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OFFICE FOR THE LITURGICAL CELEBRATIONS
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF
The Liturgy, Work of
the Trinity/1: God the Father (CCC 1077-1083)
Without the mediation of the Son, we would not have known the Father, and we
would not have received the Spirit that enables us to recognize the Son as
Lord and to adore in him the Father. The Father willed to render us capable
of all this, that is, to adopt us as His children, before the creation of
the world (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church [CCC], 1077. The
capacity to act as individuals or as members of a chosen and consecrated
people is called “liturgy”: rightly described as work of the mystery of the
three Persons. The Trinitarian action, therefore, is the prototype of the
sacred or liturgical action. However, given the ecclesiastical and
liturgical activism that has led to the adoption of terms like “actor” and
“operator” even in sacred liturgy, to avoid ambiguities we must define the
nature of this action. The sacred action of the liturgy is essentially a “blessing,”
term noted by all, but not in its true meaning. This is defined in the
following article of the Catechism, which it is appropriate to quote in its
entirety: “Blessing is a divine and life-giving action, the source of which
is the Father; his blessing is both word and gift (“bene-dictio” –
“eu-logia”). When applied to man, the word ‘blessing’ means
adoration, and surrender to his Creator in thanksgiving (CCC, 1078). Hence,
the liturgy is divine blessing, word and gift, and human adoration, namely
thanksgiving (eucaristia) and offering. Is not the whole Mass contained in
this definition? No one can fail to describe the sacred liturgy in this way,
in other words, as sacrament. Adoration is nothing other than the liturgy
itself. Any attempt to split the two goes against the Catholic faith and
truth.
Is it not held today that man adores God with all his being? This means
with his soul and body. That is why, in the Bible, all “God’s work is 'blessing'” (cf.
CCC, 1079-1081): it is the cosmic dimension that innervates Sacred Scripture,
from Genesis to Revelation, and also the liturgy. If to bless means to adore,
blessing and adoration are documented in Scripture by prostration and the
physical bending of the knee and, metaphysically, of the heart. Only the
devil does not kneel, because – say the desert Fathers – he does not have
knees. Thus, before Jesus, Saint Paul sees the consonance between sacred
history and the cosmos: every knee shall bend in heaven, on earth and under
the earth. The concrete consequence is that the gesture of kneeling must
become primary in the rite of the Mass, in the rendition, inspiration and
flavor of sacred singing, in the sacred furnishings: a church without
kneelers is not a Catholic church. Why should one prostrate oneself? Because
the divine blessing is manifested in kind with “the presence of God in the
Temple” (CCC, 1081): before His presence, the first and fundamental gesture
is adoration. It must not be said that the Temple was abolished in as much
as Jesus purified it, replacing it with his body in which his divinity
dwells corporeally: thus the divine presence is now that of the Body of
Christ and coincides to the utmost with His Most Blessed Sacrament. In his Introduction
to the Spirit of the Liturgy, Joseph Ratzinger showed the harm the
liturgical reform caused in severing the link between the Jewish Temple and
the Christian Church: we see it today in the new Churches, precisely while
there is an on-going dialogue with the Jews at the ecumenical level. If the
body of Christ is constituted by the spiritual edifice of his members (cf.
1 Peter 2:5), it should be known that where the Church gathers for
the Mysteries a “holy space” is born.
Now we understand what the Catechism states clearly: “In the Church’s
liturgy the divine blessing is fully revealed and communicated. The Father
is acknowledged and adored as the source and the end of all the blessings of
creation and salvation. In his Word who became incarnate, died and rose for
us, He fills us with his blessings. Through his Word, he pours into our
hearts the Gift that contains all gifts, the Holy Spirit” (CCC, 1082). Hence
the further definition issues of the twofold dimension of the liturgy of the
Church: on one hand, it is blessing of the Father with adoration, praise
and thanksgiving; on the other, it is the offering of oneself to the Father
and of one’s gifts, as well as imploration of the Spirit so that it will
redound on the whole world. Everything, however, passes through priestly
mediation or the offering and ”through communion in the death and
resurrection of Christ the Priest, and by the power of the Spirit” (CCC,
1083).
If the resurrection of Christ had not happened historically and if he had
not originally “fulfilled” history imprinting on it its final direction, the
sacraments would have no efficacy and the end for which they were
administered would have failed: our resurrection at the end of life and of
human history. A de-mythicizing exegetical approach is generally followed by
a theology reduced to symbolism; but Catholic thought, speaks with the
Apostle of the “power of his resurrection”: the apparitions of the Risen One
are not only followed by the kerigma and the faith of the disciples,
but by the emanation of the power of the resurrection in the sacraments.
Thus, the truth of the bodily resurrection of Christ is decisive for the
efficacy of the sacraments, for their real incidence on the transformation
of the human being.
The paschal mystery, precisely because it saw the Son pass from death to
life, also sees the children of God pass from death to life. That is why it
is called paschal, because of this passing that occurred thanks to the
sacrifice of the Son of God. See why the Eucharistic Sacrifice is the center
of gravity of all the sacraments (cf. CCC, 1113), as Easter is of the
Liturgical Year.
The divine plan of salvation is one: to bring men and things, those of
Heaven and those of earth, under the lordship of Christ. The first work of
the three Persons aims at leading the human being back to his original
nature so that the image, disfigured by sin, is restored.
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