrived there in far less grandiose style.  A few intrepid lay men and women smuggled books and crucifixes back to Korea from China, where they had first met Jesus through the priests working there.  The scholars and sophisticated of Korea immediately rejected this new faith – down through history Christianity has always been a scandal and laughingstock to the affluent and self-sufficient – but it slowly took hold in simpler, humbler, hearts.  

Jeong Yak-jong, newly baptized as Augustine Chong, was one of those bold souls carrying Christ across the Han river.  For seven years, Augustine would pass on the faith to his family and friends, eventually writing the first catechism in the Korean language, all of this before the first priest arrived.  There would be four thousand Christians, by then enduring persecution, in Korea when the first Chinese priest managed to arrive there.  In return for his efforts, this father and missionary received the gift of martyrdom from His heavenly Lord, staying faithful when many of his fellow Christians repudiated their faith in the face of those tortures.  His last words, and a fitting last message to his 7 year old son was “I would never regret [having become a Christian] even if I had to die a thousand times.”   Paul would learn that lesson well, risking his own life to guide priests across the Han river, until at the age of 45 he was captured, and enduring in his faith through tortures, was faithful until death.  

During the same persecution in 1839, another Christian by the name of Ignatius Kim was also killed.  His son Andrew, the generation after Paul, and two generations after Christianity had first arrived in Korea through Augustine and his compatriots, would become the first native-born priest from Korea. At the age of 15, this young man traveled 1300 miles to go to seminary in Macao, China (making his father’s trek of 750 miles to Beijing look easy!), before making the arduous journey back to his homeland to bring them the sacraments of the Church.  At this time, still, only a few foreign priests and one bishop (from France) had managed to make their way into the country, so the graces Andrew Kim could carry back were incalculable.  He was captured after 13 months of priestly ministry, and murdered with 20 others in 1846.  In his final letter, he said this:

We are twenty here, and thanks be to God all are still well. If anyone is killed, I beg you not to forget his family. I have many more things to say, but how can I express them with pen and paper? I make an end to this letter. Since we are now close to the struggle, I pray you to walk in faith, so that when you have finally entered into Heaven, we may greet one another. I leave you my kiss of love. 

We would be well to never forget our families either!  From the 72 disciples of Jesus, to the 103 we celebrate this week, to our own day, Christianity has always been passed on more by lay people, and families, than by priests and religious.  How can we cherish, carry, and communicate our own relationship with Christ this week?

– Fr. Dominic was not born in 1789, nor 1989, so he has no memories from either era.  But, isn’t it interesting to realize that as Augustine made his first midnight mission carrying Christ back to Korea from China, the U.S. Constitution had just gone into effect in our country, and George Washington had been unanimously (I believe the only time that happened) elected our first president?  And, as Pope John Paul landed in Korea in April of 1989, it was only a few weeks before the Tiananmen Square demonstrations would happen in China, and a few months before the fall of Berlin Wall in the USSR?

Giving Thanks for our Parish Family

Last week, as I introduced our new topic for this coming year of catechesis for our Family of Faith program, I re-emphasized a point that I made last year that our entire parish community is a family, so we are all invited into this process of ongoing formation in our faith.  This week, I would like to focus a little more on this concept of being a parish family, with a special focus on one particular member of our parish family.

In St. Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians, he uses the image of the body to speak about the Church, how the body has many members, all having a specific role to play in that body.  Although some members of the body are more visible, all of the members are nevertheless important.  We are therefore called to rejoice in how God brings together all of the members of the body for the good of the entire body.  This image translates well into seeing the Church as a family as the same dynamic exists where various members of the family make up our parish, and each member of this family has great value to the entire family.  Much more can be said on the importance of each of us adopting this attitude and being proactive in sharing our gifts for the good of this family, but as I wrote above, I want to focus on the good that has been offered by one of the members of this family and to give thanks to God for those gifts.

For more than twenty years Lisa Duffey has been a part of this parish family, first as a cook in the school, and now as our Parish Secretary for close to 17 years.  She has also been active with the Cathedral Council of Catholic Women.  Lisa has been a very visible and active member of this parish family, and for that, we praise the Lord.  At the end of this month, Lisa will be retiring.  This is certainly good news for her, as she and her husband will have more time for travel and family.  As happy as we are for her, there is some sadness as we will miss her very much.  At the same time, we are confident that God, the Father of this parish family, will provide for us, just as He has done in so in many ways in the past.  I invite all of us to keep this intention in our prayers, that the Lord will choose for us a committed intentional disciple to fill the huge void that is being left with Lisa’s departure.  The Lord is always working for our good, so we can trust that our prayers to Him will be heard and that He will provide the person who will serve this family faithfully as a Parish Secretary.

Lisa has asked that we not make a big deal of her retiring, but I would like us to have the opportunity to express our gratitude and well-wishes to her in some way.  We have decided that we will have baskets at the entrances to the church in which you can leave a card or a note of some sort.  You can also drop in your contribution for a spiritual bouquet that we would like to offer her.  By contribution I mean a spiritual offering of some sort, such as promising to pray a decade of the Rosary for her, or perhaps the entire Rosary.  Perhaps you could offer to pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy.  You could pray a novena for her intentions.  You could offer your communion at a certain Mass for her.  So please join me in thanking God for the gift that Lisa has been to this parish family and pray for her as she moves on to the next stage of her life.  And let us already thank God for the person He is preparing to send to continue this important service for our parish family.

Father Alford    

The Dignity of Human Beings

When the Church talks about human dignity today, the conversation often centers around the beginning and end of human life. These two timeframes of life are when each of us are most vulnerable, unable to defend ourselves physically, intellectually, or politically in the public square. Because of this, we as Christians spend our time and resources caring for those who are vulnerable through ministries of healthcare and other life-affirming efforts. But, what is the source of this human dignity? The idea of human dignity has certainly not been a universal concept throughout human history. Our human minds can see the goodness of humanity to a certain extent, but it is only through God’s revelation that we can understand our dignity to the fullest extent.

Understanding our own dignity and goodness is essential to living a moral life. Part Three of the Catechism of the Catholic Church is entitled “Life in Christ.” This section contains a summary of the moral teaching of the Church, and without an understanding of our dignity, it may seem like an arbitrary set of rules. This section of the Catechism begins with laying out how good God has made us to be. The opening paragraph of this section is a quote from St. Leo the Great: “Christian, recognize your dignity and, now that you share in God’s own nature, do not return to your former base condition by sinning. Remember who is your head and of whose body you are a member. Never forget that you have been rescued from the power of darkness and brought into the light of the Kingdom of God” (CCC 1691). Our reason for seeking virtue and avoiding sin should be out of love for the God who made us, and out of a healthy love for ourselves, because we are made in the image of God.

Human beings are created in the image and likeness of God. Even more than this, we have been purchased at the price of the blood of Jesus Christ. God calls us to a lofty, eternal vocation of living with him forever in heaven. Sin distracts us and leads us away from our eternal vocation, while acts of love and virtue lead us closer to heaven.

In the lives of the saints, it is easy to see the goodness of God at work. I love reading Fr. Rankin’s saint articles in our Weekly, because the saints are like a walking catechesis. It can be a challenge to apply the teachings of Jesus to our own lives, but seeing the example of the saints makes it easier for us all to imagine becoming saints ourselves. Conversely, we all probably know people whose lives have been seriously damaged by sin. Thanks be to God, Jesus offers us forgiveness through the sacraments. Like the prodigal son, our loving Father wants to restore the dignity of those who have sold it through sin.

In the next year, we will be writing about some ways in which we can grow closer to God through following his laws. Let us keep in mind the reason for doing what is right – because God made us in his image, and by saying yes to God’s law, we say yes to love.

St. John Chrysostom: Miniature-Church Architecture 101

Feast Day: September 14th

            Today we have grown accustomed to “going to Mass”, that is, driving over to the church we have chosen as our parish and attending the Sunday celebration of the Eucharist there.  I think for all of us it was a wake-up call last year when, for a time, this typical American practice was taken from us.  Pastors looked out upon empty pews, and parishioners were stranded at home, with limited access to the Eucharist, and only a small part of the experience of the Holy Sacrifice available through livestreams.  It was a trying time, and one that I hope has prodded all of us to dig deeper into how we can both love our Church more, and practice our faith at home in a fuller way.

            In both of those areas, we can learn much from the early church.  In the first few centuries of the Church the Eucharist was almost entirely celebrated in Christian homes.  Those Christians who owned a space large enough to host the small community of disciples would make space in their homes for the Mass to be celebrated and would prepare their homes not only to host their fellow Christians, but also to host the coming of the Lord, making the necessary preparations for the Mass to be celebrated under their roof.  St. Paul references this multiple times in his letters: “Aquila and Prisca send their best wishes in the Lord, together with the church that meets in their house” [1Cor 16:19] and “Please give my greetings to the brothers at Laodicea and to Nympha and the church which meets in her house.” [Colossians 4:15].

            This necessary practice, of course, was no longer needed once the persecutions ceased and the Church began to build church-buildings, constructing a sacred space for the growing community to join together in worship.  But, one of the saints we celebrate this week, St. John Chrysostom, a young man in the 300s who would become a firebrand of a bishop in the 400s in Constantinople (in what is now Turkey), knew that the underlying supernatural reality visible in those church-homes had not gone anywhere, even as the congregations had migrated into basilicas.  St. Augustine, a bishop during the same age in Hippo (in what is now Algeria),  coined the celebrated phrase “domestic Church” that would be taken up by Vatican II (especially in Lumen Gentium) and Pope St. John Paul II (especially in Familiaris Consortio), but Chrysostom was preaching the same message in the East.    

In his homilies on the Christian call outlined in Ephesians 5, with wives submitting to their husbands, as the Church does to Christ, and husbands loving their wives, as Christ does the Church, Chrysostom pulls no punches when he zooms out to the reality of the family and home in its entirety.   Calling the home a “miniature church” [micra-ecclessia], he proclaims it the duty and glory of fathers and mothers to establish in their homes the reign and grace of Christ.  This is a reality he finds from the beginning to the end of the bible.  Preaching on Genesis as well, this Doctor of the Church imagines for his congregation what the Christian home should look like as a family returns from Holy Communion:

Returning to your homes, we prepare two tables, one for the food of the body and the other for the food of Sacred Scripture. Indeed, the husband should repeat the readings which were given in the holy assembly; the wife instructing them; the children listening.  Each of us must make a church of his house! Are you not responsible for the salvation of your children? Won’t you one day have to account for it? Just as we, the pastors, must give an account of your souls, so the fathers of families will have to answer before God for all the people of their house. – St. John Chrysostom, Homily on Genesis, 6.2, (translation my own because I could not find this in its entirety in English…)

Are our homes prepared for Christ’s coming?  Do we lave space and time open for Him?  Have we set up an altar, with sacred images and sacred scripture, to remain in Christ’s presence throughout our day?  Do we meditate on His Word together as a family?

– Fr. Dominic Rankin treasures as one of his earliest memories reading with his mom (well, she was doing the reading, he was doing the listening.  This is me at like 4 years old) a little blue booklet of Bible History stories.  I can almost remember the black and white scenes of Adam and Eve, and Noah, and Samson.  Little doses of God’s Word, still with me 25 years later!

Life in Christ

Labor Day marks the unofficial end of Summer for many people, especially for students who are resuming (or have already resumed) another year of education.  With each new year comes new material that deepens the student’s understanding of current concepts or introduces him or her to new concepts.  Such is the case with our Family of Faith family catechesis program as well.  As you will recall from last year, I stressed that our entire parish community is a family, so we are all invited into this process of ongoing formation in our faith.  

Last year, our focus was on the second major section of the Catechism which deals with the Sacraments.  This year, we continue to build on that foundation and move into the third major section of the Catechism: “Life in Christ.”  The connection between these two sections can be seen in the introductory paragraphs of this section where we read:

Incorporated into Christ by Baptism, Christians are “dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus” and so participate in the life of the Risen Lord. Following Christ and united with him, Christians can strive to be “imitators of God as beloved children, and walk in love” by conforming their thoughts, words and actions to the “mind … which is yours in Christ Jesus,” and by following his example. (CCC 1694)

At the most fundamental level, the sacraments give us grace, which is a participation in the life of Christ, thus making it possible for us to live our life “through Him, with Him, and in Him.”  And living our lives in union with Christ is the most basic explanation of what this section of the Catechism is all about.  We will cover various topics during this year, including the virtues, the Commandments, the corporal and spiritual works of mercy, the Beatitudes, and Catholic Social Teaching.  All of these topics touch on how we should live our lives as Christians – every aspect of our lives – thoughts, words, and actions.  The goal of our lives is not just following a set of rules, but it is all about letting the life of Christ be continued in our lives.

When it comes to the moral life taught by the Church, we so often fail to understand this most important point.  Many people only hear “do this” or “don’t do that” and it seems like the Church is trying to control our lives.  But do we ever stop to put those commandments in the proper context?  Do we truly appreciate that what Christ (and by extension the Church) teaches us and asks of us is actually a true path to freedom and joy?  We will only come to that understanding if we start with the person of Christ and our relationship with Him, hearing His words addressed to us that summarize His desire for us in offering us His teaching: “I came so that they might have life and have it more abundantly.” (John 10:10)

Do you desire this for your life, to have life and have it more abundantly?  I guarantee the answer for each of us is a resounding “yes”!  So what do we have to lose in following the way of life Christ and the Church invites us to live?  I hope you will come to discover, over the course of this year, that we have absolutely nothing good to lose.  Rather, by letting the life of Christ be lived in us, we have everything to gain, most importantly eternal life in Heaven.

Father Alford     

The Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Day: September 8th 

We can thank God that we live in the “land of the free and home of the brave”, but the fact of the matter is, if each of us are not moral individuals – upright, wholistic, virtuous, saintly, generous, rightly-ordered, that kind of thing – than freedom just collapses into ruckus, and bravery quickly devolves into rash brazenness (and our national home doesn’t last much longer than that).  This is not just a Catholic idea either!  Benjamin Franklin, to someone who asked him what kind of government the new country would have as the Constitutional Convention closed, famously quipped “a republic”, adding the essential words “if you can keep it.”  John Adams said it more directly: “Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”  And, George Washington, in his final speech to the American people, spoke to this truth at length:

Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of patriotism, who should labor to subvert these great pillars of human happiness, these firmest props of the duties of men and citizens. … And let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion.

This week I open with these lines because I want to emphasize the desperate need our country has for moral individuals, and then I want to point that need directly at my own heart, and beg the Lord for the grace of conversion within myself.  It is so easy to point to terrorists, or tyrants, or television, or temperature-change, or anything or anyone other than myself and say “that’s the problem”; they need conversion.  And it is way easier to complain, or debate, or ignore any of those other things, and therefore push the conundrum out of my area of responsibility, hopefully at least to Capital Street, or maybe as far away as Washington DC, or Afghanistan, or maybe China.

But all of this sells ourselves short, and neglects the chance we have in our heart and in our home to cultivate Christian living.  This week we celebrate the Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.  Nowhere in the Gospel do we get this precious scene, and yet what human joy must have filled the hearts of Joachim and Anne as they finally held their baby girl, and what supernatural joy must have filled the saints in heaven as God revealed to them His desire for her role in salvation history!  What has this to do with Benjamin Franklin?!  Mary, before we get to her saying ‘yes’ to Gabriel, or holding Jesus in Bethlehem, or staying near through the cross and to the upper room … before any of that happened, she was a girl, with parents, and she was given the gift of a holy heart.  

This happened, at first, at the exact moment she was conceived.  This is what we celebrate at the Immaculate Conception.  Yet we also celebrate her birthday, just as we celebrate all of ours as well: the day we were born and held and seen by our family.  What was so supernaturally special on Mary’s birthday that we dedicate a feast to it in the Church?  On this day, Mary’s immaculate heart was entrusted by God to the care of her parents, and they cared for her well.  Virtue, holiness, morality, freedom… all of these are things that must be established and maintained!  Attacks will come upon us, and upon those we love, from every corner, to distract or destroy the holiness we are meant to have within.  First of all, we must do this in our own hearts – maintaining our interior freedom, our moral compass, our holiness and virtue – and then spouses for each other, parents for their children, teachers for their students, and pastors for their parishioners.  

And if we have done this well, we need not worry about much else!

– Fr. Dominic Rankin fondly remembers celebrating birthdays in his home growing up.  The Rankin tradition was birthday cake for breakfast, followed by some sort of family excursion during the day.  The zoo in St. Louis remains a highlight from one such occasion.  Unfortunately, he was too rambling this week to fit a photograph of the day.  Maybe next time!

Being Nourished by the Word

In the Second Reading for Mass the Sunday, we hear St. James speaking about the importance of the Word of God, that we should “humbly welcome the word that has been planted in you and is able to save your souls.” (Jas 1:21)  He then gives us an important challenge: “Be doers of the word and not hearers only.” (Jas 1:22)  For the past few weeks, we have been focusing on the importance of the Eucharist in our lives as Catholics.  But we must also bear in mind the important role the Word of God in Sacred Scripture also plays in our lives.  The Second Vatican Council provides a beautiful summary of how these two are related, especially at Mass:

The Church has always venerated the divine Scriptures just as she venerates the body of the Lord, since, especially in the sacred liturgy, she unceasingly receives and offers to the faithful the bread of life from the table both of God’s word and of Christ’s body. (Dei Verbum, 21)

In a document he wrote on the Word of God, Pope Benedict XVI also highlights how deepening our love for the Word of God is at the service of a fuller encounter with the Lord when we are at Mass:

Just as the adoration of the Eucharist prepares for, accompanies and follows the liturgy of the Eucharist, so too prayerful reading, personal and communal, prepares for, accompanies and deepens what the Church celebrates when she proclaims the word in a liturgical setting. (Verbum Domini, 86)

Praying with the Word of God, especially with the readings given to us each day by the Church, is a practice that has grown in recent decades in the Church.  Thankfully, we have more resources than ever to facilitate this encounter with the Word of God, both written and electronic.  For example, beginning this weekend, you will find copies of The Word Among Us, a monthly publication that includes the daily Mass readings, along with daily reflections on those readings and a few other articles.  Feel free to pick one up to help you in deepening your commitment to being nourished by the Word of God.  Another popular publication that many use is Magnificat.  You can also find the daily readings online at https://bible.usccb.org.

In the above quote from Pope Benedict, he points out that the prayerful reading of the Word of God is encouraged on both the personal and the communal level.  When we invite others into our prayer with the Word of God, we are exposed to the unique ways that God speaks to each of us and we are blessed by the sharing of those insights with one another, insights we might not have encountered if our prayer only remains in the personal realm.

With that in mind, we would like to make the communal reading and praying with the Word of God an opportunity for our parish.  Beginning Tuesday, September 21, continuing every other Tuesday evening at 6:30 pm, we will gather together to break open the Scriptures for the upcoming Sunday liturgy.  Joining us will be the candidates who are in the process of discerning entrance into the Catholic Church.  Please consider coming to join us for any of these evenings.  I think you will find that doing so will deepen your love of Sacred Scripture and enhance your overall encounter with the Lord at Mass as He feeds us with His very self in Word and Sacrament.

Father Alford     

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Liturgy

Sunday Masses (unless noted differently in weekly bulletin)
Saturday Evening Vigil – 4:00PM
Sunday – 7:00AM, 10:00AM and 5:00PM

Weekday Masses (unless noted differently in weekly bulletin)
Monday thru Friday – 7:00AM and 5:15PM
Saturday – 8:00AM

Reconciliation (Confessions)
Monday thru Friday – 4:15PM to 5:00PM
Saturday – 9:00AM to 10:00AM and 2:30PM to 3:30PM
Sunday – 4:00PM to 4:45PM

Adoration
Tuesdays and Thursdays – 4:00PM to 5:00PM

 

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Parish Address
524 East Lawrence Avenue
Springfield, Illinois 62703

Parish Office Hours
Monday thru Thursday – 8:00AM to 4:00PM
Fridays – CLOSED

Parish Phone
(217) 522-3342

Parish Fax
(217) 210-0136

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