Thursday, August 29, 2013

Question of the Week




Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time Seeking humility

Reading I Sirach 3:17–18, 20, 28–29         (humility)
Reading II Hebrews 12:18–19, 22–24a       (God the judge; Jesus the mediator)
Gospel Luke 14:1, 7–14                            (a lesson in humility)

Key Passage   Jesus said, “But when you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. And you will be blessed, because they cannot repay you, for you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous.” (Luke 14:13–14)


Adult           Has the hunger for status and influence in the world around you endangered your life as a Christian?
Child                    Does it make you a better person to be chosen first for a team or some other honor? Why or why not?

Twenty-Second Sunday Ordinary Time C

The challenge of racism

One of my favorites from Broadway was a show called "Avenue Q," a bawdy adult musical comedy with nearly life-sized puppets.
 In "Avenue Q" there is a song called "Everyone's A Little Bit Racist." The song's words include these:

"Everyone's a little bit racist sometimes.
Doesn't mean we go around committing hate crimes.
Look around and you will find no one's really color blind.
Maybe it's a fact we all should face
Everyone makes judgments based on race."
There is no excuse for racism of any kind.

Our gospel lesson today is very clear on this issue: 
God's heavenly banquet is open to all and if we attend and except that everyone at this banquet will look like us, we will be very disappointed.
Everyone's a little bit racist.
There's much truth in that not so silly song.
 And it all drives me back to the communion table which all Christians share.

When I was in Rome, I went to a church on Sunday which had a mix of people from all over the world..
As this service began, I wondered why we should even share Holy Communion, since community among our group was almost non-existent.

As we were preparing for communion, each of us was invited to pray the Lord's Prayer in our own language.
There, finally, in a cacophony of languages and sounds, we found our unity in Jesus Christ, in prayer and then in Christ's Holy Supper.
It was truly a Pentecost moment of unity in Our Lord in the midst of diversity in much else.

And that is how Christians come to the communion table this day or anytime we celebrate the sacrament of Eucharist.
Still broken people to be sure.
A little bit or even more than a little bit racist.
Wanting to welcome others, but often not knowing how.
Sometimes fearful,  sometimes hopeful.
Sometimes hurting, sometimes confident.
Sometimes bored, sometimes excited.
Bringing all our hopes and fears with us.
And all still welcome at God's table of grace today and every Sunday.
All still loved and forgiven by our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
And to that all we can say is thanks be to God!

O God, help us to be welcoming people.
Help us to welcome all people at your table.
Help us to understand that your table, your table of grace and love is open and welcoming to everyone—
those a lot like us and those who are very different than us are all welcome at your table
Amen.


Creed: One God and Father




The very first words of the Creed are I believe. They are meant to be spoken aloud in public assembly by the Body of Christ, because God is a very public God, offering a public challenge to all the other gods littering the public square.
Most folk in our culture take it for granted that there is only one God. But there's no particular reason that should be the case. Though our ancestors believed in one God as a matter of reason and revelation, the average American believes in one God as a matter of custom and unthinking cultural inertia.
It should be no surprise that some increasingly popular movements are trying to revive polytheism just as popular movements are trying to promote atheism. As such movements arise, the Church goes on saying what God's people have said since Moses: the Lord is one.
Polytheism, the belief in many gods, is really an attempt to chop little godlets out of the one true God. It takes this or that favorite aspect of the divine nature and pretends that's all there is to God. Falsehood and false gods are born when a truth gets ripped out of the whole truth and is taken in isolation.
One of the functions of the Creed is to help us rightly order our knowledge of God. Jesus' ultimate revelation to us is that God is not so much Master, Lord, King, Ground of Being, Author of Creation, or Ruler of Time and Space as he is "my Father and your Father." All these other titles have their place. But the supreme revelation remains that God is Father.
The Creed states that God is Father before it mentions that God is almighty. That's because the fatherhood of God explains what we overlook about his omnipotence. For us, omnipotence is often understood to mean that God is bound to take the path of least pain and is especially bound to see that we do, too.
Psalm 91:1-2 is a favorite of many Catholics: "You who dwell in the shelter of the Most High, who abide in the shadow of the Almighty, Say to the Lord, 'My refuge and fortress, my God
in whom I trust.'" We reflexively hear this psalm saying, "If you are right with God, he
won't let anything bad happen to you."
But in this very psalm are the verses the devil used to tempt Jesus to leap off the Temple (with the implication that if God would not save him from pain, he's not much of a Beloved Son). Jesus rejected the lie. He knew that the might of God was not displayed by the absence of suffering. God's might didn't pass around the agony of the Cross. The Almighty was never mightier than when he submitted to death—and conquered it.
Of course, the first great act of the Father's omnipotent power was creation. One implication of the doctrine of creation is that if God wanted to destroy the universe, he would not have to do anything. He would have to stop doing something.
Creation does not just refer to something that happened with the Big Bang. It refers to the fact that the universe—every nanosecond and square millimeter of it—is held in being right now by the present act of God.
God wills you—now. And he does it not out of some need to be entertained, but out of sheer, lavish—one might even say playful—grace. All that exists does so because God loves it into being from nothing and maintains it in being so that it does not lapse back into nothingness.
The Creed also tells us God is the Creator of all that is "visible and invisible." By "invisible," the Church Fathers who struggled with the Creed's language in the fourth century primarily meant what Paul referred to as "thrones, dominations, principalities, or powers" (Col 1:16). It's the whole angelic realm as well as the natural world we see. Everything that exists is made by God, and, therefore, everything is interesting and interrelated.

Catholic theology still is expressed this way today. All things, not just "religious stuff," are fit for us to learn about and to give glory to God for by the fact of their being. For God the Father is the Creator of all things, from Aardvark to Zebra.


Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Question of the week for September 1, 2013


Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time
Seeking humility

Reading I Sirach 3:17–18, 20, 28–29 (humility)
Reading II Hebrews 12:18–19, 22–24a (God the judge; Jesus the mediator)
Gospel Luke 14:1, 7–14 (a lesson in humility)

Key Passage Jesus said, “But when you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. And you will be blessed, because they cannot repay you, for you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous.” (Luke 14:13–14)

Adult: Has the hunger for status and influence in the world around you endangered your life as a Christian?


Child: Does it make you a better person to be chosen first for a team or some other honor? Why or why not?

Twenty-first Sunday Ordinary Time C



August, 25, 2013


Several cotton farmers were whiling away a winter afternoon around the potbellied stove.
They soon became entangled in a heated discussion on the merits of their respective religions.
The eldest of the farmers had been sitting quietly, just listening, when the group turned to him and demanded,"Who's right, old Jim? Which one of these religions is the right one?"
"Well,"said Jim thoughtfully,"you know there are three ways to get from here to the cotton gin.
You can go right over the big hill. That's shorter but it's a powerful climb.
You can go around the east side of the hill. That's not too far, but the road is rougher and difficult.
Or you can go around the west side of the hill, which is the longest way, but the easiest."
"But you know," he said, looking them squarely in the eye,"when you get there, the gin man won't ask you how you came or what religion you believe.
He just asks, 'Man, how good is your cotton?'"

Jesus uses the parable of the locked door to explain to his followers that there is more to being a follower of Jesus than they might think.
The parable of the locked door refers to those who tarry in accepting Jesus.
Jesus says very clearly that it is not enough to follow Jesus, eat meals with him and listen to him.
We cannot claim discipleship by mere affiliation.
There is something more that has to be done.
Having once accepted Jesus' invitation, each one has to live by his teachings every moment of every day.
Those who do not remain faithful to him will be left outside.
Jesus is warning people of faith not to take their salvation for granted.
What he does say is that salvation is not guaranteed for anyone.We are your people” will not be good enough.
What Jesus is saying is that no one, no matter who he is, has an absolute guarantee of being saved, of being accepted by God.
No one is saved by claiming identity with a particular group or by carrying a particular name tag.
So, merelybeing descended from Abraham, Jacob and all the prophets” as the Jews were - did not count;
there is no such thing as national salvation.
The narrow gate indicates that salvation is not cheap.
We need to discipline ourselves, use the things that happen to us to help us grow, rather than get us down.
We need to remember that the tested people, the people with the most problems, the last people, may be the ones who get in the door first.
Those are the people that will easily slip through the narrow door.
Indeed, many are lost because they do not choose the narrow door.
They prefer a religion that is not too demanding, one that does not make it mandatory to, say, merely show up for Mass every Sunday.
We may be surprised to discover that some who seem less worthy will enter the kingdom before us.
To end, salvation is a gift from a God which must be willingly and fully embraced.
Christian life is a daily struggle to rise to a higher spiritual plain.
It is wrong to sit back and relax after we have made a personal commitment to Christ.
We cannot remain stagnant in our loyalty to God’s kingdom; unless we move forward we shall move backward.
And this is the Good News of today.


Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Question of the week for August 25, 2013



Twenty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time

The narrow door

Reading I                Isaiah 66:18–21                    (gathering of the nations)
Reading II              Hebrews 12:5–7, 11–13        (the discipline of God)
Gospel                    Luke 13:22–30                     (the narrow door)

Key Passage            Jesus answered them, “Strive to enter through the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will try to enter and will not be able.” (Luke 13:24)

Adult                     What daily choices are you making that will allow you to be recognized at the doorway of the reign of God?


Child                      What good habits are you practicing in order to be a good Christian?

Why Creeds?

The changes to the Roman Missal have been a struggle for many priests -- including myself. Many more changes affect the clergy than they do the laity. However, one complaint I have heard more often than any other is about the changes in our Creed. I have discovered a series of articles on the Creed that, while not addressing all the complaints, do explain the Creed in a way I have found helpful. I believe they might be enlightening for you too. Following is the first of the series:



 The best summary of the core teachings of the Catholic Church is found in the Nicene Creed. It was crafted in ancient Christianity and is proclaimed at Sunday Mass. In this series, we’ll be taking a walk through that creed, looking at its elements and unpacking it.
I became a Christian with the help of a small group of non-denominational believers on my college dorm floor who believed that "the Bible alone" was suf­ficient to know Christ's revelation and to live as he wanted us to.
We had a great fear of the word religion. And creeds seemed to be a dose of religion in chemical purity: an attempt to put the living God in a box.
The problem came as we tried to live out the gospel in the real world. As time goes on your prayer group graduates and tries to become a local church. As it starts to attract a few strangers from the neighborhood who aren't part of your cozy circle of friends, things get complicated.
Fairly quickly, somebody asks, "What do you believe?" and you no lon­ger can rely on a sort of trust that you and your friends are decent folk who wouldn't believe or do anything at odds with the Gospel. You have to try to articulate what, precisely, you believe in a way that is intelligible to somebody who doesn't know you.
And so we found ourselves, a group of perhaps 30 young adults, huddled in a room with a blackboard, trying to summarize what we, as Bible-believing, charismatic Christians, believed in: a "Statement of Faith." It was, in its own way, a hilarious afternoon (at least in retrospect). The chalkboard was soon filled with different clauses and points of doctrine, connected in a baffling web of arrows that looked like a football diagram in a Goofy cartoon. After several
hours, we gave it up as a bad job and went home.    

A week or so later, the pastor just pounded out something on his own typewriter about how we believed in the Bible, God the Father, Jesus his Son, the Holy Spirit, and about our being a com­munity of Spirit-filled servants. I thought to myself dimly, This reminds me of something I've heard somewhere. My lack of familiarity with historical Christianity had prevented me from having much knowledge of the Apostles' or Nicene Creeds. I didn't even know Catholics recited the Creed at Mass every Sunday! When I did discover the Creeds a few years later, it began to dawn on me that we could have saved a lot of time just copying them instead of reinventing this wheel with corners on it.
It is worth noting that pagans didn't have creeds. You don't need a creed for a collection of tales about gods in Asgaard, Olympus, or the Land East of the Sun and West of the Moon. The myths of Greece or Rome or the folktales of Germany, Asia, or the Great Plains required only poets and bards, not creeds. It was only when heaven began to upset the apple cart by involving itself in the mundane day-to-day events of a very real group of humans called Israel, whom the Lord God had brought from Egypt, that something like a creed began to emerge.
Suddenly something had happened, not once upon a time, but to a specific group of people in history, who lived at a specific address. Moreover, these people were constantly being pressured by their neighbors and by their own sinful tendencies to forget what had happened. And so, their history became one long and careful act of remembering, not imagining—designed to make sure that their past was not lost.

When the Church began, that need to remember and summarize what had happened continued. And since what had happened was so strange—and so fraught with the possibility of being misunderstood in a thousand ways—the Church also immediately was committed to creating summaries of the faith that, though initially brief ("Jesus is Lord"), expanded in length over time to make sure that the broad contours of the basic story and its meaning were not lost. That's because the central command around which the entire Church was built was "Do this in memory of me." The Creed keeps our memory clear.


Monday, August 19, 2013

Twentieth Sunday of Ordinary Time C



August 18, 2013

Click here for scripture readings


Today's readings invite us to explore one of the most perplexing issues for Christian people: dealing with conflict, division and anger.
I know, from my earliest years in family and school, I was taught that good boys and girls always get along, are always well-liked and never get angry and fight with one another.
Having five younger brothers gave my mom and dad plenty of opportunities to remind me of this!
Well, it seems clear from today's readings that Jeremiah and Jesus were not "good boys."
Jesus and Jeremiah both offended many good religious people of their societies.
Jesus speaks of bringing divisions even within family
Jeremiah was put down the cistern by people who thought they knew God's will better than he did.
The people who opposed Jesus and Jeremiah were not all bad; they, for the most part, had strong religious convictions and were sincere in what they believed.
They just simply believed that Jesus and Jeremiah were wrong about God!
And, like many of us today, they would rather "shoot the messenger" than listen to what might prove to be an unwelcome, unpleasant and /or difficult message
Just look at what made them angry at Jesus and Jeremiah:
Jesus challenged beliefs about how to know God.
He preached that God was forgiving, not vengeful
Jeremiah advocated surrendering Jerusalem to the Babylonians, saying God's will would be worked through the enemy.
Just think how that way of thinking would go over today in the U.S. where patriotism is often a stronger value, even among Christians, than the Gospel
The thing is, people who are very sure about religious matters often do not want to listen to those who say God's Word is different from their perception of it.
For instance, the very people who today still consider our black brothers and sisters inferior cloak themselves in Christianity; most would admit to being very faithful Christians.
Raymond Brown, one of our most respected Catholic scripture scholars, cautions all of us who preach and teach the Bible to make this aspect of Jesus' teachings clear:
The constant message of the Gospels is that Jesus offended genuinely religious people
And we have to realize that he would continue to upset religious people of every generation if they understood the radical challenge of his message; indeed, he would offend many of us in this assembly today.
Jesus taught metanoia, with which he prefaced his proclamation of the kingdom, if it be translated literally as "change your mind", not "repent" as is often translated, catches the offense.
Religious people always seem to "know" what God wants, so telling the religious Jews of Jesus' time or the religious Christians of our time that God might want something radically different from what they have been doing could and can and does create fierce hostility toward the message.
The tendency for us when faced with these challenges is to think: "Yes, Jesus would offend those (translated "others") who think differently from the way I do."
When perhaps we should be thinking: "With my religious views Jesus might very well offend me."
For instance, what are you views on capital punishment?
And how do you make them correspond to what Jesus says about forgiveness 70 X 70?
What are your views on gays and lesbians? 
And how do you fit your view into Jesus' acceptance and love for the despised and hated people of his time?
Like Jeremiah, we have been taught that there are truths we should not speak because they would be demoralizing.
Like Jesus, we know that the reign of God issues an imperative call that relativises all other relationships C of kinship, of race, of class
Following The Gospel call often stretches these other relationships, making us reach for a point where all become father and mother and brother and sister to us.
In the process we discover that our anger and our love are really different faces of the same holy energy.
Adrienne Rich writes:

Anger and tenderness: my selves.
...they breathe in me
as angels, not polarities.
Anger and tenderness: the spider's genius
to spin and weave in the same action
from her own boy, anywhere

.






.


Nineteenth Sunday Ordinary Time C



Divided




Christians have always believed in a God who is concerned with the natural world.
We have prayed to God from the depths of coal mines to the heights of Everest and from outer space.
We have blessed ships and planes in God’s name, built soaring cathedrals to the honor and glory of the Almighty, and even equated scientific achievements to God’s guidance and blessing.
These are all material things, because we believe in a material God.

Today’s readings cause us to step back for a moment and consider God in another light, as one who is beyond the material.
In the passage from Isaiah, God castigates the people of Sodom because they have allowed material things such as incense and sacrifices of animals to become more important than their relationship with God.
 God defines the relationship as being centered on justice and care for orphans, not expensive feasts and liturgies, as God commands the people to “seek justice, rescue the oppressed, defend the orphan, plead for the widow.”

The quality here is not material, but a spirituality that deeply honors a God who cares passionately for the whole of creation and doesn’t need to be appeased with sacrifice when things are going badly.
It’s not about God; it’s about us.
And God expects us to address the things that are amiss, not fix them through incantations.

However, we continue to write a check for the hungry without learning why there is hunger in the world.
We pass legislation that addresses immigration reform without wanting to know why people want so badly to come to America that they are willing to risk imprisonment and deportation to do it, leaving their families behind while they work to send money home.
The truth of the causes for both of these issues has as much to do with our demands for cheap goods and food as anything else.
We cannot appease God while we try to have everything we want.

In our gospel reading today, Jesus addresses this issue of how we are to live with God:
“Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.
Sell your possessions, and give alms.
Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys.
For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

Recently a conversation took place in a coffee shop.
A woman with a loud voice revealed how frustrated she had been because she couldn’t find a parking spot.
She then related how she had loudly prayed, “OK, God, I give up. You find me a parking place or I’m going home.”
As she drove around the block for the fourth time a place opened up right in front of the coffee shop.
Her friend, a rather quiet woman, smiled and then shared how she had been praying for weeks for her friend who had received a bad prognosis for her recurring cancer.
She had just spoken to her friend that morning and learned that the doctors were now confident she would recover.
Both of these women were sincere, but the one who asked for healing for her friend knows what God’s power is for – it’s not for finding parking places!

We are not going to get very far with God as long as we understand the Kingdom as material rather than spiritual.
We are not going to have much of a relationship with God when our weekends are spent spending the money we have earned on more material things.
Sabbath is not shopping; it is rest.
It is time set aside for us to enjoy quiet, rest and refreshment.

Sabbath is the rest that helps us to prepare for the return of the Son of Man, the final breaking in of the kingdom.
We are given the commandment to observe the Sabbath for our better selves.
We are given the space to rest, restore our spiritual lives, and avoid being completely swamped by the world’s material goods.
Nothing that rusts or wears out will enter the kingdom of heaven.
We need to be able to leave it all behind.

Outside of these readings but deeply inside their message, is the great voice of the Creator reminding us how much we are loved, not for what we have, but for who we are.
We are treasures, servants who are blessed by the Holy One.
 Our economic standing, our homes and wealth are of no account to God.
What matters is our lives.
How we live, how we approach justice, care for the poor among us, and how we treat one another is the bottom line for judgment.
Our success in worldly things will mean nothing.

Summer is a good time to take another look at all that we possess and inventory in our hearts and minds the spiritual treasures we have, the friends who love us without condition, the church that keeps us in communion with each other and God, the beauty of the material world that belongs to every human being.
It is a good time to look up at the stars in awe,
 and remember that the God who made us also made them,
but they are nothing compared with the treasure we have of being loved by that same God who asks us to show that love and care to every person we meet


Eighteenth Sunday Ordinary Time C


Miser



It is summer!
Today is the fourth of August, and for many it is tough going.
No matter where you live in the United States, summer and August make for some uncomfortable days. It gets hot and dry.
Vacations are used up; school is almost ready to begin.
Early August is an in-between time and it is easy to feel a little worn, a little down, a little tired.
So the church serves up a great text to boost our spirits and help us keep going. Here in early August, in the middle of summer, we get the spiritual equivalent of a supervitamin.
I will take the liberty of creating a paraphrase for today’s text about being raised with Christ.
The writer of Colossians seems to say, “If you have been raised with Christ, then live like it!
Don’t get dragged down into ordinary, casual living.
Live like people who are alive in Christ.
Remember how good you look in the new clothes Christ has put on you.
Walk with a spring in your step and a song in your heart.
You have been raised with Christ.”
In the dog days of summer this is a great text to take to heart.

Living like we have been raised with Christ means to take faith off the shelf and onto the street.
It means to realize in fresh ways that the Christian faith is not so much about what we know as it is about what we do.
Think of faith as a verb and not a noun.
 Let’s consider how the life raised with Christ might look in these days.

When we are raised with Christ we can dare to live tomorrow’s life today.
We can stop putting off living the best lives we are capable of.
We no longer have to make cheap and easy compromise with our best selves that says, “One day when things are right, I will do this or I will love more or I will be more kind or trust more.”
Today is the day to live like this.
Because we have been raised with Christ, we can take the future and live it now.
We can dare to make real the petition of the Lord’s Prayer for the kingdom to come on earth as it already has in heaven.
We can dare to live lovingly in a world in love with war and destruction.
We can dare to live generously in a world choked by stinginess.
We can dare to offer cups of cold water to strangers whom everyone else fears. Let the experience of being raised with Christ intoxicate you so that you dare to live as though tomorrow is today.

If you have been raised with Christ, do something for the good of the world.
Don’t get weighed down by the mundane concerns of life.
Keep scanning the horizon and working for the kingdom of God.
A college professor once told his students, “All around you, people will be tiptoeing through life, just to arrive at death safely.
But dear children, do not tiptoe. Run, hop, skip, or dance; just don’t tiptoe.”
 Bored people tiptoe through life.
The antidote for boredom is to give ourselves to something larger than ourselves.

Have you ever had an idea pop into your head about how to do something or create something that would make life better for others?
I am sure you have.
When that happens, usually another voice starts in our heads saying that the idea is not practical, or no one will listen, or we should not be so foolish.
We should just get back to doing what we know and are familiar with. Unfortunately, too many of us do just that and we start tiptoeing toward death. It is a tragic way to live.

I believe that people who have been raised with Christ have the power to create a new world.
The challenge of faithfulness is to live that power every day; to stay so focused on the resurrection experience
that we know we have overcome all obstacles and can dare to live with holy boldness because of a Savior who walks with us every step of the way.

It is summer.
The days are long and at times oppressively hot.
To hot and tired people comes the challenge to reclaim the experience of being raised with Christ in order to know his energy and aliveness for today’s ministry.
 A minister friend of mine related a story that he says is true and that illustrates what being raised with Christ means today.
An Episcopal priest, dressed in civilian clothes, walked into a motorcycle shop to look over the latest in two-wheel travel options.
As he stood on the showroom floor wishing he could afford a large and powerful motorcycle, a salesman began to talk to him.
The conversation went something like this.
“Hey, dude. That’s some bike, ain’t it?”
“It sure is,” said the minister.
“Man, you could put your woman on the back of this baby and really haul. I mean, it will leave rubber in three gears!
Dude, if you come to town on this hog, there ain’t anybody who will mess with you.
I’m telling you, this is one mean machine.
By the way, bro, what do you do for your bread?”
“I’m a minister.”
“Oh, excuse me . . . Reverend or Mister. What do they call you?
You know, these bikes, I mean machines, they really get good gas mileage, and you can park them anywhere.
Why, I sold one to a doctor the other day.”

Reflecting on this encounter the minister observed, “No one is surprised to find a Christian looking at lawn mowers.
Lawn mowers are safe, middle-class, and boring.
 Is being a Christian more like pushing a lawn mower or riding a motorcycle?”
Good question!
“If you have been raised with Christ . . .” Brothers and sisters, maybe it’s time we take our living faith out on the road and give it the gas and see what the old church can do.

Vroom! 

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Asking the right question






Asking the Right Question
Chapter 2 from Tad Guzie’s book: The Book of Sacramental Basics

(This is from one the best books I have read on sacraments. It was published by Paulist Press.)

The Roman church, along with other Christian churches, has a new set of sacramental rites. The commissions that worked, on, the new rites knew the basic questions to ask: What is the Easter experience that we are celebrating? How does each sacrament celebrate that experience? Where did the old rites miss the mark? Are there parts of the story we have been overlooking?

But revising books is easier than revising people. We have now become aware of the substantial changes in thinking and attitude that need to go along with the new books. Turning altars around, talking English, having laypeople read at Mass and distribute communion, hearing confessions in a pleasant room instead of a dark box—only a few years ago such things looked like radical reform. Indeed they were at the time, but it is now evident to a vast number of Catholics that all of this has only been a scratch on the surface.

Attitudes are not reformed merely by external changes, or
by changes in the elements of festivity. We have to develop new
attitudes toward the whole cycle of experience and story as well.
Pie fact is that for centuries we had been living on a tradition, a story, which was too narrow and not sufficiently "catholic," not expressive enough of our whole tradition. Especially where the sacraments are concerned, we had been living mostly on the ideas handed down to us from the middle ages. And the insights of the middle ages are not the whole story. In order to be truly catholic and universal, we have to take into account a whole two thousand years, not just a few centuries. The Second Vatican Council was in touch with much modern research which put us into fuller contact with our past and with older sources that had been overlooked or forgotten. This council's message to the church, especially in the area of liturgy and sacrament, was that it is time to pick up where the Council of Trent left off in the sixteenth century, at the end of the middle ages.

This is not a simple issue. A century ago Pope Leo XIII insisted that all theologizing must harmonize with the conclusions of Thomas Aquinas, a man of the thirteenth century. Until very recent decades, Catholic publishing reflected this enthronement of the middle ages. I remember a book entitled The Thirteenth, the Greatest of Centuries.
Today's Catholics who are over forty—laypeople who went to Catholic colleges, their pastors who studied in seminaries, and those less schooled who learned their Catholicism from pulpit and catechism—all were imbued with a view of history which saw the middle ages as the golden age of religious understanding. Scripture and the writings of the church fathers during the early centuries were considered vague, unsharpened, or insuffi­ciently clarified until men like Aquinas came along, Since then, according to this view, there has been mostly decline, and the best theology is a repetition or rewording of medieval insights, filtered through the Council of Trent.

Many Catholics no longer accept the perspective that the insights of one era should be normative for, all ages. Others are disturbed to see this perspective, called into question, and some functionaries in the church are determined to keep it alive and healthy. But the fact remains that Vatican II officially opened the door onto a modern interpretation of history in which the past is not absolutized and each era is permitted its own insights.

Medieval theology had many limitations, because it worked against heavy odds. The four or five centuries which we call the Dark Ages (roughly 600-1000 A.D.) were a crude age, a time when sheer self-preservation was practically the only concern of people. Even monasteries were rough places; among the monks were warlords who had been sent to a monastery because they had gotten into trouble with the king or emperor. Such practices were not calculated to make the monastery a center of study and learning. When the great medieval universities began to develop in the twelfth century, the vast majority of people thought the world was flat, even though fifteen centuries earlier the Greeks knew it wasn't.

The Spirit was still at work in the church, preserving the faith of the church. There were still holy people during the Dark Ages. But there was little learning, and a great deal of information about the past and about our Christian origins was simply lost. The theologians of the thirteenth century did remarkable work in recovering and reformulating insights that had become obscure during the Dark Ages. But especially in the area of worship and the sacraments, they lacked basic historical information.

For example, medieval theologians did not know that Jesus
created no new rituals. They did not know that a meal of bread
and wine was already a religious practice before Jesus' time.
They did not know that the practice of individual confession
went back only to the sixth century, not anywhere near the time of Jesus. They did not know that confirmation was separated from baptism more by accident than by design. In the middle ages, the anointing of the sick had become last rites for those who were dying. There was "extreme unction," a sacrament for those departing from this life, but there was no sacrament of the sick and no real theology for it. As for holy orders, the scholastics were not agreed whether the episcopate was a sacrament or only an honor added to the priesthood. They did not know that it was several centuries before presbyters began taking over from bishops sacramental duties like presiding at the Eucharist.

In short, such information which any well-informed Catholic today takes for granted was simply not available to the theologians of the middle ages. So it is not surprising that their sacramental theology does not reflect the whole of the Christian tradition. Key parts of the story were missing along with important dimensions of lived experience. This inevitably affected reflection on the meaning of the sacraments. Not that we now have to reject what the medievals did, but we do have to take account of what they overlooked or simply did not know about the tradition. It is a matter of broadening our understanding, seeing the larger or more universal story, and so becoming more authentically "catholic."

Today, when we talk about "celebrating baptism" or "celebrating the eucharist," we are using quite a different language from the one most of us learned as children. It is important to reflect on the language we use, because the way we talk usually mirrors the way we think about things. "Celebrating the eucharist" represents an attitude that is quite different from "saying and hearing Mass."

The new language is not arbitrary. It reflects important discoveries that we have made about our origins. When the early Christians came together for worship, they were very conscious of themselves as a community gathered in the name of their Lord Jesus. Different people performed different roles in their rituals. But the people were conscious that the whole celebration was their action, not just the action of the presiding ministers.

Suppose you were a Christian early in the second century.
What would you do on Sunday morning? Let's set the scene as though it were a North American city, where you live, say, on the near west side. Though this is Sunday, the Lord's day for Christians, it is an ordinary working day, not a day of rest. So the Christian community has to gather before the working day begins. You and your family get up around five in the morning. You set out through the quiet streets as the sun is rising. In your pocket or purse you carry a small bun which you will bring to the Eucharistic table.

You pass by what is now Saint Augustine's and Central Presbyterian. They weren't churches then. At that time they were temples dedicated to Democracy and Free Enterprise (a good enough modern equivalent for Jupiter and Apollo). You walk through a neighborhood of large houses until you come to a house owned by a Christian family. You slip in the back door of the house, and a man looks you over as you come in. (You belong to an illegal organization, and you are risking a death sentence or at least life in a penal colony by coming to this as­sembly.) The man, who is one of the deacons of your church, recognizes you and greets you.

You walk into the large living room, which looks just as it does any other day. But now it is filling up with people; the church is assembling. It is a very mixed group socially, economically, racially; there are people from every part of town. You know most of them by name, but the ones you know best are people from your own neighborhood, because you meet with them in small groups during the week for prayer, or instruction, or reflection on the writings of the apostles. (You have never heard the term "New Testament." It would still be decades until that term was devised to cover the apostolic writings. You are probably familiar with most of Paul's letters, and perhaps a few of the gospels. Chances are that you don't know all four gospels; it would still be a while before all of these writings circulated in all of the communities.)

Everyone is standing around chatting. Someone comes over to you and introduces a young couple, friends from another city. They brought along with them a loaf from last Sunday's Eucharist: the Christian community in their town asked them to bring it as a sign of unity among the churches.
You are happy to see Ned O'Neil and John Kubicek shaking hands and embracing. There are tears of happiness and relief in Judy Kubicek's eyes. The two men had gotten into a severe argument not long ago, and both had been missing from the Eucharistic assembly for several weeks. A saying of Jesus is coming alive before your eyes: "If you bring your gift to the altar and there recall that your brother has anything against you, leave your gift at the altar, go first to be reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift" (Mt 5:23-24).

At the other end of the living room sits an older man. This is the bishop of your city, the head pastor. He is dressed like any-of the other men in the room; no one wears any unusual clothing. At the moment he is talking to a few of the men who are seated near him, in a semicircle facing down the room. These are the "elders" or "presbyters" of your community, the men in charge of the community's affairs, much like a parish council. (In your community there might be some women among these presbyters. Documents from the second century indicate that women were not universally excluded from this form of leadership until later.)

The celebration is about to begin. The bishop stands and greets the whole assembly, and all of you reply to his greeting. Then you turn and embrace your neighbor warmly. Perhaps you go over and give the kiss of peace to someone whom you haven’t seen for a while (there are no pews to get in your way). This is a kiss, a real embrace. People who are risking a sentence of death in order to come together tend to greet one another with something a bit warmer than a formal handshake.

In front of the bishop is a small table. Two deacons stand in front of it (one might be a woman), one holding a silver plate and the other a two-handled silver cup. You all file up and put the bun you brought with you on the plate, and then you pour a little wine into the cup. The plate and cup are placed on the table in front of the bishop, and some water is added to the cup.

Then the bishop and elders stand with their hands out­stretched over the bread and cup. They do this in silence, letting the gesture speak for itself. It is a gesture you recognize well, this "laying on of hands." It occurs in nearly every ritual you have ever experienced. When you were preparing to become a Christian, your teacher laid hands on you at the end of every session. This commonest of Christian gestures is now being used to focus your attention on the bread and wine, which will be broken and shared in order to "speak" who you all are as
church: the Lord's own body.

Then the bishop invites you to lift up your hearts, and to give thanks to the Lord our God. You answer, sharing in the introductory dialogue which is one of the oldest elements of the Christian liturgy. His hands still outstretched over the bread and cup, the bishop then chants a short prayer, giving thanks for creation, God's care for us, and our re-creation as a new people redeemed in Christ. It is a short prayer, very simple, much shorter than our present Eucharistic prayers.

After the prayer of thanksgiving the bishop breaks one of the buns and eats a piece of the loaf. He then takes three sips from the cup. Meanwhile the two deacons break the other loaves. You watch this action in silence, aware that these pieces of bread broken from single loaves speak of the unity of Christians in one body.

The bishop stands in front of the table with the plate of broken bread. You go up to him and he says to you, "The bread of heaven in Christ Jesus." You answer "Amen," taking a piece of bread your hands. You eat the bread, and then go over to the deacon who offers you the silver cup. He says to you, "In God the Father almighty." You answer "Amen" and take your first sip from the cup. (This assembly takes its time with communion, because the action is the central thing.) You take your second and third sips after the deacon has said "In the Lord Jesus Christ" and finally "In the Holy Spirit in the holy church."

You go back to your place, and there is a pause for prayer as everyone finishes communicating. Many of you go up to the bishop again with a little silver box. He puts some fragments of the bread in the box, which you put into your pocket or purse. This is for members of your family who could not come this morning, perhaps because of illness. (This is the origin of reserving the Eucharistic bread after the celebration. The practice began not for purposes of adoration, but for the sake of the sick or the absent.)

The bishop then dismisses the gathering, perhaps with a short prayer or blessing. You return home, hoping you won't be stopped by the police and caught with that little silver box on you. You have your breakfast and then begin the working day. That evening, or some other time during the week, you will meet with one or another small group in your neighborhood, for prayer and reflection.

That's what it would have been like. The whole thing was very simple and brief, quite unimpressive to, an outsider. I do not want to romanticize the group of people assembled in that living room. They were generally very dedicated, but they had their conflicts and problems just as we have ours. Paul's letters and other early documents are reminders that there were serious conflicts and doctrinal disagreements even in the earliest communities.

But the experience of the Eucharist was, for them, different from what our modern experience has usually been. Their attitude toward the sacraments was the original Christian attitude, which can be summed up this way: The sacraments are actions, not things. They are actions which the assembly performs, not "things" which we "receive." They are something we do rather than something that is done to us.

Unfortunately, this sense of being the Lord's own body and celebrating it receded as the centuries went by. This began happening in the fourth century, after Constantine, when Christianity was suddenly no longer an illegal organization but the emperor's own religion. Your social standing and even your success in the business world came to depend on your being a Christian. If you were one of the men assembled in that second-century living room, you could not be a soldier. Soldiers have to kill, and Christians were total pacifists. But a few centuries later you couldn't get anywhere in the military unless you were a Christian. In other words, membership in the church came to be one of the credit cards you had to carry if you were to be successful in the world.


The church was originally a we, a group of people with a strong common awareness of being one in Christ. Gradually the church became an it, an organization to belong to. Note how the understanding of church and of sacrament go hand in hand:

The sacraments are actions, not things.
The church is a we, not an it.

If someone in that living room had spoken to you of "ministry," you would not first have thought of the bishop or presbyters or deacons at the other end of the room. You would spontaneously have applied the word to yourself. Everyone had a ministry, because everyone had gifts from the Lord which were brought to the service of the community. But gradually the whole sense of a corporate venture, involving a variety of gifts all contributing to the upbuilding of the one body, was lost. The word "ministry" came to be restricted to people holding full-time positions of leadership in the community. If you were not one of those full-timers, you came to think of the "church" more and more as something out there, something else, someone other than yourself.

This of course is where some Christians are today. The church is like a credit card. It is more an institution, than an assembly of believers. It is more a thing than an activity, and the word "church" itself evokes a building rather than people. If, when you hear that word, the first thing that comes to mind is people rather than a building, it is only because you have given much time and effort to the work of overcoming old attitudes.

The loss of awareness of being church brought with it a decline in sacramental practice. Communion was no longer an essential part of the Eucharistic action for most people, and the sacraments were no longer an action in which the whole assembly felt engaged. They came to be seen as the priest's action, something done to us rather than something we do.

The sacraments thus became "things" which, you "went to church" (the building) to "receive," and a whole new way of talking about the sacraments developed. In the early church (the assembly, not the building), all of the faithful were "celebrators." That was the word used in various languages to describe Christians engaged in worship. But by the beginning of the middle ages, the faithful had become simply "recipients." The thing-mentality took over entirely, and it was summed up in the idea that the sacraments will "take effect" on you just so long as you don't "place an obstacle" in their way.

How the Eucharistic turned from an action into a thing is well illustrated by what happened to the words of institution. In the middle of the prayer of thanksgiving is a story, an account of the last supper. The story appears there because it tells why we are giving thanks in just this way with bread and wine. The story is addressed to people who are engaged in doing what Jesus said we should do. But as the people became "recipients" rather than "celebrators," the words came to be addressed, by the priest bent low over the bread and cup, to the objects to be received.

Most people, when they are asked what are the Eucharistic symbols, will answer "Bread and wine." (What answer did you just give?) That is the answer that medieval theology gave. Bread and wine are the matter of the sacrament; the words of institution are the form. But the original Eucharistic symbols are actions, not things. The original Eucharistic symbols are breaking the bread and sharing the cup.

We are so affected by the thing-mentality that it is hard for us to hear the story of the last supper. "This is my body," said the Lord, and for centuries we have heard the word "this" as referring to the bread. Listen to the text again, with the attitude of sacrament as action rather than thing, and the story will have a different ring. Jesus took bread, said a blessing, broke the bread and gave it to his disciples, saying "This is my body which is given for you."

The "body which is given for you is symbolized in the whole action of blessing, breaking and sharing the bread. The word "this" refers to the whole action, not to the bread alone.

The New Testament gives different accounts of the last supper. Paul and Luke include the relational phrase for the bread; Matthew and Mark do not; all four give a relational phrase for the cup ("my blood which is poured out for you"). The old Roman Canon did not contain the phrase "given for you," and it did not figure into scholastic theology's concept of the essential form of the sacrament. It is for good reason that the new Roman rite has restored the phrase. Are not the relational words essential for naming the exact sense of what Jesus was doing?

Medieval stress on the things of the Eucharist changed the focus of theology and catechetics. When we who are the inheritors of the object-mentality talk about the Eucharist today, our first question tends to be "What happens to the bread and wine?" The answer is that it is changed, and we are taught that the medieval theory known as "transubstantiation" is the most fitting explanation of the change. A vast number of Catholics have become uncomfortable with this explanation because it has the ring of magic. Here I will only remark that the theory of transubstantiation is understandable in its historical context. It is a reasonable explanation in the terms of a philosophy of substance. The difficulty is that the theory is intrinsically tied to the object-mentality. As such, the theory of transubstantiation is a good answer to a bad question.

The question that eventually generated the theory of transubstantiation--What happens to the bread and wine?—does not appear in theological writings until the ninth century. The earlier Christian tradition did not think of Christ's presence or of the Eucharistic "change" in terms of the objects of bread and wine alone. For the church fathers, what is said about the objects has to be said also about the people. Their preoccupation can be put this way: "What happens to the people who celebrate with bread and wine?"

Their answer, as someone like Augustine put it, was that we must be what we have eaten. We already are the body of Christ, but we must become that body still more so. We have to be bread for others, just as Jesus is bread given for us. Christ is our pass-over, but the passover should also be happening in us. If our food and drink is the Lord himself, the important thing is that sharing this food makes us "pass over" into what we have eaten, so that "everywhere we carry him with whom we are dead, buried, and raised to life." Those are the words of Leo the Great. John Chrysostom is even more vivid. Through the food the Lord has given us, we become "members of his flesh and of his bones." We are "mixed into" that flesh, and he has "kneaded his body with ours."

Ideas like these, which fill the sermons and writings of the church fathers, express the earliest tradition of the church. What is said of the worshiping faithful goes hand in hand with what is said of the bread and wine: this body given for you. Someone once asked, in a course I was teaching on the Eucharist, why I never referred to the "sacred" host and the "precious" blood. It occurred to me that when the church fathers use adjectives of this kind—and they do it often—in the same breath they invariably talk about the sacred and precious people who are celebrating the sacrament.

The loss of awareness of "being church" brought with it a loss of this sense of our own sacredness. Theology's shift of attention from people to things both reflected this loss and fostered it. What began in medieval theology became a hardened tradition in the centuries following the Council of Trent, when Catholic theology was preoccupied with defending its tradition against Protestant attacks on it. Little theological reflection was given to the church as the holy priesthood and consecrated people spoken of in scripture and so richly elaborated by the fathers. In the writings of those centuries the sacredness of the Christian people seemed to become almost totally projected onto the Eucharistic objects of bread and wine.

There were profound pastoral consequences here. One need only think of many of our parents and grandparents who took communion very rarely, and who would spend weeks preparing for the event. Implicit here was the attitude that we are sinners who come to the sacraments in order to receive a holy thing. It is the sacrament that is sacred and holy; we are not.

The problem is not the holiness of the sacraments but rather our attitude toward ourselves. There are important insights in the medieval tradition which we can profit from, and which will be mentioned in due course. There were also moments of liturgical renewal during the centuries we have been surveying. At the moment I am stressing the negative fruits of this tradition in order to emphasize the unhappy attitudes that can be generated when theology asks the wrong questions. It should be clear at this point that for many centuries the sacramental question has been put the wrong way around. The "things" of the sacraments can make sense only if our reflection begins not with the things, but with the people and their action.