Dear Parishioners:
We had two great celebrations this past week. The St. Patrick's Day Mass and Reception were a grand time, and we are grateful to all those who made it possible. We thank our homilist, Fr. Justin Brophy, OP, for an outstanding sermon on the true meaning of St. Patrick's Day. We also thank our musicians, those who helped with the reception, and especially Mrs. Sinead Campion for reading in Irish. She always does a terrific job!
On St. Joseph's Day, we had another beautiful Mass, and we thank Fr. Nathan Ricci for celebrating the Mass in Italian. Afterward, everyone enjoyed the zeppoles! I thank all those who made it possible, especially Dr. Rocky Ruggerio and Dr. Anthony Bruzzese, for reading in Italian.
These two feasts gave us a brief respite from our Lenten fasting. However, it is time to return to prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. Lent calls us to contemplate and engage in acts of spiritual self-denial and self-discipline. We do these things because Easter is the greatest holy day of the Christian year, even above Christmas. So, we recognize that engaging in such disciplines is a good way to prepare for such an important holy day.
The late Archbishop Fulton Sheen noted that the world's attitude is summarized by the line, "First comes the feast, then comes the hangover," while the Catholic attitude is "First comes the fast, then comes the feast." Lent before Easter!
Lent lasts 40 days because 40 is the traditional number of judgments and spiritual tests in the scriptures. It relates to the 40 days Christ spent fasting in the desert before entering his public ministry. We imitate Christ by spending 40 days in spiritual discipline before celebrating his triumph over sin and death.
Fasting is a biblical discipline in both the Old and New Testaments. Christ expected his disciples to fast and instructed them on how to do so. We follow this pattern by fasting on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.
Abstinence from certain foods is also a biblical discipline. In Daniel 10:2-3 we read, "In those days I, Daniel, was mourning for three weeks. I ate no delicacies, no meat or wine entered my mouth, nor did I anoint myself at all, for the full three weeks." We have a practice similar to Daniel's when, as a way of commemorating the Crucifixion of Christ on Good Friday, we abstain from eating meat on the Fridays of Lent. We are to eat fish, a symbol of Christ, on Fridays. It is meant to be a sacrifice as we reflect upon Christ's sacrifice for love of us.
Also, on the Fridays of Lent, we should pray the Stations of the Cross, privately or in common. They are also known as the Way of the Cross or Via Crucis. They commemorate Jesus's way to Calvary. The Stations of the Cross depict 14 events in the Passion of Jesus Christ, beginning with Jesus being condemned to death and ending with His body being laid in a tomb. The practice began as pious pilgrims traced his path through Jerusalem on the Via Dolorosa.
Later, the pious practice of praying at the Stations of the Cross originated in medieval Europe when pilgrims could not visit the Holy Land, so instead "visited" these Holy places through prayer. Also, St. Francis of Assisi, the founder of the Franciscan order, authored Stations of the Cross, which did much to popularize the devotion worldwide. The pious practice eventually became the fourteen stations that adorn every Catholic Church in the world.
The great Doctor of the Church, St. Alphonsus Liguori, was an Italian moral theologian and the founder of the Redemptorist Fathers. In 1791, he authored the very popular Way of the Cross, which we still use today at OLM. St. Alphonsus knew how to blend the awful reality of sin with the awesome reality of redeeming love. His Stations do not sugarcoat or gloss over evil; they also recognize the superior power of grace.
So please join us on Fridays at 7:00 p.m. for the Stations of the Cross. As St. Francis of Assisi taught us to pray, “We adore You, O Christ, and we praise You, because by Your holy cross, You have redeemed the world.” Do good. Be well. God Bless. Remember, Fridays are for fish and chips and the Stations of the Cross!