Gaudete Sunday: Happiness in Heaven is For Those who Know How to be Happy on Earth
way of joy passes along the path of self emptying, the way of humility
St. Josemaria Escriva once wrote, "I am every day more convinced that happiness in Heaven is for those who know how to be happy on earth." (The Forge, 1005)
Pope Benedict on Gaudete Sunday
CHESAPEAKE, Va. (Catholic Online) - We awakened this morning to hear, read and see the continuing tragic details coming out of Newtown, Connecticut. The sheer magnitude of the evil act which took the lives of innocent children and the hroes who tried to save then has stunned the Nation.
However, it has done something else.
It has made us stop to consider what really matters most in life. We have hugged our children, grandchildren, and one another more. We have openly reflected on spiritual issues, even in the media. This horrible tragedy has presented us with an existential moment, a moment for reflecting on the meaning of life and the source of happiness.
It is Gaudete Sunday, the Sunday of Rejoicing in the Liturgical calendar of the Catholic Church. What an interesting juxtaposition of experiences.
The older I get, the more I realize the meaning of this beautiful Sunday. Difficulties, stress, and even tragedy - experiences which at first glance seem to cause us to respond with anything but joy, can be transformed in the life of a believer and actually become its very source. In the Second Reading of the Liturgy, St. Paul tells the early Christians at Philippi:
"Brothers and sisters: Rejoice in the Lord always. I shall say it again: rejoice! Your kindness should be known to all. The Lord is near. Have no anxiety at all, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, make your requests known to God. Then the peace of God that surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. "(Phil. 4:4-7)
He gave the Thessalonians the same direction in his letter to them, "Rejoice always. Pray without ceasing. In all circumstances give thanks, for this is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus." ( 1 Thes.5: 16 - 24) The pain, hurt, fear, worry, and that awful killer on the loose in our modern mania, stress, need not distract us from the source of true Joy, Jesus!
In times like this that I thank God for the great gift of the liturgical year. Our mother the Church invites us to enter into the deepest mysteries of the faith by living them liturgically. The Feasts we celebrate, and our preparation for them, are an invitation to participate, even now, in the life to come. So it is with Gaudete Sunday, the Sunday of rejoicing.
Christian joy is not rooted in the circumstances and struggles of our daily lives. Often, they are the bad fruit of the disorder and brokenness caused by sin. Christian Joy finds its root in the relationship we now have in and through Jesus Christ, with the Father, in the Holy Spirit.
We rejoice on Guadete Sunday, because the Lord is always near. One of the Psalms we regularly chant in the Liturgy of the Hours reminds us of the truth, "The LORD is close to the brokenhearted, saves those whose spirit is crushed. Many are the troubles of the just, but the LORD delivers from them all." (Psalm 34:19,20)
In a matter of days we will celebrate the Feast of the Nativity of the Lord. The Church as mother and teacher calls us on the third Sunday of Advent to pause from our Advent preparation. She summons us in the liturgy by using the imperative case to - "Rejoice!"
Bishops, priests and deacons have, up to this point, worn purple vestments symbolizing the penitential nature of our Advent preparation. On this Sunday they are replaced with vestments of a rose color, a color of joy.
The General Instructions for the Roman Missal (GIRM) explain the reasons for color of our vestments: "The purpose of a variety of color of the sacred vestments is to give effective expression even outwardly to the specific character of the mysteries of faith being celebrated and to a sense of Christian life's passage through the course of the liturgical year."
In our Old Testament reading from Zephaniah we meet the God who rejoices over us! "Fear not, O Zion, be not discouraged! The LORD, your God, is in your midst, a mighty savior; he will rejoice over you with gladness, and renew you in his love, he will sing joyfully because of you, as one sings at festivals." (Zeph 3)
As Christians we know that the Lord has come, in the Incarnation of the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity. The Word has become flesh and He has dwelt among us (John 1). Life is forever changed and the world is being recreated in Him.
In just a few short days we will celebrate His Birth. However, on this day we pause to remember that He has come, He is coming and He will come again. This is where we find our Joy, in an encounter with Him. We who live our lives now in His Body, the Church, are the new Zion, freed from our bondage and called to rejoice!
Our Gospel passage, Luke 3: 10-18, points to our Advent teacher, John the Baptizer. He knows that the source of joy is Jesus Christ. He calls everyone who ...
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You spelled heroes wrong.
God bless us all.
This 3rd Sunday of Advent makes me glad to be Catholic. I need the Church calendar as part of the "out of sight, out of mind" teaching I heard years ago. Our brother Christians might find it harder to keep their faith alive and nourished with every Sunday service being the same: a preacher having to come up with a stimulating message. We need happiness this year. The Church in America in conflict with a Herodian government (elected by Catholic democrats) which is actually threatening our Church institutions with closure. Our crime is that, like Martin Luther King Jr., we choose to obey God and His moral law as opposed to the Catholic democrats' candidate and his immoral law. I almost shake when I consider this is the country in which I was born and raised. This same government is led by the Catholic democrats' candidate who voted for it to be legal to kill girls and boys outside of their mom's womb who just survived the attempt to kill them in the womb. These girls and boys are just five years younger than the girls and boys killed in the kindergarten class in Connecticut. We can pray this horror will make the government see just how wretched their social policy is and to change it. We need happiness because the Catholic democrats' candidate refused to thank God on Thanksgiving and claims to be wiser than God as to what constitutes marriage. I also need prayers because I am on the lower end of the economic ladder and am losing my job soon. I am just one of the victims of the Catholic democrats' candidate and his "compassionate" "social justice" economic policy. It is quite brutal: unsustainable Greek-like debt, high unemployment and poverty along with lower incomes and wealth. The perpetual class hatred of the wealthy and businesses does not help me. I need the wealthy and businesses to be doing better, not worse, so I can have jobs from which to choose. I will not be hired by the growing number of people being paid by the Catholic democrats' candidate (with our money) not to work. This growing number of idle people is also unsustainable. But I will continue to rejoice in the Lord, always.