The One Shining Moment
‘Rome Slams Abuses of the Mass’. Priests and parishioners are worried at these loud and recent messages about rubrical correctness around the sanctuary. Many objective commentators describe such Vatican warnings as sadly missing the point. Those who stop coming to Mass claim that they are bored by the irrelevance of our liturgies and homilies. The real issues, they say, are about what happens in their daily lives, and how the Eucharist might support and nourish them in their often-desperate struggles. So how do we set this beautiful sacrament free of all that would diminish it? How do we provide fresh, sweet water for thirsty people? And where do we begin?
I remember a story about a USA football coach called Guy Lombardi. His team had fairly suddenly plummeted from top of the league. The previous season they had dazzled the country with the magic and sophistication of their passing strategies and scoring techniques. Now they had lost the plot completely. He called them together and settled them down. “Let us begin at the beginning. This,” he explained, “is a football. And these,” he said, “are your legs and arms. Now the aim is to get that ball, using your legs and arms, from one side of the field to the other.”
Where do we find a simple but profound strategy for bringing the Mass to life? How do we reveal new depths to its mystery? A deeper understanding is reached, I feel sure, when we connect what we do around the altar with what we are doing each day of our lives. We celebrate Eucharist so as to never forget its implications for our ordinary routines and chores. I see the Mass as the ‘colouring in’ of the pale outlines of the lives we bring to it. I see it as revealing the true worth of all that is going on within us and around us – disclosing and celebrating the hidden presence of God in the midst of the most common things.
Put more poetically, I like to feel that the bits and pieces of each day’s jig-saw puzzle are put together at the altar; that the separate, often discordant notes of each day’s living are fused into one flowing Sunday symphony; that the hurts, fears and shame of our lives are all held and embraced in this weekly ritual of bread and wine; that the Eucharist creates stories and poems out of the mixed-up alphabet of what happens to us each day; that, on Sunday, the scattered and broken beads of our fragmented existence are again refashioned into a necklace of pearls; that at Mass, we are astonished by the nearness of God who comes to us disguised as our lives.
Many dedicated pastors will want the people to feel affirmed at Mass, to be more aware of the holiness of even the most menial part of their lives, to appreciate the beauty and power they carry, to see the stumbling blocks of ill-health, breakdowns in relationships, anxiety over money, as potential stepping stones into a new life.
On a Sunday morning, I long for our parishioners to walk out of our church with a new spring in their step, a new look of confidence in their eyes, a holy determination to start all over again. I see them sitting there, pervaded by a strange and often heart-wrenching innocence. There is loss in their faces, hope and delight, too, apprehension and guilt. I remember Marie’s intense loss when her baby was still-born, Eleanor’s joy at achieving her A-level hopes, the shock of Harry when his wife walked out. “You are all heroes and heroines exactly as you are,” I say to them. “If you only knew how unconditionally you are loved, how cherished you are, how safe you are. Today’s Eucharist guarantees that everything in your life is sacred. That nothing is lost. That no bitter tear or heartfelt wish is ever wasted. That no sin is ever left unredeemed. That everything, in the end, is harvest.”
Full of these thoughts I carefully hold the bread and wine. They are the fruit of the earth and work of human hands, symbols of the history of Mother Earth, signs of the often-tumultuous struggles that rage within the human hearts of our congregation. Then, with all the graced intensity granted to me, I utter, over all of this astounding reality, the shattering words of God, “This is my body: this is my blood.” Nothing is ‘merely’ human any more. Everything is now revealed as divinely human, shining with God’s incarnate light.
In these ways I try to transcend an over-emphasis on the rubrics and liturgical niceties of the daily or weekly ritual. Life is incredibly raw and violent. Passions ignite in a moment. Fierce emotions wage silent civil wars in the hidden places of our hearts. This is the raw material of our Sunday Mass. If it is not about our volatile, erratic and incredibly powerful drives and emotions, then the Word has become flesh in vain. Where else can redemption happen if not at the point of our pain? From what else, other than the ever-present fear, jealousy, anger and despair, can we be saved? If the hard-won Eucharist of the Passover is to have any relevance to our lives, it must be felt at the very guts and marrow of our being, at those precarious places within us where our demons and angels meet. This is where our need is strong and urgent.
John Paul II describes this need of God’s healing in the Eucharist ‘as physical as the need for food or water’. He said that our desire for personal transformation is expressed in wanting an intimacy with God which is ‘instinctive and physical’. “It is not by chance,” he says, “that the psalmist speaks of an embrace, of a clinging that is almost physical.” I often ask our people to feel and reflect on the actual sacred and sensual awareness of the bread and wine within their bodies. Beyond words, this is another kind of life-giving intimacy.
Before he died, having exhausted what he could do with words, Jesus went beyond them. He gave us the Eucharist, his physical presence, his kiss, a ritual within which he holds us to his heart. Touch, not words, is what we often need. God has to pick us up, like a mother her child. Skin needs to be touched. Our bodies have their senses to be nourished. There are times when even holy words are not enough. That is why God became a baby, and why that baby grew up to become our Eucharist.
John Paul II’s poetic and mystical soul delights in opening up all kinds of windows on to the richness of the mystery. In his most recent encyclical Ecclesia de Eucharistia he writes, “I have been able to celebrate Mass in chapels built along mountain paths, on lakeshores and seacoasts; I have celebrated it on altars built on stadiums and in city squares. This varied scenario of celebrations of the Eucharist has given me a powerful experience of its universal and, so to speak, cosmic character. Yes, cosmic! Because even when it is celebrated on the humble altar of a country church, the Eucharist is always, in some way, celebrated on the altar of the world. It unites heaven and earth. It embraces and permeates all creation. In the Eucharist, Christ gives back to the Creator and Father all creation redeemed.”
Resonating around the heavens, this magnificent and stirring vision of the Mass as the sacred song of praise for a wild and dancing cosmos, full of wild and dancing hearts, can never be contained in fearful and constricting regulations.