Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine's The Church's Year
On this Sunday again, the Church calls on us to rejoice in the Advent of the Redeemer, and at the Introit sings:
INTROIT Rejoice
in the Lord always; again I say, rejoice. Let your modesty be known to
all men: for the Lord is nigh. Be nothing solicitous; but in every thing
by prayer let your requests be made known to God (Phil. 4). Lord, thou
hast blessed thy land; thou bast turned away the captivity of Jacob (Ps.
84). Glory be to the Father and to the Son, and to the Holy
Ghost, as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world
without end. Amen.
COLLECT Incline
Thine ear, O Lord, we beseech Thee, unto our prayers: and enlighten the
darkness of our mind by the grace of thy visitation. Through our
Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, who liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the
Unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end, Amen.
EPISTLE (Phil.
4:4-7). Brethren, rejoice in the Lord always; again I say, rejoice. Let
your modesty be known to all men. The Lord is nigh. Be nothing
solicitous; but in everything, by prayer and supplication with
thanksgiving, let your petitions be made known to God. And the peace of
God, which surpasseth all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in
Christ Jesus our Lord.
What is meant by "rejoicing in the Lord"?
By
"rejoicing in the Lord" is meant rejoicing in the grace of the true
faith we have received, in the hope of obtaining eternal happiness;
rejoicing in the protection of the most High under which we stand; and
in the persecution for justice's sake in which Christ Himself exhorts us
to rejoice, and in which the Apostle Paul gloried (II Cor. 7:4).
What else does St. Paul teach in this epistle?
He exhorts
us to give all a good example by a modest and edifying life, to which
we should be directed by the remembrance of God's presence and His
coming to judgment (Chrysostom. 33, in Joann.); he warns us
against solicitude about temporal affairs, advising us to cast our care
on God, who will never abandon us in our needs, if we entreat Him with
confidence and humility.
In what does "the Peace of God" consist?
It consists in a good conscience (Ambrose), in which St. Paul gloried and rejoiced beyond measure (II Cor. 1:12). This
peace of the soul sustained all the martyrs, and consoled many others
who suffered for justice's sake. Thus St. Tibertius said to the tyrant:
"We count all pain as naught, for our conscience is at peace." There
cannot be imagined a greater joy than that which proceeds from the peace
of a good conscience. It must be experienced to be understood.
ASPIRATION The peace of God, that surpasseth all understanding, preserve our hearts in Christ Jesus. Amen.
COMFORT AND RELIEF IN SORROW
“Is any one troubled, let him pray" (Jas. 5:13).
There is
no greater or more powerful comfort in sorrow than in humble and
confiding prayer, to complain to God of our wants and cares, as did the
sorrowful Anna, mother of the prophet Samuel, (I Kings 10) and the
chaste Susanna when she was falsely accused of adultery and sentenced to
death (Dan. 13:35). So the pious King Ezechias complained in prayer of
the severe oppression with which he was threatened by Senacherib (IV
Kings 19:14). So also King Josaphat made his trouble known to God only,
saying: But as we know not what to do, we can only turn our eyes on Thee
(11 Para. 20:12). They all received aid and comfort from God. Are you
sad and in trouble? Lift up your soul with David and say: To Thee I have
lifted up my eyes, who dwellest in heaven. Behold as the eyes of
servants are on the hands of their masters, as the eyes of the handmaid
are on the hands of her mistress: so are our eyes unto the Lord our God,
until He shall have mercy on us (Ps. 122:1-3). Give joy to the soul of
Thy servant, for to Thee, O Lord, I have lifted up my soul (Ps. 85:4).
GOSPEL (Jn.
1:19-28). At that time the Jews sent from Jerusalem priests and Levites
to John, to ask him, Who art thou? And he confessed, and did not deny;
and he confessed: I am not the Christ. And they asked him, What then?
Art thou Elias? And he said: I am not. Art thou the prophet? And he
answered, No. They said therefore unto him, Who art thou, that we may
give an answer to them that sent us? what sayst thou of thyself? He
said, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the
way of the Lord, as said the prophet Isaias. And they that were sent
were of the Pharisees. And they asked him, and said to him: Why then
dost thou baptize, if thou be not Christ, nor Elias, nor the prophet?
John answered them, saying: I baptize with water: but there hath stood
one in the midst of you, whom you know not: the same is he that shall
come after me, who is preferred before me, the latchet of whose shoe I
am not worthy to loose. These things were done in Bethania beyond the
Jordan, where John was baptizing.
Why did the Jews send messengers to St. John to ask him who he was?
Partly
because of their curiosity, when they saw St. John leading such a pure,
angelic and penitential life; partly, as St. Chrysostom says, out of
envy, because St. John preached with such spiritual force, baptized and
exhorted the people to penance, that the inhabitants of Jerusalem came
to him in great numbers; partly, and principally, they were impelled by
the providence of God to demand publicly of St. John, if he were the
Messiah, and thus be directed to Christ that they might be compelled to
acknowledge Him as the Messiah, or have no excuse for rejecting Him.
Why did the Jews ask St. John, if he were not Elias or the prophet?
The Jews
falsely believed that the Redeemer was to come into this world but once,
then with great glory, and that Elias or one of the old prophets would
come before Him, to prepare His way, as Malachias (4:5) had prophesied
of St. John; so when St. John said of himself that he was not the
Messiah, they asked him, if he were not then Elias or one of the
prophets. But Elias, who was taken alive from this world in a fiery
chariot, will not reappear until just before the second coming of
Christ.
Why did St. John say, he was not Elias or the Prophet?
Because he
was not Elias, and, in reality, not a prophet in the Jewish sense of
the word, but more than a prophet, because he announced that Christ had
come, and pointed Him out.
Why does St. John call himself "the voice of one crying in the wilderness"?
Because in
his humility, he desired to acknowledge that he was only an instrument
through which the Redeemer announced to the abandoned and hopeless Jews
the consolation of the Messiah, exhorting them to bear worthy fruits of
penance.
How do we bear worthy fruits of penance?
We bear
fruits of penance, when after our conversion, we serve God and justice
with the same zeal with which we previously served the devil and
iniquity; when we love God as fervently as we once loved the flesh-that
is, the desires of the flesh-and the pleasures of the world; when we
give our members to justice as we once gave them to malice and impurity
(Rom. 6:19), when the mouth that formerly uttered improprieties, when
the ears that listened to detraction or evil speech, when the eyes that
looked curiously upon improper objects, now rejoice in the utterance of
words pleasing to God, to hear and to see things dear to Him; when the
appetite that was given to the luxury of eating and drinking, now
abstains; when the hands give back what they have stolen; in a word,
when we put off the old man, who was corrupted, and put on the new man,
who is created in justice and holiness of truth (Eph. 4:22-24).
What was the baptism administered by St. John, and what were its effects?
The
baptism administered by John was only a baptism of penance for
forgiveness of sins (Lk. 3:3). The ignorant Jews not considering the
greatness of their transgressions, St. John came exhorting them to
acknowledge their sins, and do penance for them; that being converted,
and truly contrite, they might seek their Redeemer, and thus obtain
remission of their offences. We must then conclude, that St. John's
baptism was only a ceremony or initiation, by which the Jews enrolled
themselves as his disciples to do penance, as a preparation for the
remission of sin by means of the second baptism, viz., of Jesus Christ.
What else can be learned from this gospel?
We learn
from it to be always sincere, especially at the tribunal of penance, and
to practice the necessary virtue of humility, by which, in reply to the
questions of the Jews, St. John confessed the truth openly and without
reserve, as shown by the words: The latchet of whose shoe I am not
worthy to loose, as the lowest of Christ's servants, giving us an
example of humility and sincerity, which should induce us always to
speak the truth, and not only not to seek honor, but to give to God all
the honor shown us by man. Have you not far more reason than John, who
was such a great saint, to esteem yourself but little, and to humble
yourself before God and man? "My son," says Tobias (4:14), "never suffer
pride to reign in thy mind, or in thy words: for from it all perdition
took its beginning."
ASPIRATION O Lord,
banish from my heart all envy, jealousy and pride. Grant me instead, to
know myself and Thee, that by the knowledge of my nothingness, misery
and vices, I may always remain unworthy in my own eyes, and that by the
contemplation of Thy infinite perfections, I may seek to prize Thee
above all, to love and to glorify Thee, and practice charity towards my
neighbor. Amen. |
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