2004-10-17 On Thursday, October 7, our Holy Father Pope John Paul II...
October 17, 2004
On Thursday, October 7, our Holy Father Pope John Paul II, as successor
to St. Peter who was present at the Last Supper, issued an Apostolic
Letter dedicating these twelve months, beginning October 10, as a year
of the Holy Eucharist. He did this because most of the world does not
understand this most Blessed Sacrament, and because many Catholics
themselves, owing to social influences and bad theological teaching,
have lost an awareness of this incomparable mystery.
The Holy Father wants his sons and daughters in the Faith to
increase their devotion to this sacrament of the Body and Blood of
Christ, knowing that it is as difficult for people to understand now as
it was for the crowd who walked away when He first proclaimed it (John
6:53-55). It is a virtual definition of heresy that it denies the real
presence of Christ in the sacrament of the altar. The Holy Mass has the
power to change the world, but that requires of us that we first be
changed by opening our hearts to the Sacred Heart through confession.
The Pope wants an end to liturgical abuses and irreverence, the
beautification of our churches and the elimination of banality, and
calls for more solemn acts of worship.
The Pope has ordered that the Blessed Sacrament be exposed
for adoration in all the patriarchal basilicas of Rome and that hours
in Roman churches be extended for confessions. The Church of St. Agnes
in the Piazza Navona will be a central penitentiary shrine to which the
humble faithful can confess their sins throughout the day.
The apostolic letter is called Mane Domine Nobiscum,
which was what the two men on the Emmaus road said to the Risen Lord on
Easter Day: “Lord stay with us.” The first part of the letter teaches
the mystery of Christ as our guide through the streets of this life to
eternal glory. The second chapter is about Christ who, as the Mystery
of Light, explains the mystery of life through the “two meals” of the
Mass: the preaching of the Gospel from the pulpit and the Sacrifice of
the Altar. The third section reminds Christians that Christ is the
source and the sign of Communion: through our individual communions we
are united to Him and fulfill the request “mane nobiscum,” stay with
us. This communion unites the Church by bringing together all who
discern the Body and Blood of Christ and obey His voice through
obedience to the Pope as successor to St. Peter. The last part of the
apostolic letter instructs the Church that our Eucharistic fellowship
sends us into the world, in our various jobs and professions, to bring
others to Christ. The Vatican has said that the Holy Father does not
ask for anything extraordinary on our part, but rather that there be an
increased intensity of devotion to the Blessed Sacrament. This requires
fervent and frequent confession, diligent participation in Sunday Mass,
and Eucharistic adoration outside of the Mass.
The Year of the Eucharist coincides with the 50th
anniversary of the chartering of our parish. The year 2005 should be a
time for converting our neighborhood and city through sacramental acts
of confession and communion. I hope to expand our times of Eucharistic
adoration, with special emphasis on the conversion of the lapsed,
heretics, and non-Christians, and for an increase of vocations to the
Holy Priesthood. We are making remarkable advances in our parish toward
eliminating inherited debts and preserving our holy building, but our
great triumph will be the spiritual conversion of our fellow citizens
and ourselves.
Fr. George W. Rutler
