Rev. Fr.
Leonard Goffine's The Church's
Year
INSTRUCTION ON THE SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER
PENTECOST
The Introit of
this day's Mass is the prayer of a soul that trusts in God's
powerful and merciful protection:
INTROIT The Lord is the strength
of his people, the protector of the salvation of his Anointed: save,
O Lord, thy people, and bless Thine inheritance, and rule them for
ever. Unto Thee will I cry, O Lord: O my God, be not Thou silent to
me; lest if Thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down
into the pit. (Ps. XXVII.) Glory etc.
COLLECT O God of hosts, to whom
belongeth all that is perfect: implant in our hearts the love of Thy
name, and grant within us an increase of religion, that Thou mayest
nourish in us what is good, and by the fervor of our devotion may
preserve in us what Thou hast nourished. Through etc.
EPISTLE (Rom. VI. 3-11.) Brethren, All
we who are baptized in Christ Jesus, are baptized in his death. For
we are buried together with him by baptism unto death: that as
Christ is risen from the dead by the glory of the Father so we also
may walk in newness of life. For if we have been planted together in
the likeness of his death, we shall also be in the likeness of his
resurrection. Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him,
that the body of sin may be destroyed, to the end that we may serve
sin no longer. For he that is dead is justified from sin. Now if we
be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall live also together
with Christ. Knowing that Christ, rising again from the dead, dieth
now no more, death shall no more have, dominion aver him. For in
that he died to sin, he died once: but in that he liveth, he liveth
unto God. So do you also reckon that you are dead indeed to sin, but
alive unto God, in Christ Jesus our Lord.
EXPLANATION The apostle here teaches
that in consequence of our baptism we are made members of Christ's
body, and must, therefore, die to sin; as Christ by His death died
to physical life, but has risen again, so must we bury sin, by
constant renewal of baptismal vows, and by self?mortification rise
to a Christian life. As members of Christ's body we should in a
spiritual manner imitate Him. As He permitted His body to be nailed
to the cross to atone for our sins, so should we crucify our corrupt
nature by self-denial, and as He after His Resurrection lives
always, because having risen He dieth no more, so we, risen from the
death of sin, should lead a pious life conformable to that of
Christ.
ASPIRATION I trust, O Lord Jesus,
that by the merits of Thy passion I have risen from the death of
sin: grant me Thy grace, that as Thou diest no more, so may I die no more
by sin, but live for God, according to Thy law.
GOSPEL (Mark.
VIII. 1-9.) At that time, When there was a great multitude with
Jesus, and had nothing to eat, calling hisdisciples together, he
saith to them: I have compassion on the multitude, for behold they
have now been with me three days, and have nothing to eat; and if I
shall send them away, fasting, to their ,home, they will faint in
the way: for some of them came from afar off. And his disciples
answered him: From whence can any one fill them here with bread in
the wilderness? And he asked them: How many loaves have ye? Who
said: Seven. And he commanded the people to sit down on the ground.
And taking the seven loaves, giving thanks, he broke, and gave to
his disciples to set before them: and they set them before the
people. And they had a few little fishes, and he blessed them, and
commanded them to be set before them. And they did eat, and were
filled, and they took up that which was left of the fragments, seven
baskets: and, they that had eaten were about four thousand: and
he sent them away.
Why did Christ say: I have compassion on the
multitude?
Because of His
mercy and goodness to man, as well as to prove that which He taught
on another occasion, (Matt. VI. 33.) that to those who seek first
the kingdom of God and His justice all other things will be added,
without asking; for none of the multitude asked Christ for food, and
yet He provided for all.
REMARK. The instruction after the gospel for the fourth
Sunday in Lent, where a similar miracle is mentioned, may be
read to-day.
INSTRUCTION ON BLESSING
And He blessed them. (Mark VIII. 7.)
Seduced by
Satan, the first man violated the holy is command of God, and by his
sin brought upon himself and his habitation the curse of divine
wrath. (Gen. III. 17.) Man was made by God, and therefore subject:
to Him, but was himself master of all created things. .After the sin
of disobedience, however, all creation revolted against him: the
animals fled from him, the fields yielded only thorns and thistles,
the herbs became poisonous to him, or refused him their former
wholesome power. Innumerable evils followed, all men and even the
whole earth suffered from them; the devil drew both into his sphere
and made them his servants, and this evil spirit now made use of
created ,things to divert man altogether from God and to cause his
eternal ruin. But God decreed that man and earth should not remain
in this condition: Christ, the Son of God, came upon earth, redeemed
it from the bonds of Satan, and gave all men the power to become
once more God's children. The devil was conquered by the cross, but
not slain; man and the, earth were indeed taken from his dominion,
but not from his influence; for he even now, as the apostle Writes,
goes about like a roaring lion, seeking ,whom he may devour, (I
Peter V. 8.); and as he used the forbidden fruit in paradise to
seduce man, he now uses the created things of the earth to tempt
man, and, make him his servant. Man and all creation had to be drawn
from this pernicious influence, to be liberated from the bondage of
corruption and be brought to the freedom of the children of God.
(Rom. VIII. 19.) This is done in the Church, to which Christ
entrusted the power of binding and loosing, and gave the work of
sanctifying through the Holy Ghost, by means of blessing and
consecrating. By virtue of the merits of Christ, and with the
assistance of the Holy Ghost, the Church, or the priest in her name,
therefore blesses and consecrates persons as well as other created
things which they are to use, or which she is to apply to the
service of God. In this the Church follows the example of Christ and
the Apostles. Jesus embraced children and laid His hands upon them,
blessing them; (Mark X. 16.) He blessed bread and fishes, the food
of thousands; blessed breed and wine at the last supper; (Matt.
XXVI. 26.) was recognized by the disciples in the blessing of bread;
(Luke XXIV. 30.) blessing the disciples He ascended into heaven;
(Luke XXIV. 51.) by His command the apostles wished peace to every
house into which they stepped; (Matt. X. 12, 13.) and St. Paul
expressly says, that every living thing is sanctified by prayer and
the word of God. (I Tim. IV. 5.) Following the example and command
of Christ the Church also introduced blessings and benedictions
which were prefigured in the Old Law. God commanded the priests to
sanctify and to consecrate whatever was to belong to His service,
(Levit. VIII.) and the Old Law is full of blessings and
consecrations which had to be used by the priests; (Exod. XXIX. 36.;
XXX. 25.; XI. 9.) and if persons and things used for God's service
were to be blessed, how much more so in the. New Law which in place
of the type, contains the reality and truth The testimony of
Scripture is confirmed by all the holy Fathers, and by the constant
practice of the Church which has received from Christ, the power to
bless and to consecrate.
The blessing or
benediction of the Church is nothing more than a, prayer of
intercession which the priest makes in the name of the Church, that
for the sake of Christ (therefore the sign of the cross) and the
prayers of the saints, God may give His blessings to a person or
thing, and sanctify it. Through consecration, in which besides
prayer and the sign of the cross, the anointing with holy oil is
used, things required for divine service are separated from all
other things and especially sanctified. Thus persons, fruits, bread,
wine, houses, ships and fields, are blessed; churches, altars,
bells, &c., are consecrated.
What virtue have these blessings?
The chief
effects of the blessing of persons are: Preservation or liberation
from the influence of Satan; preservation of the soul from his
temptations and evil suggestions; reservation of the body and of the
property from his ;pernicious malice; forgiveness of venial sins,
and strength to suppress concupiscence; curing of sickness and
physical evils, whether natural or supernatural; a blessing upon the
person and his surroundings; the imparting of the grace of
conversion; the advantage of the prayer of the Church and further
grace for the remission of temporal and eternal punishment. ? The
blessing of things withdraws them from the influence of the devil,
so that he can no longer use them as a means of bringing us into
sin, but that they rather serve us as a protection against the evil
spirits and as a means for our salvation.
Whence do the blessings derive their force?
From the merits
of Christ who by His death on the cross vanquished Satan. The Church
asks God that He will through these merits and through the
intercession of the saints bless a person or thing, and make that
which is blessed profitable to us fox both body and soul. Whether or
not the effects manifest themselves in the person who receives the
blessing, or makes use of the object blessed, depends on his faith
and moral condition, as also on the usefulness or profit of the
blessing to him. We should not, then, place obstacles in its way by
diffidence in God and the prayers of the Church or by a sinful life,
but should always be convinced. that these benedictions will serve
for our benefit, if according to God's will they are used as the
Church intends, as a means to overcome evil, to sanctify ourselves,
and to honor God.
Why are salt and water blessed?
This is plainly
shown in the prayer the priest says in blessing them; for he asks,
in the name of the Church, that God may pour the virtue of His
blessing over the water that it may conquer devils, prevent
sickness, and that everything which is sprinkled with it, may be
preserved from every injury, and that He may bless the salt, so that
it may be salutary for the body and soul of all who use it. The salt
which Eliseus sprinkled into the unwholesome waters of Jericho
healed them, (IV King. II. 20. 21.) and is a type of blessed
salt.
Why are the people sprinkled with holy water on
Sundays?
To remind the
people of the interior purity with which they should come to divine
service, and fulfil the duties of their calling; and to exhort them
to purify themselves from the stains of sin by tears of sorrow, and
repentance. Hence the priest in sprinkling the faithful recites the
words of the fiftieth psalm: Asperges me hyssopo, etc. Sprinkle me
with hyssop, and I shall be cleansed; to remind them to preserve the
purity and innocence procured by the blood of the Lamb of God, and
communicated to them in baptism. Finally, the people are sprinkled
that the temptations of the devil may depart from them, enabling
them to attend with great fervor and with more recollection to the
holy service.
What else is to be remembered concerning the use of
blessed things?
That they are
to be used with faithful confidence for the purpose for which the
Church blessed them, and are to be treated with great reverence,
because they are blessed by the Church in the name of Jesus, a
custom almost as old as Christianity itself. The Christian must not
believe that blessed things which he possesses, carries, or uses,
will make him holy, for he should always remember that things
blessed are only a means of sanctification, and are only effectual
when the faithful have the earnest will to die rather than sin, to
fight with all fervor against the enemies of their salvation, to
follow Christ, and be thereby received into the freedom of the
children of God, and into heaven. |