The Holiest Days of the Year
<http://www.catholicaction.org/archbishop_burke_s_column/the-holiest-days-of-the-year.html>http://www.catholicaction.org/archbishop_burke_s_column/the-holiest-days-of-the-year.html
 

Tuesday, 31 March 2009 00:18

Crucifix
By Archbishop Raymond L. Burke

  Introduction

Last week on March 25, the Solemnity of the 
Annunciation of the Lord, we celebrated the 
beginning of the work of our Redemption, when God 
the Son became man in the womb of the Virgin Mary 
through the overshadowing of the Holy Spirit. 
That God Himself would come to live with us is a 
great and wonderful mystery. We call it the 
mystery of the Incarnation. God the Son took our 
human nature for one only purpose, namely, to 
save us from our sins and to win for us the 
freedom to love Him and to love one another. God 
the Father sent His only-begotten Son to us on a mission, our salvation.

On this coming Sunday, Palm Sunday, we enter into 
the holiest days of the Church Year, the days in 
which we celebrate the completion of the mission 
for which our Lord Jesus was sent into the world: 
His suffering, dying and rising from the dead for 
our eternal salvation. So singular is this time 
for us that we call "Holy Week" the days from 
Palm Sunday to the Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday. 
Of all the weeks of the Church Year, during which 
God faithfully pours forth His grace upon us, we 
refer to one week only as Holy Week, because the 
source of all grace is found in the events which 
took place during this week.Even as we call the 
truth that God became man for us the mystery of 
the Incarnation, so we call the truth that God 
Incarnate suffered and died for our salvation the mystery of the

Redemption. The two mysteries are inseparably 
united. For that reason, the Servant of God Pope 
John Paul II was fond of referring to the two 
great mysteries together as one, the mystery of 
the Redemptive Incarnation. Our 40 days of Lenten 
observance prepare us for Holy Week, so that we 
might enter as fully as possible into the 
celebration of the mystery of our Redemption.

Accompanying Christ, through prayer and worship, 
during these days of His Passion and death, we 
recognize the mystery of His Life within us. He 
reveals to us the deepest truth about our life in 
Him. In the cleansing and life-giving waters of 
Baptism, we were buried with Christ, dying to 
sin, and we came to life with Christ in the 
Church through the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. 
Our life, as we have come to understand more 
deeply, through our Lenten penance of prayer, 
fasting and almsgiving, is a pilgrimage in the 
company of Christ, which reaches its completion 
at the portal of death. In Christ, the portal of 
death leads to resurrection and life without end 
in the presence of God ­ Father, Son and Holy 
Spirit ­ in the company of the angels and all the 
saints. Through our participation in Holy Week, 
especially the Sacred Triduum ­ beginning with 
the Mass of the Lord’s Supper and concluding with 
the Easter Vigil ­ we will draw closer to Christ 
and grow more gratefully conscious of His life 
within us through the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.

  Passion or Palm Sunday

We will begin Holy Week by participating in the 
Mass on Passion or Palm Sunday. The Mass starts 
with the blessing and distribution of palms, and 
the procession which recalls Christ’s final entry 
into Jerusalem, in obedience to the will of the 
Father, to suffer a most cruel passion and death 
for love of us and in the desire to win for us 
both freedom from sin and life without end. At 
the Gospel, the account of the Passion and death 
of our Lord is proclaimed to us in its fullness, 
so that we may understand the significance of the 
holy time into which we are entering.

We can never comprehend sufficiently the meaning 
of Christ’s suffering and death. Christ Who 
entered Jerusalem with the acclaim of the people 
would soon hear the same people crying out 
repeatedly for His crucifixion. The words of the 
verse for the Communion Rite, taken from the 
Gospel according to St. Matthew, reveal the depth 
of the love of Christ for us as He enters into 
His Passion. They are words which Christ prayed 
in the Garden of Gethsemane, as He awaited His 
arrest and condemnation to the most ignominious 
form of execution known at the time, crucifixion. 
Christ, ever obedient in carrying out the mission 
which the Father had entrusted to Him from the 
moment of His Incarnation in the womb of the 
Virgin Mary, turned to His Father and prayed:

"Father, if this cup may not pass, but I must 
drink it, then your will be done" (Mt 26:42). 
Throughout Holy Week, it would be good to return 
to a meditation on these words and on the text of 
the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, in order to 
enter as deeply as possible into the events of 
His redeeming work. Participation in Holy Mass on 
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of Holy Week would 
be a wonderful way of accompanying Christ during 
these days. If participation in Mass is not 
possible, it would be good to make a visit to the 
Blessed Sacrament each day. For all, time each 
day in prayer, meditating upon the Passion of our 
Lord, will help us to be with our Lord during 
these holiest of days. I recommend especially the 
praying of the rosary each day, meditating upon 
the mysteries of our salvation and keeping in 
mind the intentions of the family and of world peace.

Chrism Mass

During Lent the bishop, as head of the diocese, 
offers a Chrism Mass during which the sacred 
chrism is consecrated and the holy oils are 
blessed for use in the celebration of the 
sacraments and other sacred rites during the 
coming year. It is a most beautiful celebration, 
the last solemn liturgical rite before the Sacred 
Triduum begins with the Mass of the Lord’s Supper 
during the evening of Holy Thursday. All of the 
faithful of the diocese are invited to 
participate in the Chrism Mass. It is one of the 
most important and beautiful liturgical celebrations of the Church Year.

Holy Thursday is a most special day for priests, 
for Christ instituted the ordained priesthood on 
Holy Thursday at the Last Supper. Also, the 
priests, united around the bishop at the Chrism 
Mass, are reminded that they, by their 
ordination, have been constituted the ministers 
of the sanctifying and healing sacred chrism, oil 
of the catechumens and oil of the sick. Before 
the consecration of the sacred chrism and the 
blessing of the holy oils, the priests of the 
diocese renew their commitment to priestly 
service. With these words, all of the faithful 
are invited to pray for their priests:

Ask the Lord to bless them with the fullness of his love,

To help them be faithful ministers of Christ the High Priest,

So that they will be able to lead you to Him,

The Fountain of your salvation. (The Roman Missal)

The consecration of the chrism and the blessing 
of the oil of catechumens and the oil of the sick 
remind us of the living presence of Christ, the 
Anointed of the Lord, with us in the Church, 
ceaselessly accomplishing the work of our 
salvation, especially through the sacraments. The 
word chrism comes from the same root as Christ, 
the word for anointing. Throughout the Chrism 
Mass, we recall how Christ was anointed by God 
the Father with the fullness of the Holy Spirit, 
so that He might win for us the gift of the Holy 
Spirit by suffering, dying and rising from the dead.

Mass of the Lord’s Supper

The Sacred Triduum begins with the celebration of 
the evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper. We recall 
how Christ instituted the Holy Eucharist on the 
night before He died, in order that the fruits of 
His suffering and dying, the outpouring of His 
life for us, might be available to us always in 
the Church. The Holy Eucharist is the source and 
the highest expression of our life in Christ, for 
it is communion in His true Body and Blood. For 
that reason, the Mass of the Lord’s Supper is 
central to the celebration of the mysteries of 
our Redemption. During the Mass of the Lord’s 
Supper, sufficient hosts are consecrated, so that 
the faithful may be able to participate in Holy 
Communion on Good Friday, the day of our Lord’s 
Passion and death. At the Gloria, all of the 
bells of the church are rung with exultant joy 
and then remain silent until they are even more 
exultantly rung at the Gloria of the first Mass 
of Easter during the Easter Vigil.

During the Mass, after the Gospel and homily, the 
priest carries out what is called, in Latin, the 
mandatum (command) or the Washing of the Feet. 
This striking rite recalls what our Lord Himself 
did during the Last Supper, and His command that 
His disciples do likewise. The love of Christ 
which we receive in the Holy Eucharist is 
expressed in our humble service of our brothers and sisters.

At the conclusion of the Mass of the Lord’s 
Supper, the Blessed Sacrament is carried in 
solemn procession throughout the church and is 
then reposed in a tabernacle in a fittingly 
decorated chapel. The faithful are invited to 
make a holy hour in the presence of the Blessed 
Sacrament during this holy night of its 
institution. After the Mass, the altar is 
stripped. Mass will not be celebrated at the 
altar again until the Easter Vigil.

Celebration of the Lord’s Passion

Around 3 p.m. on Good Friday, good because it is 
the day when Christ died for us on the cross, we 
solemnly celebrate our Lord’s Passion and death. 
We begin with the Liturgy of the Word, the heart 
of which is the proclamation of the Passion from 
the Gospels. After the homily, the Liturgy of the 
Word concludes with the General Intercessions for 
the needs of the universal Church and of the world.

The second part of the celebration is the 
Veneration of the Cross. A large crucifix is 
carried in procession and shown to all the 
faithful, so that they may worship the Savior who 
hung on the wood of the cross for our salvation. 
After the solemn procession with the crucifix, 
the priest, other clergy and faithful approach 
the crucifix for veneration. During the 
Veneration of the Cross, appropriate sacred 
music, based on texts of the Holy Scriptures, 
helps us to meditate on the immeasurable love of God for us in Jesus Christ.

The celebration concludes with Holy Communion. 
The hosts consecrated at the Mass of the Lord’s 
Supper are brought to the altar and distributed 
to the faithful. Any hosts remaining are reposed 
in a place outside the main body of the church, 
so that the church remains without the Real 
Presence as the Church waits at the tomb of 
Christ for the announcement of His glorious 
Resurrection at the Easter Vigil. Good Friday is 
a day of abstinence and fasting. It is day when 
we should observe periods of silence, remembering 
the Passion and death of our Lord.

The Easter Vigil

The Sacred Triduum concludes and the Easter 
Season begins with the celebration of the Easter 
Vigil. Fittingly, the liturgical rites for the 
Easter Vigil are the richest in meaning and 
beauty. The blessing of the fire and the lighting 
of the Easter Candle signify Christ the Light, 
dispelling the darkness of our sin and restoring 
life in us by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. 
The Easter Proclamation (Exultet) sung before the 
Easter Candle is a most striking meditation on the mystery of our salvation.

The Liturgy of the Word is very ample. Nine 
readings, seven from the Old Testament and two 
from the New Testament, are provided, in order 
that we may have the fullest divine instruction 
regarding the saving events we celebrate. After 
the last reading from the Old Testament has been 
proclaimed, the candles on the altar are lighted 
and the Gloria is sung with the joy-filled 
ringing of all the church bells once again. Then 
follows the prayer, Epistle, Gospel and homily.

The third part of the Easter Vigil is the Liturgy 
of Baptism, during which we witness the lasting 
fruit of Christ’s Passion, death and Resurrection 
in the baptism of catechumens, and in the 
conferral of Confirmation and the reception of 
First Holy Communion for the newly baptized. In 
many churches, this is also the time for the 
conferral of Confirmation and the reception of 
First Holy Communion for those being received 
into the full communion of the Catholic Church or 
for those who were baptized Catholic but not 
catechized. The final part of the Easter Vigil is 
the Liturgy of the Eucharist. Christ renews His 
paschal sacrifice, so that we may be healed and 
nourished with His true Body and Blood.

Conclusion

Please make plans now to participate in the 
sacred liturgies of Holy Week, especially of the 
Sacred Triduum. May these holiest of days bring 
us all to a deeper knowledge and love of Christ. 
In the mystery of Christ’s suffering, dying and 
rising from the dead may we discover the deepest 
truth about God, about ourselves and about our world.

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