Thursday, 17 December 2020

Virtual Advent Lessons and Carols with Benediction

Tomorrow, Friday December 18th at 8pm:
Service of Nine Lessons and Carols with Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament

Our annual service of Advent Lessons and Carols with Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be livestreamed  tomorrow, Friday December 18th at 8pm. Public Masses and events may be suspended, but Heaven is not under quarantine and the economy of salvation continues unabated. Let us all gather virtually in hopeful expectation of the Joy of Christmas: a babe in a manger, a King who cannot be uncrowned by any earthly power. Join us virtually, in anticipation of the day when we can all be together again at the Altar of the Lord. 

Please forward the link below to our Lessons and Carols livestream far and wide. Post it everywhere.

Sunday, 6 December 2020

Homily ADVENT II B -- DEC. 6, 2020 STM Toronto

St. Bernard of Clairvaux outlined what he called the three  comings of Christ:

 


1.   The incarnation of Jesus as a human person – fully visible to all. 

 

2. The intermediate coming – an invisible manifestation of God, the Holy Spirit, in the interior lives of those who are baptized and empowered by God to declare the Good News of salvation to all people.

 

 3. The final coming of Christ will also be visible “and all flesh shall see the salvation of our God.”

 

According to Isaiah, the time of exile— the separation of mankind from God due to sin—is about to end. This is the good news of the first coming of Christ proclaimed by St. John the Baptist in today’s liturgy.

 

Isaiah in today’s First Reading promises Israel’s release and return from captivity and exile. But as today’s Gospel shows, Israel’s historic deliverance was meant to herald an even greater saving act by God—the coming of Jesus to set Israel and all nations free from bondage to sin, to gather them up and carry them back to God.

 

God sent an angel before Israel to lead them in their exodus towards the promised land (Ex. 23:20).  And God promised to send a messenger of the covenant, Elijah, to purify the people and turn their hearts to the Father before the day of the Lord (Malachi 3:1, 23–24).

 

St. John the Baptist quotes Isaiah’s prophecy, to show that all of Israel’s history looks forward to the revelation of Jesus. In Jesus, God has filled in the valleythat divided the sinful from Himself. 

 

God has done all this not for humanity in the abstract but for each of us as St. Bernard emphasizes. The long history of salvation leads us to this Eucharist, in which God again comes: our salvation is near. Each of us must hear in today’s readings a personal call. Here is God, Isaiah says, who has been patient with you as St.  Peter says in the Epistle.

 

Like Jerusalem’s inhabitants we have to go out to God, repenting our sins, all the self-indulgence that can make our lives a spiritual desert. We must allow God’s grace to straighten our lives so everything leads us directly to Christ in our hearts and in our relationships.

 

Today, we hear the Gospel and commit ourselves to lives of devotion to proclaim the Good News of Christ’s coming.

 

 

 

Isaiah 40:1–5, 9–11        Psalm 85:9–14            

2 Peter 3:8–14                Mark 1:1–8

Sunday, 22 November 2020

On the Kingship and Kingdom of Christ

This Sunday we observe the Solemnity of Christ the King which closes the liturgical year. It is fitting that our liturgical observances are bookended at the beginning of the year by the hopeful anticipation of the Incarnation of Our Lord in Advent and at the end of the year by the celebration of His Universal Kingship. This offers us an opportunity to reflect on the nature of Christ’s Kingship and Kingdom and its operation and place in our lives.

The Gospel of this Sunday speaks of the judgement of the nations. It is often called a parable, and although it contains parabolic elements, it is not really a parable. It speaks directly and forcefully of the criterion by which we will be judged by the Lord: the degree to which deeds of mercy - real substantial mercy, not fake accidental mercy - are undertaken in favour of the “least brethren”.  Who are these least brethren? In our times these least are the believers: those who choose to conform their lives to Christ as their Center, Guide, and King. The criterion of judgement of the “least brethren” in our times is the treatment of those whose sufferings are brought upon them by their complete and total acceptance of Christ as their King.

In philosophy there is a concept called teleology in which the question is posed: for what purpose or end do we exist? Divine revelation gives us the answer. Underpinning the Gospel passage of this solemnity is the reality that we do have an ultimate purpose for which we were made: a communion with our creator that is a reflection of the perfect communion between the divine Persons of the Trinity. If we really want to live by this Truth, we must first recognise the dignity of all human life not only because we are made in the image and likeness of our Creator but because our Creator has assumed our humanity in the Incarnation. There are therefore consequences both temporal and eternal to the way we treat our brethren, especially the “least brethren”. The alternative to what the Gospel teaches us about ourselves is inconsequentialism - nothing ultimately matters, and we are the masters of our own destiny according to the utilitarian whims of our wills and desires. Truth becomes what we make it, a life is worth what we say it is worth, and the place of God and His laws in our society is simply a matter of personal or corporate preference. This diabolical disorientation leads inevitably to tyranny of the strong over the weak and where everyone is their own master, their own king, if not their own god.

Pope Leo XIII, in his encyclical on the consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Annum Sacrum (1899), reminds us that though the Kingdom of Christ is spiritual, "His empire extends not only over Catholic nations and those who, having been duly washed in the waters of holy baptism, belong of right to the Church, although erroneous opinions keep them astray, or dissent from her teaching cuts them off from her care; it comprises also all those who are deprived of the Christian faith, so that the whole human race is most truly under the power of Jesus Christ."

In the wake of the Great War, Pope Pius XI recognised the danger these disordered tendencies posed, and in 1925 issued the encyclical Quas Primas, in which he established the Feast of Christ the King in response to the looming spectre of secularism, which is nothing more than the complete divorce of God and His laws from public life. In paragraph 15, the Holy father reminds us that the Kingdom of Christ “… is opposed to none other than to that of Satan and to the power of darkness. It demands of its subjects a spirit of detachment from riches and earthly things, and a spirit of gentleness. They must hunger and thirst after justice, and more than this, they must deny themselves and carry the cross.” And so in general the “least brethren” are those who, seeking God first, are deprived of basic human needs and dignities - whether spiritual or temporal - because they put God first. Specifically, the “least brethren” are those who, making Christ their King, are so deprived because they acknowledge His universal and absolute supremacy in every sphere of existence.

We live in a time and age where men both great and small think they can uncrown Christ and discard their Creator with no consequences. The first commandment of the decalogue and the great commandment of Christ acknowledge that we have a positive duty, which supersedes all others to worship God and give Him the honour which he is due. This is the primary reason for everything we do in Church - not to receive something, but to give something, for as Our Lord himself said “it is more blessed to give than to receive” (Acts 20:35). St. Francis famously noted that it is in the act of giving that we do receive. If this Francicism is true for us in relation to one another, how infinitely more, then, is it true in relation to God?

The fulfillment of these duties, first to God and then to one another, is the measure by which we will be judged. They are not in opposition to one another, but both complementary and proportional. God comes first. The actual balancing of these duties in acts of governance, both secular and ecclesiastical, is a matter of prudential judgement which, we hope and pray, is strengthened by the Grace of office which is available to all those properly disposed to receive it. There is a line in a popular movie that says “with great power comes great responsibility”. With great power also comes severe judgment on the stewardship and exercise of that power. We must pray and fast for our leadership both secular and ecclesiastical, that they may be moved to preserve our Christian civilization by upholding the Universal Kingship of Christ lest they, on the day of judgement, be counted amongst the goats and cast into the everlasting fire.

Christus vincit! Christus regnat! Christus imperat!

Christ conquers! Christ reigns! Christ rules!


Sunday, 18 October 2020

The U.S.A. Election -- Render unto Caesar what is Caesar's and unto God what is God's.

Trinity IX  (OT 29 A)              STM, Oct. 18, 2020

 

God allows governments to rise and to fall. (John 19:11; Romans 13:1).

Every ruler needs to know what God tells King Cyrus in today’s First Reading: “I have called you . . . though you knew me not.” (X 2)

 

As we cast our eyes south of the border we hear many voices predicting and speculating about flawed human leaders. We must pray that those elected will be instruments of God for life as well as for liberty


The Lord raised up Cyrus, an imperfect man, to restore the Israelites and to rebuild Jerusalem (Ezra 1:1–4). Throughout history, God has used foreign rulers for the sake of Israel and so also for us, the new Israel. Pharaoh’s heart was hardened to reveal God’s power (Romans 9:17). Invading armies punished Israel’s sins as we read in 2nd Maccabees.

 

The Roman occupation during Jesus’ day was, in a similar way, a judgment of Israel’s unfaithfulness. Jesus’ words in today’s Gospel  are a powerful reminder of this: “Render unto Caesar and unto God what is God’s.”  We are exhorted to keep our allegiances in priority because everything belongs to God.

 

The Lord alone is king and the Kingdom of God is in this world but not of this world.“My Kingdom is not of this world,” Jesus tells us as recorded in John ch. 18; but it begins here in Christ's Church which reflects God’s glory among all peoples. As citizens of heaven (Philippians 3:20), we are called to be a light to the world (Matthew 5:14)—working in faith, labouring in love, and enduring in hope, as today’s Epistle counsels us.

 

The secular government is there to show concern for the common good and obedience to laws—unless they conflict with God’s commandments as interpreted by the Church (Acts 5:29).  So we must pay taxes but we must not submit to the anti-life policies which threaten all humanity.

 

We owe God everything. Yes, the coin bears Caesar’s image but we, his baptized people, bear the image of God. (Genesis 1:27). We owe God our very lives—all our heart, soul, mind and strength, offered as a living sacrifice of love (Romans 12:1–2) in the Body of Christ.

 

We pray for our leaders that, like Cyrus the Great, they do God’s will (1 Timothy 2:1–2)—until from the rising of the sun to its setting, all humanity knows that Jesus is Lord!

 


Readings: Isaiah 45:1,4–6               

Psalm 96:1,3–5, 7–10       

1 Thessalonians 1:1–5       

Matthew 22:15–21

Friday, 9 October 2020

Novena to St. John Henry Newman

Please join us in prayer for the healing of those suffering from Covid19 and all those with lung disease.


Novena to St. John Henry Newman


 

Saturday, 11 July 2020

Choral Music for Sung Mass


SUNG MASS AT 12:30
Sunday, July 12 

(Covid Precautions are in place.)

Missa de Angelis (in Greek)

Mass of the Quiet Hour - Oldroyd

Ego sum panis vivis - Palestrina



Fair in Face - Willan


Monday, 18 May 2020

Novena to the Holy Ghost: May 23 to 31, A.D. 2020

Dear friends, 

Every year our parish offers a novena (nine days) of prayers in preparation for Pentecost. Normally this begins on the Friday after Ascension and ends on the Saturday of the Vigil (day before) of Pentecost. On the Day of Pentecost we all gather for Holy Mass and the celebration of the Sacrament of Confirmation and reception into full communion of those who have been preparing for these sacraments and rites. 

This year, in the knowledge that we will be unable to gather together on Pentecost, we begin the novena today, so that it will conclude on the Solemnity of Pentecost itself. So let us begin this novena in our homes and families today, and conclude it on the day of Pentecost itself by reading together the texts of the Mass on that day, which will be sent out in advance next week.