Archive for December, 2009

On the birth of Jesus, the Christ

In the five-thousand, one-hundred and ninety-ninth year from the creation of the world;
In the two-thousand, nine-hundred and fifty-ninth year from the great flood;
In the two-thousand and fifteenth year from the birth of Abraham;
In the one-thousand, five-hundred and tenth year from the going forth of the people of Israel out of Egypt under Moses;
In the one-thousand and thirty-second year from the anointing of David as King;
In the sixty-fifth week according to the prophecy of Daniel;
In the one-hundred and ninety-fourth Olympiad;
In the seven-hundred and fifty-second year from the foundation of the city of Rome;
In the forty-second year of the reign of the Emperor Octavian Augustus;
In the sixth age of the world;
While the whole earth was at peace,
Jesus Christ, Himself Eternal God and Son of the Eternal Father,
being pleased to hallow the world by His most gracious coming,
having been conceived of the Holy Ghost,
and when nine months were passed after His conception,
was born of the Virgin Mary at Bethlehem of Juda, and made Man.

Unto us a child is born. Let earth receive her King!

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WRC on December 24th 2009 in Advent & Christmas

On Christ’s Mass

There’s always a lot of clamor this time of the year to “keep Christ in Christmas”. I don’t really get into that argument very much; I don’t think there’s a lot of compelling discourse in it. I also think it’s misguided to expect some conglomo company to include the word “Christmas” in its holiday advertising: companies exist to make money and only to make money. Hopefully they do it in a morally responsible manner. But let’s face it: the only interest that retailers have in Christmas is that people buy stuff at Christmastime. Nominal Christians buy stuff at Christmastime and nonbelievers buy stuff at Christmastime. The retail Christmas-industrial complex is only focused on selling stuff.

There’s actually something that I think is more important than encouraging Globomart to include the C-word in their December (and November and October and September and August) advertising campaigns. But it’s not as catchy and the AFA would have a hard time organizing a boycott on this one:

Keep Mass in Christmas.

If you’re not a regular Church-goer, you should be. It’s in the book, you gotta do it. Take Christmas as an opportunity to go back.

Do you remember that story a few years ago how some of the big megachurches were canceling Christmas Day services because they didn’t think people would go? Unfathomable! But truth is stranger than fiction, and I don’t expect much from the megachurches.

Church polemics aside, Christmas isn’t really a point negotiation. Go. Go!

I’m not sure when this “Welcome Home” thing started for returning Catholics and for converts to Catholicism, but it’s become the parlance of people seeking the Truth of Jesus Christ in the Catholic Church. I like it. Come Home for Christmas.

Yes, we have to keep Christ in Christmas. But that’s only half of the deal. Keep Mass in Christmas, too. If it’s been a long time since you went, you can look up the Churches in your area at MassTimes.org. Once you’ve found your best bet, you should put that parish in the google and find their website to double check Christmas Mass times. They’re different than usual. But don’t call asking what time Midnight Mass starts… unless you’re going to church at St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, where the pope’s Midnight Mass starts at 10:00 PM.

Oh, and here’s another tip: if you’re one of those people that goes for the Christmas-Eve-as-fulfilling-your-obligation thing (which Holy Mother Church allows), then be aware that the place is going to be FREAKING PACKED. Go early. It’s actually easier to get into Church on Christmas Morning than it is on Christmas Eve. Still, some measure of advance is in order. If Mass starts at 10:00 AM, it would behoove you to plan on getting to the parish sometime around 9:30ish. Don’t let it catch you by surprise.

This is your chance to go back to Church. Your friends won’t even think it’s weird that you’re going, since that’s when EVERYONE goes. Go! Keep Mass in Christmas!

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WRC on December 23rd 2009 in Advent & Christmas

On carols

Mrs. WRC and I were kindly invited to a Christmas party at the school were I have been substitute teaching. I say “kindly” because we really think that it was a kind and unusual invitation. When she and I arrived at the party, I’d only been at the school for 4 days– and I’m a substitute. But we had a great time and were very happy to be there– even if we only knew about 3 people at the whole party.

At one point, one of the other guests struck up a conversation with my wife about her favorite Christmas song. It’s one of those polite conversations that you strike up with people you don’t know but need something to talk about.

But you know what? It’s a great question. My answer has changed a few times over the years.

When I was a kid, I would have answered that I liked any Christmas song that Andy Williams sang. And yes, I know that’s lame. I was a lame child. But my folks had the Andy Williams Christmas album (on tape AND LP!) and I was into it. I liked that big syrupy jazzy sound and I ate it up. What, like you weren’t a dork as a kid? So it’s really funny that a couple days ago I was reading Rod Dreher’s CrunchyCon blog and I came across this little gem:

I have to confess that as a tot in the Seventies, I was weirdly fascinated by Andy Williams Christmas specials. They were all so … clean. I didn’t know anybody as clean as Andy Williams. I imagined his snow smelled minty fresh… Anyway, the only way this clip could be whiter is if it had Swedes in it. To watch it is to go snowblind with honkiness. It is like eating mayonnaise with a spoon.

Instant classic.

I’d carry my affinity for Andy Williams songs into high school, but I went into the closet about it. I was on the record for disliking Christmas songs altogether (which is about the only acceptable position for a socially awkward teenage to take on Christmas music) or concede to allow the Garth Brooks “Beyond the Season” album into my CD case. Garth’s career was peaking right about then. He was sufficiently cool. In retrospect, I don’t remember a single song on that album. It was all a front for me.

In college (a broad period of time that spans almost 8 years), my perspective would change. College is a time for disillusionment. Most people go through some melancholy and angst at some point in their life; mine started somewhere around the year 2001 and dragged on until 2005ish. In December 2003, I was about to begin the worst year of my life. On December 9 2003, I wrote about it on my old website. Now only preserved by the Wayback Machine (Nota Bene: the language in that link might be a little coarse), I can’t help but shake my head about the way I was trying to live my life.

The song “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” is a depressing one. It says that this year [stinks], maybe it will be better next year, and if you want to have a happy season, then do so. It says to have yourself the merry Christmas, not that we’re going to have one or that you should have as good of a time as I’m having. It says “[expletive deleted] me.” I like that. There aren’t enough melancholy Christmas songs.

I was in the mood to be in a rotten mood. Those were the days. I’m glad I lived them. But I’m glad they’re over.

My perspective has changed a lot in six short years. It’s not like wisdom has come with age, but a certain amount of introspection has. My taste in Christmas songs is different now. I find myself rapt with a different kind of music. Ones that allow a little contemplation of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

I’ve been to enough Christmas parties to know that no one eats roasted Chestnuts or tells scary ghost stories, I’ve seen Garth Brook’s career in its full arc, and I can’t muster up any more somber despondency to worry about somehow muddling. Christmas has a different kind of magic now. I’ve come to the realization that Christmas isn’t about me or family or friends or presents or parties or cookies or fourth-quarter sales. No, it’s about a ‘babe on a silent night.

This may be obvious to you. Truth be told, it’s always been obvious to me, I’ve just never accepted it before now.

Jennifer F. of the blog “Conversion Diary” had a post last year about the song “What Child is This?”. Excerpt:

Every time I hear the song What Child is This?, I feel haunted.

It started back in 2005, when I was still researching Christianity and not sure that I believed its claims. I’d be driving around, yapping into my cell phone, glaring at people who drove too slowly as I rushed to buy presents I should have bought weeks before, and then I’d catch sight of some nativity scene and all my racing thoughts would stop. For just a moment, I’d remember that I had a question to answer far bigger than what I should get my husband for Christmas.

During this time I always paused when I heard the song What Child is This?, its slow, ethereal melody sending chills down my spine, the simple question it asked seemingly whispered in my ear by something closer than the tinny mall sound system.

It haunted me, challenged me, to stop everything and consider the baby who was born in Bethlehem 2,000 years ago, to look at the manger scenes that dotted the winter landscape of my city, and ask:

What child is this?

Funny, isn’t it? How some songs just stick to you?

These days, I have a song that seems grab me when I hear it: O Holy Night.

I don’t usually like the mono-character word “O” and shy away from its usage. I don’t eat Land ‘O Lakes butter, I’ve never wished someone the Top ‘O the Mornin’, and think that “O Fortuna” jumped the shark somewhere around the time that Blockbuster Video was using the Carl Orff composition for its ad campaign. But O Holy Night cuts through my scowl.

O holy night! The stars are brightly shining,
It is the night of Our dear Saviour’s birth.
Long lay the world In sin and error pining,
‘Til He appear’d And the soul felt its worth.
A thrill of hope The weary world rejoices,
For yonder breaks A new and glorious morn.
     Fall on your knees! O, hear the angels’ voices!
     O night divine, O night when Christ was born;
     O night divine, O night, O night Divine.
Led by the light of Faith serenely beaming,
With glowing hearts By His cradle we stand.
So led by light of A star sweetly gleaming,
Here come the wise men From Orient land.
The King of Kings Lay thus in lowly manger;
In all our trials Born to be our friend.
     He knows our need, To our weakness is no stranger,
     Behold your King! Before Him lowly bend!
     Behold your King, Behold your King.
Truly He taught us To love one another;
His law is love And His gospel is peace.
Chains shall He break For the slave is our brother;
And in His name All oppression shall cease.
Sweet hymns of joy In grateful chorus raise we,
Let all within us Praise His holy name.
     Christ is the Lord! O praise His Name forever,
     His power and glory Evermore proclaim!
     His power and glory Evermore proclaim!

Man, what a great song! I think that it rattles in my brain mostly for that second sentence: Long lay the world; In sin and error pining, ‘Til He appear’d And the soul felt its worth. Every time I hear it, it just hits me like a ton of bricks. I guess because we still pine in sin an error as if we didn’t learn right the first time. Fall on your knees! By the end of the song, I’m standing on my chair and singing along HIS POOOOOOWERRRRRRRRRRRRRR and GLORRRRRRRRRRRRRRRy! That’s great stuff. Proclaim it, proclaim it! Manalive! Noël, Noël, chantons le Rédempteur!

It gets me going. And look out if I’m driving the one horse open sleigh when the weather outside is frightful, all that standing and singing on my part is going to make me run over grandma with my reindeer.

I didn’t tell it like this at the school Christmas party. Somethings are hard to explain to people whom you’ve just met. I could have probably just said the Magnificat and left it at that. Heh.

So let’s talk. What’s your favorite Christmas song? Answer in the comment section below. And Lord help me, if any of you say “Christmas Shoes” I’m going to come down there and beat you with a snow globe. Charitably, of course.

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WRC on December 17th 2009 in Advent & Christmas

On singing in silence

A few weeks ago, Mrs. WRC and I sat down to watch the epic documentary Into Great Silence. It is a 3 hour glimpse into the life and prayer of the silent Carthusian monks. The movie is a discussion all to itself and maybe we’ll have it some day. But because we had seen that documentary, Mrs. WRC and I found this little video that’s going around the web to be delightful!

How do you sing to the Lord if you’ve taken a vow of silence?

Hat tip to Creative Minority Report and to Father Z.

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WRC on December 6th 2009 in Catholicing

On the rosary in a family

Back in early 2008, the Leaven, the newspaper of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas, ran a beautiful article about praying the rosary. I’ve kept a copy of it and re-read it from time to time. I am not the greatest pray-er in the world and probably suffer from a lack of practice. Maybe that’s why I get a little teary-eyed when I read the story, reprinted below.

*****

‘Sometimes, it’s all you can do’
by Jill Ragar Esfeld

Every morning growing up, I woke to the sound of my father reciting the rosary in unison with a voice on a local radio station.

In college, when my faith was challenged by the “born again” Christian movement, I confronted him about prayer by rote. Why do Catholics do it — Our Fathers and Hail Marys over and over again? What’s the point?

His answer was simple but weighted with the wisdom of a man who had lived through the Depression, served in a war, and survived a Chinese prison camp.

“Sometimes,” he said, “it’s all you can do.”

He called it “keeping despair at the door” and warned me that “if you let despair in, hope goes out, and faith is soon to follow.”

In the years to come, I would learn that lesson well and be grateful for my rosary prayers and the 10 fingers God gave me to keep track of them.

Not only did they become an important method of meditation and centering as my prayer practice matured, but the rosary became an invaluable life tool — a way to get through those moments when, as my father said, it’s the only thing you can do.

A gift for our children

The immeasurable value of this prayer practice made me want to be sure, above all things, that my children learned the rosary. I saw it as the most important life tool my husband Jerry and I could give them.

But I wondered what would be the best method for teaching it. After all, the rosary can be a very long and tedious exercise in the hands of a five-year old. How could we present it as a gift and not a burden?

We decided to teach it in a manner most appealing to children, in bits and pieces, and with great appeal to their imaginations.

So each night, at prayer time, after our thank-you’s and petitions, my daughter Lizz and her little brother John would take turns choosing a rosary prayer to recite. And surprisingly, they chose the Apostles’ Creed as often as they chose the Glory Be. Length was never an issue; all prayers got equal practice.

I taught them to imagine Mary whispering their little concerns in Jesus’ ear and to think of her as their other mother — a mother who loves them as much as I do, but has far more power to make their dreams come true.

“When you call her name,” I said, “all the saints and angels turn and listen.”

In May and October, we would say a “car rosary” on the way to school, reciting a decade each morning, discussing the fruit of its mystery, and talking about how we could live that fruit during the day.

I showed them by example how important the rosary was to me. I said a rosary each day, asking them for prayer requests. Often they joined me for a decade or two. Every Wednesday, when they got out of Holy Trinity School in Lenexa, they knew they would find me in the adoration chapel saying a rosary.

A refuge and guide

The truth of my father’s wisdom was most clearly brought home to me, however, when John, in first grade, suffered from Kawasaki syndrome, a rare and life- threatening vasculitis.

At moments when I couldn’t think straight — when I sat helpless and watched a nurse struggle to get an IV in his small hand, when I waited for the results of yet another echocardiogram — the rosary helped me stay focused on Mary, who knew what it was like to watch a child suffer. Through her, I kept my eyes on God, never allowing despair to get its hold on me.

When John recovered from his illness, he worried that he might get sick again and had a hard time being away from me, especially at night. He would creep into my room and beg me to sit with him until he fell asleep.

I couldn’t refuse him. So I would sit on the edge of his bed, praying my rosary and begging Mary to show me the way to tough love.

Then one night an idea came to me, and the next day I bought a luminous rosary — one that glows in the dark. I gave it to John at bedtime and told him to say it all the way through before he came into my room.

“Try to stay awake,” I said. “But don’t worry if you fall asleep, because the angels will finish it for you.”

He never came into my room again, though many nights, before going to bed, we tore his covers apart looking for that rosary.

Our children’s keeper

Over the last 10 years, the angels have finished many rosaries for John, who is now in his last year of high school. His sister is a sophomore in college.

I’m happy to say my method of teaching them the rosary seems to have worked.

Lizz calls us now with weighty news about organic chemistry, biology internships and curriculum committee issues. When the going gets tough, she tells us, she says her rosary.

“I say the joyful mysteries,” she confides, “because those are the ones I know the best.”

I think that’s fine. I like to imagine her on her beautiful campus, in union with a youthful Mary, recalling the joys of Jesus’ life beginning.

As for me, I tend to gravitate toward the sorrowful mysteries these days. I draw strength from their fruits — courage, patience, perseverance. After all, we’re raising a teenage boy.

The child who, at seven, couldn’t leave my side, barely finds time to speak to me now as he races in the house just long enough to grab his golf clubs, a skateboard or a pair of basketball shoes. I can’t keep up with his girlfriends, much less his life.

And I worry every time he gets in the car and backs out of our driveway — a worry that borders on panic when he’s late, past his curfew.

But then I go up to his room to deliver a load of laundry or a school book that’s been left on the kitchen table, and I see his rosary — the same luminous one I gave him when he was seven.

Sometimes it’s in the middle of his unmade bed, or draped across the alarm clock on his night stand. I imagine him waking up and finding it wrapped around his hand just as it was when he fell asleep the night before, and a wave of comfort comes over me.

I know he’s talking to his other mother — the one who can make his dreams come true. And I know he’ll be OK, because she’s with him always, watching over him, keeping despair at the door.

*****

The rosary is a kind of meditative prayer, where the pray-er focuses on various scenes in Christ’s life. Those scenes, called “mysteries”, are contemplated while praying the prayers of the rosary. The website Angelqueen.org has a nice description of the mechanics of the rosary: which prayers to say, their order and the text of each prayer. It is harder to describe how to pray the rosary, by which I mean how to contemplate the scenes of the Gospel while praying. That part comes with practice. Practice which I am still learning to do.

Still, I practice. When God feels far away or when I feel like I’ve gotten into life far over my head, I am tempted to shed Him and deal with the God-stuff later. This is the exact opposite of what I should be doing. I should pursue Christ when I need Christ rather than retreat from Christ when I need Christ. Heh. Easier said than done. But we should learn to pray. Sometimes it’s all we can do.

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WRC on December 2nd 2009 in Catholicing