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World Youth Day Novena Starts July 4
User's Guide to Sunday
BY Tom & April Hoopes June 29 - July 5, 2008 Issue |
Posted 6/24/08 at 12:19 PM
Sunday, July
6, is the 14th Sunday in ordinary time (Year A, Cycle II).
Churchwide
This week marks the final week
before World Youth Day in Sydney, Australia. Pope Benedict will travel there on
July 12.
We pointed out here that, when he
visited the United States, Pope Benedict asked in a particular, insistent way
for prayers for a New Pentecost in America.
This is also what he has asked of
the whole Church in preparation for World Youth Day.
“Together we shall invoke the Holy
Spirit,” he said, “confidently asking God for the gift of a new Pentecost for
the Church and for humanity in the third millennium.” If you’d like to pray a
novena for World Youth Day, you’ll want to begin on July 4. Find a Holy Spirit
novena at EWTN.com (choose “Faith” and then “Devotions”).
Family
July 4 is Independence Day, of
course. Our family has a tradition of going to Mass this day. The priest
usually does a votive Mass for Independence Day. It is a wonderful day to
reaffirm commitment not just to America but also our nation’s founding.
We like to do recitations in our
family. Each child takes turns standing on a stool and reciting a poem or
important passage. Independence Day is a good day for family members to
memorize and present the Pledge of Allegiance, the Preamble to the Declaration
of Independence and the Constitution, and the first verse of the National
Anthem.
If they know these already, find
additional material in William Bennett’s 1993 Book of Virtues —
which you family should buy or borrow if you don’t have it!
• “America” (page
718)
• “The Americans’
Creed” (page 219)
• “America the
Beautiful” (page 772)
• “Concord Hymn”
(page 713)
• “The Gettysburg
Address” (page 568)
• “Paul Revere’s
Ride” (page 708)
Media
It’s hard to find a good movie about
America’s founding and patriotism. The Patriot is the
most high-budget recent movie about the war of Independence, but it commits the
typical Hollywood error of emphasizing a personal story of revenge instead of
focusing on the high ideals that motivated our founding. It’s also gratuitously
violent.
For small children, Schoolhouse
Rock’s series on America, now available on DVD, is excellent.
Readings
Zechariah 9:9-10; Psalm 145:1-2,
8-11, 13-14; Romans 8:9, 11-13; Matthew 11:25-30
EPriest.com offers free homily
packs for priests.
Readings
Here’s a shortcut to understanding
the readings at each Mass.
Old Testament: Crack the code. For
the Old Testament reading, remember that the Church brings these to our
attention to show God’s long preparation for Christ. Try to find what in the
Old Testament refers to our Redeemer.
In this week’s reading from Zechariah,
it’s fairly obvious: an explicit prophecy of Christ. “Rejoice heartily, O
daughter Zion, shout for joy, O daughter Jerusalem! See, your king shall come
to you; a just savior is he, meek, and riding on an ass, on a colt, the foal of
an ass.”
See the prophecy come true in Mary’s
trip to Bethlehem and in Our Lord’s entrance to Jerusalem at the time of the
Passover.
Psalm: Pray with Christ. The Psalms
are a way for us to be in direct solidarity with Christ and the Blessed Mother,
who prayed the Psalms as good Jews. It’s easy to forget that the Psalms are a
prayer; then they just sound like strange poems.
The key to making the Psalms work is
to pray them instead of saying them. Look at the crucifix or the tabernacle, if
that helps, and speak their message from your heart, with hope and faith.
Second reading: Find the sound bite.
The reading from St. Paul is often difficult to understand, but it can be
helpful to listen to the reading looking for a sound bite — a specific brief
thought you can remember throughout the week
Today’s is all about living
according to the love relationship we have with God instead of our passions
alone. Particularly in light of Benedict’s call to pray for a new Pentecost,
listen to and remember this: God will “give life to your mortal bodies also,
through his Spirit that dwells in you.”
Gospel: Note the verbs. The Gospels
are a way for us to learn to be like our friend Jesus, because in them we see
how he acts and reacts. Look for the action words and apply them to your own
life.
Today’s: “I give praise to you,
Father,” he says. So should we. “You have revealed [truth] to little ones,” he
says. We should seek revelation in simplicity. “Come to me,” he says. “I will
give you rest.” “Take my yoke upon you,” he says — in other words work with him
— “and learn from me.”
If we actually cooperate with
Christ, he says, his yoke is easy and his burden light.
The
Hoopeses are editorial directors of Faith &
Family magazine (faithandfamilymag.com).
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