The Paschal celebration continues
during the General Audience of Easter Week
Pope Francis concludes the cycle of catecheses on the Mass
at the General Audience on Easter Wednesday.
By Christopher Wells
Joy was the prevailing theme of Pope Francis’ catechesis for
the General Audience for Wednesday in Easter Week. The Holy Father reminded
pilgrims that the Easter flowers speak to us of joy and gladness – the joy we
feel in the flourishing of the Risen Christ, the flourishing of our
justification, the flourishing of the holiness of the Church.
"Happy Easter!"
The celebration continues throughout the Paschal season, but
especially during this week, when every day is celebrated like Easter Sunday.
The Pope called on the crowd to greet one another with a joyful “Happy Easter,”
and led them in extending Easter greetings to our “beloved Pope Benedict,” who,
he said, was following the Easter celebrations on television.
Wednesday’s catechesis focused on the concluding rites of
the Mass, the blessing and dismissal that follow the concluding prayer. With
the blessing, which always follows a Trinitarian formula, the Mass concludes as
it begins, in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Becoming more like Christ
But, Pope Francis says, the conclusion of the liturgy is not
the end of our Christian life; rather, it is the beginning of our “commitment
to Christian witness.” Christians, he said, “don’t go to Mass to fulfill a
weekly duty and then forget about it." Christians go to Mass to
participate in the Passion and Resurrection of the Lord, and then live even
more as Christians. The Mass should lead us to participate even more in the
life of Christ, to act as Jesus did – and this, he said, is Christian sanctity.
Pope Francis took care to explain that the presence of
Christ in the Eucharist does not end with the Mass, but continues, which is why
the Hosts are preserved in the tabernacle, both for the Communion of the sick
and for Adoration. The worship of the Most Holy Sacrament in Adoration, he
said, helps us to remain in Christ.
The fruits of the Mass
The Holy Father went on to describe the fruits of the Mass.
The Mass, he said, is like a grain of wheat “that grows in our daily life,
grows and matures in good works, in the attitudes that make us more like
Jesus.”
When we go to Mass regularly, we grow in union with Christ,
and are separated more and more from sin. Frequent participation in the liturgy
renews and strengthens our bonds with one another in the Christian community.
And finally, the Mass leads us to see Christ in our brothers and sisters, where
He waits to be “recognized, served, honoured, and loved” by us.
“Bearing the treasure of union with Christ in earthen
vessels,” he concluded, “we stand constantly in need of returning to the holy
altar, until at last, in paradise, we might taste fully of the beatitude of the
wedding feast of the Lamb.”
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