Sunday, November 28, 2010

Advent 2010

The Church through this season of Advent reminds all of us each year to stir us to renew constantly our memory of the great love of God has shown us. This commemoration teaches us that our Saviour came not only for the benefit of the people of his own time. His goodness is still there for us to share in.


Wishing all of you a Blessed Advent...

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Preface of the Solemnity of Christ the King based on Mysterium (Mystery), Tremendum (Tremendous) and Fascinans (Fascinating).

The Eucharistic Prayer in the Mass is more than just a prayer. It is the verbal element in the central action of the Mass. One of the important or principle part or element of the Eucharistic Prayer is the Preface. The General Instruction on the Roman Missal No.55 states that:-

The chief elements of the Eucharistic prayer are these:

Thanksgiving (expressed especially in the preface): in the name of the entire people of God, the priest praises the Father and gives him thanks for the work of salvation or for some special aspect of it in keeping with the day, feast, or season. (GIRM, Introduction – Chapter II).

The word preface here does not mean introduction. It refers rather to the fact that this prayer is spoken out loud (prae-fari), and it is likely that the word was once applied to the entire canon. The intention of this section of the prayer is not just thanksgiving for this and that, rather it celebrates the solemn entry of the people into the divine presence (Eucharist). It expresses that fact that here and now our congregation is one assembly with all those in heaven who worship the divine majesty with all the awe and splendor
(Raymond Moloney, SJ, The Eucharistic Prayers: in worship, preaching and study). Keeping this in mind, I would like to present the Preface of the Solemnity of Christ the King based on my understanding of Mysterium (Mystery), Tremendum (Tremendous) and Fascinans (Fascinating).



The preface of Christ the King:


Father, all-powerful and ever-living God,
we do well always and everywhere to give You thanks.

You anointed Jesus Christ, Your only Son,

with the oil of gladness,
as the eternal priest and universal king.

As priest He offered His life on the altar of the cross

and redeemed the human race by this one perfect sacrifice of peace.

As king He claims dominion over all creation,

that He may present to You, His almighty Father,
an eternal and universal kingdom:
a kingdom of truth and life,
a kingdom of holiness and grace,
a kingdom of justice, love, and peace.

And so, with all the choirs of angels in heaven
we proclaim Your glory and join in their unending hymn of praise.

Mysterium
would first mean a secret or a mystery that which is unknown (alien) to us and cannot be comprehended and explained. In the religious sense, that which is mysterious is quite beyond the usual, the intelligible and the familiar. That which is mysterium falls outside the limits of the worldly wise, filling the mind with wonder and astonishment. Truly this preface speaks about the tremendous, fascinating mystery of our salvation history. In the area of mysterium we see the element of Anthropomorphism i.e. God anointing His only Son to be the Eternal Priest and Universal King, and offering His life to all people. And as King, He is to gain His kingdom and to present it to His Father a pure and holy kingdom. The elements stated in paragraph 4 of the preface such as truth, life, holiness, grace, justice, love and peace are elements of a kingdom ‘set-apart’ i.e. a pure and holy kingdom.


As for the element of tremendum; it is reflected in the mind in term of feelings. It can be recognized through the effort of imaginative intuition at the lives of those around us. It can also be recognized in the fixed and ordered solemnities of rites and liturgies and at atmosphere that clings to old religious monuments and buildings. An appropriate expression of mysterium tremendum is the mystery inexpressible. It is this feeling that will spread throughout the mind with a calm mood of deepest worship. From tremendum we see the elements of ‘Awefulness’, ‘Overpoweringness’ and Energy or Urgency. In the preface above we see the presence of the divine; the redeemer. This is the element of ‘Awefulness’ for we can recognize goodness, gentleness, love and a kind of intimacy of God towards humankind in the preface. As for ‘Overpoweringness’ we can note the feelings of religious humility that is the creature consciousness where it recognizes its littleness and limitation in the presence of the Creator, the King. The preface too speaks about the absolute supremacy of the King over His subjects. This is the element of Energy or Urgencyl it indicates the presence of the divine.

The element of fascination tells us of the spiritual experience or the numinous experience (divine feelings). It is mysterious because of its ‘Awefulness’ and wonderfulness (the majestic) that one comes to the fascinating and attractive religious experience. It is right to see this element of fascination in the last paragraph; where the earthly beings joining the heavenly beings, coming to agreement in proclaiming the King’s glory, majesty and praising Him.


With all these elements of Mysterium (Mystery), Tremendum (Tremendous) and Fascinans (Fascinating); it is beautiful to see the ‘church’ with the words of the preface coming into the divine presence and finds an identity with one of the high points of this mystical experience in the Bible (Isaiah 6:3, Revelation 4:8).

Holy, holy, holy Lord,
God of power and might,
heaven and earth are full of your glory.
Hosanna in the highest.
Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord.
Hosanna in the highest.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

2010 Pilgrimage to the Holy Land (Egypt, Israel, Palestinian Authority & Jordan)

The weekend is here!! I'm having a light and easy weekend after a very long time, so I've decided to write a short-post on my blog and share some photos of my pilgrimage. Hmmm just realized it has been so long I made a post on my blog. Better start blogging again.

Anyway....

Together with my mother and 43 other people, I made a pilgrimage to the Holy Places at Egypt, Israel, Palestine and Jordan from October 01-11, 2010. We also had some sight-seeing such the Great Pyramid and a cruise on the River Nile. The experiences I had experienced is indescribable and unexplainable. It was just AWEsome.



It was indeed a spirit-filled experience. I thank God for giving me this opportunity to make this pilgrimage at the end of my 32 years of life here on earth 'in the footsteps of Jesus and the prophet Moses'. All the places I visited was indeed memorable but one particular place that I want to mentioned; that made an impact in me was the place of the Birth of Jesus, Our Lord and Saviour. The place where God gave a special gift to all of us i.e. His Son Jesus. God becoming human to save mankind. "For God so loved the world He gave us His only Son..." (John 3:16).
I had the privilage to venerate the place of Jesus' birth, His crucifixion, the place where His body was anointed, His tomb and the place He ascended to heaven.





To summarize my pilgrimage experience:-
A journey from the Old Testament (Exodus story - Israelites' journey from Egypt to the promised land) - to the New Testament. A Promised Foretold (OT) to the Promised Fulfilled (NT). And my challenge now as I begin my 33 years of life which God has given me is, to Live the Promise (Resurrection - New Life, Pentecost & Acts - Apostolic life).








For more photos, please click on the links below:-
Album 1
Album 2
Album 3