Skip to main content

A New Release

"Fans line up for midnight shows."  "Gamers fired up for midnight release."  These headlines are familiar to us in a culture that thrives on novelty.  People get excited about the upcoming release of a movie or video game to such a degree that they camp out for hours, some in costume to get tickets or to be among the first to obtain a copy of a virtual experience, to feel as if they are, in some way, participating in it.  What is underlying motivation of these individuals?  Is it a hunger for something that is beyond them?  Is it a desire to escape from their mundane lives and enter into something great?

I hate to break it to them, but it is not possible to become a part of 'Harry Potter' or 'Star Wars' just by showing up and dressing like a character, nor to be any more than a virtual player in HALO 3.  There is another new release on the horizon that is different.

This new release allows for time travel, active participation in a transformational even, and a close encounter with a force more powerful than the one employed by Luke Skywalker.  It is a new release that offers answers to the deepest questions and participation in the greates of all realities.  It corresponds to the desire of humanity to see great things and answers the request of Philip at the last supper that is echoed by so many today:  "Show us the Father"  (John 14:8).

We are less than a novena away from the release of the new English translation of the Third Edition of the Roman Missal.  I believe it's worth the wait and it will not require you to deal with long lines, advanced ticketing or to come up with a costume (although appropriate dress is appreciated!).  It is in the Sacred Liturgy that we are transported to Calvary and plugged into the Paschal Mystery in a manner that can literally change our lives through a close encounter with the God of the universe who comes to us in the Eucharist.  In the liturgy we go beyond ourselves into the deepest vocation of the Church that is 'communio.'  We are given what we need to live lives of greatness, to go beyond the securities we appropriate for ourselves, and the trivial matters which all too often dominate our everyday existence.

This hunger for meaning is particularly evident in the lives of young people.  For this reason, it is a tremendous privilege to walk with them through the implementation of the new Roman Missal.  What an opportunity to explore with them and to help them to "put out into the deep" riches of our Church which we celebrate through the Liturgy.  It is in the liturgy that we encounter Christ in a concrete way and encountering Him, see the Father and come to know our own part in God's story.  Far from just donning a costume for a movie premier, 'full, conscious, and active' participatioin in the liturgy allows students to engage the questions of true identity, coming to the Lord as they are, and to learn who it is they are called to be, with God's grace, in the drama of salvation history.

Personally, I am excited and anxiously anticipating the implementation of this gift from the Church.  This time of preparation has allowed me to reflect on the importance of the liturgy in my own life and has made me keenly aware of my participation in daily Mass.  I am more conscious of my responses and the meaning behind the words, especially the ones that directly echo Sacred Scripture.

The liturgy is the experience of Calvary now.  It is the experience of heaven now.  Past.  Present.  Future.  Better than any video game or movie, the experience of union with Christ and his body, the universal Church is true and real.  I am counting down the days and waiting in joyful anticipation that this moment will mark a time of renewal and rediscovery in the Church.  My hope is that come November 27, all of us will embrace with joy this gift to the Church and be able to heed the commission:  "Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by" our lives.

- Sister M. Karolyn, FSGM

Comments

Patience said…
I'll just say "Me too!"

Popular posts from this blog

Welcome to our Family, Postulants!!!

Today, on the Feast of the Birth of Mary, our new postulants entered the postulancy of our American Province of the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George! We thank God for the gift of these vocations. Pictured above - on their very first full day in the convent - are (from left) Ashley Vola, Samantha Goodson, Miranda Edgar, Jennifer Clark and Erin Leis. Welcome, Postulants! We Sisters are grateful that you have accepted Christ's invitation to belong totally to Him in our Franciscan community, and we support you wholeheartedly with our prayers and help! If you would like to send a word of welcome and encouragement to these new postulants, we will pass the greetings along to them. Just leave them as a "comment"!

Journey with Mary: Sacrificial Love of Spiritual Motherhood

                Recently, I found a reflection I had written during my first retreat as a postulant. The last conference that had been given was on Spiritual Motherhood. As I approached the 4 th Station where Jesus meets His Sorrowful Mother, this is what struck my heart:                 What is the sacrificial love of a mother? It is the self-sacrifice made to love her children. Mary’s self-sacrifice to be there with Christ, her Son, in His passion was the selfless love that united her with Him. Her heart was pierced with 7 swords in the agony of watching her beloved Son endure a cross that He did not deserve, but which He embraced for the love of the Father and mankind. Could she not have said to Jesus, “You don’t have to do this, there are other ways. Do you know how much pain You are causing me and those who love you?” She knew He could have chosen any other way to save us, but this was the Father’s will, and so in silent love Mary trusted. If the world is suffering, why do y

Looking Back with Gratitude

“Christ is calling you; the Church needs you; the Pope believes in you and he expects great things of you!” My life would never be the same as the words of John Paul II coursed through my mind and beat with fervor in my heart. Me? Could he possibly mean me? Like many others, I felt Pope John Paul II was speaking directly to me as I sat behind him in the nose-bleed section of the stadium in Saint Louis. Throughout my high school years after this encounter, the idea of having a possible vocation to the religious life shocked and bewildered me, but at the same time brought me such peace. As each year came and went, my relationship with Jesus Christ and His Church grew with greater depth, understanding, and love. Through daily mass, Eucharistic Adoration, the Rosary, Scripture and God’s divine intervention through his priests and religious, I soon realized that, yes, the Pope did mean me. Christ was calling me and how could I say no? After one year of college, I soon came to the realizatio