“The disciples were filled with joy and the Holy Spirit.”1 Being filled with the joy of the Spirit is the essence of Christian discipleship because we know Jesus Christ is risen.
What an exciting week for the Church! After the death of Pope Francis, the Galilean fisherman, Peter, is succeeded by Pope Leo XIV. This, dear friends, is a symbol of resurrection and a cause for hope.
Like Jesus’ first disciples, over the course of a few short days, the Lord has turned our mourning into dancing.2 Pope Leo is Christ’s Vicar on earth. Coming from the word “vicarious,” “vicar” refers to someone who stands in for another. The Vicar of Christ, therefore, stands in for the Good Shepherd in whose name he speaks and on whose authority he acts.
Today, in the Eucharistic prayer, we will pray for this Eucharist to unite us together under the leadership of Leo our pope and Oscar our bishop. Indeed, it is through our bishop that we are in communion with the Bishop of Rome and, through the Roman Pontiff with the Church throughout the world. This is the great Eucharistic mystery that shows us that far from being incidental to salvation, the Church is necessary. It is often the case today that many have a very thin ecclesiology, only a faint grasp of the profound mystery of the Church.
For me, one of the best things in watching events unfold in Saint Peter's Square after white smoke appeared was seeing the Catholicity of the Church on display in such an amazing way. The joy of the pilgrims came through screen. This excitement is or at least should be the Church: Evangelii gaudium- the joy of the Gospel, to borrow a Latin phrase. Or, as we’re reminded several times during Lent by the reading for Morning Prayer on Sunday: “Do not be saddened this day, for rejoicing in the Lord must be your strength!”3
I realize that in our individualistic age to speak in terms of obligation with regard to God can seem like blasphemy to many. Far from it. Just as loving your neighbor places obligations on you, so does loving God. Assisting at Mass on Sundays and holy days of obligation is the first of the Church’s five precepts. While, according to the Compendium to the Catechism, these precepts are given “to guarantee for the faithful the indispensable minimum in the spirit of prayer, the sacramental life, moral commitment and growth in love of God and neighbor,” they are little known today.4
This may seem a bit heavy-handed but all of us need grace to grow in love of God and neighbor, that is, to grow in holiness. The Eucharist, which is the source and summit of our faith, is the inexhaustible fountain of this grace, of unmerited divine assistance. This is why evangelization amounts to a beggar telling another beggar where he can find bread.
Lest you think clergy are immune, let me share a joke Father Rene once told from this ambo. It is all the dearer to me because I knew of some of his struggles. A man was lying in bed on Sunday morning. His mother came in and said, “It’s time to get up and go to Church.” He sleepily replied, “I don’t want to go.” His mother persisted, “You need to get up and go to Church.” He said, “Nobody there likes me.” Undeterred, his mom said, “You must get up and go to Church!” He said, “Why?” To which his mother replied, “You’re the pastor.”
I had a time early on after becoming Catholic, in the early years of our marriage, when attending Sunday Mass became hard for me. In talking to a trusted elderly priest (who Holly will remember, Father Maurice Prefontaine), I told him about my struggle and said that I wasn’t experiencing a crisis of faith but a crisis of practice. He lovingly took my hands in his and gently told me, “Starting Sunday, just go.” I’ve followed this simple advice ever since. If, like me then, you’ve been absent from the Sunday assembly, bring that to the Lord in confession.
From the beginning, centuries before there were daily Masses, Christians gathered on Sunday, Dies Domini, the Lord’s Day, the eighth day of eternity, the day Christ rose from the dead. In 1998, Pope Saint John Paul II wrote an Apostolic Letter on the importance of Sunday. In his letter, entitled Dies Domini, he wrote:
It is right, therefore, to claim, in the words of a fourth century homily, that “the Lord's Day” is "the lord of days.” Those who have received the grace of faith in the Risen Lord cannot fail to grasp the significance of this day of the week with the same deep emotion which led Saint Jerome to say: “Sunday is the day of the Resurrection, it is the day of Christians, it is our day.” For Christians, Sunday is “the fundamental feastday,” established not only to mark the succession of time but to reveal time's deeper meaning5As the inspired author of Hebrew enjoined: “We should not stay away from our assembly, as is the custom of some, but encourage one another, and this all the more as you see the day drawing near.”6 Or, as we read about primitive Church earlier in the Acts of Apostles: “They devoted themselves to the teaching of the apostles and to the communal life, to the breaking of the bread and to the prayers.”7
Most of us understand grasp that far from having to go to Mass, we get to go and participate in Mass on Sunday. Many of us know through experience that it is our participation in Sunday Mass that gives meaning and purpose to the rest of our lives. It is in the Eucharist that the Risen Lord comes to meet His people in time and space. While God is surely in all of creation, there is no way in which Christ is more palpably present than in the Eucharist. This is why the Lord commanded his followers to do this and not something else.
It may be the case that going to Church doesn’t make you a Christian any more than standing in a garage makes you a car. But a car that never goes to the garage will likely break down sooner than later. We gather to give thanks, to be healed, to help each other as we make our way through life and to be reminded of our eternal destiny and of God’s unfailing love given us in his Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, which He lavishes on us through the Eucharist.
Since the Lord is my Shepherd, as the psalmist insists, “there in nothing I shall want.” It is with the Eucharist that the Lord, my Shepherd, sets a table before me, anoints my head with oil, and makes my cup overflow.8 Mass is where you hear the Shepherd’s voice and where He feeds His flock. With so many voices saying so many different and contradictory things, it takes time to become familiar with our Shepherd’s voice.
Pope Leo’s episcopal motto is In Illo uno unum, meaning “In the One, we are one.” It is through the Eucharist that by the power and working of the Holy Spirit we are made one in the One, Christ Jesus the Lord.
1 Acts 13:52.↩
2 Psalm 30:12.↩
3 Nehemiah 8:10b.↩
4 Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, sec. 431.↩
5 Pope John Paul II. Apostolic Letter Dies Domini, sec 2.↩
6 Hebrews 10:25.↩
7 Acts 2:42.↩
8 See Psalm 23.↩