From How to Get the Most Out of the Eucharist by Michael Dubruiel
Chapter 1 - Serve, Part 1
“You shall worship the
Lord your God and him only shall you serve.”
M ATTHEW
4 : 1 0
In my home
parish, St. John the Baptist in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the words Parate Viam Domini are inscribed over
the front doors. The two years of Latin that I had in college and my knowledge
of Scripture are enough for me to figure out that the message greeting me each
Sunday are the words of St. John the Baptist in the desert, “Prepare the way of
the Lord.” It is an excellent message to set the tone for the mystery that is
about to be celebrated.
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P R E PA R AT I O N
I remember how differently I approached the Mass when as a
young man I began to serve at the Eucharist as an altar boy.Before I could
serve for the first time, I had to attend training sessions so that I knew what
gestures and movements I was to make, and had to study the Latin responses so
that I could answer the prayers of the priest at the appropriate time.Sometimes
school was sacrificed so that I could serve a funeral mass,or a Saturday
afternoon so that the priest could be attended to as he witnessed the marriage
vows of a couple celebrating the Sacrament of Matrimony.
The thought and preparation that went
into serving at the Eucharist required a sacrifice on my part but kept me
focused on why I was there. Adults who serve as lectors, ushers, extraordinary
ministers of the Eucharist,and choir members often mention feeling similar
sentiments when they first take on these acts of service. Yet with time we are
all apt to find ourselves going through the motions without much preparation
and indeed without much thought about the fact that we are serving God in our
respective roles at the Eucharist, and this inattentiveness is to our
detriment. Making preparations is the work of a servant, and in the celebration
of the Eucharist it is the work of every disciple of Christ.
T H E WAY
“The Way” is one of the oldest names for the first followers
of Christ. Jesus often told his disciples that he came to show them “the Way”
to the Father, that God’s ways were not our ways, and that He was the Way. The
routine that we can fall into at the Eucharist happens precisely when we stop
seeing what is taking place as “different”from everything else that we
experience in life. Not only is it different, but if we truly enter into the
Eucharist with a spirit of sacrifice,it will change the way that we view
everything in our lives. The tension between Christian beliefs and the beliefs
of “the world” is understood only when we come to embrace “the way” of Our Lord
Jesus Christ.
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Most converts
to Christianity have a clear sense of the saving power of Jesus as “the Way.”
Faithful, lifelong Catholics may not have as keen an understanding until they
experience the difference their faith has made to them in contrast to the
rejection of that faith in one of their children.Yet understanding that “the
way” of Christ is not business as usual can keep us from thinking that we have
nothing to prepare for when we celebrate the Eucharist. Once we realize that
God’s ways are not our ways, we will always see the need to “prepare ourselves
for these Sacred Mysteries” we are about to celebrate.
LIVING THE E UCHARIST
Throughout the day,when the events of the day do not go your
“way,” before frustration has a chance to set in, stop and ask yourself what
God’s way might be for what the day has given you. Try to think of a similar
incident in the life of Christ to the one in which you find yourself — how did
Our Lord handle the situation?
“You shall worship the
Lord your God and him only shall you serve.”
M ATTHEW
4 : 1 0
LIVING THE E UCHARIST
Throughout the day,when the events of the day do not go your
“way,” before frustration has a chance to set in, stop and ask yourself what
God’s way might be for what the day has given you. Try to think of a similar
incident in the life of Christ to the one in which you find yourself — how did
Our Lord handle the situation?
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