LITURGY FOR 29 DEC

Feast of the Holy Family, year A. Readings and prayers for the day can be found:

NEW MISSAL: 66

Readings only, OLD MISSAL: 143

First Reading: Ecclesiasticus 3:2-6. 12-14 A reflection on the importance of paying honour and respect to one’s parents

Second Reading: Colossians 3:12-21 Paul advises the Christians in Colossae how to live together peacefully that their life might be a witness to others

Gospel: Matthew 2:13-15. 19-23 Joseph, being warned in a dream, takes Mary and Joseph into Egypt until King Herod is dead, then they return to live in Nazareth.

Music (Sunday)

Sunday 29 December

Opening Hymn: It came upon a midnight clear 135
Kyrie:   Taizé
Gloria: Angels we have heard on high 130
Creed: We believe, we do believe (sung)
Gospel Acclamation: Celtic Alleluia
Preparation of the Gifts: Blest are you, Lord, God of all creation  603
Sanctus: Echo
Eucharistic Acclamation: ‘O come let us adore him…’ (Adeste Fideles)
Agnus Dei:  Deiss, Lourdes
Communion: :  Silent Night 136
Closing Hymn:  Hark, the Herald Angels Sing 155

AMAZING FIND IN ST ALPHONSE

Amazing find in St Alphonse, Luxembourg.      UPDATE: Link to coverage in Wort.lu (English edition) with video here.

In common with churches throughout the world, and in a special way in churches with a Redemptorist tradition, Advent is a time for dusting down the crib figures from last year and arranging them for devotion in the church. In the church of St Alphonse, home to the English-speaking Catholic community in Luxembourg, this year things started normally and took a dramatic and unexpected turn. On 19th December, with a parishioner, Silvia, I began to unwrap the crib figures that were usually used each year. At the very back of the dusty, much-neglected cupboard, there were what appeared to be several bundles of old newspaper. On closer inspection, there were clearly substantial contents within. What emerged were statues of the Holy Family, along with a couple of angels. In spite of the layers of dust, these wooden carvings were quite clearly old, and beautifully decorated. The angels seemed to date from the 1920s or 1930s, in the art deco style. But the figures of Jesus, Mary and Joseph were older, and beautifully painted. Two days of careful cleaning followed, and the results were amazing, as you can see from the pictures below. However, something else emerged that adds a whole new angle to the story.
On close examination, the yellowing, fragile newsprint in which the statues were wrapped were dated 20 December 1939, just months after the outbreak of the Second World War. The newspapers contained accounts of the ‘serious actions of the English’ [sic] and were clearly early propaganda. According to accounts here in Luxembourg, the people realised that invasion of the Grand Duchy would be inevitable, and in December 1939 began to hide away anything precious they feared would be looted by the Nazi forces they were expecting. And so the crib was stashed away. The monastery of St Alphonse was occupied in May 1940, and the military forces used St Alphonse as their church. The sacristy corridor became their latrine, and part of the choir-loft their washing-area. There are still relics of this era in the monastery, though most evidence was destroyed at the end of the war.
What was, and is, truly amazing is that this crib set remained hidden for 74 years, and has only now seen the light of day. Already people are flocking to see part of their (or their parents’ or grandparents’) heritage. The last time these figures were seen was in a time of great fear and foreboding. The feet of St Joseph are damaged, possibly accidentally, and the hands of Jesus are missing. Incidentally, the ‘new-born’ infant is standing up and looks 3 years old! The absence of hands has prompted the community to propose for devotion the prayer of St Theresa of Avila:

Christ Has No Body

Christ has no body but yours,
No hands, no feet on earth but yours,
Yours are the eyes with which he looks
Compassion on this world,
Yours are the feet with which he walks to do good,
Yours are the hands, with which he blesses all the world.
Yours are the hands, yours are the feet,
Yours are the eyes, you are his body.
Christ has no body now but yours,
No hands, no feet on earth but yours,
Yours are the eyes with which he looks
compassion on this world.
Christ has no body now on earth but yours.
If the Lord, as it were, lacks hands, then he can use ours to do his work and fulfil his mission.
So Christmas will continue as usual here this year — but with added interest.
Ed Hone CSsR   (pictures below)
 Silvia Rossetto, before the restoration of the statue of the Virgin Mary

Silvia Rossetto, before the restoration of the statue of the Virgin Mary

The restored crib figures in situ in St Alphonse

The restored crib figures in situ in St Alphonse

One of the newspaper clippings verifying the date of the concealment of the crib figures

One of the newspaper clippings verifying the date of the concealment of the crib figures

PETITION RE. RELIGION IN SCHOOLS

INITIATIVE FOR [THE] CHOICE

The government in Luxembourg is proposing to eliminate the teaching of religion in schools. Please read the text below, taken from the Initiative for Choice website. On the site you can find pdf leaflets and pdf petition forms, and also register your own support for this initiative to preserve choice in having religion taught in school. It is important to defend this choice.

“Initiative « For the choice»
Religious education or moral and social education

As parents and supporters we demand that the choice between religious education and moral and social education are maintained in public schools.

The current guaranteed free choice is an expression of mutual respect and a vibrant democracy. Unity is created in diversity and not through the standardisation of the expected state value education.

Religious education should continue to be part of that choice. Schools must ensure the support and training of young people in their search for meaning. This is why they are responsible for transmitting an integral education not only based on limited information as well as for ensuring the quality of this education.

Values are never neutral. Therefore, the State has no right to monopolise the definition of values. Parents, their children and young people must retain the right to participate in a decision that directly affects them at the level of their existential questions!”

CHRISTIAN MEDITATION SCHEDULE

Our Christian Meditation group meets each Tuesday at 18:30 in St Alphonse. More details can be found in the Prayer tab at the top of the home page. Christmas/New Year schedule: there will be no meeting next Tuesday, 24 December (Christmas Eve) however there will be a meeting the following week, 31 December (New Year’s Eve).

LITURGY FOR 4th SUNDAY OF ADVENT

4th Sunday of Advent, year A. 21 December)

Readings and prayers for the day can be found:

NEW MISSAL: 13

Readings only, OLD MISSAL: 123

First Reading: Isaiah 7:10-14 Isaiah prophecies that the Messiah will be called Emmanuel, ‘God-with-us’.

Second Reading: Romans 1:1-7 The birth, death and resurrection of Jesus is the basis of Paul’s, and of the Church’s, mission to preach.

Gospel: Matthew 1:18-24 The prophecy of Isaiah in today’s first reading is fulfilled in the birth of Jesus.

Music (Sunday) leaflet

entrance: The Angel Gabriel
kyrie: Lord have mercy (St Lukes)
psalm: Let the Lord Enter ( by Lionel Valdelion)
Alleluia
offertory : Gifts of Bread and Wine
Holy Holy (folk)
acclamation : Hosanna in the heights of heaven
Lamb of God: Behold the Lamb (folk)
Commumion: As I Kneel before you (Ave Maria)
Abba Father
Closing hymn O Come Emanuel (Verses 1,3,4,5 and 7