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5 Feasts and Benedict’s Epiphany
User’s Guide to Sunday
BY Tom and April Hoopes
December 21, 2008-January 3, 2009 Issue |
Posted 12/12/08 at 1:48 PM
Since the
Register skips the last Sunday in December, there is much to cover. Thursday,
Dec. 25, is Christmas. Sunday, Dec. 28, is the feast of the Holy Family.
Thursday, Jan. 1, is the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, a holy day of
obligation. Sunday, Jan. 4, is the second Sunday of Christmas, but in the
United States, we celebrate the Epiphany that day.
Feasts
FaithandFamilyLive.com is the
website of our sister publication, Faith & Family.
Don’t miss all the great saints’
days that come in Christmas’ wake.
Dec. 25: Christmas. If no one feels
confident on the piano, go to NCRegister.com to find accompaniment for your
caroling today. Click on “Christmas Music” in the upper right-hand corner.
Dec. 26: St. Stephen, the first
martyr. The day after Christmas, we already begin remembering that Christianity
isn’t all tinsel and pie, but a willingness to die for the faith. Sing “Good
King Wenceslas.” Find music and lyrics at CyberHymnal.org.
Dec. 27: St. John the Apostle. Today
is a day that children traditionally get to drink a little wine because of an
old legend that John blessed a cup of poisoned wine — and the poison left it.
On this day we have often made the “St. John’s Wine” from Evelyn Birge Vitz’s A
Continual Feast (Ignatius).
Dec. 28: The Holy Family. If anyone
feels uncomfortable about that “wives be subordinate to your husbands” reading,
tell them to pay attention to the day’s Gospel. Was Mary “subordinate” to Joseph?
Yes. She went to the census with him and gave him a leadership role in the
Temple. Was she his inferior? Certainly not; the Church gives her a special
kind of honor called hyperdulia, which no one else receives. Was the Child
Jesus “subordinate” to his parents? Yes, and he was obedient also (only
children are told to be obedient, not wives). Was he therefore inferior?
Certainly not. He’s God.
Jan. 1: the Solemnity of Mary,
Mother of God. A great way to start the New Year: placing it in the hands of
the Blessed Mother. Pope Benedict XVI will do so at his 10 a.m. (Rome time)
Mass.
Readings
Epiphany: Isaiah 60:1-6; Psalm
72:1-2, 7-8, 10-13; Ephesians 3:2-3, 5-6; Matthew 2:1-12
EPriest.com offers free homily
packs for priests.
Our Take
Shortly after Pope Benedict XVI was
elected, he led World Youth Day in Cologne, Germany, whose cathedral holds the
relics of the Magi. Reflections on the “three kings” therefore figured into
many of his talks. Here are only two of his remarks about the Magi.
“Like the Magi, all believers — and
young people in particular — have been called to set out on the journey of life
in search of truth, justice and love. The ultimate goal of the journey can only
be found through an encounter with Christ, an encounter which cannot take place
without faith.”
Later, he said: “We, too, have come
to Cologne because in our hearts we have the same urgent question that prompted
the Magi from the East to set out on their journey, even if it is differently
expressed.”
Today’s question isn’t “Where is the
newborn King,” he said, but:
“Where
do I find standards to live by, where are the criteria that govern responsible
cooperation in building the present and the future of our world? On whom can I
rely? To whom shall I entrust myself? Where is the One who can offer me the
response capable of satisfying my heart’s deepest desires?
“Dear friends, when questions like
these appear on the horizon of life, we must be able to make the necessary
choices. It is like finding ourselves at the crossroads: Which direction do we
take? The one prompted by the passions or the one indicated by the star that
shines in our conscience?”
He concludes:
“Dear young people, the happiness
you are seeking, the happiness you have a right to enjoy, has a name and a
face: It is Jesus of Nazareth, hidden in the Eucharist. Only he gives the
fullness of life to humanity! With Mary, say your own Yes to God, for he wishes
to give himself to you.”
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