Sunday, February 24, 2013

Second Sunday of Lent – Year, C

Luke, 9: 30, 36.
And behold, two men were conversing with him, Moses and Elijah…
…Then from the cloud came a voice that said, “This is my Chosen Son; listen to him.” After the voice had spoken, Jesus was found alone.

          Today’s Gospel reading could very well be the crutch of the Lenten season. It is during this time, more than any other, that we as a faith community pay special attention to our words and actions for the purpose of solidifying and intensifying our intimate relationship with God. During this reading of the transfiguration of Jesus, Jesus is given by his father the roles of Moses and Elijah, that of the law and the prophets. This also brings into effect the new law (covenant) and the new prophets (the Church). The new law is the law of love and the new prophets are those who are willing to work to prefect this new law.
           This transformation from the old, does not void the old, it perfects the old to the new. As we work to transform ourselves during this period of lent, we carry with the old with us, this is not done to weigh us down with unnecessary burdens, but our complete self is needed to for this transformation to come to fruition. It is necessary that the whole experience that has become who we are stays focused on the purpose of our lives. And that purpose is to “love our God with all our hearts…” “and to love our neighbors as ourselves.” (Mk, 12; 29-31) Stay focused on the here and now for tomorrow will be shaped by our actions of today. It is just as true that our actions of yesterday have shaped the events we experience today. Christ is our new, complete and final prophet, and his words guide us through today toward the promise of a perfect tomorrow.

Scripture is from the NABRE

by David E. Gonzales

Friday, February 15, 2013

The Eucharist and Re-marriage

The sacrament of marriage is unique among the sacraments; it is the only sacrament that is not administered or conferred by a priest. (CCL, 1111-1; CCC-1623, 1663) The Bishop, Priest, Deacon, or properly delegated lay person assists during the matrimonial ceremony and all are given the authority to administer the nuptial blessing. This is important since the nuptial blessing is the “epiclesis” of the sacrament, bringing the Holy Spirit upon the couple which is the “seal” of their covenant. (CCL, 1624) As such, and given that a delegated lay person may assist and bless to “seal” this sacrament changes the essence of this peak experience with God. This is truly a sacrament of conscience.

With the other sacraments - confirmation, the Eucharist, Holy Orders, penance, Sacrament of the Sick, a Bishop and/or a priest must be the celebrant. In the case of Baptism, a lay person may perform the sacrament but only in extraordinary situations, such as when death is imminent and a Bishop, Priest, or Deacon cannot be secured before death occurs.
polyvire.com

There is no doubt that the Church’s position on divorce and remarriage is solidified in both tradition and scripture. The Church, through these two disciplines and a literal interpretation of the word, has determined that remarriage without the formal, legal inclusion of the Church tribunal, concludes that the re-married couple is living in perpetual sin. Here, the words of Christ are as clearly stated as any in the bible, “Whoever divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery against her; and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she commits adultery.” (MK, 10; 11-12) We know that our Christ used many hard saying during his time of his ministry with us. We have learned to understand these sayings in the light of intent instead of a literal understanding. For instance, we understand that when Jesus said, “Again I say to you, it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for one who is rich to enter the kingdom of God”. (Matt, 19; 24), we know that he was not condemning all rich people to hell. When St. Paul said that all “women should wear a head covering” (1 Cor. 11: 5-6) or that they should be silent in church” (1 Cor. 14: 34), he was speaking in the context of his time and of Jewish law. We certainly do not follow these edicts in the western Church. By using the method of biblical criticism for scripture study, and by using as our guide the law of love, we can better interpret the author’s intent.

            At every Mass we acknowledge our “faults and failings”: that we are all sinners and are undeserving of receiving the Holy Eucharist. The Penitential Act is exceptionally telling “…that I have greatly sinned … through my most grievous fault…”1 We confess we “greatly sinned” and we have “grievous fault,” Before we partake in the Eucharist we publicly state:
“Lord, I am not worthy
that you should enter under my roof,
but only say the word
and my soul shall be healed”.1
When we recite the Lord’s Prayer we ask “forgive us our sins,” (Lk, 11, 4) “linking our forgiveness of one another’s offenses to the forgiveness of our sins that God will grant us”. (CCC-1425)  Yes, I know these examples do not rise to the level of a sacrament, when we recite our baptism vows we are not being re-baptized. When the Eucharistic prayers are stated during the Mass, Christ is not crucified again and again. The point here being God forgives us even though it is known that we will sin again.

            When a murder is committed, the sinner can be forgiven even through the deceased can never be brought back to be with their loved ones. Not only has the sinner ended the life of one, but also the life of the family. Despite this sin, the sinner can repent and return to full communion with the Church, in addition to also paying their debt to society as stipulated by civil law. Those who divorce, like the one who murdered, are required to follow civil law, and then they have the added requirement to follow cannon law if they wish to remarry and receive the Holy Eucharist. There is no forgiveness for this sin of divorce and remarriage, there is only the law. Somehow this seems disengaged with God’s plan, Christ’s sacrifice, and the Power of the Holy Spirit. This law is an extension of human thought that goes beyond the essence of the biblical idea: the law of love. Dissolution of marriage is strictly a technicality of cannon law that states that the Holy Spirit never entered into the union of the couple in question. By declaring that the marriage was never “sealed” by the Spirit it allows for the individuals that were in the marriage to re-marry and not violate the literal words of our Christ. No one desires divorce, most especially those who are going through the pain of divorce. Divorce is the death of love between two people. And as it is with death and loss, there is a grieving process that follows. The Sacrament of marriage dies when the love of the married couple dies. This is true regardless if the couple remains married or not.

“The first is this: Hear, O Israel! The Lord our God is Lord alone! You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength. The second is this: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no other commandment greater than these.” (MK, 12; 29-31: bold mine) As we read the words of our savior, it is clear to me that the law of love, charity, and forgiveness is paramount to all other laws, statutes, or any man-made obstacles to those called by God. In the story about the woman caught in adultery, (John, 8; 1-11) Jesus gives us two lessons, 1. Do not judge and 2. Forgive. In today’s Church there is no forgiveness for divorce. There is only an arduous and expensive task to dissolve or annul a marriage. This action has become a completely legalistic approach to a spiritual matter. This is a man made exception regarding the legality of a marriage. A sacrament that is held together by obligation and fails to bring about the sharing of love is not a relationship of Grace. A relationship of this nature will only bring about feelings of animosity.

It seems unlikely to me that our Christ would put this kind of barrier between himself and his Church, the people. How is it possible that a couple that is legally married through the civil authorities and sharing their love for each other and following the law of Christ, be at the same time living a life of perpetual sin?  Our Christ stated, “I did not come to call the righteous but sinners.” (Matt, 9; 13b: MK, 2;17b) So for the Church to deny the Holy Eucharist to those who have re-married without the judicial trial of cannon law seems out of touch with our Christ. I would say that our Christ never intended the Church to distance itself from its people in this manner. Denying the Holy Eucharist, the essence of our faith, for such a technicality goes against the law of love, the highest law in the Christian faith!

During the time of Jesus a man could divorce his wife for almost any reason, but this wasn’t the reason for such a hard line drawn by Jesus. After the husband declared a decree of divorce the wife became totally self-sufficient; there was no obligation for the husband to support her in any manner. Also during this period of time a working woman was looked down upon by the entire society. This is the sin that Jesus conveys. To shirk one’s responsibility to care for another and their children is the sin, not the divorce and remarriage itself. (Can, 1136, 1689)

In the Church today there is a liberal and conservative ideology that separates the people from each other. In cannon law and the theology that supports it, there is created a division between our Christ and the Church, her people. There is no greater partition with the Church than the theology and Canon Law defining divorce and re-marriage as perpetual sin excluding men and women from the partaking of the Holy Eucharist.

No, I am not trying to lessen the peak experience with God that a sacrament is. I am also not trying to diminish the ideal of marriage in general. I do feel strongly that the sacrament of marriage should be looked at from a different perspective than the current practice and reexamined from the perspective of the couple, as ministers.  I do not believe that the church should be afraid that they will be looked upon as endorsing divorce, but instead the Church should be looked upon as an extension of God’s love for us, that which is beyond our understanding.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
All scripture is from the NABRE        
1 = The Roman Missal
CCL= Code of Cannon Law
CCC= Catechism of the Catholic Church

CCL-Can. 1111 §1; As long as they hold office validly, the local ordinary and the pastor can delegate to priests and deacons the faculty, even a general one, of assisting at marriages within the limits of their territory.

CCL-Can. 1136; Parents have the most grave duty and the primary right to take care as best they can for the physical, social, cultural, moral, and religious education of their offspring.
CCL-Can. 1689; In the sentence the parties are to be reminded of the moral and even civil obligations which may bind them both toward one another and toward their children to furnish support and education.
CCC-1623; In the Latin Church, it is ordinarily understood that the spouses, as ministers of Christ's grace, mutually confer upon each other the sacrament of Matrimony by expressing their consent before the Church. In the Eastern liturgies the minister of this sacrament (which is called "Crowning") is the priest or bishop who, after receiving the mutual consent of the spouses, successively crowns the bridegroom and the bride as a sign of the marriage covenant.

CCC-1663; Since marriage establishes the couple in a public state of life in the Church, it is fitting that its celebration be public, in the framework of a liturgical celebration, before the priest (or a witness authorized by the Church), the witnesses, and the assembly of the faithful.

CCC-1624; The various liturgies abound in prayers of blessing and epiclesis asking God's grace and blessing on the new couple, especially the bride. In the epiclesis of this sacrament the spouses receive the Holy Spirit as the communion of love of Christ and the Church. The Holy Spirit is the seal of their covenant, the ever available source of their love and the strength to renew their fidelity.

CCC-1425 "YOU were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and in the Spirit of our God." One must appreciate the magnitude of the gift God has given us in the sacraments of Christian initiation in order to grasp the degree to which sin is excluded for him who has "put on Christ.” But the apostle John also says: "If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us." and the Lord himself taught us to pray: "Forgive us our trespasses,” linking our forgiveness of one another's offenses to the forgiveness of our sins that God will grant us.