THE MYSTERY OF
LENT.
By Dom Gueranger.
CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY of OREGON No. Lit057 (1957).
THE MYSTERY OF LENT.
From “The Liturgical Year” by
Dom Gueranger.
[Dom Guéranger was abbot of Solesmes from 1837 until his death in 1875. He was one of the leading monks and liturgists of his generation, and his writings were highly influential both in France and abroad. He is perhaps best known today through the pages of his monumental work, The Liturgical Year, which he began in 1841 in order to make the riches of the liturgy more widely known by the faithful. In fifteen volumes (which he did not live to complete), he follows the cycle of the liturgical year, illuminating the traditional liturgy with interpretations, commentaries, and riches collected from other liturgies both of Eastern and Western Christendom. His cause for beatification is under consideration in Rome. Of necessity, his writings refer to the Liturgy and Office of Saint Pius V, but his writings provided much of the groundwork for liturgical renewal which reached its apex under Pope Paul VI and the reforms of the Second Vatican Council. Note well what he writes about the good Catholic undertaking prayer, fasting, abstinence and almsgiving during Lent, in a spirit of sacrifice as we walk with Our Lord and Savior. Note how he points out how generous the disciplines of the Church are. How much more are the Church’s disciplines generous today! How much more, then, should we endeavor to live our Lent in a true spirit of repentance and conversion!]
WE may be sure that a season so
sacred as this of Lent is rich in mysteries. The Church has made it a time of
recollection and penance, in preparation for the greatest of all her feasts;
she would, therefore, bring into it everything that could excite the faith of
her children, and encourage them to go through the arduous work of atonement
for their sins. During Septuagesima, the time preceding Lent, we had the number
seventy, which reminds us of those seventy years of captivity in
Babylon, after which God's chosen people, being purified from idolatry, was to
return to Jerusalem and celebrate the Pasch. It is the number forty
that the Church now brings before us: a number, as Saint Jerome observes, which
denotes punishment and affliction. [On Ezechiel, chapter 29.]
Let us remember the forty days
and forty nights of the deluge [Genesis 7:12,] sent by God in His anger, when
He repented that He had made man, and destroyed the whole human race with the
exception of one family. Let us consider how the Hebrew people, in punishment
for their ingratitude, wandered forty years in the desert, before they were
permitted to enter the Promised Land. [Numbers 14:33.] Let us listen to our God
commanding the Prophet Ezechiel to lie forty days on his right side, as a
figure of the siege which was to bring destruction on Jerusalem. [Ezechiel 4:6.]
There are two persons in the Old
Testament who represent the two manifestations of God: Moses, who typifies the
Law; and Elias [called Elijah], who is the figure of the Prophets. Both of
these are permitted to approach God: the first on Sinai, [Exodus 24:18,] the
second on Horeb, the lower peak of Sinai; [1 Kings 19:8, though in the Vulgate
the reference is 3 Kings 19: 8,] but both of them have to prepare for the great
favor by an expiatory fast of forty days.
With these mysterious facts before us, we can understand why it is that the Son of God, having become Man for our salvation and wishing to subject Himself to the pain of fasting, chose the number of forty days. The institution of Lent is thus brought before us with everything that can impress the mind with its solemn character, and with its power of appeasing God and purifying our souls. Let us, therefore, look beyond the little world which surrounds us, and see how the whole Christian universe is, at this very time, offering this forty days' penance as a sacrifice of propitiation to the offended Majesty of God; and let us hope that, as in the case of the Ninivites, He will mercifully accept this year's offering of our atonement, and pardon us our sins.
The number of our days of Lent is, then, a holy mystery: let us now learn, from
the liturgy, in what light the Church views her children during these forty
days. She considers them as an immense army, fighting day and night against
their spiritual enemies. We remember how, on Ash Wednesday, she calls Lent a
Christian warfare. In order that we may have that newness of life, which will
make us worthy to sing once more our Alleluia, we must conquer our three
enemies: the devil, the flesh, and the world. We are fellow combatants with our
Jesus, for He, too, submits to the triple temptation, suggested to Him by Satan
in person. Therefore, we must have on our armor, and watch unceasingly. And
whereas it is of the utmost importance that our hearts be spirited and brave,
the Church gives us a war-song of heaven's own making, which can fire even
cowards with hope of victory and confidence in God's help: it is the ninetieth
Psalm in the Vulgate, Psalm 91 in the Hebrew. [The first line of the Psalm
reads: Qui habitat in adjutorio, in the Office of Compline or Night
Prayer. ‘He that dwells in the aid of the most High, shall abide under the
protection of the God of Jacob’.] She inserts the whole of it in the Mass
of the first Sunday of Lent, and every day introduces several of its verses
into the ferial or daily Lenten Office.
She there tells us to rely on
the protection, wherewith our heavenly Father covers us, as with a shield. [Scuto
circumdabit te veritas ejus. ‘His truth shall compass you with a
shield’ (verse 5). Office of None, the Prayer during the Day after
Midday at the ‘ninth’ hour or 3 o’clock.] She tells us to hope under the
shelter of His wings [Et sub pinnis ejus, ‘and under his wings you
shall trust’ (verse 4). This is used at Sext or the Prayer at the
‘sixth’ hour or Midday.] She tells us to have confidence in Him; for that He
will indeed deliver us from the snare of the hunter, who had robbed us of the
holy liberty of the children of God [Ipse liberavit me de laqueo venantium.
‘For he has delivered me from the snare of the hunters, (verse
3). This is used at Tierce or the Prayer before Midday at the ‘third’ hour or 9
o’clock.] She tell us to rely upon the succor of the holy angels, who are our
brothers, to whom our Lord has given charge that they keep us in all our ways,
[Angelis suis mandavit de te, ut custodiant te in omnibus viis tuis. ‘For
he has given his angels charge over you; to keep you in all your ways
(verse 11).This is used at both Lauds and Vespers, Morning and Evening Prayer.]
The Angels, when Jesus permitted Satan to tempt Him, were the adoring witnesses
of His combat, and approached Him, after His victory, proffering to Him their
service and homage.
Let us well absorb these sentiments wherewith the Church would have us to be
inspired; and, during our six weeks' campaign, let us often repeat this
admirable canticle, which so fully describes what the soldiers of Christ should
be and feel in this season of the great spiritual warfare.
But the Church is not satisfied
with thus animating us to the contest with our enemies: she would also have our
minds engrossed with thoughts of deepest import; and for this end she puts
before us three great subjects, which she will gradually unfold to us
between this and the great Easter solemnity. Let us be all attention to these
soul-stirring and instructive lessons.
And firstly, there is the conspiracy of the Jews (more especially their religious leaders) against our Redeemer. It will be brought before us in its whole history, from its first formation to its final consummation on the great Friday, when we shall behold the Son of God hanging on the wood of the cross. The infamous workings of the Synagogue will be brought before us so regularly, that we shall be able to follow the plot in all its details. We shall be inflamed with love for the august Victim, whose meekness, wisdom, and dignity bespeak a God. The divine drama, which began in the cave of Bethlehem, is to close on Calvary; we may assist at it, by meditating on the passages of the Gospel read to us by the Church during these days of Lent.
The second of the subjects offered to us, for our instruction, requires
that we should remember how the feast of Easter is to be the day of new birth
for our catechumens, and how, in the early ages of the Church, Lent was the
immediate and solemn preparation given to the candidates for Baptism. The holy
liturgy of the present season retains much of the instruction she used to give
to the catechumens; and as we listen to her magnificent lessons from both the Old
and the New Testament, whereby she completed their initiation, we ought
to think with gratitude of how we were not required to wait years before being
made children of God, but were mercifully admitted to Baptism even in our
infancy. We shall be led to pray for those new catechumens, who this very year,
in near and far distant countries, are receiving instructions from their
zealous missioners, and are looking forward, as did the postulants of the
primitive Church, to that grand feast of our Savior's victory over death, when
they are to be cleansed in the waters of Baptism and receive from the contact a
new being — regeneration.
Thirdly, we must remember how, formerly, the public
penitents, who had been separated on Ash Wednesday from the assembly of the
faithful, were the object of the Church's maternal solicitude during the whole
forty days of Lent, and were to be admitted to reconciliation on Maundy (or
Holy) Thursday, if their repentance were such as to merit this public
forgiveness. We shall have the admirable course of instructions, which were
originally designed for these penitents, and which the liturgy, faithful as it
ever is to such traditions, still retains for our sake. As we read these
sublime passages of the Scripture, we shall naturally think upon our own sins,
and on what easy terms they were pardoned us; whereas, had we lived in other
times, we should have probably been put through the ordeal of a public and
severe penance. This will excite us to fervor, for we shall remember that,
whatever changes the indulgence of the Church may lead her to make in her
discipline, the justice of our God is ever the same. We shall find in all this
an additional motive for offering to His divine Majesty the sacrifice of a contrite
heart, and we shall go through our penances with that cheerful eagerness, which
the conviction of our deserving much severer ones always brings with it.
In order to keep up the
character of mournfulness and austerity which is so well suited to Lent, the
Church, for many centuries, admitted very few feasts into this portion of her
year, inasmuch as there is always joy where there is even a spiritual feast. In
the fourth century, we have the Council of Laodicea (364 AD) forbidding, in its
fifty-first canon, the keeping of a feast or commemoration of any saint during
Lent, excepting on the Saturdays or Sundays. [Labbe, Concil. Volume 1.]
The Greek Church rigidly maintained this point of Lenten discipline; nor was it
till many centuries after the Council of Laodicea that she made an exception
for March 25, on which day she now keeps the feast of our Lady's Annunciation.
The Church of Rome maintained
this same discipline, at least in principle; but she admitted the feast of the
Annunciation at a very early period, and somewhat later, the feast of the
apostle Saint Mathias, on February 24. [However, Saint Mathias is remembered on
May 14 in the New Calendar of Pope Paul VI.] During the last few centuries, she
has admitted several other feasts into that portion of her general calendar
which coincides with Lent; still, she observes a certain restriction, out of
respect for the ancient practice. The reason why the Church of Rome is less
severe on this point of excluding the saints' feasts during Lent, is that the
Christians of the west have never looked upon the celebration of a feast as
incompatible with fasting; the Greeks, on the contrary, believe that the two
are irreconcilable, and as a consequence of this principle, never observe
Saturday as a fasting-day, because they always keep it as a solemnity, though
they make Holy Saturday an exception, and fast upon it. For the same reason,
they do not fast upon the Annunciation.
This strange idea gave rise, in
or about the seventh century, to a custom which is peculiar to the Greek
Church. It is called the Mass of the Presanctified, that is to say,
consecrated in a previous Sacrifice. On each Sunday of Lent, the priest
consecrates six Hosts, one of which he receives in that Mass; but the remaining
five are reserved for a simple Communion, which is made on each of the five
following days, without the holy Sacrifice being offered. The Latin Church
practices this rite only once in the year, that is, on Good Friday, and this in
commemoration of a sublime mystery, which we will explain in its proper place.
This custom of the Greek Church
was evidently suggested by the forty-ninth canon of the Council of Laodicea,
which forbids the offering of bread for the Sacrifice during Lent, excepting on
the Saturdays and Sundays. [Labbe, Concil. Volume 1.] The Greeks, some
centuries later on, concluded from this canon that the celebration of the holy
Sacrifice was incompatible with fasting; and we learn from the controversy they
had, in the ninth century, with the legate Humbert, [Contra Nicetam, Volume
4,] that the Mass of the Presanctified (which has no other authority to
rest on save a canon of the famous Council in Trullo, [Canon 52, Labbe, Concil.
Volume 6,] held in 692) was justified by the Greeks on this absurd plea, that
the Communion of the Body and Blood of our Lord broke the Lenten fast.
The Greeks celebrate this rite
in the evening, after Vespers, and the priest alone communicates, as is done
now in the Roman liturgy on Good Friday. But for many centuries, they have made
an exception for the Annunciation; they interrupt the Lenten fast on this
feast, they celebrate Mass, and the faithful are allowed to receive Holy
Communion.
The canon of the Council of
Laodicea was probably never received in the western Church. If the suspension
of the holy Sacrifice during Lent was ever practiced in Rome, it was only on
the Thursdays; and even that custom was abandoned in the eighth century, as we
learn from Anastasius the Librarian, who tells us that Pope Saint Gregory II,
desiring to complete the Roman sacramentary, added Masses for the Thursdays of
the first five weeks of Lent. [Anastasius ‘In Gregorio II’.] It is
difficult to assign the reason of this interruption of the Mass on Thursdays in
the Roman Church, or of the like custom observed by the Church of Milan on the
Fridays of Lent. The explanations we have found in different authors are not
satisfactory. As far as Milan is concerned, we are inclined to think that, not
satisfied with the mere adoption of the Roman usage of not celebrating Mass on
Good Friday, the Ambrosian Church extended the rite to all the Fridays of Lent.
After thus briefly alluding to
these details, we must close our present chapter by a few words on the holy
rites which are now observed, during Lent, in our western Churches. We have
explained several of these in our 'Septuagesima.' [See their explanation
in the volume for Septuagesima, the time preceding Lent.] The suspension of the
Alleluia; the purple vestments; the laying aside of the deacon's
dalmatic, and the subdeacon's tunic; the omission of the two joyful canticles Gloria
in excelsis (‘Glory to God in the highest’,) and Te Deum (‘You ,O God
we Praise’); the substitution of the mournful Tract for the
Alleluia-verse in the Mass; the Benedicamus Domino (‘Let us Bless {and
give praises to}the Lord’) instead of the Ite Missa est (‘Go forth, the Mass
is ended’); the additional prayer said over the people after the Postcommunions
on ferial days; the celebration of the ‘Vesper’ Office before midday, excepting
on the Sundays: all these are familiar to our readers. We have now only to
mention, in addition, the genuflections prescribed for the conclusion of all
the Hours of the Divine Office on ferias, and the rubric which bids the choir
to kneel, on those same days, during the Canon of the Mass.
There were other ceremonies
peculiar to the season of Lent, which were observed in the Churches of the
west, but which have now, for many centuries, fallen into general disuse; we
say general, because they are still partially kept up in some places. Of these
rites, the most imposing was that of putting up a large veil between the choir
and the altar so that neither clergy nor people could look upon the holy
mysteries celebrated within the sanctuary. This veil-which was called the
Curtain, and, generally speaking, was of a purple color-was a symbol of the
penance to which the sinner ought to subject himself, in order to merit the
sight of that divine Majesty, before whose face he had committed so many
outrages. It signified, moreover, the humiliations endured by our Redeemer, who
was a stumbling-block to the proud Synagogue. But as a veil that is suddenly
drawn aside, these humiliations were to give way, and be changed into the
glories of the Resurrection. [Honorius of Autun, (1080-1154), Gemma animae,
book 3, chapter 66.] Among other places where this rite is still observed, we
may mention the metropolitan church of Paris, Notre Dame.
It was the custom also, in many
churches, to veil the crucifix and the statues of the saints as soon as Lent
began; in order to excite the faithful to a livelier sense of penance, they
were deprived of the consolation which the sight of these holy images always
brings to the soul. But this custom, which is still retained in some places,
was less general than the more expressive one used in the Roman Church, which
we will explain in our next volume - the veiling of the crucifix and statues
only in Passiontide.
We learn from the ceremonials of the Middle Ages that, during Lent, and particularly on the Wednesdays and Fridays, processions used frequently to be made from one church to another. In monasteries, these processions were made in the cloister, and barefooted. [Martene, De antequis Eccles. ritibus, volume 3, chapter 18.] This custom was suggested by the practice of Rome, where there is a Station for every day of Lent which, for many centuries, began by a procession to the stational church.
Lastly, the Church has always been in the habit of adding to her prayers during
the season of Lent. Her discipline was, until recently, that, on ferias, in
cathedral and collegiate churches which were not exempted by a custom to the
contrary, the following additions were made to the canonical Hours: on Monday,
the Office of the Dead; on Wednesday, the Gradual Psalms; and on Friday, the
Penitential Psalms. In some churches, during the Middle Ages, the whole Psalter
was added each week of Lent to the usual Office. [Martene, De antequis
Eccles. ritibus, volume 3, chapter 18.]
During these forty days of penance, which seem so long to our poor nature, we
shall not be deprived of the company of our Jesus. He seemed to have withdrawn
from us during those weeks of Septuagesima, when everything spoke to us of His
maledictions upon sinful man, but this absence has done us good. It has taught
us how to tremble at the voice of God's anger. 'The fear of the Lord is the
beginning of wisdom'; {Ps. 110:10. It is Ps 111:10 in the Hebrew.} We have
found it to be so: the spirit of penance is now active within us, because we
have feared.
And now, let us look at the
divine object that is before us. It is our Emmanuel; the same Jesus, but not
under the form of the sweet Babe whom we adored in His crib. He has grown to
the fullness of the age of man, and wears the semblance of a sinner, trembling
and humbling Himself before the sovereign Majesty of His Father whom we have
offended, and to whom He now offers Himself as the Victim of propitiation. He
loves us with a brother's love; and seeing that the season for doing penance
has begun, He comes to cheer us on by His presence and His own example. We are
going to spend forty days in fasting and abstinence: Jesus, who is innocence
itself, goes through the same penance. We have separated ourselves, for a time,
from the pleasures and vanities of the world: Jesus withdraws from the company
and sight of men. We intend to assist at the divine services more assiduously,
and pray more fervently, than at other times: Jesus is suppliant; and all this
for us. We are going to think over our past sins, and bewail them in bitter grief.
Let, then, the children of the Church courageously observe the Lenten practices
of penance. Our Lent will give us a clearer view of Him who is our light, and
if we acknowledged Him as our God when we saw Him as the Babe of Bethlehem, our
soul's eye will not fail to recognize Him in the divine Penitent of the desert,
or in the bleeding Victim of Calvary.
***