Easter Sunday 2020
Scan twitter with #coronavirusbaking and you will likely see pictures of “quarantine cookies” and “isolation loaves.” As the number of families confined to their homes grows, more people are finding refuge in baking. Baking offers a welcome distraction and a sense of comfort. The scents that waft from the kitchen gives one something for which to look forward.
Scan twitter with #coronavirusbaking and you will likely see pictures of “quarantine cookies” and “isolation loaves.” As the number of families confined to their homes grows, more people are finding refuge in baking. Baking offers a welcome distraction and a sense of comfort. The scents that waft from the kitchen gives one something for which to look forward.
Around this time every year, my mother and I would make Easter Bread. Easter Bread is a specialty bread, popular in Europe, that is made in different shapes and styles in honor of the Easter holiday. I remember the delight of getting my hands all gooey in the dough and the energy it took to knead it.
After separating the dough into balls, it was time to cover it and allow it to rise. After a period of time, that little ball of dough would double in size, pushing up the dish towels covering it. It was almost as if the dough became pregnant. I’ll never forget my mother’s expression at the risen dough. “Ah!” She would gasp with excitement, “God Bless it!” As a child, I wondered how God had time to help our dough to rise, especially at this busy time of year, but I was delighted that divine intervention had somehow decided to mix with our human efforts. The aroma of the bread baking in the oven was heavenly. After the bread had cooled, my mother would give the bread to others.
In the Ukraine, Easter Bread is called Paska, a derivative of Pascha, which means Easter. The word Pascha comes from the Hebrew word Pesach, meaning Passover. As the Jews celebrate the feast of Passover, commemorating the liberation of the Israelites from bondage in Egypt, Christians celebrate the feast of Easter, commemorating the death and resurrection of Jesus, the Passover or Paschal Lamb. Pesach is related to the Greek word Paschein, which means to suffer. This is one reason why Easter Bread is made at this time of year. It is symbolic of the dying and rising of Jesus.
This is one reason ordinary bread is used to make Eucharistic Bread. In order to make bread, seeds must die in the ground to become wheat. Wheat must be ground in order to become flour. In each step of the process, there is a dying in order to become something new. In the Eucharist, ordinary bread is transformed into something extraordinary, the Body and Blood of Christ. By partaking in the Eucharist, we too are transformed. We become pregnant with possibilities, energized to knead the dough of life and to give ourselves away for the life of the world. Amen!
Many recipes for Easter Bread can be found online. Here is an easy one courtesy of my mother, Violet Kuczka:
Easter Bread
Ingredients
· dry yeast, 2 packages
· 2 ½ cups of warm water
· 1 lemon cake mix
· 5 cups of flour +
· 2 eggs
· 1 t lemon flavoring
Directions
1. Dissolve yeast in 2 ½ cubs of warm water.
2. In a large bowl, combine cake mix and flour.
3. Beat eggs and add lemon flavoring.
4. Add egg mixture and yeast and water to the cake mix and the flour.
5. Knead well so that the dough is sticky. You may need to add more flour.
6. Let rise until double.
7. Divide into three loaf pans.
8. Let rise in the loaf pans until double.
9. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 minutes or until firm and lightly golden brown on top.
10. Brush with butter or icing.
Holy Week Amidst Covid-19
Despite the coronavirus, Holy Week has come. While each Holy Week is unique, this one will be far different from any we’ve known before.
Despite the coronavirus, Holy Week has come. While each Holy Week is unique, this one will be far different from any we’ve known before. We will not be gathering as a community for the Triduum at the church. Instead, most of us will watch these sacred liturgies from the comforts of our own homes, surrounded by our immediate families. This experience echoes that of our ancestors who, before churches were erected, gathered in homes to hear God’s Word and to celebrate the sacred meal. In a sense, we have been forced to return to a time that was fittingly called “The Domestic Church.”
Families who watch this year’s Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday liturgies will not see the elaborate ceremonies common to the Triduum. Vatican directives have simplified these celebrations, stripping them of much of their decorated splendor. Many of the rituals such as the washing of the feet have been omitted. The rites of initiation and most of their accompanying symbols will be absent. Even so, the symbols and rituals that normally hold pride of place during the Triduum can still be performed by families at home. Here are a few ideas.
Holy Thursday – Mass of the Lord’s Supper
On this night, the Church commemorates the institution of the Holy Eucharist and the Lord’s command to be charitable. At home, families can imitate the intimacy that Jesus shared with his disciples at supper by breaking bread together. You can wash each other’s feet as a sign of love, as Jesus did.
Good Friday – Stations of the Cross
To contemplate the passion of Jesus families can pray the Stations of the Cross on Good Friday. Many and various stations written around particular themes can be found online. Since this devotion traces the steps of Jesus on the road to his crucifixion and is usually prayed by moving from place to place, you are encouraged to make the stations a spiritual pilgrimage by walking as you pray.
Good Friday -- Celebration of the Passion of the Lord
The high points in this liturgy consist of the proclamation of the passion according to John, the extended intercessions and the veneration of the cross. Families can read John’s Gospel together at home: John 18:1-19:42. You can discuss how the passion according to John differs from the other gospel writers. You can talk about the love that is revealed by the death of Jesus. You can pray for your needs and for the needs of others by speaking the prayers aloud or by writing them down on a piece of paper and placing them in a bowl or basket near a lighted candle. You can take a cross or crucifix and venerate it with a touch or a kiss.
Holy Saturday-The Easter Vigil
This night is the high point of the liturgical year! It typically begins after nightfall with a blazing fire. The Vatican has omitted the fire this year, but in the home families can light candles as a reminder that Jesus is the light of the world. This is a night for remembering the presence of God throughout salvation history, which is why Scripture passages such as the story of creation, the sacrifice of Isaac and the exodus are proclaimed. In reflecting on these texts, you could discuss or even create a timeline portraying the experiences when you most felt God’s presence.
This is a night to celebrate baptism, and though baptisms will not take place at this year’s Easter Vigil, there are other ways families can honor the first sacrament. Gather mementos from each person’s baptism: a baptismal certificate, baptismal clothing, the baptismal candle, pictures, and/or religious articles. Tell the story of your children’s baptisms. Connect with your godparents via skype or facetime. Renew your baptismal promises. Discuss what it means to be part of a faith community. Share what it means to be a child of God. Give thanks for the gift of water and for the gift of baptism. Bless one another with water!
This Holy Week, we all have an opportunity to create new rituals and new traditions. Our faith, after all, isn’t confined to the church. It begins at home and is meant to be lived in the world.
St. Thomas Aquinas will be live streaming the events of Holy Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday and Easter Sunday. See the website or t
The Pew Study
As a journalist working for CNN, I discovered that stories about religion were among the most difficult to cover. The layers of history, the complexities and the nuances which surrounded the issues never seemed to fit well into our neatly-edited sound bites.
As a journalist working for CNN, I discovered that stories about religion were among the most difficult to cover. The layers of history, the complexities and the nuances which surrounded the issues never seemed to fit well into our neatly-edited sound bites. This is one reason why religion and matters of faith rarely get covered by the mainstream media. Another is that most journalists lack the knowledge needed to adequately cover religion. When reporting on religion, often only part of the story gets told.
If mainstream journalists are challenged to get religion right, pollsters are even more challenged. Many pollsters, like journalists, lack the knowledge needed to ask questions in a way that takes account of the layers of history, the complexities and the nuances of religion. As a result, polls typically tell only part of the story.
As an example, a poll by the Pew Research Center published this month asked Catholics what they believe about the Eucharist:
Which best describes Catholic teaching about the bread and wine used for Communion?
A. They become the actual body and blood of Christ
B. They are symbols of the body and blood of Jesus
The study reported that about one-third or 31% of Catholics chose the first option. Most chose the second option.
In a similar poll conducted in 1994 by the New York Times and CBS News, Catholics were asked what happens to the bread and wine at Mass. The options were the bread and wine “are changed into the body and blood of Christ” or they are “symbolic reminders of Christ.” The results were similar to those in the Pew Study.
Both polls have caused alarm among church leaders because they suggest a failure in teaching a core doctrine of our faith. However, a look at the wording in the poll tells another story.
Notice that in the possible answers for the Pew Study, option B doesn’t say “They are merely or only symbols,” it simply said symbols. The fact that bread and wine are real symbols that become the actual body and blood of Christ has long been a hallmark of Catholic theology.
These surveys presume that the two are mutually exclusive. Thus, some if not more respondents may have easily been confused by the choices.
Bread and wine are fitting symbols not only because Jesus used them at the Last Supper, but because of what they signify. Long before bread can be made, seeds die in the ground to become wheat, and the wheat is ground to become flour.
In a similar way, grapes must be harvested, crushed and pressed before undergoing fermentation. Each stage of the process in the making of both bread and wine includes a dying to become something new. The bread and the wine are powerful symbols of that deeper mystery that we call the paschal mystery.
The point is that the Pew Study, like the one before it, reveals an impoverished view of the Eucharist, not because of the results, but because the questions stop far short of expressing the fullness of what the Eucharist is all about.
In addition, both the Pew Study and the earlier poll point to the presence of Christ in the Eucharist, but don’t mention the presence of Christ elsewhere in the liturgy. The Church tells us that Christ is uniquely present in the Eucharist, but that he is really present in the gathered people of God, in the priest-presider and in the Word of God.
To accomplish so great a work, Christ is always present in His Church, especially in her liturgical celebrations. He is present in the sacrifice of the Mass, not only in the person of His minister, "the same now offering, through the ministry of priests, who formerly offered himself on the cross" but especially under the Eucharistic species. By His power He is present in the sacraments, so that when a man baptizes it is really Christ Himself who baptizes. He is present in His word, since it is He Himself who speaks when the holy scriptures are read in the Church. He is present, lastly, when the Church prays and sings, for He promised: "Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them" (Matt. 18:20).Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy #7
God desires to be one with us and so in the liturgy Jesus communes with us in Scripture, in those gathered to celebrate and in the sacred meal, but the grace of that presence is not meant to stop there. As Pope Francis has said, it is meant to continue through us.
To nourish oneself of the Eucharist means to allow oneself to be changed by what we receive . . . Each time we receive Communion, we resemble Jesus more; we transform ourselves more fully into Jesus. As the Bread and the Wine are converted into the Body and Blood of the Lord, so too those who receive it with faith are transformed into a living Eucharist.
The entire Mass is about us becoming more Christ-like so that we can be the presence of Christ for the life of the world. That’s not something that could ever be captured by a poll but a mystery that must be lived out in faith.
The Eucharistic Prayer
Much like the Jewish berakah prayers from which they derived, our eucharistic prayers
give thanks and praise for the wonders of God. These prayers form the heart of the Mass. In fact, the word “Eucharist” is a Greek word that means thanksgiving.
Much like the Jewish berakah prayers from which they derived, our eucharistic prayers
give thanks and praise for the wonders of God. These prayers form the heart of the Mass. In fact, the word “Eucharist” is a Greek word that means thanksgiving.
Thanksgiving is the first action in the Eucharistic prayer, but The General Instruction of the Roman Missal tells us that there are eight key actions in which the entire assembly participates when praying the eucharistic prayer:
Thanksgiving
Acclamation
Epiclesis
Institution Narrative and Consecration
Anamnesis
Oblation
Intercessions
Concluding doxology
Thanksgiving
Several prayers in the Mass begin with the priest saying, “Let us pray,” but the words that begin the Eucharistic prayer are “The Lord be with you,” signaling that this prayer is distinct from all other prayers at Mass. Following the dialogue between the priest and the assembly, a prayer known as the preface sets forth particular motives for praising God.
For he assumed at his first coming the lowliness of human flesh,
and so fulfilled the design you formed long ago,
and opened for us the way to eternal salvation. . .
Preface I of Advent
The coming of Christ, his ministry, his passion and death, his resurrection and ascension, all that he has done to procure our salvation are the main events named in our prefaces. The nearly 100 prefaces are tied to a particular liturgical season or feast.
Acclamation
We join with the angels to offer our praise to God by singing the Holy Holy Holy.
Epiclesis
The term epiclesis comes from the Greek kleo, which means "to call" and epi, which means "forth". The epiclesis in the eucharisic prayer is an invocation calling forth the power of the Holy Spirit to consecrate and transform the gifts of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ.
Make holy, therefore, these gifts, we pray, by sending down your Spirit upon them like the dewfall. . .
There is another epiclesis in several of our eucharistic prayers which invokes the power of the Holy Spirit for the unity of the Church.
Humbly we pray that, partaking of the Body and Blood of Christ, we may be gathered into one by the Holy Spirit.
We pray that the Holy Spirit will come in power to sanctify and transform the gifts of bread and wine as well as ourselves, for nothing that the Spirit touches remains the same.
Institution Narrative and Consecration
The next action is the Institution narrative and Consecration which comes to us in the form of a story. The priest, acting in the person of Christ, proclaims the words and actions of Christ at the Last Supper. The story we hear is an adaptation of the scriptural accounts of that night.
At the time he was betrayed . . . he took bread and giving thanks, broke it. . .
At this point in our liturgical prayer, we might ask: How does my story relate to this story? Connecting Christ’s dying and rising to our experience gives Christ’s story meaning for us today.
Anamnesis and The Memorial Acclamation
Anamnesis is a Greek word which means memory. We remember God's saving and liberating actions, accomplished in Christ--not as past events--but as events that continue to achieve their effects here and now. We remember how God acted in the past and ask that God act among us now. By singing the Memorial Acclamation, the assembly proclaims its participation in the Paschal Mystery.
When we eat this bread and drink this Cup, we proclaim your Death, O Lord, until you come again.
The Oblation
An early name for the eucharistic prayer was the anaphora, which is Greek for offering.
We offer you, Lord, the Bread of life and the Chalice of salvation
Jesus offered the gift of his life in complete obedience for the sake of our redemption. Jesus continues to offer himself in love to God for all eternity. We participate in this action by offering ourselves in union with the offering of Christ.
Intercession
In the eucharistic prayer, we intercede for the church, the clergy, those who have died, and for those present:
Remember, Lord, your Church . . .Remember also our brothers and sisters who have fallen asleep . . .
The Concluding Doxology
Doxology means correct praise and serves to bring the eucharistic prayer to a stirring climax. The assembly, through the priest-presider, restates the whole purpose of the eucharistic prayer, namely to offer praise and honor to the Father through Christ and in the Holy Spirit.
Through him, and with him, and in him . . .
We make this statement our own by singing an exuberant Amen, the most important acclamation of the eucharistic prayer. By our Amen, we ratify the covenant begun by God and made new in Christ Jesus.
Although it is the task of the ordained minister to lead the eucharistic prayer he does so on our behalf. As the wording of the prayers reminds us, it is we who praise, we who offer. Everyone present joins Christ in acknowledging the works of God and in offering the sacrifice.
To pray what this prayer intends demands attention to its actions in our daily lives. We must be people who give thanks to God day in and day out. We must be a community who remembers how God has been good to us in the past, and who trusts that God will sustain us here and now. We must intercede for the needs of the world around us. We must remember the death and resurrection of Christ when we experience the pain and the promise of our own living. We join our suffering and hope to Christ as we, like him, offer ourselves to others living through him, and with him and in him.
Liturgical Music
Walk or jog any track and you are likely to see people with earbuds or In-ear headphones. While some may be catching up on the latest podcast, the majority are listening to music.
Walk or jog any track and you are likely to see people with earbuds or In-ear headphones. While some may be catching up on the latest podcast, the majority are listening to music.
Music motivates people to move and helps to focus attention. The rhythms and the pulse of the beats helps people to keep a certain pace which is vital to effective exercise. Music and action have long been partners in exercise, dance, and liturgy.
In the liturgy, hymns and songs may highlight the Scripture readings, add to the solemnity of the liturgy, and foster a unity among the assembly. The Second Vatican Council document the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy calls the musical tradition of the universal Church a treasure of inestimable value, greater even than that of any other art” (112). Noting the “preeminence” of music, the document goes on to say that “as sacred song closely bound to the text, it forms a necessary or integral part of the solemn liturgy.” Music, then, isn’t merely a nice extra in the liturgy; it is intrinsic to the liturgy.
Music is wedded to the action of the liturgy. The Entrance Song, for example, is meant “to open the celebration, foster the unity of those who have been gathered, introduce their thoughts to the mystery of the liturgical time or festivity, and accompany the procession of the Priest and ministers.” General Instruction of the Roman Missal. 47
The purpose of the song during the procession to the Eucharistic table is “to express the spiritual union of the communicants by means of the unity of their voices, to show gladness of heart, and to bring out more clearly the ‘communitarian’ character of the procession to receive the Eucharist.” General Instruction of the Roman Missal. 86
These processional songs remind us that we are pilgrims who journey from God, with God and toward God. As we journey, our common song unites our hearts and our voices in love. St. Augustine explained that singing is for lovers. It’s what people in love do! Who among us in the throes of falling in love hasn’t wandered about singing or whistling a tune? God is in love with us! We are in love with God! Words are not enough to express our feelings! We must sing!
But singing takes courage—ask any cantor! Singing involves risk and vulnerability. Yet this is exactly what is asked of each of us when we celebrate liturgy—to be open, vulnerable and willing to go beyond our comfort zones.
When I ask people to join the choir, I usually get the same stock answer, “I can’t sing.” Everyone can sing, at different levels perhaps, but EVERYONE CAN SING! The liturgy gives people a chance to return to God the voice they have been given. As you sing at the next liturgy, allow the music to move your heart in love and in song, returning your gift to God.