aboutmalta Religion

Thursday, January 05, 2006

Come let us adore Him!

The Feast of the Epiphany


Isa 60:1-6; Ps 71; Eph 3:2-6; Mt 2:1-12

On this first Sunday after New Year’s day, the Church celebrates the feast of the Epiphany i.e. the manifestation of Christ to the Magi at Betlehem. These Magi – which the Christian tradition later identified as three, since three gifts are mentioned in the Matthean text – came from the East to “adore” “the child born to be the king of the Jews” (Mt 2:2).

The verb “adore” is given prominence in this text as it is mentioned three times. This action is reserved solely to God: He alone deserves worship. This is echoed in Jesus’ answer to Satan when the latter tempted him for the third time in the desert: “Away with you Satan! For it is written, ‘Worship the Lord your God, and serve only him’” (Mt 4:10).

Hence, in the light of the above, we can see that when Matthew informs us that the Magi “knelt down and worshiped him” (Mt 2:11), he implicitly wants to convey to the reader that the new born is not simply “the king of the Jews” (Mt 2:2) but the Son of God himself through whom “all things came into being and without [whom] not one thing came into being” (Jn 1:3). Matthew had already prepared us for this revelation when in the episode preceding the Magi’s visit, he gives us the significance of the name “Em·man’ū·el” which means “God is with us” (Mt 1:23).

This insistence on ‘adoration’ precisely at the dawn of a new year encourages us to rediscover the importance of adoration in our prayer life. In his encyclical letter ‘Ecclesia de Eucharistia’, the deceased Pope highly stressed the inestimable value of the worship of the Eucharist outside Mass, saying that, “It is pleasant to spend time with him, to lie close to his breast like the Beloved Disciple (Jn 13:25) and to feel the infinite love present in his heart. If in our time, Christians must be distinguished above all by the ‘art of prayer’, how can we not feel a renewed need to spend time in spiritual converse, in silent adoration, in heartfelt love before Christ present in the Most Holy Sacrament? … Such [adoration is] a sign of gratitude, an expression of love and an acknowledgment of the Lord’s presence” (no.25).

Our commitment to Eucharistic adoration can be further refined by paying attention to three other details in the Magi narrative, namely, the long route travelled by the wise men, the gifts they offered and the star they followed, all of which were directed to the adoration of the kingly child.

The toil of their lengthy trip teaches us that in this hectic world of ours wherein we are very often too busy to pray, we should summon up all our strengths and make an effort to find time and place for worshipping Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament. Furthermore, the fact that the Magi offered Jesus the best of their gifts – gold, incense, myrrh – ushers the realization that we should offer Jesus not just any time but ‘quality’ time i.e. the best time of the day. The shining star which guided the Magi to their desired destination suggests that we should be prompted to bend our knees in prayerful adoration not by some duty or obligation, but love alone should stand as the shining star which enlightens our hearts and enkindles our desire to adore in silence this wellspring of grace, which is the Eucharist.

Thursday, December 29, 2005

The Madonna of the Broom …

Feast of Mary Mother of God

Num 6:22-27; Ps 62; Gal 4:4-7. 28; Lk 2: 16-21

“Mary treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart” (Lk 2: 19). Perhaps this key phrase contained in the Lucan text which the Church proclaims on this Frist Sunday after Christmas, deserves noteworthy attention and presents a shining model of a woman who excells in being a contemplative in action.

I belief Mary was a very busy housewife: preparing meals, cleaning the house, washing the clothes of her husband and son, bringing water from the village well etc. Indeed, I once heard that in America there is a parish dedicated to the ‘Madonna of the Broom’ – the idea being that the angel Gabriel appeared to Mary when she was in the midst of her chores! However, in the midst of all this breath-taking activity, Mary learnt how to lend an attentive ear to the Lord’s initiatives … she learnt how to read God’s interventions in the circumstances she found herself in … and she cherished all that He had to say to her in her heart and pondered on it in her “inner room” trying to decipher its meaning for her.

This pondering resembles the second stage of the ancient method of prayer, stemming from the Benedictine monks, known as ‘Lectio Divina’. After the first step of this way of prayer, namely, the careful reading of a biblical text, comes the second phase known as ‘meditatio’ which involves meditating on those words or elements from the text in question which sink into the heart of the one who is praying. At this stage, the believer is invited to ponder lovingly on the words which struck him deeply, to chew them gently like the animals chew their food, to savour their sweetness … as Francis of Assisi used to lick his lips when he pronounced the sweet name of “Jesus”. The third step in the process is ‘oratio’, i.e. praying on what one has meditated upon, while the final step is ‘contemplatio’, which is a pure gift from God, wherein we are taken up by the divine presence and the simple loving gaze on Him would be sufficient for us.

We too, like Mary, are involved in a multitude of daily tasks and activities. The hectic life we lead makes it all the more difficult for us to wait upon God for a word or two from His side. But Mary teaches us that this is a possibility … that we can be contemplatives in action! May she, a real master of prayer, teach us, on this Marian Sunday, how to discern His voice amidst the toil and hassle of our daily life, and how to treasure His words and ponder on them in our hearts, allowing them to bear fruit in due time. And when this happens … our life starts to gain meaning and turn on colour …