2003-06-29 The term for this season of the liturgical year, “Ordinary Time..."
June 29, 2003
The term for this season of the liturgical year, “Ordinary
Time,” does not seem very inspiring at first. The fact is, the word
“ordinary” is a revelation. It means that there is an order, and if an
order then there is an orderer. God made all things according to a
plan, and in “Ordinary Time” the Sundays are numbered, because creation
is harmonious and God’s grace brings that order to perfection. There
would be no science, no civilization, no progress, and no computers, in
fact there would be nothing to make life livable if one were not
followed by two and two by three and so on.
Sin is a wrong note in the symphony. It is disordered. Some pretend
that disorder is part of the order of things. They actually reject the
philosophical principle of “non-contradiction,” which holds that two
opposite theories cannot both be true, and it is astonishing how many
absurdly disordered propositions such as “same-sex marriage” are taken
seriously.
If you appreciate the romance of the ordinary, you will not fall into
the trap of looking for the extraordinary. The Holy Eucharist is
ordinary in the sense that it is celebrated every day, and it is also
the most blessed gift God can give us. St. Thomas Aquinas said that if
God could have given us something more precious than the Mass, He would
have. Yet there are those who prefer the extraordinary to the ordinary
and will superstitiously rush to see some moisture on a window that
resembles the Blessed Virgin Mary. I suppose that some of them will
skip Mass and Benediction to look at the window. Jesus said that a
faithless generation seeks after signs and wonders.
The ordinary is not a news item. No headline proclaims, “The sun rose
today.” The newspapers do not record the ordinary lives of ordinary
people doing ordinary things with love. Sin gets more attention, and
the media are always ready with lurid accounts of scandal and
corruption. These sad facts need to be noted if there is to be reform,
in culture and in the Church, but these disorders can blind us to God’s
grace at work in the daily routine of life.
In a recent conversation, the Cardinal mentioned his
astonishment at the living saints he meets each day, at the increasing
number of vocations, at the throngs at the cathedral these days
overflowing onto Fifth Avenue, at the 11,000 catechists now training
the young in the archdiocese, at the most successful Cardinal’s Appeal
in history, and the impressive correction of the archdiocese’s serious
financial burdens. We may give thanks for the many blessings in the
daily rites of our own parish. Ordinary Time is a graceful time to
pause and notice the splendor of the ordinary.
Fr. George W. Rutler
