HOLY THURSDAY 2023
With this
solemn liturgy of the Lord’s Supper, we enter the heart and soul of the entire
liturgical year. We celebrate the
paschal mystery – the dying and rising of Christ Jesus. As the disciples of Jesus, we gather during
the Triduum to celebrate the mystery of the ways we encounter the Lord.
In this Holy
Thursday liturgy, we encounter the Lord in two significant ways. The first way is very shocking: the voice of
God speaks to us through Jesus with a towel around his waist asking us to find
the towel with our name on it: “As I have done for you, so you also must do.”
In today’s
Gospel account, Jesus wraps a towel around his waist, takes a pitcher of water
and, on the night before he dies, begins washing the feet of his disciples. The disciples are stunned. The washing of feet was usually done by a
slave. It was Jesus who was washing
their feet. Jesus is teaching them that
this new life is gained not in presiding over multitudes from royal thrones; it
is gained, however, in walking with the humble and in humbly serving this
world’s walkers. When he tells his
disciples to do as he has done in washing their feet, he is commissioning them
to walk as he has walked and to heal as he has healed.
The message of Holy Thursday is that
his disciples are to change the world by getting down on their knees and
washing the feet of God’s poor.
This is the
authentic mark of the follower of Jesus Christ:
that he and she wash the feet of the beggar, the leper, the miserable
sinner rejected by everyone else. The
lesson to be drawn from Jesus’ washing of the feet, I do not decide which lives
have value and dignity, God does.
Jesus the
teacher demonstrated his life-giving message:
foot washing. He did not ask his
friends to die for one another, but to live for one another. Holy Thursday is a celebration of life, and
life together as a people of God.
Notice how
we encounter the Lord in this liturgy of the Lord’s Supper
Service
rooted in love is the example Jesus gives to his disciples. It is a radical form of service because it is
based on a radical form of love.
The second
way we encounter is in the mystery of the Eucharist. It was at the Last Supper on the night before
he died, that Jesus said over the Bread and Wine: This is my Body; take and eat. This is my blood: take and drink. Do this in memory of me.
When we
gather for Sunday Eucharist Sunday after Sunday after Sunday, we are doing what
Jesus asked us to do when He said: Do
this in memory of me.
In this
sacred Eucharistic meal, under the form of bread and wine, Jesus is present to
us. We are nourished with the bread of
life and the cup of salvation.
We encounter
the Lord in a most privileged sacramental in the Sacrament of the Eucharist
that was instituted at the Last Supper on the night before he died to insure us
that Jesus will be present to us all days until the end of time.
On this Holy
Thursday, may we ponder over the words of Jesus: “Do this in memory of
me.” Specifically, what is “this” that
Jesus wants us to in His memory.
Traditionally,
we think of the Eucharist has what Jesus is calling us to do in His
memory. And so, we gather Sunday after
Sunday after Sunday to celebrate the Eucharist in obedience to what the Lord as
asked us to.
I invite us
to expand our sense of what Jesus is asking us to do. Do this also means to do the meaning of the
ritual in real life, to do what Jesus did.
It means to live as Jesus lived.
We are to remember not only what Jesus did at the Last Supper, but we to
remember the example in his whole life. Doing this is living this.
A profound
truth of our Holy Thursday liturgy is that these two ways of encountering the
Lord are essentially linked together for us as Catholic Christians. What does this mean? We will never see Christ in the Eucharist we
kneel to adore if we do not first see Christ in those before whom we kneel to
serve.
To say it
again, we will never see Christ in the Eucharist we kneel to adore if we do not
first see Christ in those before whom we kneel to serve. Where is the towel with your name on it? That towel is surely found in how you are to
love and serve in your family, that towel is around your waist calling you to
wash the feet of the person you don’t along with, that towel is to be found for
you in one of the ministries of our parish life?
After Jesus
washed his disciples’ feet, he said to them: “Do you know what I have done for
you? You call me Teacher and Lord – and
rightly so, for that is what I am. So,
if I, your Lord and Master, wash your feet, you are to wash the feet of one
another. I have given you an example,
what I have done, you are to do likewise.
On this holy
night, we pledge once again to use our hands and feet for the work of
forgiveness, for the work of loving each other.
We pledge to wash each other’s feet, to hand over our lives for each
other for the sake of the world. As we
gather to celebrate the Eucharist on this Holy Night, we do this in the memory
of the One who gave His life for us.
We seek by
the way we live our lives to be faithful to the words of Jesus: Do this in memory of me.
Have a
Blessed Triduum.
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