Questions the catechism didn't answer : 50 catechetical instructions on the liturgy of the church. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/questionscatechiOOfisc Queötionö tke (^ateckiöm zDidnt (zAnövoer 50 CATECHETICAL INSTRUCTIONS on THE LITURGY OF THE CHURCH by Dr. Balthasar Fischer ^ke liturgical <*Pre^«> I Questions the Catechism Didn't Answer is the authorized English transla- tion of Was Nicht im Katechismus Stand by Dr. Balthasar Fischer, published by Paulinus Verlag, Trier, Germany. Nihil obstat : Paschal Botz, O.S.B., S.T.D., Censor deputatus. Imprimi potest: © Baldwin Dworschak, O.S.B., Abbot of St. John’s Abbey. Im- primatur: © Peter W. Bartholome, D.D., Bishop of St. Cloud. August 26, 1957. Copyright 1958 by The Order of St. Benedict, Inc., Collegeville, Minnesota. ii CONTENTS INTRODUCTION v THE HOUSE OF GOD 1 HOLY SIGNS 13 HOLY DAYS AND SEASONS . . 24 THE SACRIFICE OF MASS .... 57 THE SACRAMENTS 91 iii IV INTRODUCTION There is no longer a shortage nowadays of learned books on the liturgy. The educated Catholic knows how their num- ber has grown during the last thirty years and what a precious amount of new information about the divine services of the Church they have brought to light. But the simple Christian who would want to gain a deeper knowledge of divine wor- ship (happily there are ever more of them) would not be served by these works. He needs plain lessons in Christian worship that translate for him into simple and bold language the wisdom of the learned works. Such popular lessons in Christian worship this booklet wishes to present. One would expect that every Catholic had acquired the necessary knowledge about divine services in catechism class. Yet, although valuable and solid, the catechisms of our youth fell very short on this important point. Even catechisms are children of their time, and during the first three decades of our century the interest in matters liturgical was surprisingly limited. Few suspected that a revival of the liturgical spirit would come over the Church during the first half of our century, thanks to the three great Popes by the name of Pius. Now many whose hearts are awake, also among ordinary Christians, suddenly realize that much can be learned from the liturgy that was not in the catechism. For these the following fifty lessons about the liturgy are intended. Beginning with the body or nave of the church, the first five chapters describe sacred places, five are devoted to liturgical gestures, fifteen to holy seasons and the central mystery of all liturgy, the celebration of the holy Eucharist; and the circle closes with five lessons on Baptism and five on the other sacraments. In each case this question is put to what has become customary and well-known: Why is it so and what is its lesson ? Instead of thoughtlessly accepting current, super- ficial opinions, our purpose is to penetrate into what lies be- neath the exterior of Catholic worship. These instructions first appeared separately in the diocesan paper Paulinus of Trier and were then, upon request, revised and published in the booklet Was Nicht im Katechismus Stand. Balthasar Fischer vi ^ke ctlouöe o } ^ocl 1 ... THE NAVE OF THE CHURCH When formerly, in my religious instructions to children, I came to speak of the house of God, I usually asked the ques- tion: “Tell me, children, you have heard people speaking about the nave of the church; that the pulpit stands in the main nave, the confessional in the side nave. What do they mean?” Of course, we more commonly use the words main aisle and side aisle, but nave and aisle here mean the same thing. But why speak of nave at all? The word “nave” literally means ship or boat. That’s a strange use of the word, don’t you think ? The church does not float on water, surely. Well, I shall tell you. The early Christians, in speaking of the nave of the church, were thinking of Lake Gennesareth and of St. Peter’s boat in which our Lord was often together with the small group of His disciples. Isn’t it exactly similar in the house of God, they wished to say, that within its walls the Lord is with His fol- lowers amid the waves of world history? That is why we are so happy within this house, more so than in any other in the whole town or city; why we annually celebrate its dedication with great festivity as God’s temple (if the building has been consecrated) . The Lord is actually present among us in this nave of the church as He once was with the apostles in the boat on Lake Gennesareth. And sometimes it happens to us, as it happened to them, that strong waves rage about our boat and we turn 1 2 THE HOUSE OF GOD suppliantly to our great Fellow-passenger. He now too, as then, seems to be asleep. Silently and seemingly unconcerned about our needs, He dwells on the altar and in the tabernacle. I believe that if we did not know His answer in advance, we would do as the apostles did and approach Him amid the raging storm, calling to Him: “Master, does it not concern you that we are perishing?” But we do not want to be of little faith. We know that He who ever comes to us in our boat and sails with us, though He be the most calm and seemingly unimportant of our companions, is still Lord over all storms and of all world history. At the right moment He will extend His hand and there will be “a great calm.” See how a dead piece of old picture language begins to live and breathe! Only we must have a little patience, we must stop and reflect till the light comes. It can well be imagined how the eyes of the little ones in school, still living in their picture world, brightened up at my illustrations. And more so as I explained further that in this nave or boat of the church, fish are being caught, yes, human fishes, just as our Lord told St. Peter. They are caught with hooks, one at a time, and occasionally there is a jerk on the line and in the heart of the fisherman when he hears: “My last confession was so and so many years ago.” With nets, too, they are caught, many at a time, with the bait of God’s mighty words coming from pulpit or altar. For these reasons we speak of the nave of the church, be- cause in the church our Lord really comes to us time and again and stays with us bodily as once with His disciples on the lake; and therefore we sail with Him confidently amid violent storms. Even when He appears sound asleep, we know and believe what was already said in the Book of Psalms: “He neither slumbers nor sleeps who guards Israel.” 2 ... THE TWELVE CROSSES ALONG THE CHURCH WALLS Few of those, I am sure, who Sunday after Sunday come to a consecrated church (only such have the twelve crosses), ever notice the little crosses painted along its interior side walls. Never have they heard a reference to this decoration, much less do they know what it is for. But on one particular Sunday of the year in such a church, the twelve crosses can hardly go unnoticed (if all is done right). I refer to the Sunday on which the solemn dedication of the church is annually celebrated. According to beautiful, ancient custom, a candle then burns before each of the crosses as part of the festive commemoration of the day on which the bishop solemnly blessed or baptized this house of God. It is not accidental that candles are lit at those twelve places. For the first time they were burning there on that blessed occasion when the bishop with cope and mitre solemnly stepped down from the altar and anointed the church walls on those very spots with holy chrism, just as a newly baptized person is anointed on the crown of his head. During the ceremony the choir chanted hymns about the heavenly Jerusalem, how it is adorned as the Bride of the Lamb and knows not the darkness of night. If you are familiar with your Bible, you will recall where the choir found those words—in the Apocalypse of St. John, in the chapter describing the heavenly Jerusalem. The house of 3 4 THE HOUSE OF GOD God should be a part of heaven, a reflection and image of the heavenly City. Read through that chapter again (ch. 21 of the Apocalypse) from beginning to end, and you will see why just twelve places on God’s house are anointed. For there it says of the heavenly City which the apostle saw in vision : “The wall of the city has twelve foundation stones, and on them twelve names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.” Now you know why the bishop anoints those twelve spots along the wall of the church, the image of the heavenly Jerusalem. They should remind us of the twelve apostles; that is why the crosses are called “Apostle crosses” and the candles “Apostle candles.” All the joy that comes to us in this earthly house of God and all the happiness—please God! — we may one day enjoy in heaven, rest “on the foundation of the apostles,” and flow from the faith which the Twelve have faithfully handed down to us from the lips of the Master and firmly sealed by their martyrdom. Really, this significant adornment on the church walls, if we understand it correctly, is a bit of the ancient veneration for the apostles. But over and above, the crosses want to tell us something more, which our Christian brethren in the East feel more deeply than we, that every Catholic church, no matter how small or poor, is part of the eternal Jerusalem, a forecourt to heaven. That same chapter of the Apocalypse quoted above tells how the citizens of the heavenly Jerusalem no longer need the sun or the moon, for “the Lamb is the lamp thereof.” Isn’t this more or less anticipated every time the same “Lamb” comes into our midst in a hidden form and we say to Him: “Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, have mercy on us”? But also when the holy Sacrifice is over the “Lamb” remains present on the altar, reserved in the taber- nacle, a living echo of the Eucharistic celebration. Hence very MARTYRS7 RELICS IN THE ALTAR 5 fittingly, during our visits to the Blessed Sacrament, the sanc- tuary lamp reminds us of those consoling words of the Apocalypse: “The Lamb is the lamp thereof.” 3 ... WHY MARTYRS7 RELICS IN THE ALTAR? Have you ever witnessed the consecration of a church? Yes? Well, then, one thing you have not forgotten is that it lasted a long time. But despite its length, I am sure you felt it was well worth attending. It is indeed a magnificent ceremony, stirring in parts and inspiring throughout. One of the highlights (remember?) was the procession that bore martyrs’ relics into the new church. The vestments for this were, appropriately, red; the singing festive, trium- phant. Down the center aisle the procession moved, and on into the sanctuary until it reached the altar. There, in a little “sepulchre” ground into the horizontal slab (mensa), the relics were reverently interred. That the altar should contain martyrs’ relics is an ancient rule in the Church. St. Ambrose, the great fourth-century bishop of Milan, knew and honored it. What led to this peculiarly Christian custom, and what is its message? The custom is, clearly, an outgrowth of another practice that was universally followed in the early Church. On the anniversary of a martyr’s death, friends and relatives accom- panied by a priest came to his grave to offer a commemora- tive Mass. On these occasions the coffin served as altar, or in lieu of that, an altar was improvised over the remains. 6 THE HOUSE OF GOD You can imagine what an impression this must have made on the bystanders, the more so because of the times. Persecu- tion was forever in progress, or threatening. The holy martyr had met death for his faith. This was his grave. All present realized only too well that the same test might at any moment overtake each of them. The group was not very large, to avert suspicion. Often the destination was one of those sub terranean burial chambers which may still be seen in the Roman catacombs, where no sun came through from the outside and one had to make his way by candlelight. What thoughts crowded their minds as they stood encircling the holy martyr, and in union with the priest offered the holy Sacrifice from an altar over his grave! Or rather, how spoke the holy martyr to them? For, speak he did, in the silence of their hearts. “ ‘Be imitators of me as I am of Christ,’ ” he began, echoing the Apostle (i Cor. n:i). “As for me,” he continued, “I followed the Lord Christ, even to death; and now, in recompense, I share His glory, too, the glory of His resurrection which shall appear when He comes again in power and majesty. For this I have not myself to thank; no, I thank only the Lord’s boundless mercy. The same eternal crown awaits you. In the Sacrifice of the Lord’s death, here offered from my grave, is found the way and the pledge. Christ came to glory through death. Die with Christ daily, and never cease to die. Then shall you also live with Christ and follow in His glory.” As the group returned home, the experience at the grave went with them, not soon to be forgotten. No homily from the priest had been necessary; the saint’s mute exhortation was quite enough. And because the experience could so rouse and strengthen the Christian soul, one did not wish to lose the opportunity when, under the Emperor Constantine, persecu- tion came to an end and the cubicles in homes and ceme- MARTYRS7 RELICS IN THE ALTAR 7 teries yielded to public edifices of worship. In fact, as the nations thronged into the Church, the memory of the martyrs became, if anything, more necessary. Accordingly, wherever possible the churches that now sprang up were erected over the site of a martyr’s grave, and the altar was located above or near the sacred relics. Visitors to Rome will know what I mean. There, in the Churches of St. Peter, St. Lawrence outside the Walls, St. Clement, and many others, they have seen the small crypt near the main altar, called the “Con- fession,” a small vestibule usually glowing with vigil lights in memory of the holy martyr (s). Naturally, not every church could be built over a martyr’s grave, since in some localities none existed. But the idea was maintained. If the grave of a martyr was not available, at least one could have a martyr’s relics. And this is how our custom began. In solemn procession the relics of a martyr were brought from his grave to the newly-erected church. The procession formed outside the church, from where it moved inside and down the aisle to the altar, just as it is done today. The why and the wherefore of relics in the altar should now be clear. The custom reaches back, if not to the earliest, still to very early times, and the reason stems from a funda- mental dogma of Christianity. All Christian life is a martyr- dom, or it is nothing. Every Christian must have the soul of a martyr, must immolate himself on a cross. This is the message of the relics, the message of the Mass itself. Without self-immolation prayer and praise, however “liturgical,” can become like “sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal” (i Cor. 13:1). To die with Christ, that makes the Christian. Die with Christ to live with Him . So speak the holy martyrs every where, from their graves and from all altars. 4 ... THE ALTAR COVERED BY WHITE LINENS One should think that for the altar the most precious silks or gold brocade would be barely good enough. How then does it happen that the Church so strongly insists on the altar being covered with linen cloths (and even three of them) ? The answer sounds quite simple, and yet many Christians no longer know what is really involved. The altar is a table, and mothers the world over have ever covered their tables with linen cloths. Why then should Mother Church not do the same with her holy table ? The Christian house of God is, before all else, a second cenacle; in the center of the cenacle stands the holy “table of the Lord,” covered in white. Indeed, the altar in our church is more than just a table of the Last Supper; it also represents the rock of Calvary. It stands before us as the sacred place of Sacrifice and as the table of the sacred Banquet. Much as it reminds us in several ways of the Sacrifice (its elevated position, the crucifix, the candles, the relics), it derives its essential form not only from the Sacrifice, but also from the Banquet which flows from the Sacrifice. It is a table. To this day our Christian brethren in the East have no other word for the altar than “the holy table”; and also among us the altar plate is referred to in the Latin term of mensa, which means “table.” In former days the faithful realized more clearly than we do that the altar is a table. First of all, in those days it was covered in white before their eyes at each holy Mass (just as 8 THE ALTAR COVERED BY WHITE LINENS 9 is done on Good Friday). But what was more important, the faithful were permitted, at least in some places, to approach the holy table and there receive from the hands of the celebrant the sacred Food and drink of the chalice. How could they have forgotten that the altar is a table! Later on for various reasons the custom of the laity receiving holy Communion directly from the altar was changed; in general, they were to be kept outside the sanctuary altogether. A substitute table was arranged for; we give it the unhappy name of “com- munion rail.” Nevertheless, it represents the altar table; it is the “table of the Lord” and therefore, like the altar in former days, it is covered with a white cloth. The most important part of the altar is, therefore, not that which rises vertically above it. “We have a beautiful altar in our church,” the children say; “there are many beautiful angels on it.” They think—and many adult Catholics share their false notion—that the reredos (the upright ornamental panels behind the altar) is the main thing and the mensa is merely an adjunct; for the priest needs something whereon to put the chalice! There are altars that give the impression that the architect or the pastor whose wishes were followed had a similar idea. In reality the very contrary is true. The rear panel is not essential to the altar; it can be dispensed with, as it was missing in the oldest, and is fortunately also wanting with many of our newer altars. But the mensa can never be wanting; an altar without mensa is simply no altar. To bring home this point to the faithful it is perhaps good that the ancient manner of celebrating holy Mass is now permitted more often by our bishops, the manner which our Holy Father makes use of regularly when offering the holy Sacrifice on the high altar of St. Peter’s, namely, the priest does not stand in front of the altar with his back to the people, but behind the altar, facing the people. I do not, of 10 THE HOUSE OF GOD course, agree with those who maintain that this is the only correct way; that it is not proper for the priest to have his back turned constantly to the people who offer the Mass with him. The one at the head of a delegation appearing before a public official also has his back turned to those who came with him, and we see nothing improper about that. Yet I think the other way should also be followed occasion- ally, since it has the advantage of impressing upon us more clearly that the heavenly Lord (whom the priest represents) is come “to keep the Passover” with us, inviting us to His sacred Banquet. All of us Christians should become more conscious that it is not simply for the fulfillment of our “Sunday duty,” as we so thoughtlessly use the word, but for sharing a festive Banquet that we are invited. How pitiful if one of the invited guests should think: What is said or shown at this Banquet, I will listen to or look at, but I have no intention of eating. Truly, it is hard to understand how so many Catholics can behave that way Sunday after Sunday —except for the one Sunday of the year on which they make their “Easter duty.” 5 ... THE CHOIR Perhaps you never realized it—we are so thoughtless in the use of words—but the same word is used for the sanctuary of the church as for that elevated platform, usually at the rear of the church, reserved for the singers and the organ. And you may even hear the same word used in a third sense, when the THE CHOIR 11 priest announces from the pulpit that next Thursday evening the “choir” will have singing practice. Here the word “choir” no longer designates the place for the clergy or for the chanters, but the body of singers themselves, as when we speak of a “men’s choir” or of a “choir of angels.” Is it merely accidental that the Church uses the same word in these three different meanings? Hardly. There must be some reason behind it. We want to get to the bottom of this, and perhaps it will prove worthwhile. Scholars explain the matter this way: the word “choir” comes from the Greek; it refers to theatre life and denotes a group that appears on the stage, speaking and singing together alongside the principal actors. In this meaning the Church in the early Middle Ages adopted the term, applying it to those who sang in common at the divine services, namely, the clergy in the sanctuary because they carried out the Mass chant insofar as it had simple melodies. For at that time already it was, unfortunately, no longer possible for the con- gregation to sing more than certain short responses and per- haps the Sanctus, since the people had become too unfamiliar with Latin. Soon it became customary to give the name “choir” to the place occupied by the clergy in the sanctuary. From the beginning there always existed a small group of especially trained singers within the large choir of the clergy who rendered the more difficult chants, the so-called schola cantorum. Gradually this group became known as the “choir,” and when it separated itself from its rightful place among the clergy near the altar and sought out a new place as far as possible away from it, the name “choir” went along. So the loft in the rear of the church, where this backing-up movement ended, we call to this day “choir,” because the choir of singers (now entirely from the laity) is located there. Quite properly one could have stopped calling the sanctuary a “choir,” but 12 THE HOUSE OF GOD fortunately this was not done, and there remains, at least in the name, a last reminder that the church choir has some connection with the altar. At this point the answer to our inquiry seems to have an important lesson for us. Choir service in church is altar service, originally performed near the altar and by clerics in liturgical vestments. Something of that holy reverence and recollected- ness which marks the choir service of young clerics should also be reflected by members of church choirs. It were desirable and certainly more correct, if it could be provided, that the singers have a place (preferably concealed) near the altar. Some modern churches have already introduced this arrange- ment; but where this is not possible, those who provide the singing in our churches should be keenly aware that their service is service at the altar and even from their more distant place they must take part in the action at the altar with a greater living devotion than the rest of the faithful. c^loly acramentö 41 . . . WHY SALT IS PLACED ON THE TONGUE OF THE CANDIDATE FOR BAPTISM Didn’t it seem peculiar to you the last time you witnessed a Baptism for the priest to put a few grains of blessed salt on the tongue of the persons to be baptized? In any case, since the individual is usually an infant, the ceremony seems surprising to the little creature, who sometimes shows it in its own fashion. Baptismal salt naturally is a symbol, and one with manifold meanings. Out of the various possibilities I would like to select one which is less frequently thought of, but which was cer- tainly included in the early days when our ceremony originated and when the rite was performed on adults upon entering the catechumenate. You may already have heard allusions to it; for there still are outlying villages in the Balkans where the woman of the house meets a stranger at the doorsteps with bread and salt in her hands. Only aftef the visitor has tasted of the bread and the salt does he enjoy the sacred rights of hospitality. Here also at the church door is a “stranger” being received into a family, the biggest and proudest in the whole wide world. In the name of God’s family, the Church, the priest in accordance with the ancient custom of our forefathers comes to the church door and offers him salt. If you listen carefully you will detect even today how the giving of salt at Baptism (not only, but also) conveys this message. For how could it otherwise be explained that the 91 92 THE SACRAMENTS priest, after offering the salt, greets the new arrival with the kiss of peace and says to him: Pax tecum l Peace be to you! And the prayer said immediately after giving the salt points in the same direction. Let this stranger here—that is the sense of it—when he has become a guest, sit with the children of the house at our holy Table. The accompanying words and action, therefore, originally expressed a yearning for the goal to which the long and arduous road of the catechumenate led, viz., the holy night of Easter when the newly baptized Chris- tian for the first time enjoyed the full right of hospitality at the Table with the children of the house. At the ceremony today we might well think of First Holy Communion, the day when our candidate for Baptism will enjoy the same happiness. “God of our fathers, Thou font of all truth, we pray and beseech Thee graciously look down upon this Thy servant and now that he has tasted the first morsel of salt, let him soon satiate his hunger for heavenly Food.” Do you now understand what this morsel of salt placed by the priest on the tongue of the infant means to tell you so many years after your own Baptism? Once you too received the rights to hospitality in the family of God’s children and to the family Table; now you no longer need to 1 “hunger for the heavenly Food”; the Table is always spread ready for you. Are you not perhaps a bit thoughtless about this, as if it had been just a matter of courtesy on God’s part to let you be born into this world as a child of good Catholic parents? Should you not rather feel ashamed when you see a convert who has found only now what you had from childhood, and cannot adequately express his joy and gratitude? Don’t you think we all ought to be more happy and more grateful that God in His unsearchable mercy, without any merit on our part, has called us to the family and to the Table of His children? 42 ... ANOINTING THE NEWLY-BAPTIZED One who has followed the rite of Baptism closely will have observed that the priest, in the course of the ceremonies sur- rounding the administration of the sacrament, anoints the in- fant twice with holy oil : once on its throat and neck before the actual baptism; and again after the sacramental washing on the top of its head. At first glance it would seem that both anointings belong together and mean basically the same thing. In reality they are to be kept strictly apart; for they are so dif- ferent that they are even—if you paid close attention you would have noticed it—performed with different holy oils. For the anointing before Baptism the priest used the oil of catechu- mens, for the one after Baptism the nobler holy chrism (min- gled with balsam, and used also for Confirmation). The first anointing (on breast and back) reminded the early Christians of the athletic field and the arena contests; it taught them not to forget that the life of baptized Christians is an uninterrupted struggle against Satan, who tries with all his power to re-enter “the house swept and adorned” (Luke n 125). The anointing on the top of the head means something else, something more important. From olden days kings and priests were anointed on the head. A famous picture shows the prophet Samuel anointing the boy David; he pours the horn of oil over the head of the youth kneeling before him (they had to call him from the sheep pasture; he still holds a shepherd’s crook 93 94 THE SACRAMENTS in his hand). Even today anointing the head is part of the cere- monial at the crowning of Britain’s kings, according to the old Catholic rite. And when someone is consecrated bishop and receives the fullness of the priesthood, his head is anointed in the course of the ceremonies. But how does this practice fit in with Baptism, by which one becomes neither bishop nor king, but merely an ordinary Christian? Much better perhaps than appears at first sight— a fact that becomes apparent as soon as we reflect a little on the dignity of being “merely an ordinary Christian.” The infant present now as the sanctifying waters flow over its head and the sacred words are spoken, according to the Savior’s promise, is in all truth and reality born anew “by water and the Holy Spirit.” It is now become a living member of Christ’s Mystical Body. In an invisible but real manner Christ’s Easter life is stream- ing into it, and together with it something of Christ’s kingly and priestly dignity. Every baptized Christian shares in the nobility of this family into which he is enrolled by Baptism; henceforth he may call the only-begotten Son of God “Brother” and address the Most High as “our Father.” Every baptized Christian partakes of the priestly dignity of Christ; for he has the sacred right of sharing in Christ’s wonderful Sacrifice of the altar, not indeed in the act of consecrating, but by co-offer- ing and receiving its fruits. True, the little child cannot exer- cise that right before the age of reason, but for many centuries it was a custom to place a drop of the Sacred Blood from the chalice on the infant’s tongue after Baptism in token of its Christian dignity. And there are churches today where it is still customary to carry the child three times around the altar so everyone can see that the child now has family rights at Christ’s Table. The newly-baptized child is anointed with holy chrism on A WHITE GARMENT AT BAPTISM 95 the crown of the head that all may see how, as a member of Christ, it has received a share in Christ’s royal and priesdy dignity. It is an effect produced by the same Holy Spirit with whom Christ was anointed. St. Ambrose, in explaining the anointing on the crown of the head to his newly-baptized adults, says very plainly : “Through the grace of the Holy Spirit we are all anointed to kingship and priesthood.” Indeed, it is an important sermon this ceremony of anointing wants to give us thoughtless Christians. There is something special in being a Christian, even for those who so heartlessly rattle off the Our Father, who so rarely approach Christ’s altar on Sunday. The saintly Pope Leo the Great once summed it up in the memorable words: “Christian, acknowledge your dignity!” 43 ... A WHITE GARMENT FOR THE NEWLY-BAPTIZED CHILD The explanation for this ceremony is not difficult. It would come spontaneously if we could witness the Baptism of adults at the restored Easter Vigil, say somewhere in a mission coun- try, and see them enter church clothed in white robes to assist at their first Mass and receive their First Holy Communion. The visible, bright garment symbolizes the wondrous, in- visible brightness effected by Baptism and serves as a warning to be most careful with the divine gift, as one is concerned about a snowy white garment. The priest points this out in be- stowing it: “Receive this white garment and bear it spodess 96 THE SACRAMENTS before the judgment seat of our Lord Jesus Christ that you may have eternal life.” But there is a subtler difficulty. If you last witnessed a Bap- tism some ten or twenty years ago, you may have trouble re- calling how the white garment was given to the child. You may have missed seeing it altogether, for the whole wonderful rite had been reduced to a few, sad remnants. When the mo- ment came, the priest used to place on the child the end of his white stole or even a finger-cloth (often no longer white from much previous use) . But this, thank God, is changing in many churches. Since the accompanying words are now intel- ligently said in the vernacular, would it not be doubly queer to say to the newly-baptized child: “Receive this white gar- ment,” while touching it momentarily with the end of the stole ? Many churches now provide a special little garment, em- broidered with appropriate symbols, which the priest places on the child. Still better, of course, is the practice of making the baptismal garment the property of the family and using it for all the children. On its hem the mother embroiders the name of each child and the date of Baptism so that with the course of years it becomes a real family treasure, a reminder unto grateful remembrance each time it is used. (The same holds for the family baptismal candle. It is not difficult to select days when it can again be used, e.g., the annual Easter Vigil, the day of a First Mass or profession or wedding, and finally the day of death.) In the case of the family baptismal garment, the mistake must be avoided which is made by some well-meaning mothers who think in terms of the bridal dress. As the bride is all decked out with the new gown for her march up to the altar, so they put the baptismal dress on the baby for carrying it to church. It may sound reasonable, but it is entirely wrong. The A WHITE GARMENT AT BAPTISM 97 baptismal robe is a symbol of the baptismal cleansing received and as such is solemnly given by the priest to the newly-bap- tized during the sacramental rite after the actual washing with water. It would not be right if the little pagan that is carried into church were already dressed in the clean, bright garment by which the glory of baptismal grace is symbolized. Therefore if it is done properly, the sponsor will carry the baptismal garment on her arm into church. After the final anointing, she hands it to the priest, who places it on the infant with her aid. Even externally the child should return home different in appearance so that all may see more easily what an extraordinary change took place, how its soul was washed white in the Blood of the Lamb. For when the child is again placed in the arms of its mother, she should not only know by faith, but actually see what an inexpressible mystery took place in the heart of her babe, into what glory it has been immersed through holy Baptism. I could well imagine how a mother, after taking part with a warm heart in this well-arranged and properly enacted rite, would, when alone with the quietly breathing infant Christian by her side after the guests had left, spontaneously recall the words with which Mother Church gave the baptismal robe once to herself and say to her babe: “Yes, that I wish and beg for you, my child, with all my heart on this your day of Bap- tism, that you bring spotless before the judgment seat of our Lord Jesus Christ what you received today, so that you may have life everlasting!” 44... WHY IS THE MOTHER "CHURCHED" AFTER CHILDBIRTH? Dear Mrs : It was a good idea on your part to send this question “to the right place” (as you put it), for it troubles many mothers. Nor did you need make long excuses for your alleged “imposition.” Every zealous teacher welcomes such “imposing” letters in matters pertaining to his field. I must indeed compliment you on submitting so practical and important a question. For there is hardly a ceremony in our Catholic liturgy which occasions as many erroneous or twisted notions in the minds of people as the so-called “church- ing of mothers after childbirth.” You are definitely not the only young mother who must concede that she looks ahead to this ceremony with a certain embarrassment. Behind this em- barrassment lurks the notion that “churching” implies some- thing shameful. You indicate it in your letter, and I am con- vinced that many mothers also harbor it, consciously or uncon- sciously. I can only tell you that it is altogether wrong. The Church is not two-faced; she teaches, and no one can doubt it, that Matrimony is holy and a sacrament. And all the acts proper to marriage are therefore holy. The meaning of the ceremony is simply this: the mother comes to church to express her thanks for the first time with her newly-baptized child in her arms. A Biblical precedent may be seen in Mary’s presentation of the Child Jesus in the temple. 98 "CHURCHING" AFTER CHILDBIRTH 99 And according to our new American ritual, there is even a special blessing for the child after that given to the mother. I am sure there is no need to explain to you or to any mother how proper it is to show gratitude to God on such an occasion. If, then, a young mother opens her eyes and ears to what she experiences in the house of God, she will realize that Mother Church has no other intention than to rejoice and give thanks together with her. The very fact that the priest in white stole meets her at the church door (so the book directs, and so it should actually be done every time) adds an air of solemnity; otherwise he does this only for the bishop. Isn’t this reception at the church door a well-planned form of respect for her ? And did you know that this “churching” is a mother’s honorable right ? The address which the priest then makes to the mother kneeling before him, the lighted candle he hands her, the solemn procession to the front and the Magnificat, together with the special prayers of blessing said at the altar (thank God, they are now said in the vernacular)—all these speak of nothing but grateful joy. Let me quote for you only three little sentences: “Look with kindness,” the priest addresses God, “on this Thy servant! Joyfully she entered Thy sanctuary to give thanks. Permit her and her child at the end of this life to attain to the joys of eternal life!” You see then, my dear Mrs , any embarrassment is altogether unfounded. Indeed, I should imagine that a mother who really understood the ceremony would count among the most precious of her life these moments when with a heart full of grateful joy she knelt before the altar holding in her arms the new-born and newly-baptized infant, so sweetly flooded by the light of the candle. She cannot as yet speak to it about God; the more must she at this hour before the altar begin to speak to God unceasingly in its behalf. And what else could her 100 THE SACRAMENTS motherly prayer be but a repetition of the Church’s prayer: “May I and my child at the end of this life attain to the joys of eternal life.” Besides, do you know that the Church holds another, almost more beautiful, “Mother Blessing” in store for the expectant mother? Pardon me if in conclusion my letter gives you a little “lecture” on this “Blessing before Childbirth.” It is too bad that most, even good Catholic mothers have never heard about this treasure. You may be able to imagine what the Church asks in this blessing for an expectant mother. She herself is a Mother who has carried in her womb thousands upon thousands of chil- dren. She knows the sentiments of the young daughter kneel- ing at her feet asking for a blessing, and she helps her to pray for the one thing about which all her thoughts and planning, all her anxiety and hopes revolve during those weeks—a safe and happy delivery. But her prayer does not rest with this motherly concern. With firm assurance it goes farther and deeper. Mother Church knows that seeing the much-praised “light of day” can be of little good to the tiny creature in its mother’s dark womb un- less it sees the Light of another Sun. Therefore in one and the same breath she prays for a happy delivery and for a happy admission to the holy font of Baptism: “. . . that the fruit of her womb, by the assistance of Thy merciful hand, come hap- pily to light and be preserved for the sacred rebirth of Baptism.” But do you know what to me always seemed most impressive about this first blessing which Mother Church bestows on the expectant mother? It is easily noticeable that already on this day she is thinking—with a sore heart—of how, according to an inexorable law, the ways of these two persons, now so in- timately united, will separate farther and farther; how this THE FATHER AT BAPTISM 101 child will slowly but steadily tend away from the heart and the breast, the knees and the home of mother to go its own ways, only God knows how dark and fearsome. Over all this Mother Church already today extends her praying hands, petitioning that at the end child and mother meet again and together enter the holy, eternal Light. I must give you the conclusion to this blessing of an expectant mother, grand and simple as it is, passing unnoticeably from the singular to include both: “Save them both, almighty God, and grant them Thy everlasting Light!” I hope, dear Mrs. , that when the time comes for you to receive these blessings of Mother Church, kneeling with the child under your heart in the sacristy or later with the same child in your arms before the altar, your own joy will prove how your question and my reply were not in vain. That this joy may be yours (and many other mothers-to-be) is the hearty wish of Yours sincerely in Christ, 45 ... THE FATHER AT THE BAPTISM OF HIS CHILD Thus far I have discussed many questions that are not in the catechism, and I have tried to give the answers clear and simple as I thought to be. But to the query, “Why shouldn’t the father also attend the Baptism of his child?,” I can merely say: That is what I too would like to know! For I dare not assume any Catholic father is so poorly instructed as to con- 102 THE SACRAMENTS sider Baptism unimportant, a kind of “old women’s affair” of no concern to an honest man. Much less could I assume that the same person who proudly announced the birth of his child at the rectory and at shop would all of a sudden feel ashamed to cross the village street with his baby. Listen to what the novelist Alban Stolz had to say on the matter: “In many places the sense and intelligence of some fathers must have struck a leak. When the child dies and the dead body, the empty frame of the escaped soul, is carried to the cemetery, then the father goes along in his best attire. But when the living child is carried to church to be solemnly re- ceived and made a child of our Father in heaven, a member of Jesus Christ, a temple of the Holy Spirit, and a claim to heaven is accorded it, then behold, everybody remains at home, and the father . . . well, he sits down and waits till the nurse and sponsors come back from church, as if the whole affair hardly concerned him.” Where such is the case, something must be out of order. For whatever else happens in the life of the child, whether it makes its First Holy Communion, gets married or buried, if the father is not present, everybody will wonder what has hap- pened. But when the one most important thing in the life of the child happens, when it is re-born in water and the Holy Spirit, then the father at times remains home, smoking, watch- ing television, or perhaps napping. What a wealth of material for him to think about and to pray about during the sacred function—for him, the respon- sible educator of this youngest Christian in the parish, whose soul will one day be asked of him at the final judgment! All that is there done and said and prayed for has a special mean- ing just for him. He could very easily think of his own Bap- tism; he could think of the day soon to come when his crying baby, which now understands nothing of all they do for it, will THE CROSS AT CONFIRMATION 103 open its bright baby eyes and read from his own face the first important lesson in this living catechism, what a baptized Christian looks like. Truly Christian parents will easily sense how unique an occasion and how important an event a Baptism is in the life of their family. 46 . . . THE SIGN OF THE CROSS ON THE FOREHEAD AT CONFIRMATION At our first meeting with Mother Church, one of the first things she did was this: by the hand of the priest she made the Sign of the Cross on our forehead, at the very beginning of the Baptism ceremony. This was meant to show that she took possession of us. Just as many establishments carry the name of the owner over the front door, so are we to carry all life long the victorious sign of Him who in the sacrament of Baptism claimed us as His own. To make the Sign of the Cross meant nothing else to the early Christians than to renew with one’s own hand this claim of possession; to cross oneself meant to mark a cross with the thumb on one’s forehead; only later did it become customary to add a second and a third on the lips and breast. What we experienced at Confirmation was basically the same ceremony, and yet we felt that here it had special rank and significance. For it was the hand of the bishop that made the cross, using at the same time the noblest of the three holy oils, holy chrism. Moreover, what pertained to ceremony at 104 THE SACRAMENTS Baptism (and in case of necessity could have been omitted) was here an essential part of the sacrament. With the new rank came new meaning. To be confirmed means to be anointed in the power of the Holy Spirit as a full- fledged citizen of God’s kingdom; from then on he is to share the responsibility for the fortunes of this kingdom on earth. Therefore he is to carry, one may say, the “national emblem” on his forehead. Wherever he goes it should be known that he professes and stands up for Him who died on the Cross and overcame death by death. Through Confirmation one dedi- cates himself as a soldier of Christ to this glorious insignia of the holy Cross: proudly he bears it on his forehead, ready to stand up fearlessly for his Leader whether in attack or defense. Not without reason did I mention attack first. For the Church is like a country at war: mere defense is not enough. On her flags is imprinted the order for world conquest, the' most decisive and yet the most peaceful ever planned by any power on earth. Do not say that here we have the task of the clergy. Only a person who for the last decades had isolated himself in an ivory tower could still talk that way. Again and again have recent Popes emphasized that every baptized and confirmed Christian shares in the fortunes of God’s kingdom upon earth; in the lay apostolate, in Catholic Action laymen must march shoulder to shoulder with the clergy as servants and soldiers of Christ on all fronts. A sad army indeed, if only the officers’ corps had the spirit of attack! You see, then, that the cross of Confirmation on your brow means something that enters deeply into your life. It was not said unwisely that Confirmation is the sacrament of Catholic Action, the anointing unto the lay apostolate. What are you doing on your part, confirmed Christian, to help conquer the world for Him whose emblem was sealed on your forehead? What interest do you show and how do you help along when THE PRIEST'S HAND AT ABSOLUTION 105 the missions, home and foreign, are mentioned ? How do you stand in your parish? Are you just another name on the files, or one who shares the cares of the pastor ? What steps do you take when you notice a brother or a sister in Christ growing cold in faith and love because of the icy winds of our times? What do you do in your business, in society and politics, in public life and in education, to uphold respect for God’s Com- mandments and for the Cross of Jesus Christ? More than ever before in the Church’s history does the for- tune of God’s kingdom depend today on the support of the laity. We must pray earnestly that the Spirit we have received in Confirmation may make us realize ever more vividly the high purposes to which Confirmation and the cross on our foreheads have destined us; to a fearless, aggressive support of Him who in this sign overcame death and redeemed man- kind. 47 ... THE RAISING OF THE PRIEST'S HAND BEFORE ABSOLUTION Nothing simpler, you say. He wants to make the Sign of the Cross over the penitent, and for that he must raise his hand. The explanation sounds plausible, yet it is wrong. If you pay close attention, you will see that the priest does not raise his hand at the moment he makes the Sign of the Cross over you, but already at the beginning of the long formula of absolution. Hence this lifting of the hand must have some other meaning. Scholars tell us that the raising of the hand was not intro- 106 THE SACRAMENTS duced as an elevation of the hand, but is the remnant of an ancient imposition of hands . As long as confession was made in the open choir, kneeling down beside the confessor’s chair (it was done that way through the Middle Ages), the priest laid his right hand on the head of the penitent at the absolu- tion. When after the Reformation our modern confessionals were introduced, with a grill between priest and penitent (St. Charles Borromeo was mainly responsible for this), the im- position of hand became impossible—the grill was in the way. But not to lose sight entirely of the ancient gesture, the raising of the hand at the absolution was retained. Good and necessary as is the present arrangement of the confessional, it is too bad that this wonderful priestly gesture had to be sacrificed. In it the faithful could see directly what confession is, what consoling and soothing and healing power here flows from the Cross of Christ into the sinful heart of man. Indeed, the gesture of imposing hands tells us still more. Once Christians spontaneously felt that the priest did not do it in his own name, but in His Name who, according to the Bible, “imposed hands on the sick and possessed, and they were cured.” When the bishop imposes hands on a young deacon in priestly ordination, we likewise sense that it is only done in Christ’s Name. Thus the gesture of the imposition of hands at the absolution expresses the most important thing that can be said of confession. To go to confession does not mean to take one’s spiritual ail- ments to human physicians (with varying degrees of skill and tact); to go to confession means to come to the Physician of souls whom the ancients called “Arch-physician”—the One who knows our heart because He made it. Of this we must be absolutely convinced every time we enter the confessional. We should close our eyes to “the human side” of the sacrament and say quietly to ourselves : I will now contritely kneel down, ANOINTING THE SICK 107 not before any mortal’s hand (it is wholly inconsequential to which priest I confess or who gives me absolution), but be- neath the healing hand of my Redeemer. No matter how much our heart may be weighed down with anxiety and fear, we will nonetheless have an experience similar to the Evangelist John’s when he fell down on his face before God’s majesty with the feeling of sinful unworthiness: “And he (the Lord Jesus) laid his right hand upon me, saying: Tear not!”’ (Apoc. 1:17). 48 . . . ANOINTING THE SICK In spiritual books and periodicals you may have noticed in recent years a tendency to translate the name “extreme unction” into more understandable English by calling it “last anointing.” Some writers, in fact, feel that an even better name for this sacrament would be “anointing of the sick” or simply “holy anointing.” Why so? Because an unfortunate misunderstand- ing has come about and settled in the hearts of Christians, the false idea, namely, that this sacrament is limited to the moment when a person is about to breathe “his last.” As a result the name of the fifth sacrament conjures up a fearsome picture to many; a great number of the sick and a still greater num- ber of unreasonable relatives will wait and wait—till often it is too late—to call the priest for administering this sacrament, believing that after the anointing death “must” necessarily follow. However, things are quite different once you quietly listen 108 THE SACRAMENTS to what the Church herself says on the topic. Not only is she the competent minister but also the competent interpreter of the seven fountains of salvation issuing from the Cross of her Spouse. The Church does not simply identify this sacrament as “the sacrament of the dying”; rather, it is the sacrament for the benefit of those who are seriously ill. In compassion toward those suffering from a disease that threatens life, Christ insti- tuted a special sacrament. By a special means of grace He wants to extend His pardoning, strengthening and consoling hand to His brothers and sisters who are gravely ill. Not without reason did He make soothing and invigorating oil the sign of the sacrament. Yes, according to the express teach- ing of the Church, not the least purpose of this sacrament is that Christ by means of it grants to the sick person’s body mysterious powers of recovery. God be thanked that now when the prayers surrounding this sacrament are said in the vernacular, everyone can hear that there is scarcely a word about death in them, but rather repeated references to healing and to getting back to work. Of course, for everyone the hour will one day arrive when according to God’s will, determined from eternity, the physical healing power of this sacrament will not be realized. Then the sacrament for the seriously ill becomes the sacrament of strength and encouragement for the dying, safely steering the soul into its eternal harbor. There would seem, therefore, to be some reason for naming the sacrament “holy anointing” or “anointing of the sick” rather than “last anointing.” But even if we use the latter term, we should not associate it exclusively with the Christian’s “last hour”; rather, this anointing can rightly be called the “last” by comparison to the anointings that usually precede it in the life of a Christian, i.e., those of baptism and confirmation. In any case, we must do away with unreasonable fears ANNOUNCING A CANDIDATE TO THE PRIESTHOOD 109 associated with this sacrament. And we must do all in our power that it be conferred in due time so that it can unfold its healing power if such be God’s will: for we have no right to expect God to work an outright miracle. All life long we should pray that as our dying hour approaches we may in full consciousness be strengthened with the graces of this consoling sacrament and with Holy Viaticum, and so be privileged to pass from this land of exile into our heavenly fatherland. 49 . . . ANNOUNCING A CANDIDATE TO THE PRIEST- HOOD When grandmother returned from High Mass one Sunday morning, she was mumbling to herself indignantly on enter- ing the front door. “Such a thing is a bit too much; it has not happened before during all my 73 years.” Urged to tell what really had happened, she grew quite angry. Was she, with her old deaf ears, the only one in the house who had listened to what was announced! Didn’t they realize that it meant the end of all the town’s preparations for their neighbor son’s First Mass? To think that this young man was going to get married! Because of her deafness, she had not been able to catch the name of the girl—but she could state solemnly that his name was announced from the pulpit, the very seminarian who in his long black cassock had for several years been helping the priest around the altar. “One should not think it possible!” It took a long time to convince grandma that a candidate for the priesthood must also “be announced” in no THE SACRAMENTS church; and finally she wanted to know why such a “new- fangled custom” was introduced. Here the wisdom of the household was exhausted. So we must try to find the answer. Someone might say: When a person gets married or becomes a priest, that is his own business and it should concern nobody else. This sounds all right, - but it is absolutely wrong. Could you imagine parishioners to whom it would be altogether a matter of in- difference what kind of families and what kind of priests their church produced? Canon Law provides that the sacra- ments of Holy Orders and Matrimony are administered solemnly and publicly before the assembled people, and that the names of prospective recipients be announced to the parish a good time in advance. Everybody in church should know: someone of the community wants to start a family, or someone of the parish wants to become a priest. This con- cerns everybody. Yes, all of us here in the parish—and who should be better informed—are regularly asked by the Church concerning those about to get married or preparing for Holy Orders. For priests it begins already with the first decisive higher Order, the subdiaconate; it is repeated again before the dia- conate and the priesthood. The primary purpose of the an- nouncement is that if anyone is aware of something weighing seriously against the reception of Holy Orders (or some im- pediment to marriage), he would be obliged in conscience to report it. Yes, even when at the point of ordaining, the bishop does not begin with the ceremonies without once more address- ing the assembled faithful and asking if there be any reason militating against the candidate; because those who travel in a ship, he says, cannot be indifferent about the man at the helm. To be sure, it will happen rarely—God be thanked—that anyone must bring an accusation against an ordinand after the ANNOUNCING A CANDIDATE TO THE PRIESTHOOD 111 announcement in church or in the cathedral. But the declara- tion serves a good purpose, even when everything is in proper order. That one of your parish is to be ordained to the holy priesthood should certainly affect you in this sense that you rejoice over the honor coming to your community; that you feel partly responsible and want to pray along that your candidate will become a good priest; and that, if possible, you attend the ceremonies when the bishop amid solemn silence imposes his consecrating hands upon your deacon. And also for the others whom you do not know personally, you can pray; they too will be your priests, helmsmen of the ship in which you sail; who knows but that one of them one day will stand at your death-bed endeavoring to conduct you into heaven’s holy harbor. In ancient days when dioceses were no bigger than the episcopal city, such participation on the part of the faithful came easy. The whole congregation could pray and fast with their bishop during all of Ember Week for the priestly can- didates (fortunately the prayers for good priests in Ember Week have been retained to our day). When the ordination night between Saturday and Sunday had arrived, all would be present in the cathedral; and every time a name was called off, all gave their consent with a joyous shout—as a great peal their acclamation would resound from the walls: Dignus est! He is worthy! When you next assist at an ordination ceremony, I hope you will experience a faint glimmer of that wonderful scene of early Christian days. Your heart will expand—and I think grandmother’s too, in spite of her old, deaf ears—when you hear the whole assembled church pray as with one voice for the candidates to the priesthood. There they lie humbly pros- trate in their long white albs on the floor of the sanctuary while the whole congregation sings over them the Litany of 112 THE SACRAMENTS the Saints, calling down upon them the protection of the saints in heaven, and upon all who in the ship of the Church are sailing towards the haven of eternity. Omnes sancti Dei , intercedite pro nobis! All ye Saints of God, make intercession for us! 50 . . . THE NUPTIAL MASS AFTER HOLY MARRIAGE I know there are plenty of weddings with no Nuptial Mass. Yes, there also are weddings that for good reasons cannot have a Nuptial Mass, such, for instance, at which one of the contracting parties unfortunately is a non-Catholic. It must nevertheless be remembered that these “quiet weddings,” even when they become frequent and seem “in style,” are actually only tolerated by the Church. If you inquire how the Church wants a wedding performed, every priest will un- hesitatingly give you the answer: together with the Nuptial Mass. Why has Mother Church introduced this sequence of marriage and Nuptial Mass, and why is she so concerned about retaining it? The answer is not difficult. The bridal couple have now, after administering the sacrament of Matrimony to each other, embarked timidly upon a new course. Naturally they will ask themselves what the first thing is that they should do in common. And without hesitation their Christian heart will tell them that they can begin their married life in no more beautiful and worthy way than with a united offering of Christ’s holy Sacrifice. THE NUPTIAL MASS AFTER HOLY MARRIAGE 113 To whom should they have recourse in this great and anxious hour but to their Lord and Savior who has created and disposed their hearts for each other and now united them by the holy seal of the sacrament! With Him alone lies the answer to the anxious question that fills every serious human heart in that decisive hour. To Him alone can they address the words that are sung at the Nuptial Mass Offertory, in which all human anxiety finds its solution: In Thee, O Lord, I trust. Thou art my God: In Thy hands my days rest secure. On the threshold of married life the newly-weds want their Lord and Redeemer to unite them by His holy Sacrifice. All life long this Sacrifice will be for them the lofty school of matrimonial and parental love. Here they will have to learn to dedicate themselves ever more completely and selflessly and silently with Christ and like Christ to the holy will of the heavenly Father, in holy service to each other and to the children God may entrust to them. The strength of self- surrender, learned and begged for at the altar, they will have plentiful occasion to exercise. But the Nuptial Mass would not be truly a Nuptial Mass without the newly-weds receiving holy Communion together. For in the most perfect manner possible to Christians, they should permit themselves to be taken up into Christ’s own self-surrender; now for the first time as husband and wife, they approach the holy Table at which the sacrificial Body of Christ is received as Food. Even before sharing a common table at home, they share in the heavenly Table of Christ’s love and suffering. And it should remain that way all their lives. All of their matrimonial and family life should come under the law of “the two tables,” with priority given to the 114 THE SACRAMENTS Lord’s. (How poor the family where every thought and care is for the one table at home, where everything circles about earning and eating and spending.) Naturally they will rejoice over the growing group around the family table at home; and naturally they will work hard, not that this table should offer superfluity and luxury, but the necessary items (and sometimes a little more). Nevertheless, the happiest hours of family life will ever be those when they can conduct another child for the first time to the holy Table of Christ’s love. Blessed indeed will be the Sunday mornings, when surrounded by the circle of their children, they kneel down together at the holy Table where once they began their married life; its festive splendor they take along to a joyful Sunday breakfast at home—an inspiration for the joys and sorrows of the ensuing days. And when father and mother are resting under the sod, the grown-up children will say to one another: What wonderful Sundays those were at home when father and mother first went to holy Communion with us and when we took break- fast together in holy peace! Don’t you agree that if all Christian couples would under- stand this approach and begin their family life with the Nuptial Mass and continue to live it out, then we would not need to be concerned about the spirit of joyful living with the Church and with its liturgy, objectives which these instruc- tions have attempted to rouse anew. In the bosom of such a family, children inhale the Christian spirit naturally, like the air they breathe. In the bosom of such a family they receive the first and the most important “catechism lessons” of their lives. No one in the world can teach as impressively and unfor- gettably what is in the catechism and what is not in the cate- chism as the heart of a truly Christian mother and the example of a truly Christian father. HOW TO make "participation" INTELLIGENT and SPIRITUALLY FRUITFUL— GOD’S PEOPLE ABOUT THE ALTAR THE VOICE OF THE FAITHFUL AT THE EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION by Dr. Balthasar Fischer Writing to provide special pedagogical helps for the Munich International Eucharistic Congress in I960, Dr. Fischer concentrates on those parts of the Mass liturgy that belong primarily to the people—particularly the simple responses. Familiarity and repetition have seemingly made these parts commonplace and shop- worn; here the profound spiritual doctrine and practical moral values of the people’s responses and functions are set forth simply, clearly, convincingly. $.20