This morning's post isn't quite a "pause for prayer" - but it's definitely a "pause for reflection."
At the Easter Vigil and at all the Masses on Easter Sunday, we will be asked:
- Do you reject the glamor of evil
- Do you reject Satan,
- Do you believe in God, the Father almighty,
- Do you believe in Jesus Christ,
- Do you believe in the Holy Spirit,
- Do you believe in
- Do you believe in the forgiveness of sins?
- Do you look for the resurrection of the dead
And we'll respond: I do, I do, I do!
Do we even understand the questions?
Here's a way to better understand the profession of faith, the renewal of our baptismal promises...
Fr. Bill Reiser, SJ has proposed some additional questions for us to ponder in preparation for Easter. His questions can be food for our prayer and fasting in this holy season.
- Do you accept Jesus as your teacher, as the example whom you will always imitate and as the one in whom the mystery of God’s love for the world has fully been revealed?
- Do you dedicate yourself to seeking the kingdom of God and God’s justice, to praying daily, to meditating on the Gospels and to celebrating the Eucharist faithfully and devoutly?
- Do you commit yourself to that
spirit of poverty and detachment that Jesus enjoined on his disciples,
and to resisting the spirit of consumerism and materialism that is so
strong in our culture?
- Do you accept responsibility for
building community, for being a person of compassion and reconciliation,
for being mindful of the poor and the oppressed, and for truly
forgiving those who have offended you?
- Will you try to thank and praise God
by your works and by your actions, in times of prosperity as well as in
moments of suffering, giving loyal witness to the risen Jesus by your
faith, by your hope, and by the style of your living?
- Do you surrender your life to God as
a disciple and companion of Jesus? Do you believe that God is the Lord
of history, sovereign over nations and peoples, and that God’s promise
to redeem all of creation from its bondage to death and decay will one
day be accomplished?
All of these questions, the traditional and the new ones, are offered
here for our Lenten reflection, prayer and action. Soon we’ll be
renewing our baptismal promises and professing our faith in God. Let us
pray for one another that this Lenten season of preparation will find
us ready to answer “I do!” with voices and hearts filled with faith.