My blogging is a bit off-set this week,
as I’m about to disappear for a couple of days, off doing a parish mission in
the local area. So Wednesday’s blog was yesterday, and Thursday’s is today.
Friday’s blog will be Saturday, and then we’re back to normal…
In our commentary on the Mass we have
finally reached the Eucharistic Prayer beginning with the preface. The preface is not a part of the Mass
that catches many people’s attention especially. If you have a priest who is a
decent singer, it may stand out as one of the first longer sung prayers of the
Mass, but I have noticed that most priests most of the time opt to recite it,
at least in my experience.
The preface, though, along with the
Sanctus that follows it, brings out an important dimension of liturgy, one that
is important indeed for our living it out in our daily lives. It is a prayer of
the Mass that is intensely concerned with where we are in liturgical time, with
where we are situated on this wonderful grand wheel of the year that revolves
around. Now it is Advent, soon it will be Christmas.
There are prefaces for each season of the
year, along with prefaces for some of the ‘mini-seasons’ – the week after
Epiphany, the time between Ascension and Pentecost, the last two weeks of Lent.
There are prefaces for the various ‘types’ of saints’ days—apostles, martyrs,
pastors, virgins. There are specific prefaces for all the major feasts of Our
Lord and Our Lady of the year and for solemnities of saints—John the Baptist,
Joseph, Peter and Paul. And so on and so forth—I have no doubt missed a couple.
Some of the richest liturgical catechesis
we have is found in these prefaces, some of the best explanations of the
meaning of the seasons and feasts. Parents raising children would do well to
remember them as a resource for religious education.
But beyond that basic catechetical
function which is secondary in the liturgy, the preface functions to ground us
in the here and the now, that this liturgy which is the eternal action of the
Son towards the Father, the eternal act of love and oblation, the very worship
of heaven going on perpetually outside of time, is nonetheless happening to us, right now, on December 1, 2015, and we have the preface (Advent I) to
prove it!
There is this weaving together of heaven
and earth (the Sanctus which concludes the preface and about which I will write
next week is the heaven side of the equation), that is so important for our
whole Christian consciousness and praxis. Our whole Christian life is to be
lived intensely in the now, in the immediate, in the where and the who and the
what of our incarnate lives. But this who, what, and where is always opened at
the top, so to speak, to the eternal reality of God and heaven and love and
worship.
This is why the liturgical calendar has
to spill out from the liturgy into our daily lives. This is why in Catholic
culture the rhythm of the year is not determined strictly by the secular
patterns (September is back to school time! April is tax season! Summer is
beach time!) but by the sacred rhythm of time, time redeemed, time ‘open at the
top’ to eternity.
And so… Advent wreaths. Christmas trees.
Lenten fasts and austerity. Easter breads and eggs. Special meals on the
special days, and more ordinary fare on the ordinary days. A candle lit, a bouquet
of flowers placed before Our Lady’s image in our homes on her feasts. And other
ways of honoring or remembering or sanctifying the home on the other feasts of
the year (Nicholas cookies, Lucy bread). Time has been transformed, and we
cannot just leave that reality in the sanctuary of the Church; it has to be
lived in the domestic Church, somehow. Big ways or small, depending on how we
are able.
The preface of the Mass recalls all this
to us. We live in time; the liturgy occurs in time; God comes to us in time.
But always in time, in liturgy, and in life, there is this upward pull to
heaven and eternity. So the preface always starts with where we are right now
but ends by mentioning the angels and saints in glory and how, as we
contemplate the reality of life lived now, we are called to join with them in
singing the great hymn of praise… and that will be next week’s post.
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