Christ is Present to
His Church
Indeed,
in this great work which gives perfect glory to God and brings holiness to men,
Christ is always joining in partnership with himself his beloved Bride, the
Church, which calls upon its Lord and through him gives worship to the eternal
Father.
It
is therefore right to see the liturgy as an exercise of the priestly office of
Jesus Christ, in which through signs addressed to the senses man’s
sanctification is signified and, in a way proper to each of these signs, made
effective, and in which public worship is celebrated in its fullness by the
mystical body of Jesus Christ, that is, by the head and by his members.
Accordingly,
every liturgical celebration, as an activity of Christ the priest and of his
body, which is the Church, is a sacred action of a pre-eminent kind. No other
action of the Church equals its title to power or its degree of effectiveness.
In
the liturgy on earth we are given a foretaste and share in the liturgy of
heaven, celebrated in the holy city of Jerusalem, the goal of our pilgrimage,
where Christ is seated at the right hand of God, as minister of the sanctuary
and of the true tabernacle. With the whole company of heaven we sing a hymn of
praise to the Lord; as we reverence the memory of the saints, we hope to have
some part with them, and to share in their fellowship; we wait for the Saviour,
our Lord Jesus Christ, until he, who is our life, appears, and we appear with
him in glory.
By
an apostolic tradition taking its origin from the very day of Christ’s
resurrection, the Church celebrates the paschal mystery every eighth day, the
day that is rightly called the Lord’s day. On Sunday the Christian faithful
ought to gather together, so that by listening to the word of God and sharing
in the Eucharist they may recall the passion, death and resurrection of the
Lord Jesus and give thanks to God who has given them a new birth with a lively
hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. The Lord’s day is
therefore the first and greatest festival, one to be set before the loving
devotion of the faithful and impressed upon it, so that it may be also a day of
joy and of freedom from work. Other celebrations must not take precedence over
it, unless they are truly of the greatest importance, since it is the
foundation and the kernel of the whole liturgical year.
Source:
The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From the constitution on the sacred Liturgy of the Second
Vatican Council
Photo taken from keeva999
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