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LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS
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LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

LITURGY AND THE

SACRAMENTS

Page 2: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Liturgy is the Church’s

OFFICIAL

PUBLIC

COMMUNAL

PRAYER

(Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Page 3: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

OFFICIAL(a spontaneous prayer service is not official)

PUBLIC(open to all)

COMMUNAL(we worship as a COMMUNITY – equality, solidarity, cooperation)

PRAYER(lifting up of our hearts to God)

Page 4: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

FIVE BOOKSLike Torah!

But it’s not Torah!

Page 5: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Roman Missal

Used by the priest at Mass, contains all the prayers of the Mass

Page 6: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Lectionary for Mass

Contains the readings for Mass, first, second, responsorial psalm and gospel acclamations

Page 7: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Book of Gospels

Contains only the Gospels

Page 8: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Rite of Baptism for children

Contains the rituals necessary for baptism. Each sacrament and other blessings and consecrations has a separate book

Page 9: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Liturgy of the Hours

Readings, hymns and prayers for the seven “hours” of the day. There is a book for each “season” of the year

Page 10: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

What is the Paschal Mystery?

The work of salvation accomplished by Jesus mainly through his life, Passion, death, Resurrection and Ascension

Page 11: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

What is the Church?

The people of God; the whole membership of the baptized who work in union with each other to participate in God’s work.

Page 12: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

• As a community we are the “Body of Christ”.

• We are adopted children of God through Jesus and the Holy Spirit

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Liturgy is

• The Church’s celebration of the Paschal Mystery (Every Sunday celebrates Easter!)

• God’s work of salvation in which we are called to participate

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Liturgy is…(cont’d)

• Ritual, repeated, meaningful symbols and actions

• Decreed by Jesus “Do this in Memory of Me”

Page 15: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

• Through Jesus, we receive a new law that fulfills the old law, a new covenant that fulfills the old covenant.

• Through the Holy Spirit we share the grace of God that helps us to live the new law.

• We are called to gather together and participate in liturgy that in turn encourages us to go out and bring the good news to others.

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Creation

• Creation is good, but evil grows• God promises to help restore our relationship

Salvation

History

• God builds a community with Abraham, give the Law through Moses, leads the people through David and prophets

Redemptio

n

• Through His life, passion, death, resurrection and ascension (Paschal mystery) Jesus restores our relationship with God

• The Church with the help of the Holy Spirit continues the work of salvation.

Liturgy

• The Liturgy is the way we participate in and celebrate God’s work of salvation

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• Where does our Liturgy come from?• Christ is its origin• Scripture and Tradition give us the essential

elements of Liturgy• Form a single deposit of faith

• The Magisterium (pope + bishops), with the guidance of the Holy Spirit, is responsible for interpreting the deposit of faith

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• The traditions that have influenced the Liturgy are customs, things we do because they are part of our history and culture• Washing hands, the direction the priest

faces, etc. • Essential elements are kept where

traditional elements may be kept, modified or eliminated with the guidance of the Magisterium

Page 19: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

• Tradition from the word meaning to “hand on or give over”.

• Our liturgy has been handed on to us by Jesus• “took bread, said the blessing, broke it and giving it to

the Apostles said “take and eat, this is my body…do this in memory of Me”

• “I received from the Lord what I also handed on to you, that the Lord Jesus, on the night he was arrested, took bread….

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• Liturgy is Trinitarian• The Trinity is at work in the Church’s Liturgy- Father,

Son, & Holy Spirit• Trinity is the central mystery of the Christian faith

• Begins with “In the name of the Father…”• Ends with a blessing of the Holy Trinity• Each person is involved in the Church’s Liturgy

• Father is the source of all blessings of creation and salvation

• Jesus who became incarnate to redeem us is central in the Liturgy

• Christ’s gift of himself is made present to us by the power of the Holy Spirit

Page 21: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

The Rublev Icon

Andrei Rublev, 1425

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• Liturgy is the prayer of the Church, in heaven, on Earth and in Purgatory• We are connected to all of those outside of time

and space, Mary, angels, saints, etc.

• Communion of Saints:• Heaven• Earth• Purgatory

• People on Earth pray for those in Purgatory, who get to Heaven, and then pray for those on Earth!

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“Through Christ Our Lord”

• We are united with the Trinity because God the Father saves us through the actions of God, the Son, and we are able to live as Christ with the help of God, the Holy Spirit.

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• Christ is present in all liturgy• In the ordained minister who acts in the

person of Jesus.• In the assembly of people, as the “Body of

Christ”• In the Scripture, the “Word of God” that is an

essential element of every liturgy• In the Eucharist, in a special way, Jesus is

truly present in Body and Blood

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“In the Unity of the Holy Spirit”

The Holy Spirit:

• Prepares us to encounter Jesus

• Helps the assembly to see Jesus Presence within itself, in the Scripture and in the sacramental actions

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• Transforms the bread and wine into the Body and Blood, the real presence, of Jesus, making Christ’s saving work present and active, here and now.

• The Holy Spirit helps us to take the message of God’s love to all whom we meet.

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Trinitarian DoxologyThrough Him,

with Him,

in Him,

In the unity of the Holy Spirit,

all glory and honor is yours, almighty Father,forever and ever.

Amen.

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Liturgical Calendar

• Celebrates the whole of the Paschal Mystery, from the Incarnation to Pentecost

Purple Waiting, penanceWhite/Gold JoyGreen Hope

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• Advent: • Begins the Liturgical year• a time of preparation, 4 weeks (22-28 days) before

Christmas• To celebrate the birth of God made flesh• To celebrate Jesus coming into our own hearts• To prepare for the final coming of Jesus

• Christmas: • Begins on Dec. 25th and ends with the Solemnity of the

Baptism of Jesus (3rd Sunday after Christmas)• Includes Epiphany (aka Little Christmas/Three Kings

Day) on the 12th day of Christmas (revelation to the Gentiles)

• Also includes Feast of the Holy Innocents (12/28 – infants massacred by Herod), Feast of the Holy Family, and Feast of Mary, Mother of God (1/1)

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• Ordinary Time I and II:• Numbered with ordinal numbers.• Two sections in the year,

• 1st between Christmas to Lent• 2nd between Pentecost to Advent.

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• Lent:• Based on Jesus fasting 40 days in desert• Begins on Ash Wednesday (46 calendar days, Sundays don’t

count)• Encouraged to fast, pray and give alms• Focus on what Jesus did for us

• Easter Triduum• Three Days when we remember in the most intense way the

suffering and death of Jesus• Begins the evening of Thursday and ends Sunday evening (in

the Jewish tradition)• Holy Thursday: Mass of the Lord’s Supper• Good Friday: Reflect on Passion narrative, venerate the

Cross• Easter Sunday: Easter Vigil on Saturday evening- great

celebration with candles, fire, water and the welcoming of new members

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• Easter Season:• Begins on Easter Sunday and continues to Pentecost

Sunday, 50 days later.• Coincides with spring (goddess Estre, goddess of

Spring)• Liturgy speaks of new life• Centers on the hope of our new life, an everlasting

life.• 40 days after Easter: Ascension Thursday: Jesus

ascended back into heaven.• 50 days after Easter: season ends with Pentecost,

the Church is revealed and we, like the apostles, are sent forth to carry out Jesus’ mission to the world

Page 33: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Liturgical Rites & Traditions

• Latin Rites• Roman Rite***• Ambrosian Rite• Mozarabic Rite• Bragan Rite• Dominican Rite• Carmelite Rite• Carthusian Rite

Eastern Catholic Churches (21)• Eastern Rite

• Antiochene Rite• Chaldean Rite• Byzantine Rite• Alexandrian( Coptic, Ethiopian)

Rite• Armenian Rite

• Follows its own ancient traditions, has its own Bishops and different liturgical language and liturgical customs

Roman Catholic Church (1)

United under the leadership of the Bishop of Rome, the PopeThey either chose to remain united with the Roman church at the

time of the Schism (1054 AD) or reunited with it later.

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1054: The Church is Split – Catholic and Orthodox

Filiaque (“and the Son”) Debate

• Catholic Church says the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son, reasoning that if the Spirit only came from the Father, there seems to be two sons.

• Catholic Church was OK with Orthodox not having these words, Orthodox insisted they be removed from Creed.

Other issues• Iconoclasm debate had

upset Catholics.• Also, Catholics had a

leadership model of one pope leading all, while Orthodox had a conciliar model, led by Patriarchs. (Stemming from 5 Patriarchs in the Roman Empire – the empire split, 4 in the East, only Rome in the West.)

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Celebrating the Liturgy• All Liturgical celebrations are the same because Jesus

is present in the same way whether a large or small group, a renown celebrant or a local priest, music or silent.

• Tips for celebrating the Liturgy:• Be there, physically, mentally and spiritually

Page 37: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

• Ask the Holy Spirit for help to fully participate

• Listen and participate in the prayers

• Listen to the readings and let them affect you

Page 38: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

• Fervently pray during the Prayer of the Faithful

• If there is singing, join in, singing hymns is like praying twice according to St. Augustine

• Respond during the liturgy with your heart as well as your mouth

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• Use your whole body in prayer• Receive Communion with reverence,

you are holding the real body of Christ

• When you leave Mass, obey the command to “Go forth” and bring the good news out to the world with you.

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Structure of Liturgy

1. Introductory Rites• Greeting• Opening prayer

2. Liturgy of the Word• Readings, Psalm, Gospel• Homily

3. Celebration of Sacrament• Essential elements

4. Liturgy of the Eucharist• Consecration and

reception of Eucharist

5. Concluding Rites• Blessing• Dismissal

Page 41: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

sACRAMENTS• A symbol points to another reality.

• Sacraments are effective signs, instituted by Christ and entrusted to the Church, to give grace.• In other words, they do not merely remind us or

represent another reality: they make that reality come true.

• A stop sign doesn’t ACTUALLY stop your car.• Baptism symbolizes AND creates new life. The

Eucharist symbolizes AND brings becomes the body and blood of Christ.

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Sacraments and Mysteries

• We are used to murder mysteries, so when we heard the word mystery, we think of something we need to solve.

• In the Greek church, the word for sacrament means mystery.

• We can never SOLVE a mystery, but we can contemplate it to further understand it

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• To receive a sacrament, one needs the required disposition. (i.e. to be forgiven in Reconciliation, one must feel sorry for their sins, intend to do better in the future)

• Sacraments DO NOT depend on the holiness of the priest or the recipient – they are a gift from God’s goodness.

Page 44: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

Prayer• Prayer can be communal or private

• Types of prater:• Blessing/praise/adoration: blessing God;

acknowledging God’s greatness• Thanksgiving• Petition/contrition: pray for our needs, especially

forgiveness• Intercession: pray for the needs of others

Page 45: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

• Advent The four-week liturgical season during which Christians prepare themselves for the celebration of Christmas.

•  • Christmas The feast day on which Christians celebrate

the birth of Jesus; also refers to the liturgical season that immediately follows this day.

•  • Eastern Catholic Churches The twenty-one Churches

of the East, with their own theological, liturgical, and administrative traditions, in union with the universal Catholic Church and her head, the Bishop of Rome.

•  

Page 46: LITURGY AND THE SACRAMENTS. Liturgy is the Church’s OFFICIAL PUBLIC COMMUNAL PRAYER (Sacraments, Funerals, Liturgy of the Hours)

• Epiphany A feast day celebrating the visit of the Magi to the infant Jesus and the revelation of the Savior to the Gentiles. Originally celebrated on the twelfth day of Christmas (January 6), Epiphany is now celebrated on the Sunday between January 2 and January 8.

•  • icon From a Greek word meaning “to resemble”; a pictorial representation

or image of a religious figure or event typically painted on a wooden panel and used in the prayer and worship of Eastern Christians.

•  • Lent Traditionally, the span of forty days (excepting Sundays) between Ash

Wednesday and Easter Sunday. In the official Church calendar, it begins with Ash Wednesday and ends on Holy Thursday evening with the celebration of the Mass of the Lord’s Supper. It is followed by the Triduum, the three days of the Lord’s Passion, death, and Resurrection. It is the season during which believers focus on conversion, turning toward God more completely in their lives.

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•  liminal Of, relating to, or being an intermediate state, phase, or condition. This type of experience is one of being between one significant moment and another; a threshold experience; for example, the time of engagement before marriage.

•  • Liturgical year The Church’s annual cycle of religious

feasts and seasons that forms the context for the Church’s worship. During it, we remember and celebrate God the Father’s saving plan as it is revealed through the life of his Son, Jesus Christ.

•  • liturgy The Church’s official, public, communal prayer. It

is God’s work, in which the People of God participate. The Church’s most important liturgy is the Eucharist, or the Mass.

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• Magisterium The Church’s living teaching office, which consists of all the bishops, in communion with the Pope.

•  • Ordinary Time The time in the liturgical year that is not

part of a special season like Advent, Christmas, Lent, or Easter.

•  • Paschal Mystery The work of salvation accomplished

by Jesus Christ mainly through his life, Passion, death, Resurrection, and Ascension.

•  

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• Passover The night the Lord passed over the houses of the Israelites marked by the blood of the lamb, and spared the firstborn sons from death. It also is the feast that celebrates the deliverance of the Chosen People from bondage in Egypt and the Exodus from Egypt to the Promised Land.

•  • Pentecost The biblical event following the Resurrection and

Ascension of Jesus at which the Holy Spirit was poured out on his disciples; in the Christian liturgical year, the feast fifty days after Easter on which the biblical event of Pentecost is recalled and celebrated.

•  • ritual The established form of the words and actions for a

ceremony that is repeated often. The actions often have a symbolic meaning.

•  

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• Tradition This word (from the Latin, meaning “to hand on”) refers to the process of passing on the Gospel message. This began with the oral communication of the Gospel by the Apostles, was written down in the Scriptures, is handed down and lived out in the life of the Church, and is interpreted by the Magisterium under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.

•  • Triduum The three days of the liturgical year that begin with the Mass of the

Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday and end with Evening Prayer on Easter Sunday.

•  • Trinity From the Latin trinus, meaning “threefold,” referring to the central

mystery of the Christian faith that God exists as a communion of three distinct and interrelated Divine Persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This doctrine is a mystery that is inaccessible to human reason alone and is known through Divine Revelation only.

•  • World Youth Day Instituted by Pope John Paul II in 1985, World Youth

Days are convocations of youth held in Rome and in several cities around the world to celebrate and encourage the participation of youth in the life of the Church.