Preached on Sunday, April 30, 2017.
With Summer coming and all the many activities that are available, you may have friends invite you to do something fun on Saturday afternoon or Sunday morning to which you reply ... “Oh no, I can’t join you at that time, I have to go to Mass!”
They may ask? “What is Mass?” and “What do you mean ... you have to go?”
How would you answer them?
How would you describe the Mass?
You might be flustered and tell them ... “I have to go to Mass ... you know Church
... it’s the way we Catholics have Sunday Service.”
But that wouldn’t tell them what the Mass is ... or why you feel you have to go.
How much better if you could simply tell them that:
the Mass is the re-presentation
of the once for all sacrifice of Jesus to the Father
for the redemption of the whole world!
That’s a mighty powerful and profound statement!
Notice the word is “re-presentation” ... not “representation”.
A representation is simply an image of something else ... whereas,
A re-presentation is an actual participation in the same original event.
And “the Event” ... in this case ... is:
Jesus’ self- offering of His Body and Blood
to atone for the sins of the whole world!
Is that an Event worth celebrating? Yes, indeed!
Because the sins of the whole world include yours and my sins too!
Yes, all of our sins have been atoned for by the once for all sacrifice of Jesus!
Notice, we say the once for all sacrifice of Jesus ...
not the once and for all sacrifice of Jesus ...
as that would indicate a finality to the Event ...
implying that what happened 2000 years ago ... is over and done with.
Whereas, the expression : “the once for all sacrifice of Jesus” refers to ...
the universal breath of redemption ... that it includes all people of all time ...
and it makes no reference to “the Event” being over and done with.
God is eternal ...
and the sacrifice that Jesus offered is eternal ...
which means that the Once for All Sacrifice that He offered on earth ...
is ever present to the Father in Heaven!
And it’s the one and the same sacrifice ... that we get to participate in
in every Mass ... the re-presentation of Jesus’ love for all of us!
Jesus’ sharing of His Body and Blood at the Last Supper on Holy Thursday ...
and
Jesus’ death on the Cross on Good Friday ...
are two Events that are inseparably fused in time.
For just as the Passover of the Old Covenant involved ...
the sacrifice of a lamb and the eating of the lamb in a communion meal.
So too, the Passover of the New Covenant ...
that Jesus established at the Last Supper ... involved ...
the sacrifice of a Lamb ... the Lamb of God ...
and the eating of his Flesh and Blood in a Holy Communion Meal!
It was this Sacrifice ... of the Only Begotten Son of God ...
that won redemption for the whole world!
And it’s this very sacrifice that we get to be present to ... in every Mass!
What is the Mass?
It’s the way that we ... the children of God ...
get to participate in the greatest act of love ... ever.
Recall how Jesus said,
“Greater love than this no man has than to give his life for his friends.”
Well Jesus gave His life for all men and women of all time ...
making His Sacrifice ... the greatest act of love ... ever.
And Jesus wants us to remember His Great love for us ...
which is why He instructed his Apostles on Holy Thursday ...
to: “do this in memory of Me.”
Do what?
Do what He did ... celebrate the Passover of the New Covenant!
Jesus said,
“This is the chalice of my Blood, the Blood of the New and Eternal Covenant, which will be poured out for you and for many for the forgiveness of sins.
Do this in memory of me.”
We call it the Eucharist. The great act of Thanksgiving!
It’s where we offer Jesus once again to the Father ...
and eat His Flesh in a Holy Meal!
For 2000 years ... the Catholic Church has been doing ...
what the Lord commanded his followers to do ...
we’ve been celebrating the New Covenant in His Blood ...
in the liturgy called the Mass!
And not just on Sundays but every day of the week
thereby enabling the faithful to participate in ...
the greatest act of Love there ever was.
In Luke’s Gospel today, we heard about the Second Mass ever prayed.
When did it occur? On Easter Sunday night.
Luke begins by saying, “That very day, the first day of the week,
two disciples of Jesus were going to a village ... Emmaus.”
And what was their experience?
First Jesus, the High Priest, met them on the way and opened the Scriptures for them to the point that their hearts were burning.
Then at dinner, Jesus “took bread, said the blessing, broke it and gave it to them.”
And it was then that they recognized Him … in the breaking of the bread,...
just as He had done at the Last Supper ... three nights before!
So, you have a Priest, Jesus, sharing the Scriptures and explaining their relevance (what we call the Liturgy of the Word)
and then you have a Priest take bread and bless it supernaturally transforming it into the Body and Blood of Jesus (what we call the Liturgy of the Eucharist)
Together, these two components comprise the Mass.
And so the Second Mass was prayed just 3 days after the first one.
And the Mass has been prayed ever since ... now all around the world.
Do you have any idea how many Masses are prayed every day? 364,000!
That means that the praying of the Mass never stops ...
And it will continue to be prayed ... until the end of time.
As we described last week ... the Eucharist is a manifestation of Jesus’
more than enough Love for us ...
It’s the way that Jesus gets to be in union with us in a most intimate way this side of Heaven ... where we receive Him into our Body and become one with Him!
It’s the way that we remember and celebrate His great Love for us!
So when people ask you ... What is the Mass? and Why do you have to go?
Hopefully you’ll be able to explain to them :
That the Mass is way more than a duty ...
Yes, it’s the way we honor God’s 3rd commandment... but it’s way more than that ... it is a participation in the Greatest Love Affair ever ...
The Love of God for all of mankind.
And it’s the way we listen to our Lover and speak our hearts to Him ...
knowing that He cares and that we’re so dear to Him
So lets’ never forget God’s great love for us
And let’s celebrate it every week together here in His house
Where we hear His word
And offer the Lamb of God to the Father
And partake of the Body and Blood of the Lamb.
You see, there’s no Beach, no Lake, no vacation, no picnic, no sport,
no other event in the world that can compete with ...
The event of celebrating God’s love for us ... in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
And so we faithfully and happily come ... to do this ...in memory of Him!
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