Homily Archbishop Charles Brown, Apostolic Nuncio
For more info on the Papal Nuncio in Ireland go to:
Homilies and Pastoral Visits of the Papal Nuncio to Ireland Archbishop Charles J.Brown
Pilgrimage to the Shrine of Our Lady of Knock, Apostolate of
Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration on 20th April 2013
“Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal
life” (Jn 6:68).
My brothers and sisters in Christ, it is a real joy and a
privilege for me to be with you this afternoon here at the shrine of Our Lady
of Knock, for the pilgrimage of the Apostolate of Perpetual Eucharistic
Adoration. It is truly good to be here (cf. Mt 17:4). Since my
arrival in Ireland
some fourteen months ago, I have made several visits to this holy and renowned
place. My first visit as Nuncio was less than a week after arriving in Ireland ,
in February 2012, and since that first experience, I have become ever more
convinced that the renewal of the Church in Ireland
is, in a profound way, connected to this place of pilgrimage and to Ireland
in 1879 was a difficult place. The effects of the famine thirty years
before were still felt sharply in the lives of the people. The countryside,
especially here in the West, had been depopulated; hundreds of thousands of
people had died or had emigrated, and in 1879 it seemed very likely that the
famine might return. And so, it was in those challenging and frightening
circumstance that she appeared – to comfort and to sustain the faith of her
people by her maternal and loving presence.
everything
that it represents. All of us know well the history of Knock; how in 1879
Our Lady appeared to simple people gathered in prayer outside the parish
church, to comfort and console them in their struggles and difficulties.
The apparition of Knock is somewhat unusual for the fact
that Our Lady did not speak. Rather we can say that, instead of speaking,
she opened the eyes of those who were present that day to see what our physical
eyes do not normally see – a vision not unlike the one given to the Apostle
John, the Beloved Disciple, on the Island of Patmos, a revelation of heaven, a
vision of the ceaseless act of adoration, which is what heaven will be.
At the centre of Saint John’s vision, recounted in the Book of the Apocalypse,
is the Lamb “who seemed to have been slain” (Rev 5:6), that is, with his wounds
still visible, surrounded by countless angels and by the symbolic figure of
144,000 redeemed people, coming “from every race and tribe, people and
language, standing before the throne and the Lamb” (Rev 7:9).
Here at
Knock, the symbolic 144,000 are represented by just three of the redeemed,
three saints: Our Lady, Saint Joseph
and Saint John the Beloved Disciple himself. And here too, as in the
vision of Saint John in the Book of
the Apocalypse, at the centre is the Lamb, Christ our Lord and our God (cf. Jn 20:28 ); the Lamb upon the altar; the Lamb of
sacrifice. The apparition here at Knock is, as I have said, a vision of
heaven, and in that vision, the presence of the altar is very
significant. The altar, on which the Lamb is standing, connects the
realty of heaven – the “life of the world to come,” as we profess ever Sunday
in the final words of the Creed – with earth. The presence of the altar
in the apparition here at Knock links heaven and earth. And that
connection is in and through the Mass.
The ceaseless act of worship, which is what heaven will be, already begins for
us as Catholics here on this earth in the celebration of the Holy Mass.
In Holy Mass, we, as baptized Christians, are drawn into the heavenly liturgy
of the saints and angels. Our elevation into the adoration of heaven
becomes very explicit in the Mass at the end of the Preface prayed by the
priest, the prayer which leads us into the “Holy, Holy, Holy”. Each of
the different Prefaces always concludes with some reference to all the angels
and saints of heaven and to their unending hymn of praise to God, and then we
too here on earth truly join them in their song of adoration of the Thrice-Holy
God: “Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of hosts…” This is the hymn of the
angels, which becomes our hymn here on earth. The Mass is our act of adoration
in which we are united with the Lamb who offers himself to the Father for us.
It is important for us to see the centrality of the Mass as
the principal act of adoration of the Church, because the beautiful and worthy
apostolate in which all of you are involved, that is, the Apostolate of
Eucharistic Adoration is intrinsically connected to the Mass (cf. Pope Benedict
XVI,Sacramentum caritatis, 66). It flows from the Mass and leads
back to the Mass. Pope Benedict XVI designated this year as a Year of
Faith; the Eucharist is the mystery of faith, the fact that Jesus Christ is
truly present in the Blessed Sacrament. Eucharistic adoration is, like
the Mass itself, an act of faith. We adore because we believe that he is
really present, and through our adoration our faith increases. As I
mentioned earlier, when we think of Ireland in 1879 at the time of the
apparition here in Knock, we remember that Catholics faced considerable
challenges. But they held fast to what was most important, namely
their Catholic faith. Our time has its own challenges.
In my view
the greatest challenge in our own age is the erosion of faith.
Eucharistic adoration can be seen as the antidote, the remedy, both personal
and communal, to the weakening of faith. We adore because we
believe. The crisis of faith may be a distinctively modern or postmodern
problem, but we see it as well in the Gospel that we have heard proclaimed
today. In the sixth chapter of the Gospel of Saint John, which we have
been reading at daily Mass all this week, Jesus teaches his followers about the
Eucharist, the bread of life, and, as we heard today, many of those who had
been following him said “This is intolerable language. How could anyone
accept it?” (Jn 6:60). We ourselves in our own time hear the same thing
said about the Catholic faith: “This is intolerable language. How could
anyone accept it?” And Jesus says the same thing to us today that he said
to his Apostles in the Gospel: “What about you, do you want to go away
too?” Our response has to be the response of Saint Peter, who as the
first of the Apostles, speaks for all of them and for all of us: “Lord, to whom
shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. We believe and we know
that you are the Holy one of God.” In adoration of the Blessed Sacrament,
we put these words into practice; “Lord, to whom shall we go, you have the
words of eternal life”. In adoration, we recognize that the Lord is here
in our midst and that he is the Holy One of God.
A beautiful way of entering into adoration of the Eucharist
is to open the Gospels and read slowly and meditatively his words while being
in his presence. When we do that, Jesus truly speaks to us “the words of
eternal life,” because the Gospel is not a dead letter or even a just book of
history; the Gospel is a living word which speaks directly to the heart of the
person in adoration. The beautiful experience of adoration
increases our
faith and it also increases our love. There are so many fruits of
Eucharistic adoration; vocations to the priesthood and religious life flourish
when there is adoration. Adoration should also lead us to a greater love
of our brothers and sisters, especially those who are most forgotten,
marginalized; the poor, the elderly, unborn children in their mothers’ womb.
And finally adoration leads to joy. Our Holy Father
Pope Francis has spoken so powerfully about the joy that comes from following
Christ. The words of Pope Francis on Palm Sunday in Saint Peter’s Square
express this joy so powerfully: “Jesus is God, but he lowered himself to walk
with us. He is our friend, our brother. He illumines our path here
[on this earth]. And in this way we have welcomed him today. And
here the first word that I wish to say to you: joy! Do not be men
and women of sadness: a Christian can never be sad! Never give way to
discouragement! Ours is not a joy born of having many possessions, but from
having encountered a Person: Jesus, in our midst; it is born from knowing that
with him we are never alone, even at difficult moments, even when our life’s
journey comes up against problems and obstacles that seem insurmountable, and
there are so many of them! And in this moment the enemy, the devil, comes,
often disguised as an angel, and slyly speaks his word to us. Do not listen to
him! Let us follow Jesus! We accompany, we follow Jesus, but above all we know
that he accompanies us and carries us on his shoulders. This is our joy, this
is the hope that we must bring to this world” (Pope Francis, Homily for
Palm Sunday, 24 March 2103).
My brothers and sisters, how many saints in the history of
the Church found their joy and their strength in Eucharistic adoration.
We need to follow the same path. Let us ask Our Lady, who opened the eyes
of the
visionaries here at Knock to see the reality of Christ on the altar, to
open our own eyes through a progressive deepening of our faith. That is
the way forward for the Catholic Church in Ireland. And so, we will make
our own the words of Saint Peter: “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the
words of eternal life (Jn 6:68).For more info on the Papal Nuncio in Ireland go to:
Homilies and Pastoral Visits of the Papal Nuncio to Ireland Archbishop Charles J.Brown
No comments:
Post a Comment