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  • the Pope's handbook for Holy Week

    A Handbook for Holy Week

    An introduction to each moment of the sacred Triduum, given personally
    by Joseph Ratzinger, pope and theologian. The catechesis he addressed to
    the faithful at the general audience on Wednesday, April 8, 2009

    by Benedict XVI

    Dear brothers and sisters, Holy Week, which for us Christians is the
    most important week of the year, offers us the opportunity to be
    immersed in the central events of Redemption, to relive the Paschal
    Mystery, the great mystery of the faith. Beginning tomorrow afternoon,
    with the Mass "In Coena Domini," the solemn liturgical rites will help
    us to meditate in a more lively manner on the Passion, Death and
    Resurrection of the Lord in the days of the Holy Paschal Triduum,
    fulcrum of the entire liturgical year. May divine grace open our hearts
    to comprehend the inestimable gift that salvation is, obtained for us by
    Christ's sacrifice.

    We find this immense gift wonderfully narrated in a famous hymn
    contained in the Letter to the Philippians (cf. 2:6-11), on which we
    meditated several times in Lent. The Apostle reviews, both in an
    essential and effective manner, the whole mystery of the history of
    salvation referring to Adam's pride who, not being God, wanted to be
    like God. And he contrasts this pride of the first man, which all of us
    feel a bit in our being, with the humility of the true Son of God who,
    becoming man, did not hesitate to take upon himself all the weaknesses
    of the human being, except sin, and pushed himself to the profundity of
    death. This descent to the last profundity of the Passion and Death is
    then followed by his exaltation, the true glory, the glory of the love
    that went all the way to the end. And that is why it is right -- as Paul
    says -- that "at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and
    on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ
    is Lord!" (2:10-11). With these words, St. Paul refers to a prophecy of
    Isaiah where God says: I am the Lord, to me every knee shall bow in
    heaven and on earth (cf. Isaiah 45: 23). This -- says Paul -- is also
    true for Jesus Christ. He really is, in his humility, in the true
    greatness of his love, the Lord of the world and before him every knee
    truly bows.

    How marvelous, and at the same time amazing, is this mystery! We can
    never meditate this reality sufficiently. Jesus, though being God, did
    not want to make of his divine prerogatives an exclusive possession; he
    did not want to use his being God, his glorious dignity and power, as an
    instrument of triumph and sign of distance from us. On the contrary, "he
    emptied himself" assuming our miserable and weak human condition -- in
    this regard, Paul uses a quite meaningful Greek verb to indicate the
    "kenosis", this descent of Jesus. The divine form (morphe) is hidden in
    Christ under the human form, namely, under our reality marked by
    suffering, poverty, human limitations and death. The radical and true
    sharing of our nature, a sharing in everything except sin, leads him to
    that frontier that is the sign of our finiteness -- death. But all this
    was not the fruit of a dark mechanism or a blind fatality: It was
    instead his free choice, by his generous adherence to the salvific plan
    of the Father. And the death which he went out to meet -- adds Paul --
    was that of the cross, the most humiliating and degrading that one can
    imagine. The Lord of the universe did all this out of love for us: out
    of love he willed to "empty himself" and make himself our brother; out
    of love he shared our condition, that of every man and every woman. In
    this connection, Theodoret of Cyrus, a great witness of the Eastern
    tradition, writes: "Being God and God by nature and having equality with
    God, he did not retain this as something great, as do those who have
    received some honor beyond their merits, but concealing his merits, he
    chose the most profound humility and took the form of a human being"
    (Commentary on the Letter to the Philippians, 2:6-7).

    HOLY THURSDAY

    As prelude to the Paschal Triduum, which begins with the
    thought-provoking afternoon rites of Holy Thursday, is the solemn Chrism
    Mass, which the bishop celebrates in the morning with his presbytery,
    and in the course of which at the same time the priestly promises are
    renewed, made on the day of ordination. It is a gesture of great value,
    an occasion all the more propitious in which the priests confirm their
    fidelity to Christ who chose them as his ministers. Moreover, this
    priestly meeting assumes a particular meaning, because it is almost a
    preparation to the Priestly Year, which I have proclaimed on the
    occasion of the 150th anniversary of the death of the holy Curé of Ars
    and which will begin next June 19. Blessed also in the Chrism Mass will
    be the oil of the sick and of catechumens, and the chrism will be
    consecrated. These are rites that signify symbolically the fullness of
    Christ's priesthood and the ecclesial communion that must animate
    Christian people, gathered for the Eucharistic sacrifice and vivified in
    the unity of the gift of the Holy Spirit.

    In the afternoon Mass, called "In Coena Domini," the Church commemorates
    the institution of the Eucharist, the ministerial priesthood and the new
    commandment of charity, left by Jesus to his disciples. St. Paul gives
    one of the earliest testimonies of all that happened in the Cenacle,
    vigil of the Lord's Passion. "The Lord Jesus," he wrote, at the
    beginning of the 50's years, based on a text he received from the Lord's
    own realm, "on the night when he was betrayed took bread, and when he
    had given thanks, he broke it, and said, 'This is my body which is for
    you. Do this in remembrance of me.' In the same way also the cup, after
    supper, saying, 'This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as
    often as you drink it, in remembrance of me'" (1 Corinthians 11:23-25).
    Words charged with mystery, which manifest clearly the will of Christ:
    Under the species of bread and wine he renders himself present in his
    body given and with his bloodshed. It is the sacrifice of the new and
    definitive covenant offered to all, without distinction of race or
    culture. And from this sacramental rite, which he entrusts to the Church
    as supreme proof of his love, Jesus appointed his disciples as
    ministers, and those who followed them in the course of the centuries.
    Holy Thursday is, therefore, a renewed invitation to render thanks to
    God for the supreme gift of the Eucharist, to be received with devotion
    and to be adored with lively faith. Because of this, the Church
    encourages, after the celebration of Holy Mass, watching in the presence
    of the Most Holy Sacrament, recalling the sad hour that Jesus passed in
    solitude and prayer in Gethsemane, before being arrested and then being
    condemned to death.

    GOOD FRIDAY

    And so we come to Good Friday, day of the Passion and crucifixion of the
    Lord. Every year, placing ourselves in silence before Jesus nailed to
    the wood of the cross, we realize how full of love were the words he
    pronounced on the eve, in the course of the Last Supper. "This is my
    blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many" (Mark 14:24). Jesus
    willed to offer his life in sacrifice for the remission of humanity's
    sins. Just as before the Eucharist, so before the Passion and Death of
    Jesus on the cross the mystery is unfathomable to reason. We are placed
    before something that humanly might seem absurd: a God who not only is
    made man, with all man's needs, not only suffers to save man, burdening
    himself with all the tragedy of humanity, but dies for man.

    Christ's death recalls the accumulation of sorrows and evils that beset
    humanity of all times: the crushing weight of our dying, the hatred and
    violence that again today bloody the earth. The Lord's Passion continues
    in the suffering of men. As Blaise Pascal correctly writes, "Jesus will
    be in agony until the end of the world; one must not sleep during this
    time" (Pensées, 553). If Good Friday is a day full of sadness, and hence
    at the same time, all the more propitious a day to reawaken our faith,
    to strengthen our hope and courage so that each one of us will carry his
    cross with humility, trust and abandonment in God, certain of his
    support and victory. The liturgy of this day sings: "O Crux, ave, spes
    unica" (Hail, O cross, our only hope)."

    HOLY SATURDAY AND EASTER VIGIL

    This hope is nourished in the great silence of Holy Saturday, awaiting
    the resurrection of Jesus. On this day the Churches are stripped and no
    particular liturgical rites are provided. The Church watches in prayer
    like Mary, and together with Mary, sharing the same feelings of sorrow
    and trust in God. Justly recommended is to preserve throughout the day a
    prayerful climate, favorable to meditation and reconciliation; the
    faithful are encouraged to approach the sacrament of penance, to be able
    to participate truly renewed in the Easter celebrations.

    The recollection and silence of Holy Saturday lead us at night to the
    solemn Easter Vigil, "mother of all vigils," when the singing of the joy
    of the resurrection of Christ will erupt in all the churches and
    communities. Proclaimed once again will be the victory of light over
    darkness, of life over death, and the Church will rejoice in the
    encounter with her Lord. We will thus enter into the climate of the
    Easter of Resurrection.

    Dear brothers and sisters, let us dispose ourselves to live the Holy
    Triduum intensely, to participate ever more profoundly in the mystery of
    Christ. We are accompanied on this journey by the Holy Virgin, who in
    silence followed her son Jesus to Calvary, taking part with great sorrow
    in his sacrifice, thus cooperating with the mystery of the Redemption
    and becoming Mother of all believers (cf. John 19:25-27). Together with
    her we will enter the Cenacle, we will stay at the foot of the Cross, we
    will watch next to the dead Christ, awaiting with hope the dawn of the
    radiant day of the Resurrection. In this perspective, I now express to
    all of you the most cordial wishes for a happy and holy Easter, together
    with your families, parishes and communities.

    --
    Christian Allègre
    allegre@sympatico. ca
    Eo Longius

    __._,_.___

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