NB. from 2015
Office of Readings: Holy Thursday
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
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Office of Readings: Holy Thursday
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
All that we read and hear read in these Holy Thursday liturgies teach us
to how to see our Lord's death. If we were to watch him die on the
cross as a criminal, we would have nothing to celebrate. He is dead. If
we were see him die as just a man, as this morning's sin-offering, we
would have to prepare another victim to sacrifice for tomorrow's sins.
If we were to see him die as a god, then nothing human is healed by his
dying. Holy Thursday teaches us to see our Lord's death in truth. He is a
heretic to the Jews. A criminal to the Romans. Just a man to Jew and
Gentile alike. But for us, he is the Son of God and the Son of Man,
offered once for all on the altar of the Cross as a sin-offering for the
whole world. “When perfected [through obedience], he became the source
of eternal salvation for all who obey him. . .”
Holy Thursday teaches us how an execution became a sacrifice and how a
sacrifice becomes a on-going feast for giving thanks. When Jesus and his
disciples gather in Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover, they are doing
more—much more—than honoring an ancient Jewish custom. For three years
now, Jesus has reminded his disciples—in word and deed—that everything
he says and does is moving them all toward a single goal: the
fulfillment of the Covenant btw Abraham and God the Father. Every
sermon, every hostile exchange with the Pharisees, every healing
miracle, everything he has said and done fulfills scriptural prophecy
and points to his birth as the coming of the Kingdom. This last
celebration of Passover in Jerusalem is no different. It too is a
prophetic sign of who and what he is for us. When Jesus and his friends
recline at table to begin the feast, they know that what they are
remembering is God's rescue of His people from centuries of Egyptian
slavery. Bread for the feast is unleavened b/c there is no time to wait
for it to rise. The wine is watered b/c they need to be clear-headed for
their escape. They are girded for travel and lightly packed. Jesus
lifts the bread and says, “This is my Body.” He lifts the cup of wine,
“This is my Blood.” At that moment, what were the disciples thinking?
Knowing full well what the Passover means—freedom from slavery—did they
understand that the Lord was telling them that their ancestral meal of
remembrance was now a feast of freedom? That eating his Body and Blood
would free them from sin and death? Later, after Jesus' execution, did
they make the connection btw ritually sacrificing a lamb in the temple
with his sacrifice on the cross?
Holy Thursday teaches us that the Roman execution of Jesus is a Jewish
sacrifice that the Risen Christ transforms into a feast of
thanksgiving—a New Covenant Passover celebration that celebrates our
rescue from slavery to sin. How does a Roman execution become a
Christian feast? When the one executed is the Son of God and Son of Man.
When the one whose body and blood we eat and drink is presented to God
as a sacrifice, a sin-offering made once for all. And when we are
commanded to remember this sacrifice, to participate in it by taking
into our own bodies the Body and Blood of the one sacrificed for us.
Holy Thursday teaches us that Jesus the Christ has fulfilled the
promises and obligations of the Covenant made btw Abraham and God the
Father, establishing for us a New Covenant of grace, of freely offered
forgiveness for all of our offenses. Knowing this, “. . .let us
confidently approach the throne of grace to receive mercy and favor and
to find help in time of need.”
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Amen and Amen.
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