PRACTICE DURING PASCHAL TIME

THE practice for this holy season mainly consists in the spiritual
joy which it should produce in every soul that is risen with
Jesus. This joy is a foretaste of eternal happiness, and the
Christian ought to consider it a duty to keep it up within him, by
ardently seeking after that life which is in our divine Head, and
by carefully shunning sin which causes death. During the last nine
weeks we have mourned for our sins and done penance for them; we
have followed Jesus to Calvary; but now, our holy Mother the
Church is urgent in bidding us rejoice. She herself has laid aside
all sorrow; the voice of her weeping is changed into the song of a
delighted Spouse.

In order that she might impart this joy to all her children, she
has taken their weakness into account. After reminding them of the
necessity of expiation, she gave them forty days wherein to do
penance; and then removing the restraint of Lenten mortification,
she brings us to Easter as to a land where there is nothing but
gladness, light, life, joy, calm, and the sweet hope of
immortality. Thus does she produce, in those of her children who
have no elevation of soul, sentiments in harmony with the great
feast, such as the most perfect feel, and by this means all, both
fervent and tepid unite their voices in one same hymn of praise to
our risen Jesus.

The great liturgist of the twelfth century, Rupert, Abbot of
Deutz, thus speaks of the pious artifice used by the Church to
infuse the spirit of Easter into all: 'There are certain carnal
minds that seem unable to open their eyes to spiritual things,
unless roused by some unusual excitement; and for this reason the
Church makes use of such means. Thus, the Lenten fast, which we
offer up to God as our yearly tithe, goes on till the most sacred
night of Easter; then follow fifty days without so much as one
single fast. Hence it happens, that while the body is being
mortified, and is to continue to be so till Easter Night, that
holy night is eagerly looked forward to even by the carnal-minded;
they long for it to come; and, meanwhile, they carefully count
each of the forty days, as a wearied traveller does the miles.
Thus, the sacred solemnity is sweet to all, and dear to all, and
desired by all, as light is to them that walk in darkness, as a
fount of living water is to them that thirst, and as "a tent which
the Lord hath pitched" for wearied wayfarers.'1

What a happy time was that when, as St. Bernard expresses it,
there was not one in the whole Christian army that neglected his
Easter duty, and when all, both just and sinners, walked together
in the path of the Lenten observances! Alas! those days are gone,
and Easter has not the same effect on the people of our
generation! The reason is that a love of ease and a false
conscience lead so many Christians to treat the law of Lent with
as much indifference as if there were no such law existing. Hence,
Easter comes upon them as a feast-it may be as a great feast-but
that is all; they experience little of that thrilling joy which
fills the heart of the Church during this season, and which she
evinces in everything she does. And if this be their case even on
the glorious day itself, how can it be expected that they should
keep up, for the whole fifty, the spirit of gladness, which is the
very essence of Easter? They have not observed the fast, or the
abstinence, of Lent: the mitigated form in which the Church now
presents them to her children, in consideration of their weakness,
was too severe for them! They sought, or they took, a total
dispensation from this law of Lenten mortification, and without
regret or remorse. The Alleluia returns, and it finds no response
in their souls: how could it? Penance has not done its work of
purification: it has not spiritualized them; how, then, could they
follow their risen Jesus, whose life is henceforth more of heaven
than of earth?

But these reflections are too sad for such a season as this: let
us beseech our risen Jesus to enlighten these souls with the rays
of his victory over the world and the flesh, and to raise them up
to himself. No, nothing must now distract us from joy. 'Can the
children of the Bridegroom mourn, as long as the Bridegroom is
with them?'2 Jesus is to be with us for forty days; he is to
suffer no more, and die no more; let our feelings be in keeping
with his now endless glory and bliss. True, he is to leave us, he
is to ascend to the right hand of his Father; but he will not
leave us orphans; he will send us the divine Comforter, who will
abide with us for ever.3 These sweet and consoling words must be
our Easter text: 'The children of the Bridegroom cannot mourn, as
long as the Bridegroom is with them.' They are the key to the
whole Liturgy of this holy season. We must have them ever before
us, and we shall find by experience that the joy of Easter is as
salutary as the contrition and penance of Lent. Jesus on the
cross, and Jesus in the Resurrection, it is ever the same Jesus;
but what he wants from us now is that we should keep near him, in
company with his blessed Mother, his disciples, and Magdalen, who
are in ecstasies of delight at his triumph, and have forgotten the
sad days of his Passion.

But this Easter of ours will have an end; the bright vision of our
risen Jesus will pass away, and all that will be left to us is the
recollection of his ineffable glory, and of the wonderful
familiarity wherewith he treated us. What shall we do, when he who
was our very life and light leaves us and ascends to heaven? Be of
good heart, Christians! you must look forward to another Easter.
Each year will give you a repetition of what you now enjoy. Easter
will follow Easter, and bring you at last to that Easter in heaven
which is never to have an end, and of which these happy ones of
earth are a mere foretaste. Nor is this all. Listen to the Church.
In one of her prayers she reveals to us the great secret, how we
may perpetuate our Easters even here in our banishment-'Grant to
thy servants, O God, that they may keep up, by their manner of
living, the Mystery they have received by believing!'4 So, then,
the Mystery of Easter is to be ever visible on this earth; our
risen Jesus ascends to heaven, but he leaves upon us the impress
of his Resurrection, and we must retain it within us until he
again visits us.

And how could it be that we should not retain this divine impress
within us? Are not all the mysteries of our divine Master ours
also? From his very first coming in the Flesh, he has made us
sharers in everything he has done. He was born in Bethlehem: we
were born together with him. He was crucified: our 'old man was
crucified with him.'5 He was buried: 'we were buried with him.'6
And therefore, when he rose from the grave, we also received the
grace that we should 'walk in the newness of life.'7

Such is the teaching of the Apostle, who thus continues: 'We know
that Christ rising again from the dead, dieth now no more, death
shall no more have dominion over him: for in that he died to sin,
(that is, for sin,) he died once, but in that he liveth, he liveth
unto God.'8 He is our head, and we are his members: we share in
what is his. To die again by sin would be to renounce him, to
separate ourselves from him, to forfeit that Death and
Resurrection of his which he mercifully willed should be ours. Let
us, therefore preserve within us that life, which is the life of
our Jesus, and which yet belongs to us as our own treasure; for he
won it by conquering death, and then gave it to us, with all his
other merits. You, then, who before Easter were sinners, but have
now returned to the life of grace, see that you die no more, let
your actions 1: bespeak your resurrection. And you to whom the
Paschal solemnity has brought growth in grace, show this increase
of more abundant life by your principles and your conduct. Tis
thus all will 'walk in the newness of life.'

With this, for the present, we take leave of the lessons taught us
by the Resurrection of Jesus; the rest we reserve for the humble
commentary we shall have to make on the Liturgy of this holy
season. We shall then see, more and more clearly, not only our
duty of imitating our divine Master's Resurrection, but the
magnificence of this grandest Mystery of the Man-God. Easter- with
its three admirable manifestations of divine love and power, the
Resurrection, the Ascension, and the Descent of the Holy Ghost-
yes, Easter is the perfection of the work of our Redemption.
Everything, both in the order of time and in the workings of the
Liturgy, has been a preparation for Easter. The four thousand
years that followed -the promise made by God to our first parents
were crowned by the event that we are now to celebrate. All that
the Church has been doing for us from the commencement of Advent
had this same glorious event in view; and now that we have come to
it, our expectations are more than realized, and the power and
wisdom of God are brought before us so vividly that our former
knowledge of them seems nothing in comparison with our present
appreciation and love of them. The angels themselves are dazzled
by the grand Mystery, as the Church tells us in one of her Easter
hymns, where she says: 'The angels gaze with wonder on the change
wrought in mankind: it was flesh that sinned, and now Flesh taketh
all sin away, and the God that reigns is the God made Flesh.'9

Eastertide, too belongs to what is called the Illuminative Life;
nay, it is the most important part of that life, for it not only
manifests, as the last four seasons of the liturgical year have
done, the humiliations and the sufferings of the Man-God: it shows
him to us in all his grand glory; it gives us to see him
expressing in his own sacred humanity the highest degree of the
creature's transformation into his God. The coming of the Holy
Ghost will bring additional brightness to this illumination, it
shows us the relations that exist between the soul and the Third
Person of the blessed Trinity. And here we see the way and the
progress of a faithful soul. She was made an adopted child of the
Heavenly Father; she was initiated into all the duties and
mysteries of her high vocation by the lessons and examples of the
Incarnate Word; she was perfected by the visit and indwelling of
the Holy Ghost. From this there result those several Christian
exercises which produce within her an imitation of her divine
Model, and prepare her for that Union to which she is invited by
him who gave to them that received him, power to be made 'sons of
God,' by a birth that is 'not of blood, nor of the flesh, but of
God.'10

ENDNOTES

1 De Divinis Officiis, lib. vi, cap. xxvii.

2 St. Matth. ix 15.

3 St. John xiv 16-18.

4 Collect for Tuesday in Easter Week.

5 Rom. vi 6.

6 Rom. vi 4.

7 Rom. vi 4.

8 Rom. vi 9, 10.

9 Hymn for the Matins of Ascension Day.

10 St. John i 12, 13.

(Taken from Volume VII of "The Liturgical Year" by Abbot Gueranger
O.S.B. published by Marian House, Powers Lake, ND 58773.)

Copyright (c) 1997 EWTN Online Services.

-------------------------------------------------------

  Provided courtesy of:

       Eternal Word Television Network
       5817 Old Leeds Road
       Birmingham, AL 35210 USA
       Voice: 205-956-9537
       Web: http://www.ewtn.com
       Email address: [email protected]

-------------------------------------------------------