Sunday, December 16, 2012

The Mass: The Place Where We Are Supposed To PRACTICE Rejoicing In The Lord!


 

(Third Sunday of Advent (C): This homily was given on December 16, 2012 at St. Pius X Church, Westerly, R.I., by Fr. Raymond Suriani.  Read Philippians 4: 4-7; Luke 3: 10-18.)
 
[For the audio version of this homily, click here: Third Sunday of Advent 2012]

 
The other day I came across the following excerpt from a homily by Fr. Roger Landry.  Fr. Landry is a well-known priest from the Diocese of Fall River, Massachusetts.  He wrote:

The vast majority of Catholics do not live the faith with joy. This is something that young people never cease to remind me. When I ask teenagers who don’t come to Mass why they’ve stopped, many respond by saying Mass seems so dead and purposeless. Most of the “old people” they see look “dead” at Mass, and seem to come only because they think they “have to be there.” They’ll point to how many people leave Mass before the end of Mass and ask, “How can Mass be so important if they can’t leave fast enough?” They’ll point to the fact that so few people sing. They’ll describe how few people really wish them a genuine sign of peace. They don’t sense joy; they don’t sense much enthusiasm. And looking out from the pulpit and the altar, I have to say that, sometimes, they’re right on. That’s why this Gaudete Sunday is a gift, to get us to focus on the command God gives us through St. Paul to rejoice always, beginning again today.

The third Sunday of Advent—the one on which we light the pink candle of our Advent wreath—is known as “Gaudete Sunday” as Fr. Landry notes there.  Gaudete is the Latin command to “Rejoice!”  It’s the first word of the entrance antiphon for this Sunday (which is only read at Masses where there’s no music—so you didn’t hear it today).  But it’s also the first word of the instruction that St. Paul gives us in today’s second reading (which you DID hear!)—in this great passage from Philippians 4 where he says, “Rejoice in the Lord always!”

To which many people will immediately respond, “How, in heaven’s name, is that possible?  How can I or anyone else rejoice always?  How can a person rejoice even most of the time?  Now can anyone rejoice after Friday’s horrific events in Newtown, Connecticut?!!!”

Well, first of all, notice the wording of the text.  Notice that St. Paul does not say, “Rejoice in your circumstances always;” nor does he say, “Rejoice in your problems always;” nor does he say, “Rejoice in your disappointments and trials and sicknesses always.”

He says, “Rejoice IN THE LORD always!”

That’s different.

To rejoice in the Lord is not a feeling or an emotion based on what’s going on around us; rather it’s a DECISION!  It’s an act of the will whereby we decide to give praise and glory to God because of who he is and because of what he has done for us in and through his Son, Jesus Christ. 

And the good news is that we can do that regardless of what we’re dealing with at the present moment.  We can rejoice in that way, for example, because the expectation of John the Baptist that we heard about in today’s gospel has been fulfilled: the one who baptizes with the Holy Spirit and fire has come; he’s done his salvific work—and nothing that happens to us in this life can ever change that fact!

Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and forever, as the Letter to the Hebrews reminds us.  And, since that is the case, it is possible for a person to always rejoice.

“But, Fr. Ray, you don’t understand.  I have so many reasons NOT to rejoice—especially at this time of year.” 

To which I respond, “Well that’s precisely why the Mass is so important, and why you need to be at Mass EVERY SUNDAY AND EVERY HOLY DAY—AT LEAST.”

The fact of the matter is, we can all find lots and lots of reasons NOT to rejoice: the tragic events in Newtown; the terrible economy; the corruption in our government; the violence and hedonism in our society; the people we know who are sick; our family members who died recently, or who died during the month of December in years past—and on and on the list goes.

But here, at Mass, we meet our living Lord, Jesus Christ, in word and in sacrament!  Here, at Mass, we have the opportunity to focus on who God is, and on what he has done for us in and through his Son, Jesus Christ—which, as I said a few moments ago, is exactly what we need to focus on if we’re going to be able to rejoice always!

So the bottom line is this: Mass is the place where we are supposed to “practice” rejoicing in the Lord, so that we can then take our rejoicing out there—into the darkness of our world, and into the difficulties of our lives.

It’s supposed to begin HERE!

Of course the real problem is that many Catholics don’t rejoice when they’re here—as Fr. Landry makes clear in that quote I read to you at the beginning of my homily. Listen again to some of his words: When I ask teenagers who don’t come to Mass why they’ve stopped, many respond by saying Mass seems so dead and purposeless. Most of the “old people” they see look “dead” at Mass, and seem to come only because they think they “have to be there.”  [Of course, it should be added that most of the young people don’t look much better.] [These teens will] point to how many people leave Mass before the end of Mass and ask, “How can Mass be so important if [these adults] can’t leave fast enough?” [A very good question!  Obviously, Fr. Landry could also have mentioned those who are habitually late!]  [These teens will] point to the fact that so few people sing. They’ll describe how few people really wish them a genuine sign of peace. They don’t sense joy; they don’t sense much enthusiasm.

If we can’t rejoice at Mass, where Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior, is present to us and with us—and even within us through the Eucharist—then how will we be able to rejoice in places where his presence is not so evident?

The simple answer is, we won’t be able to!  It will be impossible.

If you want to be able to rejoice out there, then you need to practice rejoicing in here.

So let’s resolve to do that—at this Mass and at every Mass—by participating with sincere and heartfelt enthusiasm—from the beginning, and until the end!