“Come, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker” – Catholic Divine Office/ Liturgy of the Hours

Bright Sun, Clouds, Sky, adapted from image at anl.gov by Steven C. Welsh :: www.stevencwelsh.com :: www.stevencwelsh.info

[The Divine Office, or Liturgy of the Hours, begins the Liturgical Day with “A Call to Praise God” in the form of the Invitatory Psalm, usually Psalm 95, in stanzas, or strophes, interspersed with an antiphon. For Sundays and weekdays during Lent, from Ash Wednesday to the Saturday of the Fifth Week of Lent, the antiphon is “Come, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker.” Below, the first alternative is set out with the stanzas of the Psalm.]

[Prior to the Psalm is an introductory phrase taken from Psalm 51 and a quote from the Letter to the Hebrews]

Lord, open my lips.

— And my mouth will proclaim Your Praise.
Encourage each other daily, while it is still today (Hebrews 3:13)

Holy Trinity and Scenes From ScriptureCome, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker.

Come, let us sing to the Lord
and shout with joy to the Rock Who Saves us.
Let us approach Him with Praise and Thanksgiving
and sing joyful songs to the Lord.

Come, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker.

The Lord is God, the Mighty God,
the Great King over all the gods,
He holds in His Hands the depths of the earth
and the highest mountains as well.
He made the sea; it belongs to Him,
the dry land, too, for it was formed by His Hands.

Come, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker.

Come then, let us bow down and worship,
bending the knee before the Lord, our Maker.
For He is our God, and we are His People,
the Flock He Shepherds.

Come, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker.

Today, listen to the Voice of the Lord:
Do not grow stubborn, as your fathers did
in the wilderness,
when at Meribah and Massah
they challenged me and provoked me,
Although they had seen all of my works.

Come, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker.

Forty years I endured that generation.
I said, “They are a People whose hearts go astray
and they do not know My Ways.”
So I swore in my anger,
“The shall not enter into my rest.”

Come, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker.

Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit:
as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be for ever.
Amen.

Come, let us worship before the Lord, our Maker.

[The Divine Office also indicates that Psalm 100, Psalm 67 or Psalm 24 may be used, and indicates that the psalm may be omitted when the Invitatory precedes Morning Prayer. An added note provides that, in individual recitation, the antiphon may be said once, at the beginning, rather than with each strophe.]

[As can be seen, the psalm presents a a wide-ranging encounter with God’s Greatness and our Relationship to Him. We are exhorted to approach God, to sing and shout with joy, praise and thanksgiving. God is Almighty and our Creator, indeed holding creation in His Hands.

We are to worship and follow Him in His Greatness. Yet He also is a Person Whose Voice we are to listen to and follow, Who Shepherds us as His Flock. At times, there are those who stubbornly failed to follow him, challenging Him and provoking His Wrath. In particular, with the reference to Meribah and Massah, the psalm recalls the Israelites grumbling and challenging God at points during their exodus in the desert.]

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CATHOLIC MASS READINGS: Wednesday of the Twenty-Third Week in Ordinary Time 9.11.19 – USCCB/NABRV

Historic Bible

“Raising His Eyes toward His Disciples Jesus said: ‘Blessed are you who are poor … the Kingdom of God is yours. … Blessed are you … now weeping, for you will laugh. Blessed are you when people hate you, and when they exclude and insult you, and denounce your name as evil on account of the Son of Man. Rejoice and leap for joy on that day! Behold, your reward will be great in Heaven. …”

CATHOLIC NEWSLINK: “Second Buffalo whistleblower says he was abused as seminarian” – CNA

File Photos of Law Books and Gavel, adapted from image at fjc.gov

“… Biernat said … he was assaulted by Fr. Art Smith, a diocesan priest whom Bishop Richard Malone of Buffalo asked to be kept in ministry in 2015 in a letter to Vatican officials, despite the bishop admitting in that same letter that Smith had groomed a young boy, had been accused of inappropriate touching of at least four young men, had faced boundary problems, and refused to stay in a treatment center. Fr. Smith was suspended in 2018 …. After Biernat told Bishop Edward Grosz, then-auxiliary bishop of Buffalo …Grosz allegedly responded by threatening Biernat’s vocation if he kept talking about it. ‘He said [it] was my fault because I [didn’t] lock the door,’ Biernat quoted Bishop Grosz, as reported by WKBW. ‘And then he said, “and Ryszard, if you don’t stop talking about this, you will not become a priest. You understand me? You understand me?”‘ Biernat said. …”

CATHOLIC MASS READINGS: Twenty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time 9.8.19 – USCCB/NABRV

Historic Bible

“‘… Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after Me cannot be My Disciple. Which of you wishing to construct a tower does not first sit down and … see if there is enough for its completion? …. [A]nyone of you who does not renounce all his possessions cannot be My Disciple.'”

CATHOLIC MASS READINGS: Monday of the Twenty-Second Week in Ordinary Time 9.2.19 – USCCB/NABRV

Historic Bible

“Jesus came to Nazareth … and went … into the synagogue … and was handed a scroll of the prophet Isaiah. He unrolled the scroll and found the passage where it was written:

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to bring glad tidings to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord.

He said to them, ‘Today this Scripture passage is fulfilled in your hearing.’ …”

CATHOLIC NEWSLINK: “Jackson diocese: we did not influence victim’s decision to accept smaller settlement” – CNA

File Photos of Law Books and Gavel, adapted from image at fjc.gov

“The Diocese of Jackson in Mississippi said it did not pressure a victim of clerical sexual abuse to accept settlement offers after he was abused by a Franciscan brother in the late 1990s. Earlier this year, that victim and his cousin were paid $15,000 each by a Wisconsin-based Franciscan province — a lower amount than typical settlements— to settle their abuse claims. … [AP] reported … that La Jarvis Love and his cousins, brothers Joshua and Raphael Love, alleged that they had been repeatedly abused during the 1990s by Brother Paul West, OFM, when they were elementary school students at St. Francis of Assisi School, in Greenwood, Mississippi. …”

CATHOLIC MASS VIDEO: Twenty-Second Sunday in Ordinary Time 9.1.19 – Heart of the Nation (Wisconsin)

File Photo of Mass Underway Inside Church, adapted from image at army.mil

From Heart of the Nation in Wisconsin.
[Click here for Mass Readings]


[featured image is file photo from another time and location]

[featured image is file photo from another time and place]

CATHOLIC MASS VIDEO: Twenty-Second Sunday in Ordinary Time 9.1.19 – Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (Washington, D.C.)

File Photo of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception

From the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. [Click here for Mass Readings]


[featured image is file photo]

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