
Family
Spirituality
Families can
get more out of Mass
At Home with our Faith
offered a series of 10 short articles on how your family can get more
out of the Mass. We walked through the chronology of the Mass, from
preparation and gathering through the final blessing and sending forth.
Each month for ten issues we suggested ways that you and your family
can better appreciate how the Mass can deepen and enrich our life
together. What follows are the ten installments.
Let the faithful pray
David Charles Wells, a
teacher from England, told a crowd of religious educators he thinks
its a shame that people "send their photographs to Mass."
At first I didnt get what he was saying and he went on to explain:
"Too often Catholics seem to present a bright shining image when
they arrive at Mass. Like the look you put on when the photographer
says, Say cheese. From the outside it looks as though
everything is all together. Meanwhile, on the inside, their lives
are anything but all together. Theyre torn up with worries,
concerns, and needs." Wells thought we ought to be able to come
to Mass as we truly are.
I agree. The prayer
of the faithful is one place to bring out whats behind the smiling
photo and to place it before God.
Its natural to
pray for what we want. But if petitionary prayer is the only kind
of prayer you pray, lets just say your spiritual metabolism
is out of whack. A well-balanced prayer life includes praise, thanksgiving,
and just plain awe.
But Jesus highly praised
all those who asked for help: the widow who pestered the judge, the
prodigal son who asked his fathers forgiveness, the good thief
who yearned for a place in heaven. On and on, throughout the gospel
stories, Jesus not only encouraged people to turn to God for help,
but he also rejoiced when they revealed their needs and told them
they had found the way to eternal life.
Im a lector at
St. Viator Parish in Chicago. I especially enjoy reading the petitions
at the prayer of the faithful. Its not so much the reading I
enjoyin fact I think wed be better off letting people
just spontaneously speak their own petitions. What I like best about
it is to look out at the people when I say, "And for all those
intentions that lie silently in our hearts . . ."
followed by a pause.
During that pause I
scan the crowd. Some have their heads bowed. Some are moving their
lips in fervent prayer. Some are daydreaming. But within the church,
a new spirit forms. All of us who all week long try to remain in control,
finally let go. Its like watching a hand thats been clenched
in a fist slowly untense and open up.
Jesus likes that openness.
He can work with it. Open your heart a crack and his love pours in.
With openness, lives can change, stony hearts can be turned to hearts
of flesh.
Some people worry that
talking about petitionary prayer will confuse their children. On one
level it would be easy for children to mistake Gods promise
of beneficence by expecting that they should get everything they ask
for. But children are capable of understanding this truth on a deeper
level. They can recognize the difference between being a spoiled,
demanding brat and being a vulnerable child who relies on loving parents
to be attuned to the childs need and provide whats best.
The prayer of the faithful
is a turning point in the Mass. Weve gathered, heard the Word
of God, and soon we will begin the Liturgy of the Eucharist. In response
to what weve heard, and in anticipation of the meal we will
share, we take a minute to acknowledge our needs and place them before
God. Heres how you can help your child better appreciate this
moment of the Mass:
1.
Introduce other experiences of petitionary prayer. For example, before
or after Mass, light a candle with your child. We put our petition
before God, recognizing that we need Gods love in this situation.
We do so in faith and recognition that the answer will come over time.
2.
Tell them that God wants to know their deepest concerns. Like the
father in the parable of the prodigal son, God stands on the hill
searching for us, longing for our return.
3. Point
out that as members of the church, we pray not only for ourselves,
our own parish, and for the Catholic Church, but for the whole world.
When tragedies strike in the world and are mentioned in the prayer
of the faithful (e.g., the aftermath of hurricane damage in Honduras
and Nicaragua), take advantage of the opportunity to talk about why
the church responds with prayers and with material aid.
4.
If appropriate, share with them what you are praying for at the prayer
of the faithful. Its good for our kids to know that we adults
bring our concerns and petitions before God, too. TJM
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