Christians
who find themselves in the new covenant now sing an altogether new song, which
is truly and definitively new in view of the wholly new thing that has taken
place in the Resurrection of Christ… The in-between state of Christian reality
(no longer a shadow, but still not fully reality, only an ‘image’) applies
here. The definitively new song has been intoned, but still all the sufferings
of history must be endured, all pain gathered in and brought into the sacrifice
of praise, in order to be transformed there into a song of praise.
Joseph
Ratzinger, Spirit of the Liturgy, 138
Reflection – We did something new this year for our
All Saints Day celebration on November 1, and I hope we keep doing it, as it
really worked well. In the days before we all wrote down, on little file cards,
our favorite quotes from the saints, with the quote on one side and the saint
on the other. In the evening of the day we played a guessing game of ‘which
saint said what’. It was fun and helped us to enter the world of the saints
more fully.
One of the
quotes I wrote down reminds me of this passage from Ratzinger. St. Augustine of
Hippo, ‘Sing, and keep going.’ I think this pithily gives us our Christian way
of life in the world. To sing and keep going—praise God, lift up our hearts and
minds and voices to the Lord in thanksgiving and worship… but keep moving in
this world, keep heading towards the new and everlasting Jerusalem, keep living
our life in such a way that our feet tend towards the kingdom of love and
goodness.
We all can
tend to live in our world where the ‘sufferings of history’ are endured and the
pains of life have a way of grabbing our full attention. There is something
about ‘gathering it all in to the sacrifice of praise’, as Ratzinger so
beautifully puts it here, that is absolutely crucial if we are to navigate our
life correctly and get to our final and proper destination.
All,
ultimately, is to be gathered upon into praise and into song. Even the most
dreadful events, the deepest sufferings, the worst evils visited upon
people—all of this is meant to be redeemed and transformed into a song of
praise. This is very deep, this business of song and praise. Even if you happen
to be tone deaf and have little to no musical appreciation, there is something
about song and praise that is at the heart of reality, something that is not,
in the end, optional at its core.
Heaven, C.S.
Lewis writes in the Screwtape Letters, has
only silence and music. Hell has neither, and is all noise. Our world is a
battleground of silence and music against noise. To sing and keep going, to
enter now in the midst of the noise of the world into the sacrifice of praise,
the song of the Risen Christ, is to win a great battle that rages in our own
hearts and lives, too.
That within us
which is Noise, which is Hell (and we all have a little bit of Hell in us,
alas), tells us to respond to the struggles and strains and evils of life by
asserting our own prerogatives, by taking control of our own destiny, by
extending our self as far as we can into this world. Only by the extension of
the ego into the world can we push back the evils and ills that beset us. And
so, as all our egos get busy clamoring for that push, for tat extension, Noise
grows and grows and grows in the world.
That within us
which is Heaven (and I believe every human being has at least a glimmer of that
gold shining somewhere in them) bids us to be silent, and to praise God with a
psalm. To sing, and keep going. Singing, in which that in us which must express
itself is coordinated into a beautiful harmonious whole, a unity of love and
purpose, and silence in which that which is interior in us is made receptive
and attentive both to God and the needs of our brothers and sisters. And then,
to keep going, to keep loving, to keep serving, to keep moving through the
world that is into the world that is to be, the world Christ is fashioning in
his resurrected body and to which the whole cosmos is turning and yearning. And
that is the fundamental way of life of the Christian in the world.
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