Adoremus Bulletin
NOVEMBER 2020
News & Views
For the Renewal of the Sacred Liturgy
Holy Liturgy, Holy Living: Lessons from the Book of Leviticus
Leviticus, is fundamental to holy living, and holy living the necessary counterpart to holy liturgy. These are the means by which God’s people are enabled to fulfill their calling as “a kingdom of priests and a holy nation,” as God’s agents of blessing and salvation to the world (Exodus 19:5-6).
Archbishop Cordileone Urges ‘Devotion and Love’ for Eucharist as Indoor Masses Resume
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CNA Staff (CNA)—At an outdoor rosary rally and Mass held October 3, San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone encouraged Catholics to renew their respect for and devotion to the Eucharist as indoor Masses resume across the city. “Have we accepted this fast from the Eucharist as an opportunity God has given us to renew our devotion and love for the sacrament?” Archbishop Cordileone asked during his homily at the rally outside the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption. The office of San Francisco’s mayor announced September 29 that places of worship will be permitted to hold services indoors at 25% capacity, up to 100 people, beginning September 30. The city had been allowing only one worshiper at a time in places of worship, regardless of the building’s size, while allowing multiple patrons in other indoor establishments. Parishes in San Francisco had been adapting to the restrictions by holding multiple, concurrent outdoor Masses each Sunday. The October 3 annual rosary rally began at St. Anthony of Padua Church in the city’s mission district with a procession to the cathedral. Reflecting on the city’s namesake, St. Francis of Assisi, Archbishop Cordileone held up St. Francis’ devotion to the Eucharist as an example, and noted that in times of scandal, corruption and division within the Church, the temptation can arise to criticize and “do things our own way.” Please see RESUME on next page
XXVI, No.3
Holy liturgy, according to Leviticus, is fundamental to holy living, and holy living, the necessary counterpart to holy liturgy. These are the means by which God’s people are enabled to fulfill their calling as “a kingdom of priests and a holy nation,” as God’s agents of blessing and salvation to the world (Exodus 19:5-6).
By Vern Steiner
T
he Book of Leviticus, the third book of the Old Testament and first of the “legal books,” can be a difficult read for modern Christians. In its pages we encounter a myriad of tedious, bewildering, even bizarresounding requirements that God laid on ancient Israel, with little apparent relevance to the Church today. This probably explains why many a pious resolve to read straight through the Bible cover to cover has foundered among the shoals of Leviticus, or why a family physician once advised me to read this book for its sleep-inducing value (“Take two chapters one-half hour before bedtime.”). Among Jewish readers, Leviticus has enjoyed a more favorable reception. Historically, no book has had greater impact on Jews than this, and it remains among the first books
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Adoremus Bulletin NOVEMBER 2020
taught to Jewish children even today. When encountering a perplexing passage in the Bible, I teach my students to welcome the difficulty factor as a challenge: We simply have to work harder at getting to the heart of it. Those who accept that challenge discover that Leviticus contains some of the Bible’s richest insights on what it means for God’s people to be a liturgical community. In fact, Leviticus is the one biblical book devoted entirely to the complementary themes of holy liturgy and holy living, and the essential relationship between the two. This is reflected in the book’s structure, where chapters 1-16 focus on the former (holy liturgy)—on formal worship at the Tabernacle, where God resides with his people; and chapters 17-27 on the latter (holy living)—the kind of conduct that flows from and befits a liturgy-centered existence. Holy liturgy, according to
Four Searching Questions In his Psalms commentary, The Vitality of Worship, Robert Davidson confronts us with this bit of penetrating candor: “If worship does not lead us to ask searching questions about ourselves, then it is little more than a harmless hobby.”1 Leviticus helps us to ask searching questions about ourselves with respect to worship, questions which directly impact how we think about liturgy and life. Four of those searching questions come to the fore in that part of the book which focuses on the sacrificial rituals at the heart of Israel’s Tabernacle liturgy (chs. 1-7). Each of these contributes to the larger question of how liturgy can be “a soothing aroma to the Lord.” Most Christians have a sense that our liturgy should please the Lord, but not all agree on what that might
“ Leviticus contains some of the Bible’s richest insights on what it means for God’s people to be a liturgical community.” entail. Relatively few, it seems, consider the opposite possibility, that our liturgy might at times not please the Lord. The following four questions get to the heart of the matter from the perspective of Leviticus. Question 1: Is the object of our liturgy God? The question demands more than a general and over-confident response in the affirmative: “Of course it is. That’s why I go to church.” In The Spirit of the Liturgy, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger queries: “What, then, is special about the liturgy of Israel?” His response might seem unsurprising: “First of all, Please see LEVITICUS on page 4
Living Holy—Wholly Living According to Vern Steiner, the book of Leviticus is more than a catalog of laws—it’s also a nascent instruction manual on the Catholic art of living the liturgical life............1
Take It to the House Father Anthony Stoeppel offers an interior view of why humans have a natural need to make a supernatural space for God—a place we can all truly call his own..............................8
Encore! Encore! Adoremus’s late legendary editor Helen Hull Hitchcock weighs in on the liturgical reform in this month’s editorial, reprinted as a fitting coda for our 25th anniversary..........................3
Who’s the New Priest? If a new priest comes to your parish, says Benedictine Father Kurt Belsole, you can count on him being a man of God—and what’s more, you can count how on one hand......................................................10
Are You a Latin Lover? Perhaps you should be. Father Dylan Schrader makes the case for restoring Latin to its rightful place—on everyone’s tongue—as the mater lingua of Mother Church................6
Newman Revisited In reviewing Peter Kwasniewski’s recent compilation of John Henry Newman’s liturgical writings, Jeremy Priest reveals another side of Newman—one ever ancient, ever new.............................................................12