Part of OSV's new Companion in Faith series, T.J. Burdick's The Lord's Prayer is a solid work of spirituality, helping readers pray the Our Father in a deeper way. As a young husband and father, as well as a high school educator and lay Dominican, Burdick has wonderful insights into the way spirituality informs every aspect of our lives.
The Our Father issues from the heart of Christ; its depths have yet to be plumbed. Burdick sees the seven petitions of the Our Father as not simply the perfect prayer, but a means for prioritizing our lives:
Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name.
Priority #1 - Honoring God and Neighbor
Thy kingdom come.
Priority #2 - Advancing God's Kingdom
Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Priority #3 - Submitting to God's Will
Give us this day our daily bread...
Priority #4 - Balancing Your Life
...and forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us...
Priority #5 - Forgiveness
...and lead us not into temptation...
Priority #6 - Discipline
...but deliver us from evil.
Priority #7 - Fighting Sin and Evil
Burdick has crafted wonderful meditations on each of these points, deftly woven of everyday experience, Scripture, the Catechism, and the Summa Theologica. It is theologically meaty but eminently readable. One of the things I really appreciated about the book was its size: 4" x 6" and 54 pages. It was easy for me to slip into my coat pocket and read during breaks in my work day. A book that causes me to be more attentive during prayer is an exquisite gift; The Lord's Prayer is certainly one of those books.
The reflections of Shane Kapler - not a member of religious order or movement, but a garden variety dad - excited by what it means to be "just a Catholic."
(It's like saying you're "just a billionaire.")
Showing posts with label Our Father. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Our Father. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Friday, June 23, 2017
The Sacred Heart - Source of Our Prayer
When we speak of Jesus’s prayer, it is legitimate to put
“prayer” within quotation marks. (Benedict XVI did this in Volume I of his
Jesus of Nazareth). It is done when we want to highlight the uniqueness of
Jesus’ prayer. It was, after all, the human prayer of the Second Person of the
Trinity. But even on the purely human level, the personal union of God and man
in Christ allowed his prayer to be something impossible since humanity’s fall
from grace – the loving conversation of a child with his Father, as opposed to
simply a creature petitioning and offering homage to his or her Creator.
I think there is also a truth to be highlighted by coming at prayer from the opposite direction too – to say that Jesus prayed, and you and
I “pray” to the degree that we unite ourselves to His prayer. It is in Jesus,
after all, that every human action
– prayer included – reaches
perfection. Only He can show us what it means to be fully human, and only He
can teach us what it really means to pray.
And because prayer is an activity of the heart (CCC 2562), meditation
upon Jesus’ Sacred Heart will open our eyes to the startling reality of what it
means to pray as a Christian.
From eternity, God the Father and God the Son have been
communicating Themselves to Each Other in the Person of the Holy Spirit. In a
never ending, perfect rush of Love, Father and Son pour Themselves out to One
Another. When the Son became a human being he continued to pour himself out to
the Father, but that gift began to be “channeled” through a human heart –
Jesus’ Sacred Heart. God the Son expressed His love and dependence upon the
Father in human thoughts, displays of emotion, words, and actions.
Jesus assured the apostles that, “no one comes to the Father
but by me.” We do not have independent relationships with God the Father; we
participate in Jesus’ relationship with the Father! We believe that Jesus wants
to perfect our words and actions in this world by making them extensions of His
own (we are saved by grace), and that extends to our prayer lives.
Jesus desires to raise our prayer up into His own, and He
does this through the Holy Spirit. What I am talking about is a Mystery of the
first order. Listen to St. Paul:
… the Spirit helps us in our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words. And he who searches the hearts of men knows what is the mind of the Spirit, for the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God” (Rom. 8:26-27)
That’s right – the Divine communication that takes place in
eternity, the Divine communication that was channeled through the human heart
of God the Son, is now (because of our union with Christ) occurring inside of
you and me! The YOUCAT says it about as clearly and as beautifully as possible:
Basically prayer means that from the depths of my heart, God speaks to God. The Holy Spirit helps our spirit to pray. Hence we should say again and again, “Come, Holy Spirit, come and help me to pray.” (YOUCAT 496)
Yes Holy Spirit, flow from the Sacred Heart of our Savior to
ours (Jn. 7:38), and fill us with his prayer to the Father.
If you wish to begin uttering Jesus’ prayer right now, then pray the Our Father, for “God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, ‘Abba! Father!’” (Gal.4:6). As the Catechism teaches:
If you wish to begin uttering Jesus’ prayer right now, then pray the Our Father, for “God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, ‘Abba! Father!’” (Gal.4:6). As the Catechism teaches:
[This] prayer that comes to us from Jesus is truly unique... On the one hand, in the words of this prayer the only Son gives us the words the Father gave him [Jn.17:7]... On the other, as Word incarnate, he knows in his human heart the needs of his human brothers and sisters and reveals them to us: he is the model of our prayer (CCC 2765).
Jesus discloses and entrusts his Heart to us at Mass. He
professes his love to us in the words of consecration and delivers himself –
heart, soul, body, blood, soul, and divinity – into the arms of his beloved in
Communion. The Mass makes present his sacrifice upon the Cross, “where prayer
and the gift of self are but one” (CCC 2605), and it is our participation in
the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass that identifies us with his Heart – “This is my
body…this is my blood…Do this” (CCC 1419).
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If you'd like to read more along these lines, you might enjoy Through, With, and In Him: The Prayer Life of Jesus and How to Make It Our Own.
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If you'd like to read more along these lines, you might enjoy Through, With, and In Him: The Prayer Life of Jesus and How to Make It Our Own.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Why Do We Address God as "Father," Instead of "Mother"?
Well, because that is what Jesus did, and as Christians we don't have an independent relationship with God; we participate in Jesus' relationship.
Over the years I have heard a number of people object, "But Jesus only did that because of the patriarchal nature of ancient cultures" - the underlying assumption being that Jesus' word choice was
culturally conditioned.
The difficulty with that assumption is the freedom Jesus demonstrated throughout his ministry in breaking with the gender conventions of the time: meeting with women privately, welcoming them to travel with him independent of their husbands, and his selection of women (unable to testify in courts of law at that point in history!) as the first witnesses to His resurrection. His decision to name only males as apostles and address God with the masculine “Father” was not circumscribed by the outside culture. In fact, priestesses and female deities existed throughout the Middle East as well as among the Greeks and Romans. As the Word made flesh, Jesus’ revelation of God as Father was both free and deliberate. But why?
The difficulty with that assumption is the freedom Jesus demonstrated throughout his ministry in breaking with the gender conventions of the time: meeting with women privately, welcoming them to travel with him independent of their husbands, and his selection of women (unable to testify in courts of law at that point in history!) as the first witnesses to His resurrection. His decision to name only males as apostles and address God with the masculine “Father” was not circumscribed by the outside culture. In fact, priestesses and female deities existed throughout the Middle East as well as among the Greeks and Romans. As the Word made flesh, Jesus’ revelation of God as Father was both free and deliberate. But why?
In
Hebrew and Christian thought God is bigger than gender. Both male and female are reflections
of the Deity (Gen.1:27). Scripture compares God to a mother (Is.49:15; Hos.11:3-4). And
yet, throughout the whole of Scripture, God is never addressed as
“Mother.” There is something about
fatherhood that is more analogous than motherhood for describing God’s
relationship to us. Scripture does not
come out and explain it, but I would suggest that male and female have been
invested by God with an “iconic character.”
By this I mean that the differences we observe between male and female
can give us insight into spiritual realities.
Think
about the complementary roles the mother and father play in the conception of
the child. The father comes from the
"outside," and the mother welcomes the father into herself. The ovum produced by the mother awaits the
father's sperm cell, and the union of the two produces the child’s body. The child then grows within her mother,
unable to see her father’s face until birth.
God also plays a "Fatherly" role in every conception - coming
from outside of all creation to breathe a spirit, an intellectual soul, into the child at the instant of his/her physical conception. All of God’s actions come from “the outside”
so to speak, and in this way are Fatherly.
The Church on the other hand – and the individual souls that make it up - is the part of creation that has received God into
itself and allowed him to bring forth new supernatural life. In this analogy, whether biologically male or
female, each human soul resembles the feminine.
This explains why Scripture refers to the Church as Christ’s Bride
(Eph.5:22-23), and the Mother of the faithful (Rev.12:17).
As members of Christ's Body we approach God the Father through, with, and in Jesus. In union with him we pray "Our Father, who art in heaven ..."
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This post was adapted from Through, With, and In Him: The Prayer Life of Jesus and How to Make It Our Own.
Question: If we think about the "iconic character" attached to gender, might that yield an insight as to why the ministerial priesthood has been reserved to males? If the priest is ordained to function "in the person of Christ" in ministering to the Lord's Bride, then doesn't the priest's masculinity function as a sacramental sign of Christ, the Divine Groom?
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This post was adapted from Through, With, and In Him: The Prayer Life of Jesus and How to Make It Our Own.
Question: If we think about the "iconic character" attached to gender, might that yield an insight as to why the ministerial priesthood has been reserved to males? If the priest is ordained to function "in the person of Christ" in ministering to the Lord's Bride, then doesn't the priest's masculinity function as a sacramental sign of Christ, the Divine Groom?
Monday, August 25, 2014
Someone Broke Into Our Car
When the kids and I went out to the car this morning, we quickly realized that someone had been in it overnight. (I forgot to lock it.) I usually leave my wallet and cell phone in the compartment between the driver and passenger seats; but I had brought in the cell phone for an early morning call, and I had my wallet in my pocket when I came in from the store last night. Fortunately, I hadn't loaded my work laptop into the trunk either (here's to putting things off until morning!).
The thief had to be pretty bummed when all he could find to take was a small bag of change.
The thief had to be pretty bummed when all he could find to take was a small bag of change.
I have lived in my house for five years and never experienced something like this before. What really made me chuckle was the timing of the theft: Just an hour before going out to the car, I had been talking to Matt Swaim on EWTN's Son Rise Morning Show, and one of the things we discussed was Jesus' prayer, "Father, forgive them." Matt and I talked about the way Jesus taught us to pray the same way in the Our Father, "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us." You have to love it when the Lord gives you a chance to walk the talk. Had I not just spoken with Matt, my heart may have been in a different state. Thanks to the preparation, however, the kids and I launched straight into our morning prayer:
"Lord, we ask you to forgive, to pardon, the person who was in our car last night. Please make him truly sorry for what he did and cause him to turn to you, ask for forgiveness, and never do this again. If he or his family needed that bit of change to buy some food, we ask that they receive what they need. And Lord, we thank you that you made sure we brought everything of value into the house last night. You take such incredible care of us, Lord. I will stop leaving my phone and wallet in the car overnight, and I'll be sure to double-check that it is locked. Thank you, Lord. Our Father..."
I recognize that I didn't have much to forgive. It was a small lesson ... but even small lessons have their purpose. My mind went to words I reread last night in preparation for my talk with Matt:
"I know what you are thinking: when you imagine yourself on his cross, praying 'Father, forgive them' seems impossible. But baptism makes it possible! It unites my soul to his. I could never pray those words on my own, apart from the action of the Holy Spirit. But through the Spirit, through the action of grace upon my soul, Jesus can pray those words in me; and they can become mine! Each time I pray the Our Father and cooperate with his grace to forgive people their small wrongs against me, my soul grows toward forgiving those who would take my life." (Through, With, and In Him, p.76)
Thank the Lord for baby steps.
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
If Jesus Prayed Judaism's 18 Benedictions, Why Don't We?
“The Son of God who became Son of the Virgin also learned to pray according to his human heart. He learns the formulas of prayer from his mother ... He learns to pray in the words and rhythms of the prayer of his people.” (CCC 2599)Until five years ago, when I began an intense study of Jesus' earthly prayer, I had never heard of the Eighteen Benedictions. What I quickly discovered was how they are a beautiful tapestry of blessings and petitions that the Jews had been praying three times a day for at least a century before the birth of Christ. Their centrality in Jewish prayer is witnessed to by their Hebrew name, Tephilla, or simply “the prayer.” (You will also hear them referred to as Amidah, “standing,” since they are prayed while standing; Jesus likely refers to this in Mk 11:25.) These benedictions both praise God for his goodness and ask for his continued blessings and the fulfillment of his promises. With their importance in the prayer life of Jesus and his Jewish apostles, why didn't their use continue among Christians? I believe the answer is two-fold.
First, Scripture assures us that Jesus entered history in the “fullness of time” (Gal.4:4). He entered at precisely the right moment of history for these blessings and petitions to form an integral part of his daily prayer with Mary and Joseph. And Jesus' own death and resurrection - and all that means for humanity - were the answer to many of the Eighteen Benedictions: "Blessed be the Lord who forgives our sins, ... who raises the dead, ... restore the kingdom of David, ... allow us to worship in your sanctuary."
Second, Jesus commanded us to pray the Our Father. Because it comes from God the Son, it is literally the perfect prayer. Its seven petitions encapsulate all others, the Eighteen Benedictions included; and when prayed slowly, with the proper awe and love expressed in these words, "Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name," can encapsulate all blessing and thanksgiving as well. The early Church recognized this, and so we find its first catechism, the Didache (70-120 A.D.), instructing believers to pray the Our Father three times a day (8:1). The 1993 Catechism of the Catholic Church affirms that this was done “in place of the ‘Eighteen Benedictions’ customary in Jewish piety” (CCC 2767).
In the early days of my conversion I neglected the Our Father. As a "rote prayer" that I learned in childhood and often rattled off with my parochial school classmates, in my heart-of-hearts, I didn't believe it could capture the "closeness" and "spontaneity" Jesus wanted me to enjoy with the Father! (Ridiculous, right? Ah, but far too common.) Like many others, I had misunderstood Jesus' words in Mt 6:7, "when you are praying, do not use meaningless repetition as the Gentiles do, for they suppose that they will be heard for their many words." Jesus, a faithful Jew, was far from opposed to praying "set" prayers. (While hanging upon the Cross he prayed the same Psalms he had since childhood!) Rather, Jesus was warning his Jewish audience against the errors found in pagan prayer - believing that God would be moved to grant their requests by the sheer amount of verbiage.
God wants prayer to be an expression of our hearts; and as the Holy Spirit brought me to recognize, nothing expresses them better than the Our Father. St. Paul went so far as to teach that it is the Holy Spirit who puts this prayer on our lips: "you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by which we cry out 'Abba! Father!'" (Rom 8:15).
So why don't we Christians pray the Eighteen Benedictions? Ultimately, it is for the same reason we no longer offer the animal sacrifices prescribed in the Law of Moses: Jesus, and the prayer he taught us, is the fulfillment of the Law and the Prophets (Mt. 5:17; Heb 8:13) ... and the Eighteen Benedictions.
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If you'd like to read more along these lines, you might enjoy the soon-to-be-released Through, With, and In Him: The Prayer Life of Jesus and How to Make It Our Own.
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
St. Francis of Assisi's Paraphrase of the "Our Father"
A few months back I wrote a post sharing how the Our Father can be used as a template for times of personal prayer. I was happy to discover that Saint Francis of Assisi (1182-1226), Founder of the Friars Minor, did exactly that. Here he is praying the first half of the Our Father:
O our most holy Father,
our Creator, Redeemer, Consoler, and Savior,
our Creator, Redeemer, Consoler, and Savior,
“Who are in heaven”,
in the angels and in the saints,
enlightening them to love, because you, Lord, are light,
inflaming them to love, because you, Lord, are love,
dwelling in them and filling them with happiness,
because you, Lord, are the Supreme Good, the Eternal Good
from whom comes all good
without whom there is no good.
“Hallowed be your name”:
may our knowledge of you become ever clearer
that we may know the breadth of your blessings,
the length of your promises,
the height of your majesty,
the depth of your judgments (Eph 3,18).
“Your kingdom come”:
so that you may rule in us through your grace;
enable us to come to your kingdom
where there is an unclouded vision of you,
a perfect love of you,
a blessed companionship with you,
an eternal enjoyment of you.
“Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven” :
that we may love you with our whole heart
by always thinking of you with our whole soul
by always desiring you with our whole mind
by directing all our intentions to you
and by seeking your glory in everything
with our whole strength,
by spending all our energies and affections
of soul and body
in the service of your love and of nothing else (Mk 12,30).
And may we love our neighbors as ourselves (Mt 22,39)
by drawing them all with our whole strength to your love,
by rejoicing in the good fortunes of others as well as our own,
by sympathizing with the misfortunes of others
and by giving offense to no one.
in the angels and in the saints,
enlightening them to love, because you, Lord, are light,
inflaming them to love, because you, Lord, are love,
dwelling in them and filling them with happiness,
because you, Lord, are the Supreme Good, the Eternal Good
from whom comes all good
without whom there is no good.
“Hallowed be your name”:
may our knowledge of you become ever clearer
that we may know the breadth of your blessings,
the length of your promises,
the height of your majesty,
the depth of your judgments (Eph 3,18).
“Your kingdom come”:
so that you may rule in us through your grace;
enable us to come to your kingdom
where there is an unclouded vision of you,
a perfect love of you,
a blessed companionship with you,
an eternal enjoyment of you.
“Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven” :
that we may love you with our whole heart
by always thinking of you with our whole soul
by always desiring you with our whole mind
by directing all our intentions to you
and by seeking your glory in everything
with our whole strength,
by spending all our energies and affections
of soul and body
in the service of your love and of nothing else (Mk 12,30).
And may we love our neighbors as ourselves (Mt 22,39)
by drawing them all with our whole strength to your love,
by rejoicing in the good fortunes of others as well as our own,
by sympathizing with the misfortunes of others
and by giving offense to no one.
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Jesus' Prayer (offered through YOU) Will Bring an End to Abortion
Here is my talk from today's luncheon:
My hope is to encourage you and renew your
excitement over the Mystery at work in you - this Mystery I saw lived out this
morning at Mass and in praying the Rosary on behalf of the unborn. We have many
incredible Mysteries in our Faith, to which one am I referring?
The Epistle to the Hebrews says that in Heaven,
Jesus always lives to make
intercession for us. The Catechism of the
Catholic Church draws our attention to the way He exercises that
intercession through His Mystical Body, the Church! (CCC 2740) “The prayer of Jesus makes Christian prayer an
efficacious petition. He is its model,
he prays in us and with us … the heart of the Son seeks only what pleases
the Father …” We’re going to look at Jesus’ human prayer, He wants to reproduces it
within us. We want to consider how we can most effectively cooperate in this
Mystery, how we can allow the intentions of Jesus’ Sacred Heart, especially for
the unborn, to be lifted up to the Father through
us.
Short outline:
1) Details of Jesus' daily prayer
2)
Talk about His Passover, His offering of Himself, to
the Father
3)
How we the Church enter into His
Passover sacrifice and prayer
4)
And how Mary assists us in this.
It seems strange for us to think about Jesus
learning to pray. This is God the Son. He, the Father, and Spirit are eternally
communicating Themselves to each other.
When God the Son became one of us, He didn’t lose anything
of His Divinity. He is still one with
the Father. In His human soul He gazed
upon the Father just as clearly as the Saints and Angels in heaven. What He did learn, what He did grow in,
however was how to express His love for the Father as a human being - in words
and actions! (CCC 2599) “The Son of God . .
. learned to pray in his human heart.
He learn[ed] to pray from his
mother… He learn[ed] to pray in the words and rhythms of … his people,”
Jesus’ prayer was Jewish prayer. When we think of Israel’s prayer, the first
place most of our minds go is to the Temple.
Luke both began and ended his gospel there. Jews recognized God as being present in the
Temple as in no other point in all creation.
The Holy of Holies was His earthly throne room, heaven’s embassy on
earth. Jesus called the Temple His
Father’s House and like all Jews, He, Mary, and Joseph traveled there three
times a year for the Pilgrim Feasts of Tabernacles, Passover, and Pentecost. John’s Gospel tells us that Jesus and His
relatives made the 75 mile trip from Nazareth even when
it wasn’t required, such as to celebrate Hannukah (Jn.10:22)
The worship of the Temple was avodah, sacrifice. Why was
that? With New Covenant hindsight, we
understand that God is an exchange of life – A Son Who receives all He is from
the Father and pours Himself out in a return of
Love in the Person of the Holy Spirit.
Man and woman were created to share, to have a created participation in,
that circle of love and life – to receive all we are from God and pour ourselves
out in gratitude and love. Our first
parents said “No” and that original sin damaged us, closed us in on ourselves.
God started to undo the damage by establishing a
covenant with Israel. He began the long
process of rehabilitation by calling them to sacrifice, to give back to Him a portion of the earthly gifts
they received. For an agricultural
people like the Israelites, when they sacrificed their animals and crops – the very
elements of life – to the Lord, they symbolically offered themselves. In many
sacrifices the Lord stipulated that a portion of the animal was to be held back
– part of it eaten by the priests and part by the family making the
offering. God and his people were united
in the life of the sacrificial victim. This
was how God wanted to be worshipped, and it was the absolute heart of Jewish
prayer.
I had heard of the Passover sacrifice and sacrifices
for sins and to give thanks. What I didn’t
study until very recently though was the Temple’s daily liturgy. It took place
every day at 9 a.m. and again at 3 p.m. The
liturgy began with the priests leading the people in the Shema and the Ten
Commandments. With a crash of symbols
priests and people launched into singing the Psalm for that Day. Trumpets sounded between the verses and everyone in the Temple
went facedown in worship! After that the
priests then placed the perpetual, or daily offering, on the a lamb, cake of
bread, and wine on the altar. Trumpets
sounded again and everyone in the Temple prostrated themselves in worship. A priest chosen by lot went into the Holy
Place to offer incense on the altar at the entrance to the Holy of Holies- the
prayers of God’s people ascending upward.
The Temple and its sacrifices were the pinnacle of
Jewish worship. Obviously though -
Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, and millions of other Jews could only participate on
very special occasions. So what did they
do on a daily basis?
At least two centuries before the birth of Jesus, Jewish people adopted the practice of stopping wherever they were to pray … 3 times a day, facing toward the Temple. They prayed at 9 a.m., and 3 p.m., when the Tamid – the lamb, bread, and wine – were placed on the altar and then again around sunset when any final scaps remaining from the day’s offerings were burned on the altar and the Temple gate closed for the night. Their daily, personal prayer united them to the sacrifices in the Temple.
At their first and third time of prayer, as the
spiritual bookends of the day, they recited the Shema, the Creed. "Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one
LORD; You shall love the LORD your God
with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength"
(Deut.6:4-5). [The full Shema consists
of Deut.6:4-9; Deut.11:13-21; and
Num.15:37-41]
Just like when you and I begin and end our day with
the Sign of the Cross. Yes, we have our Creeds,
the Nicene and Apostle’s; but every time we make the Sign of the Cross we pray
the Creed in miniature. Through the Christ’s Cross, we enter into the inner
life of the Blessed Trinity (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) and His grace
empowers us to do so with all our mind, all our heart, and all our
strength! There’s the Shema, our
Christian Shema.
At all three times of prayer people prayed The
Eighteen Benedictions. In Hebrew they
are known as Tephilla, simply “the
prayer” (Because the Benedictions are always
prayed while standing, you’ll also hear
it called the Amidah, which means
“standing.” This is probably what Jesus
was speaking of in the Gospels when He said, “When you stand praying, if you hold anything against anyone,
forgive them” (Mk.11:25). The Eighteen
Benedictions are a beautiful tapestry of blessings and petitions: “Blessed be the Lord, the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob – our shield (#1); Blessed
be the Lord, the only God. (#3); Blessed be the Lord Who raises the dead (#2); Blessed
be the Lord Who loves repentance. Make
us turn back to you. (#5) … Who forgives, forgive us our sins. (#6) ... Who rebuilt Jerusalem. Restore the kingdom of David, your anointed.
(#14).
Scripture says that
Jesus entered history in the “fullness of time” (Gal.4:4), precisely the right
moment in history, when these blessings and petitions would be a part of his
prayer three times a day. I suggest that
when God willed the Incarnation, He willed
the petitions Jesus offered as a man, willed to bring about Jesus’
resurrection, and all that would mean for humanity, in response to them.
The early Church kept
the Jewish practice of praying three times a day, but they didn’t pray the
Eighteen Benedictions. Instead of the
Eighteen they prayed the Our Father. (We
find this in the Didache, the earliest Christian writing we have outside of the
New Testament. The Catechism makes note
of it in Paragraph 2767.) The Our Father is the
perfect prayer. Listen to the Catechism,
“, in the words of this prayer the only Son gives us the words the Father
gave him [Jn.17:7] … [Jesus] knows in his human heart the needs of his
human brothers and sisters and reveals them to us: he is the model of our
prayer” (CCC 2765). In
those seven petitions of the Our Father Jesus encapsulated all Eighteen
Benedictions!
The Gospels show Jesus’ prayer extending far beyond
the 3 fixed times. He prayed long after
everyone else fell asleep. He got up
before anyone else to go off and pray. Sometimes He just stayed up the entire night
communing with the Father! But the
pinnacle of Jesus’ human prayer was reached at the Cross, when as the Catechism
says (2605), “prayer and the gift of Self were one”
It’s at the Cross that Jesus’ gathered up his whole
earthly life and poured it our to the Father in one great, irrevocable act of
obedient love. The words of Psalms 22, 69, and 31 were on his lips, even as the
texts took flesh in His Body – the piercing of His hands and feet, His
incredible thirst, and his heart melting like wax within Him. Mark’s Gospel tells us that He was nailed to
the Cross at 9 a.m., the time of the morning sacrifice. His sacrifice was culminated at the 3 o’clock hour,
as the Tamid – the lamb, bread, and wine – were again placed on the altar and
Jews throughout the world prayed the Eighteen Benedictions: Blessed are You Lord: Restore the Kingdom of David … Make us turn
back to You … Forgive us our sins … Raise the dead!
That was the moment when Jesus “cried out with a
loud voice and yielded up His Spirit.” The
Catechism says that His final cry pulled all of the petitions and intercessions
of all history into itself and carrying them to the Father. Jesus’ death was
when all the prayers of God’s people, all the prayers of our Messiah’s thirty
some years on earth reached a “critical mass” and the Father unleashed the
graces of salvation upon the world through the Spirit, blood, and water issuing
from Jesus’ pierced Heart.
This great
mystery of salvation and of Jesus’ prayer is being lived out by you and
me. In baptism our souls were fused to
Jesus and the Holy Spirit rushed from His heart to ours. As
Paul said “It is no longer I who live, but Christ Who lives in me.” (Gal.2:20).
The good works we do are not done under our power but His – it is Jesus loving
His Father and brothers and sisters through us. St. Paul says that our
sufferings are a participation in Jesus’ Cross, and because of that, they have redemptive value. And part of our
prayer is Jesus praising and thanking and petitioning the Father through His
Body.
We pray the Our Father – St. Paul says that “God
sent the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, the Spirit who calls out ‘Abba,
Father” (Gal.4:6) The Spirit started
praying in us the moment we were baptized.
Paul told the Romans (8:26-27): “. . . the Spirit helps us in our weakness;
for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but that very Spirit intercedes
with sighs too deep for words. And God,
who searches the heart, knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the
Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God.”
The highest point of Jesus prayer, where prayer and
the gift of Self became one was at the Cross.
And His sacrifice becomes really, truly present for us at every Mass! That’s why the Eucharist is the CENTER
of our lives, the source and summit of our prayer.
Just this morning, Jesus once again made pilgrimage
to His Father’s House. He made
pilgrimage in us! The Shema echoed when
we began with the Sign of the Cross and it will echo again in tomorrow’s Mass
when we pray the Creed. The Eighteen
Benedictions were prayed in our Gloria and the Our Father. The true perpetual offering – the Lamb, under the appearance of Bread and Wine –
became present upon our altar. And we
offered ourselves and all of our petitions to end abortion through, with, and in Him! It
is Jesus’ offering, and Jesus’ petition to end abortion,
so we know with absolute certainty that they are pleasing to the Father. The petitions made by Jesus through, with, and
in His Body are efficacious – they will be answered by the Father!
But we’re not able to stay at the altar, at least
not physically. God has given us work to
do out in the world. We have to go to
our jobs, and see to the needs of our families and friends. Jesus, Mary, and Joseph did too! But that’s where personal prayer comes in.
That personal prayer is meant to unite our entire day to Jesus’ sacrifice, made
present on the altars throughout the world.
It’s meant to help us live the Eucharist, to become Jesus’ offering to the Father. Like Him, our every thought, word, and action
are to be an offering to the Father. St.
Paul practically begged the Romans, “present your bodies as a living
sacrifice, for this is our spiritual worship” (12:1)
Anybody else out there feel like they ain’t getting’
the job done? Like they’re coming up
short? How do we change that? I believe that
Jesus gave us the answer at the Cross when He told the beloved disciple, "Behold
your mother." We have to take note of what John did, "And
from that moment on the disciple took Mary into his home." John took
Mary to himself. Wherever John was, there was the Blessed Mother.
Think about John’s
Gospel. It soars up to speak about Jesus
Divinity, it penetrates His Mystery in a way much different than the
synoptics. It shows Jesus’ connection to
the great feasts in the Temple and the way they were fulfilled in Jesus. He give us the Bread of Life Discourse and
Jesus’ great high priestly prayer at the Last Supper. I have to think that sharing his life with
Mary had something to do with that!
She became John’s
mother. The woman who taught Jesus to
pray as a boy prayed with John. Think
about this woman: For 9 months His
Heart physically beat beneath her own; the flesh and blood He offered in
sacrifice were taken from her…; Mary was
Jesus’ prayer partner throughout His Life - and then she became John’s. She became John’s mother too. Jesus wants that for us. The Mother of the Head, is the Mother of the
Mystical Body as well. In the Communion
of Saints she has a special connection to each soul.
Today is the 95th
anniversary of the Miracle of the Sun at Fatima. What did Mary say to the children? Jesus wanted to establish devotion to Mary’s
Immaculate Heart. Very simply that means
to love Jesus with the Heart of Mary.
The way that I read St.
Louis Marie DeMontfort it means that the Faith, Hope, Charity, and virtues
that the Holy Spirit poured into the soul of the Blessed Mother remain
accessible to other members of the Mystical Body - what is of benefit to one,
is of benefit to the whole. And the Holy
Spirit wants to knit our hearts together with Mary’s so that we can share her
union with Jesus – her prayer and surrender to Him, her performance of every
thought, word, and action out of love for God.
One of the most awesome ways we join Mary in loving Jesus is through the
praying of the Rosary.
How did Jesus tell the
Apostles to prepare for Pentecost. Go
back to Jerusalem and wait for the Gift My Father promised. The went back to
the Upper Room and spent the next nine days in prayer, with Mary. What was
there prayer like in those nine days?
Petition, combined with a whole lot of meditation. They were meditating on, thinking and
rethinking the life, death, rez, of Jesus in the light of Scripture. (Look at Acts 1, and you’ll see Peter sharing
what he discovered in the Psalms) They
were meditating on the life of Jesus in the light of Scripture, with the
Blessed Mother. That's the Rosary!
Outside of the Mass, the Rosary is where I think you
find the greatest number of elements from Jesus’ human prayer woven together.
· Sign of the Cross – Shema
· Apostle’s Creed – Shema
· Our Father – the prayer taught to us by
God the Son, the prayer that comes to us in Scripture, and the Holy Spirit
cries out within us!
· On the Cross, Jesus prayed the words of
Scripture:
· The Hail Mary – a prayer composed from
Scripture, the words of the Angel Gabriel and St. Elizabeth.
· The Glory Be – “The glory be to God” the
angels sang at Jesus birth; “as it was
in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be” – that’s the Book of Revelation’s
“God Who is, was, and is to come”
These are the words are lips are praying as, along
with Mary, our hearts and minds are focused on Jesus and how He brought about
our salvation. I love the way Pope John
Paul II put it, “With the Rosary, the Christian people sits at the school of
Mary and is led to contemplate the beauty on the face of Christ and to
experience the depths of his love” (Rosarium Virginis Mariae, 1). If Mary was good enough for the Apostles, if she led
John deeper and deeper into the Mystery of her Son … if she taught Jesus how to
pray as a child, then she’s good enough for me!
On this 95th anniversary of the Miracle
of the Sun at Fatima we recall our Lady’s requests to the children. Our Lady was sent to bring about
conversion. She requested acts of
penance, Communions of Reparation (the celebration of the Eucharist), and the
praying of the Rosary. That is the
prescription to bring an end to abortion too.
Just as Jesus offered petitions throughout His
entire earthly life, before that critical Mass of intercession was reached at
the Cross, so now the Father seems to have ordained a participation in the
intercession of Christ to us. But know
this: It is the intercession of Christ.
It will be efficacious. God the
Father wants to answer this prayer,
and He will answer this prayer. In His Providence He has woven our petitions,
penances, and participation in the Eucharist into His plan to end
abortion. He has ordained that certain
graces only be released in response to our prayer, our participation in the intercession of Jesus! What an honor!
To share in the redemptive prayer and mission of Christ!
Let’s join the Blessed Mother in uniting everything
else we do today with the Eucharist celebrated this morning:
Daily Offering from the
Apostleship of Prayer (with
one addition)
“O
Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, I offer You my prayers, works,
joys, and sufferings of this day in union with the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass
throughout the world.
I offer them for all the intentions of Your Sacred Heart: the salvation of souls, reparation for sin, AN END TO ABORTION, and the reunion of all Christians. I offer them for the intentions of our bishops and of all Apostles of Prayer, and in particular for those recommended by our Holy Father this month.”
I offer them for all the intentions of Your Sacred Heart: the salvation of souls, reparation for sin, AN END TO ABORTION, and the reunion of all Christians. I offer them for the intentions of our bishops and of all Apostles of Prayer, and in particular for those recommended by our Holy Father this month.”
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Thursday, October 4, 2012
Jewish Prayer's Eighteen Benedictions & The Our Father
Until three years ago I had never heard of the Eighteen Benedictions. They are the eighteen blessings and petitions prayed by faithful Jews three times daily, since before the birth of Christ. In
Judaism they are known as Tephilla, simply “the prayer.”
For Christians
the Our Father is of course the perfect prayer. (Coming from the lips of Christ, how could it be anything but?) The Didache, the earliest Christian document outside of the New
Testament (c.70 - 120 A.D.), and the Church’s first manual of discipline,
directed Christians to pray the Our Father three times a day. The Catechism
of the Catholic Church comes right out and says that it was prayed “in place of the ‘Eighteen Benedictions’ customary in Jewish piety”
(CCC 2767).
Does the Our Father, the perfect prayer, in
fact encompass the Eighteen Benedictions?
I assert that it does. This is how I align them:
The Our
Father
|
The
Eighteen Benedictions
"Blessed be the Lord ..."
|
Our Father Who art in
heaven, hallowed be Thy name
|
1) ... the God of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, our shield through the ages.
3) ... the
only God.
15) ... who hears our prayers.
17) ... whom it is right
to thank. Thank you for the mercy,
kindness, and goodness you have shown to us, and our fathers and mothers
before us.
|
Thy kingdom come
|
2) ... who raises the
dead.
12) ...who humbles the arrogant, the heretics. Remove them from among your people.
14)...who rebuilt Jerusalem. Restore the kingdom of David, your anointed
one.
|
Thy will be done on earth
as it is in heaven
|
11) ... who loves justice.
Give us wise judges and leaders, as we had in times past.
18) ... who creates peace.
Give your peace to your people Israel.
|
Give us this day our daily
bread
|
4) ... who gives
knowledge. Give us understanding of
your Law.
8) ... who heals the
sick. Heal the pain in our hearts.
9) ... who blesses the
yearly harvest. Send our lands all
they need to be fruitful.
13) ... who shelters the
righteous. Shower goodness upon
converts and reward all who do your will.
16) ... who allows us to
worship in his sanctuary. May he
always dwell in Jerusalem.
|
Forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those we trespass against us
|
6) ... who forgives. Forgive us our sins against you.
|
Lead us not into temptation
|
5) ... who loves
repentance. Make us turn back to you.
10) ... who gathers the
exiles of Israel. Bring them back.
|
But deliver us from
evil.
|
7) ... who has redeemed
Israel. Save us from our enemies.
|
What do you think?
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