APOSTOLIC LETTER
DIES DOMINI
OF THE HOLY FATHER
JOHN PAUL II
TO THE BISHOPS, CLERGY AND FAITHFUL
OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH
ON KEEPING THE LORD'S DAY HOLY
My esteemed Brothers in the Episcopate
and the Priesthood,
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
1. The Lord's Day — as Sunday was called from Apostolic
times(1) — has always been accorded special attention in the history of the
Church because of its close connection with the very core of the Christian
mystery. In fact, in the weekly reckoning of time Sunday recalls the day of
Christ's Resurrection. It is Easter
which returns week by week, celebrating Christ's victory over sin and death,
the fulfilment in him of the first creation and the dawn of "the new
creation" (cf. 2 Cor 5:17).
It is the day which recalls in grateful adoration the world's first day and
looks forward in active hope to "the last day", when Christ will come
in glory (cf. Acts 1:11; 1 Th 4:13-17) and all things will be made
new (cf. Rev 21:5).
Rightly, then, the Psalmist's cry is applied to Sunday:
"This is the day which the Lord has made: let us rejoice and be glad in
it" (Ps 118:24). This
invitation to joy, which the Easter liturgy makes its own, reflects the
astonishment which came over the women who, having seen the crucifixion of
Christ, found the tomb empty when they went there "very early on the first
day after the Sabbath" (Mk
16:2). It is an invitation to relive in some way the experience of the two
disciples of Emmaus, who felt their hearts "burn within them" as the
Risen One walked with them on the road, explaining the Scriptures and revealing
himself in "the breaking of the bread" (cf. Lk 24:32,35). And it echoes the joy — at
first uncertain and then overwhelming — which the Apostles experienced on the
evening of that same day, when they were visited by the Risen Jesus and
received the gift of his peace and of his Spirit (cf. Jn 20:19-23).
2. The Resurrection of Jesus is the fundamental event upon
which Christian faith rests (cf. 1 Cor
15:14). It is an astonishing reality, fully grasped in the light of faith, yet
historically attested to by those who were privileged to see the Risen Lord. It
is a wondrous event which is not only absolutely unique in human history, but
which lies at the very heart of the mystery
of time. In fact, "all time belongs to [Christ] and all the
ages", as the evocative liturgy of the Easter Vigil recalls in preparing
the Paschal Candle. Therefore, in commemorating the day of Christ's
Resurrection not just once a year but every Sunday, the Church seeks to indicate
to every generation the true fulcrum of history, to which the mystery of the
world's origin and its final destiny leads.
It is right, therefore, to claim, in the words of a fourth
century homily, that "the Lord's Day" is "the lord of
days".(2) Those who have received the grace of faith in the Risen Lord
cannot fail to grasp the significance of this day of the week with the same
deep emotion which led Saint Jerome to say: "Sunday is the day of the
Resurrection, it is the day of Christians, it is our day".(3) For
Christians, Sunday is "the fundamental feastday",(4) established not
only to mark the succession of time but to reveal time's deeper meaning.
3. The fundamental importance of Sunday has been recognized
through two thousand years of history and was emphatically restated by the
Second Vatican Council: "Every seven days, the Church celebrates the
Easter mystery. This is a tradition going back to the Apostles, taking its
origin from the actual day of Christ's Resurrection — a day thus appropriately designated
'the Lord's Day'."(5) Paul VI emphasized this importance once more when he
approved the new General Roman Calendar and the Universal Norms which regulate
the ordering of the Liturgical Year.(6) The coming of the Third Millennium,
which calls believers to reflect upon the course of history in the light of
Christ, also invites them to rediscover with new intensity the meaning of
Sunday: its "mystery", its celebration, its significance for
Christian and human life.
I note with pleasure that in the years since the Council
this important theme has prompted not only many interventions by you, dear
Brother Bishops, as teachers of the faith, but also different pastoral
strategies which — with the support of your clergy — you have developed either
individually or jointly. On the threshold of the Great Jubilee of the Year
2000, it has been my wish to offer you this Apostolic Letter in order to
support your pastoral efforts in this vital area. But at the same time I wish
to turn to all of you, Christ's faithful, as though I were spiritually present
in all the communities in which you gather with your Pastors each Sunday to
celebrate the Eucharist and "the Lord's Day". Many of the insights
and intuitions which prompt this Apostolic Letter have grown from my episcopal service
in Krakow and, since the time when I assumed the ministry of Bishop of Rome and
Successor of Peter, in the visits to the Roman parishes which I have made
regularly on the Sundays of the different seasons of the Liturgical Year. I see
this Letter as continuing the lively exchange which I am always happy to have
with the faithful, as I reflect with you on the meaning of Sunday and underline
the reasons for living Sunday as truly "the Lord's Day", also in the
changing circumstances of our own times.
4. Until quite recently, it was easier in traditionally
Christian countries to keep Sunday holy because it was an almost universal
practice and because, even in the organization of civil society, Sunday rest
was considered a fixed part of the work schedule. Today, however, even in those
countries which give legal sanction to the festive character of Sunday, changes
in socioeconomic conditions have often led to profound modifications of social
behaviour and hence of the character of Sunday. The custom of the "weekend"
has become more widespread, a weekly period of respite, spent perhaps far from
home and often involving participation in cultural, political or sporting
activities which are usually held on free days. This social and cultural
phenomenon is by no means without its positive aspects if, while respecting
true values, it can contribute to people's development and to the advancement
of the life of society as a whole. All of this responds not only to the need
for rest, but also to the need for celebration which is inherent in our
humanity. Unfortunately, when Sunday loses its fundamental meaning and becomes
merely part of a "weekend", it can happen that people stay locked
within a horizon so limited that they can no longer see "the heavens".(7)
Hence, though ready to celebrate, they are really incapable of doing so.
The disciples of Christ, however, are asked to avoid any
confusion between the celebration of Sunday, which should truly be a way of
keeping the Lord's Day holy, and the "weekend", understood as a time
of simple rest and relaxation. This will require a genuine spiritual maturity,
which will enable Christians to "be what they are", in full
accordance with the gift of faith, always ready to give an account of the hope
which is in them (cf. 1 Pt 3:15).
In this way, they will be led to a deeper understanding of Sunday, with the
result that, even in difficult situations, they will be able to live it in
complete docility to the Holy Spirit.
5. From this perspective, the situation appears somewhat
mixed. On the one hand, there is the example of some young Churches, which show
how fervently Sunday can be celebrated, whether in urban areas or in widely
scattered villages. By contrast, in other parts of the world, because of the
sociological pressures already noted, and perhaps because the motivation of
faith is weak, the percentage of those attending the Sunday liturgy is
strikingly low. In the minds of many of the faithful, not only the sense of the
centrality of the Eucharist but even the sense of the duty to give thanks to
the Lord and to pray to him with others in the community of the Church, seems
to be diminishing.
It is also true that both in mission countries and in
countries evangelized long ago the lack of priests is such that the celebration
of the Sunday Eucharist cannot always be guaranteed in every community.
6. Given this array of new situations and the questions
which they prompt, it seems more necessary than ever to recover the deep doctrinal foundations underlying the
Church's precept, so that the abiding value of Sunday in the Christian life
will be clear to all the faithful. In doing this, we follow in the footsteps of
the age-old tradition of the Church, powerfully restated by the Second Vatican
Council in its teaching that on Sunday "Christian believers should come
together, in order to commemorate the suffering, Resurrection and glory of the
Lord Jesus, by hearing God's Word and sharing the Eucharist, and to give thanks
to God who has given them new birth to a living hope through the Resurrection
of Jesus Christ from the dead (cf. 1 Pt
1:3)".(8)
7. The duty to keep Sunday holy, especially by sharing in
the Eucharist and by relaxing in a spirit of Christian joy and fraternity, is
easily understood if we consider the many different aspects of this day upon
which the present Letter will focus our attention.
Sunday is a day which is at the very heart of the Christian
life. From the beginning of my Pontificate, I have not ceased to repeat:
"Do not be afraid! Open, open wide the doors to Christ!".(9) In the
same way, today I would strongly urge everyone to rediscover Sunday: Do not be afraid to give your time to Christ!
Yes, let us open our time to Christ, that he may cast light upon it and give it
direction. He is the One who knows the secret of time and the secret of
eternity, and he gives us "his day" as an ever new gift of his love.
The rediscovery of this day is a grace which we must implore, not only so that
we may live the demands of faith to the full, but also so that we may respond
concretely to the deepest human yearnings. Time given to Christ is never time
lost, but is rather time gained, so that our relationships and indeed our whole
life may become more profoundly human.
CHAPTER I
DIES DOMINI
The
Celebration of the Creator's Work
"Through
him all things were made" (Jn
1:3)
8. For the Christian, Sunday is above all an Easter
celebration, wholly illumined by the glory of the Risen Christ. It is the
festival of the "new creation". Yet, when understood in depth, this
aspect is inseparable from what the first pages of Scripture tell us of the
plan of God in the creation of the world. It is true that the Word was made
flesh in "the fullness of time" (Gal
4:4); but it is also true that, in virtue of the mystery of his identity as the
eternal Son of the Father, he is the origin and end of the universe. As John
writes in the Prologue of his Gospel: "Through him all things were made,
and without him was made nothing that was made" (1:3). Paul too stresses
this in writing to the Colossians: "In him all things were created, in
heaven and on earth, visible and invisible .... All things were created through
him and for him" (1:16). This active presence of the Son in the creative
work of God is revealed fully in the Paschal Mystery, in which Christ, rising
as "the first fruits of those who had fallen asleep" (1 Cor 15:20), established the new creation
and began the process which he himself will bring to completion when he returns
in glory to "deliver the kingdom to God the Father ..., so that God may be
everything to everyone" (1 Cor
15:24,28).
Already at the dawn of creation, therefore, the plan of God
implied Christ's "cosmic mission". This Christocentric perspective, embracing the whole arc of time,
filled God's well-pleased gaze when, ceasing from all his work, he
"blessed the seventh day and made it holy" (Gn 2:3). According to the Priestly writer
of the first biblical creation story, then was born the "Sabbath", so
characteristic of the first Covenant, and which in some ways foretells the
sacred day of the new and final Covenant. The theme of "God's rest"
(cf. Gn 2:2) and the rest which
he offered to the people of the Exodus when they entered the Promised Land (cf.
Ex 33:14; Dt 3:20; 12:9; Jos 21:44; Ps
95:11) is re-read in the New Testament in the light of the definitive
"Sabbath rest" (Heb
4:9) into which Christ himself has entered by his Resurrection. The People of
God are called to enter into this same rest by persevering in Christ's example
of filial obedience (cf. Heb
4:3-16). In order to grasp fully the meaning of Sunday, therefore, we must
re-read the great story of creation and deepen our understanding of the
theology of the "Sabbath".
"In
the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth" (Gn 1:1)
9. The poetic style of the Genesis story conveys well the
awe which people feel before the immensity of creation and the resulting sense
of adoration of the One who brought all things into being from nothing. It is a
story of intense religious significance, a hymn to the Creator of the universe,
pointing to him as the only Lord in the face of recurring temptations to
divinize the world itself. At the same time, it is a hymn to the goodness of
creation, all fashioned by the mighty and merciful hand of God.
"God saw that it was good" (Gn 1:10,12, etc.). Punctuating the story
as it does, this refrain sheds a positive
light upon every element of the universe and reveals the secret for
a proper understanding of it and for its eventual regeneration: the world is
good insofar as it remains tied to its origin and, after being disfigured by
sin, it is again made good when, with the help of grace, it returns to the One
who made it. It is clear that this process directly concerns not inanimate
objects and animals but human beings, who have been endowed with the incomparable
gift and risk of freedom. Immediately after the creation stories, the Bible
highlights the dramatic contrast between the grandeur of man, created in the
image and likeness of God, and the fall of man, which unleashes on the world
the darkness of sin and death (cf. Gn
3).
10. Coming as it does from the hand of God, the cosmos bears
the imprint of his goodness. It is a beautiful world, rightly moving us to
admiration and delight, but also calling for cultivation and development. At
the "completion" of God's work, the world is ready for human
activity. "On the seventh day God finished his work which he had done, and
he rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had done" (Gn 2:2). With this anthropomorphic image
of God's "work", the Bible not only gives us a glimpse of the
mysterious relationship between the Creator and the created world, but also
casts light upon the task of human beings in relation to the cosmos. The
"work" of God is in some ways an exemple for man, called not only to
inhabit the cosmos, but also to "build" it and thus become God's
"co-worker". As I wrote in my Encyclical Laborem
Exercens, the first chapters of Genesis constitute in a sense
the first "gospel of work".(10) This is a truth which the Second
Vatican Council also stressed: "Created in God's image, man was
commissioned to subdue the earth and all it contains, to rule the world in justice
and holiness, and, recognizing God as the creator of all things, to refer
himself and the totality of things to God so that with everything subject to
God, the divine name would be glorified in all the earth".(11)
The exhilarating advance of science, technology and culture
in their various forms — an ever more rapid and today even overwhelming
development — is the historical consequence of the mission by which God
entrusts to man and woman the task and responsibility of filling the earth and
subduing it by means of their work, in the observance of God's Law.
"Shabbat": the
Creator's joyful rest
11. If the first page of the Book of Genesis presents God's
"work" as an exemple for man, the same is true of God's
"rest":"On the seventh day God finished his work which he had
done" (Gn 2:2). Here too we
find an anthropomorphism charged with a wealth of meaning.
It would be banal to interpret God's "rest" as a
kind of divine "inactivity". By its nature, the creative act which
founds the world is unceasing and God is always at work, as Jesus himself
declares in speaking of the Sabbath precept: "My Father is working still,
and I am working" (Jn 5:17).
The divine rest of the seventh day does not allude to an inactive God, but
emphasizes the fullness of what has been accomplished. It speaks, as it were,
of God's lingering before the "very good" work (Gn 1:31) which his hand has wrought, in
order to cast upon it a gaze full of joyous
delight. This is a "contemplative" gaze which does not
look to new accomplishments but enjoys the beauty of what has already been
achieved. It is a gaze which God casts upon all things, but in a special way
upon man, the crown of creation. It is a gaze which already discloses something
of the nuptial shape of the relationship which God wants to establish with the
creature made in his own image, by calling that creature to enter a pact of
love. This is what God will gradually accomplish, in offering salvation to all
humanity through the saving covenant made with Israel and fulfilled in Christ.
It will be the Word Incarnate, through the eschatological gift of the Holy
Spirit and the configuration of the Church as his Body and Bride, who will
extend to all humanity the offer of mercy and the call of the Father's love.
12. In the Creator's plan, there is both a distinction and a
close link between the order of creation and the order of salvation. This is
emphasized in the Old Testament, when it links the "shabbat" commandment not only with
God's mysterious "rest" after the days of creation (cf. Ex 20:8-11), but also with the salvation
which he offers to Israel in the liberation
from the slavery of Egypt (cf. Dt
5:12-15). The God who rests on the seventh day, rejoicing in his creation, is
the same God who reveals his glory in liberating his children from Pharaoh's
oppression. Adopting an image dear to the Prophets, one could say that in both
cases God reveals himself as the bridegroom
before the bride (cf. Hos
2:16-24; Jer 2:2; Is 54:4-8).
As certain elements of the same Jewish tradition
suggest,(12) to reach the heart of the "shabbat",
of God's "rest", we need to recognize in both the Old and the New
Testament the nuptial intensity which marks the relationship between God and
his people. Hosea, for instance, puts it thus in this marvellous passage:
"I will make for you a covenant on that day with the beasts of the field,
the birds of the air, and the creeping things of the ground; and I will abolish
the bow, the sword, and war from the land; and I will make you lie down in
safety. And I will betroth you to me for ever; I will betroth you to me in
righteousness and in justice, in steadfast love and in mercy. I will betroth
you to me in faithfulness; and you shall know the Lord" (2:18-20).
"God
blessed the seventh day and made it holy" (Gn 2:3)
13. The Sabbath precept, which in the first Covenant
prepares for the Sunday of the new and eternal Covenant, is therefore rooted in
the depths of God's plan. This is why, unlike many other precepts, it is set
not within the context of strictly cultic stipulations but within the
Decalogue, the "ten words" which represent the very pillars of the
moral life inscribed on the human heart. In setting this commandment within the
context of the basic structure of ethics, Israel and then the Church declare
that they consider it not just a matter of community religious discipline but a defining and indelible expression of our
relationship with God, announced and expounded by biblical
revelation. This is the perspective within which Christians need to rediscover
this precept today. Although the precept may merge naturally with the human
need for rest, it is faith alone which gives access to its deeper meaning and
ensures that it will not become banal and trivialized.
14. In the first place, therefore, Sunday is the day of rest
because it is the day "blessed" by God and "made holy" by
him, set apart from the other days to be, among all of them, "the Lord's
Day".
In order to grasp fully what the first of the biblical
creation accounts means by keeping the Sabbath "holy", we need to
consider the whole story, which shows clearly how every reality, without
exception, must be referred back to God. Time and space belong to him. He is
not the God of one day alone, but the God of all the days of humanity.
Therefore, if God "sanctifies" the seventh day
with a special blessing and makes it "his day" par excellence, this must be understood
within the deep dynamic of the dialogue of the Covenant, indeed the dialogue of
"marriage". This is the dialogue of love which knows no interruption,
yet is never monotonous. In fact, it employs the different registers of love,
from the ordinary and indirect to those more intense, which the words of
Scripture and the witness of so many mystics do not hesitate to describe in
imagery drawn from the experience of married love.
15. All human life, and therefore all human time, must
become praise of the Creator and thanksgiving to him. But man's relationship
with God also demands times of explicit
prayer, in which the relationship becomes an intense dialogue, involving
every dimension of the person. "The Lord's Day" is the day of this
relationship par excellence when
men and women raise their song to God and become the voice of all creation.
This is precisely why it is also the day of rest. Speaking vividly as it does of
"renewal" and "detachment", the interruption of the often
oppressive rhythm of work expresses the dependence of man and the cosmos upon
God. Everything belongs to God!
The Lord's Day returns again and again to declare this principle within the
weekly reckoning of time. The "Sabbath" has therefore been
interpreted evocatively as a determining element in the kind of "sacred
architecture" of time which marks biblical revelation.(13) It recalls that
the universe and history belong to God;
and without a constant awareness of that truth, man cannot serve in the world
as co-worker of the Creator.
To "keep holy"
by "remembering"
16. The commandment of the Decalogue by which God decrees
the Sabbath observance is formulated in the Book of Exodus in a distinctive
way: "Remember the Sabbath day in order to keep it holy" (20:8). And
the inspired text goes on to give the reason for this, recalling as it does the
work of God: "For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and
all that is in them, and rested on the seventh day; therefore the Lord blessed
the Sabbath day and made it holy" (v. 11). Before decreeing that something
be done, the commandment urges
that something be remembered. It
is a call to awaken remembrance of the grand and fundamental work of God which
is creation, a remembrance which must inspire the entire religious life of man
and then fill the day on which man is called to rest. Rest therefore acquires a sacred value: the faithful
are called to rest not only as
God rested, but to rest in the
Lord, bringing the entire creation to him, in praise and thanksgiving, intimate
as a child and friendly as a spouse.
17. The connection between Sabbath rest and the theme of
"remembering" God's wonders is found also in the Book of Deuteronomy
(5:12-15), where the precept is grounded less in the work of creation than in
the work of liberation accomplished by God in the Exodus: "You shall
remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your God
brought you out from there with mighty hand and outstretched arm; therefore the
Lord your God commanded you to keep the Sabbath day" (Dt 5:15).
This formulation complements the one we have already seen;
and taken together, the two reveal the meaning of "the Lord's Day"
within a single theological vision which fuses creation and salvation.
Therefore, the main point of the precept is not just any kind of interruption of work, but the celebration of the marvels which God has
wrought.
Insofar as this "remembrance" is alive, full of thanksgiving and of the praise of God,
human rest on the Lord's Day takes on its full meaning. It is then that man
enters the depths of God's "rest" and can experience a tremor of the
Creator's joy when, after the creation, he saw that all he had made "was
very good" (Gn 1:31).
From the Sabbath to
Sunday
18. Because the Third Commandment depends upon the
remembrance of God's saving works and because Christians saw the definitive
time inaugurated by Christ as a new beginning, they made the first day after
the Sabbath a festive day, for that was the day on which the Lord rose from the
dead. The Paschal Mystery of Christ is the full revelation of the mystery of
the world's origin, the climax of the history of salvation and the anticipation
of the eschatological fulfilment of the world. What God accomplished in
Creation and wrought for his People in the Exodus has found its fullest
expression in Christ's Death and Resurrection, though its definitive fulfilment
will not come until the Parousia,
when Christ returns in glory. In him, the "spiritual" meaning of the
Sabbath is fully realized, as Saint Gregory the Great declares: "For us,
the true Sabbath is the person of our Redeemer, our Lord Jesus
Christ".(14) This is why the joy with which God, on humanity's first Sabbath,
contemplates all that was created from nothing, is now expressed in the joy
with which Christ, on Easter Sunday, appeared to his disciples, bringing the
gift of peace and the gift of the Spirit (cf. Jn
20:19-23). It was in the Paschal Mystery that humanity, and with it the whole
creation, "groaning in birth-pangs until now" (Rom 8:22), came to know its new
"exodus" into the freedom of God's children who can cry out with
Christ, "Abba, Father!" (Rom
8:15; Gal 4:6). In the light of
this mystery, the meaning of the Old Testament precept concerning the Lord's
Day is recovered, perfected and fully revealed in the glory which shines on the
face of the Risen Christ (cf. 2 Cor
4:6). We move from the "Sabbath" to the "first day after the
Sabbath", from the seventh day to the first day: the dies Domini becomes the dies Christi!
CHAPTER II
DIES CHRISTI
The
Day of the Risen Lord
and of the Gift
of the Holy Spirit
The weekly Easter
19. "We celebrate Sunday because of the venerable
Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ, and we do so not only at Easter but also
at each turning of the week": so wrote Pope Innocent I at the beginning of
the fifth century,(15) testifying to an already well established practice which
had evolved from the early years after the Lord's Resurrection. Saint Basil
speaks of "holy Sunday, honoured by the Lord's Resurrection, the first
fruits of all the other days";(16) and Saint Augustine calls Sunday
"a sacrament of Easter".(17)
The intimate bond between Sunday and the Resurrection of the
Lord is strongly emphasized by all the Churches of East and West. In the
tradition of the Eastern Churches in particular, every Sunday is the anastàsimos hemèra, the day of
Resurrection,(18) and this is why it stands at the heart of all worship.
In the light of this constant and universal tradition, it is
clear that, although the Lord's Day is rooted in the very work of creation and
even more in the mystery of the biblical "rest" of God, it is
nonetheless to the Resurrection of Christ that we must look in order to understand
fully the Lord's Day. This is what the Christian Sunday does, leading the
faithful each week to ponder and live the event of Easter, true source of the
world's salvation.
20. According to the common witness of the Gospels, the
Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead took place on "the first day
after the Sabbath" (Mk
16:2,9; Lk 24:1; Jn 20:1). On the same day, the Risen Lord
appeared to the two disciples of Emmaus (cf. Lk
24:13-35) and to the eleven Apostles gathered together (cf. Lk 24:36; Jn
20:19). A week later — as the Gospel of John recounts (cf. 20:26) — the
disciples were gathered together once again, when Jesus appeared to them and
made himself known to Thomas by showing him the signs of his Passion. The day
of Pentecost — the first day of the eighth week after the Jewish Passover (cf. Acts 2:1), when the promise made by Jesus
to the Apostles after the Resurrection was fulfilled by the outpouring of the
Holy Spirit (cf. Lk 24:49; Acts 1:4-5) — also fell on a Sunday. This
was the day of the first proclamation and the first baptisms: Peter announced
to the assembled crowd that Christ was risen and "those who received his
word were baptized" (Acts
2:41). This was the epiphany of the Church, revealed as the people into which
are gathered in unity, beyond all their differences, the scattered children of
God.
The first day of the week
21. It was for this reason that, from Apostolic times,
"the first day after the Sabbath", the first day of the week, began
to shape the rhythm of life for Christ's disciples (cf. 1 Cor 16:2). "The first day after the
Sabbath" was also the day upon which the faithful of Troas were gathered
"for the breaking of bread", when Paul bade them farewell and
miraculously restored the young Eutychus to life (cf. Acts 20:7-12). The Book of Revelation
gives evidence of the practice of calling the first day of the week "the
Lord's Day" (1:10). This would now be a characteristic distinguishing
Christians from the world around them. As early as the beginning of the second
century, it was noted by Pliny the Younger, governor of Bithynia, in his report
on the Christian practice "of gathering together on a set day before
sunrise and singing among themselves a hymn to Christ as to a god".(19)
And when Christians spoke of the "Lord's Day", they did so giving to
this term the full sense of the Easter proclamation: "Jesus Christ is
Lord" (Phil 2:11; cf. Acts 2:36; 1 Cor 12:3). Thus Christ was given the same title which the
Septuagint used to translate what in the revelation of the Old Testament was
the unutterable name of God: YHWH.
22. In those early Christian times, the weekly rhythm of
days was generally not part of life in the regions where the Gospel spread, and
the festive days of the Greek and Roman calendars did not coincide with the
Christian Sunday. For Christians, therefore, it was very difficult to observe
the Lord's Day on a set day each week. This explains why the faithful had to
gather before sunrise.(20) Yet fidelity to the weekly rhythm became the norm,
since it was based upon the New Testament and was tied to Old Testament
revelation. This is eagerly underscored by the Apologists and the Fathers of
the Church in their writings and preaching where, in speaking of the Paschal
Mystery, they use the same Scriptural texts which, according to the witness of
Saint Luke (cf. 24:27, 44-47), the Risen Christ himself would have explained to
the disciples. In the light of these texts, the celebration of the day of the
Resurrection acquired a doctrinal and symbolic value capable of expressing the
entire Christian mystery in all its newness.
Growing distinction from
the Sabbath
23. It was this newness which the catechesis of the first
centuries stressed as it sought to show the prominence of Sunday relative to
the Jewish Sabbath. It was on the Sabbath that the Jewish people had to gather
in the synagogue and to rest in the way prescribed by the Law. The Apostles,
and in particular Saint Paul, continued initially to attend the synagogue so
that there they might proclaim Jesus Christ, commenting upon "the words of
the prophets which are read every Sabbath" (Acts 13:27). Some communities observed the Sabbath while
also celebrating Sunday. Soon, however, the two days began to be distinguished
ever more clearly, in reaction chiefly to the insistence of those Christians
whose origins in Judaism made them inclined to maintain the obligation of the
old Law. Saint Ignatius of Antioch writes: "If those who were living in
the former state of things have come to a new hope, no longer observing the
Sabbath but keeping the Lord's Day, the day on which our life has appeared
through him and his death ..., that mystery from which we have received our
faith and in which we persevere in order to be judged disciples of Christ, our
only Master, how could we then live without him, given that the prophets too,
as his disciples in the Spirit, awaited him as master?".(21) Saint
Augustine notes in turn: "Therefore the Lord too has placed his seal on
his day, which is the third after the Passion. In the weekly cycle, however, it
is the eighth day after the seventh, that is after the Sabbath, and the first
day of the week".(22) The distinction of Sunday from the Jewish Sabbath
grew ever stronger in the mind of the Church, even though there have been times
in history when, because the obligation of Sunday rest was so emphasized, the
Lord's Day tended to become more like the Sabbath. Moreover, there have always
been groups within Christianity which observe both the Sabbath and Sunday as
"two brother days".(23)
The day of the new
creation
24. A comparison of the Christian Sunday with the Old
Testament vision of the Sabbath prompted theological insights of great
interest. In particular, there emerged the unique connection between the
Resurrection and Creation. Christian thought spontaneously linked the
Resurrection, which took place on "the first day of the week", with
the first day of that cosmic week (cf. Gn
1:1 - 2:4) which shapes the creation story in the Book of Genesis: the day of
the creation of light (cf. 1:3-5). This link invited an understanding of the
Resurrection as the beginning of a new creation, the first fruits of which is
the glorious Christ, "the first born of all creation" (Col 1:15) and "the first born from
the dead" (Col 1:18).
25. In effect, Sunday is the day above all other days which
summons Christians to remember the salvation which was given to them in baptism
and which has made them new in Christ. "You were buried with him in
baptism, in which you were also raised with him through faith in the working of
God, who raised him from the dead" (Col
2:12; cf. Rom 6:4-6). The liturgy
underscores this baptismal dimension of Sunday, both in calling for the
celebration of baptisms — as well as at the Easter Vigil — on the day of the
week "when the Church commemorates the Lord's Resurrection",(24) and
in suggesting as an appropriate penitential rite at the start of Mass the
sprinkling of holy water, which recalls the moment of Baptism in which all
Christian life is born.(25)
The eighth day: image of
eternity
26. By contrast, the Sabbath's position as the seventh day
of the week suggests for the Lord's Day a complementary symbolism, much loved
by the Fathers. Sunday is not only the first day, it is also "the eighth
day", set within the sevenfold succession of days in a unique and transcendent
position which evokes not only the beginning of time but also its end in
"the age to come". Saint Basil explains that Sunday symbolizes that
truly singular day which will follow the present time, the day without end
which will know neither evening nor morning, the imperishable age which will
never grow old; Sunday is the ceaseless foretelling of life without end which
renews the hope of Christians and encourages them on their way.(26) Looking
towards the last day, which fulfils completely the eschatological symbolism of
the Sabbath, Saint Augustine concludes the Confessions describing the Eschaton as "the peace of quietness,
the peace of the Sabbath, a peace with no evening".(27) In celebrating
Sunday, both the "first" and the "eighth" day, the Christian
is led towards the goal of eternal life.(28)
The day of Christ-Light
27. This Christocentric vision sheds light upon another
symbolism which Christian reflection and pastoral practice ascribed to the
Lord's Day. Wise pastoral intuition suggested to the Church the
christianization of the notion of Sunday as "the day of the sun",
which was the Roman name for the day and which is retained in some modern
languages.(29) This was in order to draw the faithful away from the seduction
of cults which worshipped the sun, and to direct the celebration of the day to
Christ, humanity's true "sun". Writing to the pagans, Saint Justin
uses the language of the time to note that Christians gather together "on
the day named after the sun",(30) but for believers the expression had
already assumed a new meaning which was unmistakeably rooted in the Gospel.(31)
Christ is the light of the world (cf. Jn
9:5; also 1:4-5, 9), and, in the weekly reckoning of time, the day
commemorating his Resurrection is the enduring reflection of the epiphany of
his glory. The theme of Sunday as the day illuminated by the triumph of the
Risen Christ is also found in the Liturgy of the Hours(32) and is given special
emphasis in the Pannichida, the
vigil which in the Eastern liturgies prepares for Sunday. From generation to
generation as she gathers on this day, the Church makes her own the wonderment
of Zechariah as he looked upon Christ, seeing in him the dawn which gives
"light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death" (Lk 1:78-79), and she echoes the joy of
Simeon when he takes in his arms the divine Child who has come as the
"light to enlighten the Gentiles" (Lk
2:32).
The day of the gift of
the Spirit
28. Sunday, the day of light, could also be called the day
of "fire", in reference to the Holy Spirit. The light of Christ is
intimately linked to the "fire" of the Spirit, and the two images
together reveal the meaning of the Christian Sunday.(33) When he appeared to
the Apostles on the evening of Easter, Jesus breathed upon them and said:
"Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are
forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained" (Jn 20:22-23). The outpouring of the Spirit
was the great gift of the Risen Lord to his disciples on Easter Sunday. It was again
Sunday when, fifty days after the Resurrection, the Spirit descended in power,
as "a mighty wind" and "fire" (Acts 2:2-3), upon the Apostles gathered with Mary. Pentecost
is not only the founding event of the Church, but is also the mystery which for
ever gives life to the Church.(34) Such an event has its own powerful
liturgical moment in the annual celebration which concludes "the great
Sunday",(35) but it also remains a part of the deep meaning of every
Sunday, because of its intimate bond with the Paschal Mystery. The "weekly
Easter" thus becomes, in a sense, the "weekly Pentecost", when
Christians relive the Apostles' joyful encounter with the Risen Lord and
receive the life-giving breath of his Spirit.
The day of faith
29. Given these different dimensions which set it apart,
Sunday appears as the supreme day of faith.
It is the day when, by the power of the Holy Spirit, who is the Church's living
"memory" (cf. Jn
14:26), the first appearance of the Risen Lord becomes an event renewed in the
"today" of each of Christ's disciples. Gathered in his presence in
the Sunday assembly, believers sense themselves called like the Apostle Thomas:
"Put your finger here, and see my hands. Put out your hand, and place it
in my side. Doubt no longer, but believe" (Jn 20:27). Yes, Sunday is the day of faith. This is stressed
by the fact that the Sunday Eucharistic liturgy, like the liturgy of other
solemnities, includes the Profession of Faith. Recited or sung, the Creed
declares the baptismal and Paschal character of Sunday, making it the day on
which in a special way the baptized renew their adherence to Christ and his
Gospel in a rekindled awareness of their baptismal promises. Listening to the
word and receiving the Body of the Lord, the baptized contemplate the Risen
Jesus present in the "holy signs" and confess with the Apostle
Thomas: "My Lord and my God!" (Jn
20:28).
An indispensable day!
30. It is clear then why, even in our own difficult times,
the identity of this day must be protected and above all must be lived in all
its depth. An Eastern writer of the beginning of the third century recounts
that as early as then the faithful in every region were keeping Sunday holy on
a regular basis.(36) What began as a spontaneous practice later became a
juridically sanctioned norm. The Lord's Day has structured the history of the
Church through two thousand years: how could we think that it will not continue
to shape her future? The pressures of today can make it harder to fulfil the
Sunday obligation; and, with a mother's sensitivity, the Church looks to the
circumstances of each of her children. In particular, she feels herself called
to a new catechetical and pastoral commitment, in order to ensure that, in the
normal course of life, none of her children are deprived of the rich outpouring
of grace which the celebration of the Lord's Day brings. It was in this spirit
that the Second Vatican Council, making a pronouncement on the possibility of
reforming the Church calendar to match different civil calendars, declared that
the Church "is prepared to accept only those arrangements which preserve a
week of seven days with a Sunday".(37) Given its many meanings and
aspects, and its link to the very foundations of the faith, the celebration of
the Christian Sunday remains, on the threshold of the Third Millennium, an
indispensable element of our Christian identity.
CHAPTER III
DIES ECCLESIAE
The
Eucharistic Assembly:
Heart of Sunday
The presence of the Risen
Lord
31. "I am with you always, to the end of the age"
(Mt 28:20). This promise of
Christ never ceases to resound in the Church as the fertile secret of her life
and the wellspring of her hope. As the day of Resurrection, Sunday is not only
the remembrance of a past event: it is a celebration of the living presence of
the Risen Lord in the midst of his own people.
For this presence to be properly proclaimed and lived, it is
not enough that the disciples of Christ pray individually and commemorate the
death and Resurrection of Christ inwardly, in the secrecy of their hearts.
Those who have received the grace of baptism are not saved as individuals
alone, but as members of the Mystical Body, having become part of the People of
God.(38) It is important therefore that they come together to express fully the
very identity of the Church, the ekklesia,
the assembly called together by the Risen Lord who offered his life "to
reunite the scattered children of God" (Jn
11:52). They have become "one" in Christ (cf. Gal 3:28) through the gift of the Spirit.
This unity becomes visible when Christians gather together: it is then that
they come to know vividly and to testify to the world that they are the people
redeemed, drawn "from every tribe and language and people and nation"
(Rev 5:9). The assembly of
Christ's disciples embodies from age to age the image of the first Christian
community which Luke gives as an example in the Acts of the Apostles, when he
recounts that the first baptized believers "devoted themselves to the
apostles' teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the
prayers" (2:42).
The Eucharistic assembly
32. The Eucharist is not only a particularly intense
expression of the reality of the Church's life, but also in a sense its
"fountain-head".(39) The Eucharist feeds and forms the Church:
"Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all
partake of the one bread" (1 Cor
10:17). Because of this vital link with the sacrament of the Body and Blood of
the Lord, the mystery of the Church is savoured, proclaimed, and lived
supremely in the Eucharist.(40)
This ecclesial dimension intrinsic to the Eucharist is
realized in every Eucharistic celebration. But it is expressed most especially
on the day when the whole community comes together to commemorate the Lord's
Resurrection. Significantly, the Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that
"the Sunday celebration of the Lord's Day and his Eucharist is at the
heart of the Church's life".(41)
33. At Sunday Mass, Christians relive with particular
intensity the experience of the Apostles on the evening of Easter when the
Risen Lord appeared to them as they were gathered together (cf. Jn 20:19). In a sense, the People of God
of all times were present in that small nucleus of disciples, the first fruits
of the Church. Through their testimony, every generation of believers hears the
greeting of Christ, rich with the messianic gift of peace, won by his blood and
offered with his Spirit: "Peace be with you!" Christ's return among
them "a week later" (Jn
20:26) can be seen as a radical prefiguring of the Christian community's
practice of coming together every seven days, on "the Lord's Day" or
Sunday, in order to profess faith in his Resurrection and to receive the
blessing which he had promised: "Blessed are those who have not seen and
yet believe" (Jn 20:29). This
close connection between the appearance of the Risen Lord and the Eucharist is
suggested in the Gospel of Luke in the story of the two disciples of Emmaus,
whom Christ approached and led to understand the Scriptures and then sat with
them at table. They recognized him when he "took the bread, said the
blessing, broke it and gave it to them" (24:30). The gestures of Jesus in
this account are his gestures at the Last Supper, with the clear allusion to
the "breaking of bread", as the Eucharist was called by the first
generation of Christians.
The Sunday Eucharist
34. It is true that, in itself, the Sunday Eucharist is no
different from the Eucharist celebrated on other days, nor can it be separated
from liturgical and sacramental life as a whole. By its very nature, the
Eucharist is an epiphany of the Church;(42) and this is most powerfully
expressed when the diocesan community gathers in prayer with its Pastor:
"The Church appears with special clarity when the holy People of God, all
of them, are actively and fully sharing in the same liturgical celebrations —
especially when it is the same Eucharist — sharing one prayer at one altar, at
which the Bishop is presiding, surrounded by his presbyters and his
ministers".(43) This relationship with the Bishop and with the entire
Church community is inherent in every Eucharistic celebration, even when the
Bishop does not preside, regardless of the day of the week on which it is
celebrated. The mention of the Bishop in the Eucharistic Prayer is the
indication of this.
But because of its special solemnity and the obligatory
presence of the community, and because it is celebrated "on the day when
Christ conquered death and gave us a share in his immortal life",(44) the
Sunday Eucharist expresses with greater emphasis its inherent ecclesial
dimension. It becomes the paradigm for other Eucharistic celebrations. Each
community, gathering all its members for the "breaking of the bread",
becomes the place where the mystery of the Church is concretely made present.
In celebrating the Eucharist, the community opens itself to communion with the
universal Church,(45) imploring the Father to "remember the Church
throughout the world" and make her grow in the unity of all the faithful
with the Pope and with the Pastors of the particular Churches, until love is
brought to perfection.
The day of the Church
35. Therefore, the dies
Domini is also the dies Ecclesiae.
This is why on the pastoral level the community aspect of the Sunday
celebration should be particularly stressed. As I have noted elsewhere, among
the many activities of a parish, "none is as vital or as community-forming
as the Sunday celebration of the Lord's Day and his Eucharist".(46)
Mindful of this, the Second Vatican Council recalled that efforts must be made
to ensure that there is "within the parish, a lively sense of community,
in the first place through the community celebration of Sunday Mass".(47)
Subsequent liturgical directives made the same point, asking that on Sundays
and holy days the Eucharistic celebrations held normally in other churches and
chapels be coordinated with the celebration in the parish church, in order
"to foster the sense of the Church community, which is nourished and
expressed in a particular way by the community celebration on Sunday, whether
around the Bishop, especially in the Cathedral, or in the parish assembly, in
which the pastor represents the Bishop".(48)
36. The Sunday assembly is the privileged place of unity: it
is the setting for the celebration of the sacramentum
unitatis which profoundly marks the Church as a people gathered
"by" and "in" the unity of the Father, of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit.(49) For Christian families, the Sunday assembly is one of the
most outstanding expressions of their identity and their "ministry"
as "domestic churches",(50) when parents share with their children at
the one Table of the word and of the Bread of Life. We do well to recall in
this regard that it is first of all the parents who must teach their children
to participate in Sunday Mass; they are assisted in this by catechists, who are
to see to it that initiation into the Mass is made a part of the formation
imparted to the children entrusted to their care, explaining the important
reasons behind the obligatory nature of the precept. When circumstances suggest
it, the celebration of Masses for Children, in keeping with the provisions of
the liturgical norms,(51) can also help in this regard.
At Sunday Masses in parishes, insofar as parishes are
"Eucharistic communities",(52) it is normal to find different groups,
movements, associations and even the smaller religious communities present in
the parish. This allows everyone to experience in common what they share most
deeply, beyond the particular spiritual paths which, by discernment of Church authority,(53)
legitimately distinguish them. This is why on Sunday, the day of gathering,
small group Masses are not to be encouraged: it is not only a question of
ensuring that parish assemblies are not without the necessary ministry of
priests, but also of ensuring that the life and unity of the Church community
are fully safeguarded and promoted.(54) Authorization of possible and clearly
restricted exceptions to this general guideline will depend upon the wise
discernment of the Pastors of the particular Churches, in view of special needs
in the area of formation and pastoral care, and keeping in mind the good of
individuals or groups — especially the benefits which such exceptions may bring
to the entire Christian community.
A pilgrim people
37. As the Church journeys through time, the reference to
Christ's Resurrection and the weekly recurrence of this solemn memorial help to
remind us of the pilgrim and eschatological
character of the People of God. Sunday after Sunday the Church moves
towards the final "Lord's Day", that Sunday which knows no end. The
expectation of Christ's coming is inscribed in the very mystery of the
Church(55) and is evidenced in every Eucharistic celebration. But, with its
specific remembrance of the glory of the Risen Christ, the Lord's Day recalls
with greater intensity the future glory of his "return". This makes
Sunday the day on which the Church, showing forth more clearly her identity as
"Bride", anticipates in some sense the eschatological reality of the
heavenly Jerusalem. Gathering her children into the Eucharistic assembly and
teaching them to wait for the "divine Bridegroom", she engages in a
kind of "exercise of desire",(56) receiving a foretaste of the joy of
the new heavens and new earth, when the holy city, the new Jerusalem, will come
down from God, "prepared as a bride adorned for her husband" (Rev 21:2).
The day of hope
38. Viewed in this way, Sunday is not only the day of faith,
but is also the day of Christian hope.
To share in "the Lord's Supper" is to anticipate the eschatological
feast of the "marriage of the Lamb" (Rev
19:9). Celebrating this memorial of Christ, risen and ascended into heaven, the
Christian community waits "in joyful hope for the coming of our Saviour,
Jesus Christ".(57) Renewed and nourished by this intense weekly rhythm,
Christian hope becomes the leaven and the light of human hope. This is why the
Prayer of the Faithful responds not only to the needs of the particular
Christian community but also to those of all humanity; and the Church, coming
together for the Eucharistic celebration, shows to the world that she makes her
own "the joys and hopes, the sorrows and anxieties of people today,
especially of the poor and all those who suffer".(58) With the offering of
the Sunday Eucharist, the Church crowns the witness which her children strive
to offer every day of the week by proclaiming the Gospel and practising charity
in the world of work and in all the many tasks of life; thus she shows forth
more plainly her identity "as a sacrament, or sign and instrument of
intimate union with God and of the unity of the entire human race".(59)
The table of the word
39. As in every Eucharistic celebration, the Risen Lord is
encountered in the Sunday assembly at the twofold table of the word and of the
Bread of Life. The table of the word offers the same understanding of the
history of salvation and especially of the Paschal Mystery which the Risen
Jesus himself gave to his disciples: it is Christ who speaks, present as he is
in his word "when Sacred Scripture is read in the Church".(60) At the
table of the Bread of Life, the Risen Lord becomes really, substantially and
enduringly present through the memorial of his Passion and Resurrection, and
the Bread of Life is offered as a pledge of future glory. The Second Vatican
Council recalled that "the Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of the
Eucharist are so closely joined together that they form a single act of
worship".(61) The Council also urged that "the table of the word of
God be more lavishly prepared for the faithful, opening to them more abundantly
the treasures of the Bible".(62) It then decreed that, in Masses of Sunday
and holy days of obligation, the homily should not be omitted except for
serious reasons.(63) These timely decrees were faithfully embodied in the
liturgical reform, about which Paul VI wrote, commenting upon the richer
offering of biblical readings on Sunday and holy days: "All this has been
decreed so as to foster more and more in the faithful 'that hunger for hearing
the word of the Lord' (Am 8:11)
which, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, spurs the People of the New
Covenant on towards the perfect unity of the Church".(64)
40. In considering the Sunday Eucharist more than thirty
years after the Council, we need to assess how well the word of God is being
proclaimed and how effectively the People of God have grown in knowledge and
love of Sacred Scripture.(65) There are two aspects of this — that of celebration and that of personal appropriation — and they are very
closely related. At the level of celebration, the fact that the Council made it
possible to proclaim the word of God in the language of the community taking
part in the celebration must awaken a new sense of responsibility towards the
word, allowing "the distinctive character of the sacred text" to
shine forth "even in the mode of reading or singing".(66) At the
level of personal appropriation, the hearing of the word of God proclaimed must
be well prepared in the souls of the faithful by an apt knowledge of Scripture
and, where pastorally possible, by special
initiatives designed to deepen understanding of the biblical readings,
particularly those used on Sundays and holy days. If Christian individuals and
families are not regularly drawing new life from the reading of the sacred text
in a spirit of prayer and docility to the Church's interpretation,(67) then it
is difficult for the liturgical proclamation of the word of God alone to
produce the fruit we might expect. This is the value of initiatives in parish
communities which bring together during the week those who take part in the
Eucharist — priest, ministers and faithful(68) — in order to prepare the Sunday
liturgy, reflecting beforehand upon the word of God which will be proclaimed.
The objective sought here is that the entire celebration — praying, singing,
listening, and not just the preaching — should express in some way the theme of
the Sunday liturgy, so that all those taking part may be penetrated more
powerfully by it. Clearly, much depends on those who exercise the ministry of
the word. It is their duty to prepare the reflection on the word of the Lord by
prayer and study of the sacred text, so that they may then express its contents
faithfully and apply them to people's concerns and to their daily lives.
41. It should also be borne in mind that the liturgical proclamation of the word of God,
especially in the Eucharistic assembly, is not so much a time for meditation
and catechesis as a dialogue between God and
his People, a dialogue in which the wonders of salvation are
proclaimed and the demands of the Covenant are continually restated. On their
part, the People of God are drawn to respond to this dialogue of love by giving
thanks and praise, also by demonstrating their fidelity to the task of
continual "conversion". The Sunday assembly commits us therefore to
an inner renewal of our baptismal promises, which are in a sense implicit in
the recitation of the Creed, and are an explicit part of the liturgy of the
Easter Vigil and whenever Baptism is celebrated during Mass. In this context,
the proclamation of the word in the Sunday Eucharistic celebration takes on the
solemn tone found in the Old Testament at moments when the Covenant was
renewed, when the Law was proclaimed and the community of Israel was called — like
the People in the desert at the foot of Sinai (cf. Ex 19:7-8; 24:3,7) — to repeats its "yes",
renewing its decision to be faithful to God and to obey his commandments. In
speaking his word, God awaits our response: a response which Christ has already
made for us with his "Amen" (cf. 2
Cor 1:20-22), and which echoes in us through the Holy Spirit so that
what we hear may involve us at the deepest level.(69)
The table of the Body of
Christ
42. The table of the word leads naturally to the table of
the Eucharistic Bread and prepares the community to live its many aspects,
which in the Sunday Eucharist assume an especially solemn character. As the
whole community gathers to celebrate "the Lord's Day", the Eucharist
appears more clearly than on other days as the great "thanksgiving"
in which the Spirit-filled Church turns to the Father, becoming one with Christ
and speaking in the name of all humanity. The rhythm of the week prompts us to
gather up in grateful memory the events of the days which have just passed, to
review them in the light of God and to thank him for his countless gifts,
glorifying him "through Christ, with Christ and in Christ, in the unity of
the Holy Spirit". The Christian community thus comes to a renewed
awareness of the fact that all things were created through Christ (cf. Col 1:16; Jn
1:3), and that in Christ, who came in the form of a slave to take on and redeem
our human condition, all things have been restored (cf. Eph 1:10), in order to be handed over to
God the Father, from whom all things come to be and draw their life. Then,
giving assent to the Eucharistic doxology with their "Amen", the
People of God look in faith and hope towards the eschatological end, when
Christ "will deliver the kingdom to God the Father ... so that God may be
everything to everyone" (1 Cor
15:24, 28).
43. This "ascending" movement is inherent in every
Eucharistic celebration and makes it a joyous event, overflowing with gratitude
and hope. But it emerges particularly at Sunday Mass because of its special
link with the commemoration of the Resurrection. By contrast, this
"Eucharistic" rejoicing which "lifts up our hearts" is the
fruit of God's "descending" movement towards us, which remains for
ever etched in the essential sacrificial element of the Eucharist, the supreme
expression and celebration of the mystery of the kenosis, the descent by which Christ "humbled himself,
and became obedient unto death, even death on a Cross" (Phil 2:8).
The Mass in fact truly
makes present the sacrifice of the Cross. Under the species of bread
and wine, upon which has been invoked the outpouring of the Spirit who works
with absolutely unique power in the words of consecration, Christ offers
himself to the Father in the same act of sacrifice by which he offered himself
on the Cross. "In this divine sacrifice which is accomplished in the Mass,
the same Christ who offered himself once and for all in a bloody manner on the
altar of the Cross is contained and is offered in an unbloody manner".(70)
To his sacrifice Christ unites the sacrifice of the Church: "In the
Eucharist the sacrifice of Christ becomes also the sacrifice of the members of
his Body. The lives of the faithful, their praise, sufferings, prayer and work,
are united with those of Christ and with his total offering, and so acquire a
new value".(71) The truth that the whole community shares in Christ's
sacrifice is especially evident in the Sunday gathering, which makes it
possible to bring to the altar the week that has passed, with all its human
burdens.
Easter banquet and
fraternal gathering
44. The communal character of the Eucharist emerges in a
special way when it is seen as the Easter banquet, in which Christ himself
becomes our nourishment. In fact, "for this purpose Christ entrusted to
the Church this sacrifice: so that the faithful might share in it, both
spiritually, in faith and charity, and sacramentally, in the banquet of Holy
Communion. Sharing in the Lord's Supper is always communion with Christ, who
offers himself for us in sacrifice to the Father".(72) This is why the
Church recommends that the faithful receive
communion when they take part in the Eucharist, provided that they
are properly disposed and, if aware of grave sin, have received God's pardon in
the Sacrament of Reconciliation,(73) in the spirit of what Saint Paul writes to
the community at Corinth (cf. 1 Cor
11:27-32). Obviously, the invitation to Eucharistic communion is more insistent
in the case of Mass on Sundays and holy days.
It is also important to be ever mindful that communion with
Christ is deeply tied to communion with our brothers and sisters. The Sunday
Eucharistic gathering is an experience of
brotherhood, which the celebration should demonstrate clearly, while
ever respecting the nature of the liturgical action. All this will be helped by
gestures of welcome and by the tone of prayer, alert to the needs of all in the
community. The sign of peace — in the Roman Rite significantly placed before
Eucharistic communion — is a particularly expressive gesture which the faithful
are invited to make as a manifestation of the People of God's acceptance of all
that has been accomplished in the celebration(74) and of the commitment to
mutual love which is made in sharing the one bread, with the demanding words of
Christ in mind: "If you are offering your gift at the altar, and there
remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there
before the altar and go; first be reconciled with your brother, and then come
and offer your gift" (Mt
5:23-24).
From Mass to
"mission"
45. Receiving the Bread of Life, the disciples of Christ
ready themselves to undertake with the strength of the Risen Lord and his
Spirit the tasks which await them in their
ordinary life. For the faithful who have understood the meaning of
what they have done, the Eucharistic celebration does not stop at the church
door. Like the first witnesses of the Resurrection, Christians who gather each
Sunday to experience and proclaim the presence of the Risen Lord are called to evangelize and bear witness in their
daily lives. Given this, the Prayer after Communion and the Concluding Rite —
the Final Blessing and the Dismissal — need to be better valued and
appreciated, so that all who have shared in the Eucharist may come to a deeper
sense of the responsibility which is entrusted to them. Once the assembly
disperses, Christ's disciples return to their everyday surroundings with the
commitment to make their whole life a gift, a spiritual sacrifice pleasing to
God (cf. Rom 12:1). They feel
indebted to their brothers and sisters because of what they have received in
the celebration, not unlike the disciples of Emmaus who, once they had
recognized the Risen Christ "in the breaking of the bread" (cf. Lk 24:30-32), felt the need to return
immediately to share with their brothers and sisters the joy of meeting the
Lord (cf. Lk 24:33-35).
The Sunday obligation
46. Since the Eucharist is the very heart of Sunday, it is
clear why, from the earliest centuries, the Pastors of the Church have not
ceased to remind the faithful of the need to
take part in the liturgical assembly. "Leave everything on the
Lord's Day", urges the third century text known as the Didascalia, "and run diligently to
your assembly, because it is your praise of God. Otherwise, what excuse will
they make to God, those who do not come together on the Lord's Day to hear the
word of life and feed on the divine nourishment which lasts forever?".(75)
The faithful have generally accepted this call of the Pastors with conviction
of soul and, although there have been times and situations when this duty has
not been perfectly met, one should never forget the genuine heroism of priests
and faithful who have fulfilled this obligation even when faced with danger and
the denial of religious freedom, as can be documented from the first centuries
of Christianity up to our own time.
In his first Apology addressed to the Emperor Antoninus and
the Senate, Saint Justin proudly described the Christian practice of the Sunday
assembly, which gathered in one place Christians from both the city and the
countryside.(76) When, during the persecution of Diocletian, their assemblies
were banned with the greatest severity, many were courageous enough to defy the
imperial decree and accepted death rather than miss the Sunday Eucharist. This
was the case of the martyrs of Abitina, in Proconsular Africa, who replied to
their accusers: "Without fear of any kind we have celebrated the Lord's
Supper, because it cannot be missed; that is our law"; "We cannot
live without the Lord's Supper". As she confessed her faith, one of the
martyrs said: "Yes, I went to the assembly and I celebrated the Lord's
Supper with my brothers and sisters, because I am a Christian".(77)
47. Even if in the earliest times it was not judged
necessary to be prescriptive, the Church has not ceased to confirm this
obligation of conscience, which rises from the inner need felt so strongly by
the Christians of the first centuries. It was only later, faced with the
half-heartedness or negligence of some, that the Church had to make explicit the
duty to attend Sunday Mass: more often than not, this was done in the form of
exhortation, but at times the Church had to resort to specific canonical
precepts. This was the case in a number of local Councils from the fourth
century onwards (as at the Council of Elvira of 300, which speaks not of an
obligation but of penalties after three absences)(78) and most especially from
the sixth century onwards (as at the Council of Agde in 506).(79) These decrees
of local Councils led to a universal practice, the obligatory character of
which was taken as something quite normal.(80)
The Code of Canon Law of 1917 for the first time gathered
this tradition into a universal law.(81) The present Code reiterates this,
saying that "on Sundays and other holy days of obligation the faithful are
bound to attend Mass".(82) This legislation has normally been understood
as entailing a grave obligation: this is the teaching of the Catechism of the
Catholic Church,(83) and it is easy to understand why if we keep in mind how vital
Sunday is for the Christian life.
48. Today, as in the heroic times of the beginning, many who
wish to live in accord with the demands of their faith are being faced with
difficult situations in various parts of the world. They live in surroundings
which are sometimes decidedly hostile and at other times — more frequently in
fact — indifferent and unresponsive to the Gospel message. If believers are not
to be overwhelmed, they must be able to count on the support of the Christian
community. This is why they must be convinced that it is crucially important
for the life of faith that they should come together with others on Sundays to
celebrate the Passover of the Lord in the sacrament of the New Covenant. It is
the special responsibility of the Bishops, therefore, "to ensure that
Sunday is appreciated by all the faithful, kept holy and celebrated as truly
'the Lord's Day', on which the Church comes together to renew the remembrance
of the Easter mystery in hearing the word of God, in offering the sacrifice of
the Lord, in keeping the day holy by means of prayer, works of charity and
abstention from work".(84)
49. Because the faithful are obliged to attend Mass unless
there is a grave impediment, Pastors have the corresponding duty to offer to
everyone the real possibility of fulfilling the precept. The provisions of
Church law move in this direction, as for example in the faculty granted to
priests, with the prior authorization of the diocesan Bishop, to celebrate more
than one Mass on Sundays and holy days,(85) the institution of evening
Masses(86) and the provision which allows the obligation to be fulfilled from
Saturday evening onwards, starting at the time of First Vespers of Sunday.(87)
From a liturgical point of view, in fact, holy days begin with First
Vespers.(88) Consequently, the liturgy of what is sometimes called the
"Vigil Mass" is in effect the "festive" Mass of Sunday, at
which the celebrant is required to preach the homily and recite the Prayer of
the Faithful.
Moreover, Pastors should remind the faithful that when they
are away from home on Sundays they are to take care to attend Mass wherever
they may be, enriching the local community with their personal witness. At the
same time, these communities should show a warm sense of welcome to visiting
brothers and sisters, especially in places which attract many tourists and
pilgrims, for whom it will often be necessary to provide special religious
assistance.(89)
A joyful celebration in
song
50. Given the nature of Sunday Mass and its importance in
the lives of the faithful, it must be prepared with special care. In ways
dictated by pastoral experience and local custom in keeping with liturgical
norms, efforts must be made to ensure that the celebration has the festive
character appropriate to the day commemorating the Lord's Resurrection. To this
end, it is important to devote attention to the songs used by the assembly, since singing is a particularly
apt way to express a joyful heart, accentuating the solemnity of the
celebration and fostering the sense of a common faith and a shared love. Care
must be taken to ensure the quality, both of the texts and of the melodies, so
that what is proposed today as new and creative will conform to liturgical
requirements and be worthy of the Church's tradition which, in the field of
sacred music, boasts a priceless heritage.
A celebration involving
all
51. There is a need too to ensure that all those present,
children and adults, take an active interest, by encouraging their involvement
at those points where the liturgy suggests and recommends it.(90) Of course, it
falls only to those who exercise the priestly ministry to effect the
Eucharistic Sacrifice and to offer it to God in the name of the whole
people.(91) This is the basis of the distinction, which is much more than a
matter of discipline, between the task proper to the celebrant and that which
belongs to deacons and the non-ordained faithful.(92) Yet the faithful must
realize that, because of the common priesthood received in Baptism, "they
participate in the offering of the Eucharist".(93) Although there is a
distinction of roles, they still "offer to God the divine victim and
themselves with him. Offering the sacrifice and receiving holy communion, they
take part actively in the liturgy",(94) finding in it light and strength
to live their baptismal priesthood and the witness of a holy life.
Other moments of the
Christian Sunday
52. Sharing in the Eucharist is the heart of Sunday, but the
duty to keep Sunday holy cannot be reduced to this. In fact, the Lord's Day is
lived well if it is marked from beginning to end by grateful and active
remembrance of God's saving work. This commits each of Christ's disciples to
shape the other moments of the day — those outside the liturgical context:
family life, social relationships, moments of relaxation — in such a way that
the peace and joy of the Risen Lord will emerge in the ordinary events of life.
For example, the relaxed gathering of parents and children can be an
opportunity not only to listen to one another but also to share a few formative
and more reflective moments. Even in lay life, when possible, why not make
provision for special times of prayer
— especially the solemn celebration of Vespers, for example — or moments of catechesis, which on the eve of
Sunday or on Sunday afternoon might prepare for or complete the gift of the
Eucharist in people's hearts?
This rather traditional way of keeping Sunday holy has
perhaps become more difficult for many people; but the Church shows her faith
in the strength of the Risen Lord and the power of the Holy Spirit by making it
known that, today more than ever, she is unwilling to settle for minimalism and
mediocrity at the level of faith. She wants to help Christians to do what is
most correct and pleasing to the Lord. And despite the difficulties, there are
positive and encouraging signs. In many parts of the Church, a new need for
prayer in its many forms is being felt; and this is a gift of the Holy Spirit.
There is also a rediscovery of ancient religious practices, such as
pilgrimages; and often the faithful take advantage of Sunday rest to visit a
Shrine where, with the whole family perhaps, they can spend time in a more
intense experience of faith. These are moments of grace which must be fostered
through evangelization and guided by genuine pastoral wisdom.
Sunday assemblies without
a priest
53. There remains the problem of parishes which do not have
the ministry of a priest for the celebration of the Sunday Eucharist. This is
often the case in young Churches, where one priest has pastoral responsibility
for faithful scattered over a vast area. However, emergency situations can also
arise in countries of long-standing Christian tradition, where diminishing
numbers of clergy make it impossible to guarantee the presence of a priest in
every parish community. In situations where the Eucharist cannot be celebrated,
the Church recommends that the Sunday assembly come together even without a
priest,(95) in keeping with the indications and directives of the Holy See
which have been entrusted to the Episcopal Conferences for implementation.(96)
Yet the objective must always remain the celebration of the Sacrifice of the
Mass, the one way in which the Passover of the Lord becomes truly present, the
only full realization of the Eucharistic assembly over which the priest
presides in persona Christi,
breaking the bread of the word and the Eucharist. At the pastoral level,
therefore, everything has to be done to ensure that the Sacrifice of the Mass
is made available as often as possible to the faithful who are regularly
deprived of it, either by arranging the presence of a priest from time to time,
or by taking every opportunity to organize a gathering in a central location
accessible to scattered groups.
Radio and television
54. Finally, the faithful who, because of sickness,
disability or some other serious cause, are prevented from taking part, should
as best they can unite themselves with the celebration of Sunday Mass from
afar, preferably by means of the readings and prayers for that day from the
Missal, as well as through their desire for the Eucharist.(97) In many
countries, radio and television make it possible to join in the Eucharistic
celebration broadcast from some sacred place.(98) Clearly, this kind of
broadcast does not in itself fulfil the Sunday obligation, which requires
participation in the fraternal assembly gathered in one place, where
Eucharistic communion can be received. But for those who cannot take part in
the Eucharist and who are therefore excused from the obligation, radio and
television are a precious help, especially if accompanied by the generous
service of extraordinary ministers who bring the Eucharist to the sick, also
bringing them the greeting and solidarity of the whole community. Sunday Mass
thus produces rich fruits for these Christians too, and they are truly enabled
to experience Sunday as "the Lord's Day" and "the Church's
day".
CHAPTER IV
DIES HOMINIS
Sunday:
Day of Joy, Rest and Solidarity
The "full joy"
of Christ
55. "Blessed be he who has raised the great day of
Sunday above all other days. The heavens and the earth, angels and of men give
themselves over to joy".(99) This cry of the Maronite liturgy captures
well the intense acclamations of joy which have always characterized Sunday in
the liturgy of both East and West. Moreover, historically — even before it was
seen as a day of rest, which in any case was not provided for in the civil
calendar — Christians celebrated the weekly day of the Risen Lord primarily as
a day of joy. "On the first day of the week, you shall all rejoice",
urges the Didascalia. (100) This
was also emphasized by liturgical practice, through the choice of appropriate
gestures. (101) Voicing an awareness widespread in the Church, Saint Augustine
describes the joy of the weekly Easter: "Fasting, is set aside and prayers
are said standing, as a sign of the Resurrection, which is also why the
Alleluia is sung on every Sunday". (102)
56. Beyond particular ritual forms, which can vary in time
depending upon Church discipline, there remains the fact that Sunday, as a
weekly echo of the first encounter with the Risen Lord, is unfailingly marked
by the joy with which the disciples greeted the Master: "The disciples
rejoiced to see the Lord" (Jn
20:20). This was the confirmation of the words which Jesus spoke before the
Passion and which resound in every Christian generation: "You will be
sorrowful, but your sorrow will turn to joy" (Jn 16:20). Had not he himself prayed for this, that the
disciples would have "the fullness of his joy" (cf. Jn 17:13)? The festive character of the
Sunday Eucharist expresses the joy that Christ communicates to his Church
through the gift of the Spirit. Joy is precisely one of the fruits of the Holy
Spirit (cf. Rom 14:17; Gal 5:22).
57. Therefore, if we wish to rediscover the full meaning of
Sunday, we must rediscover this aspect of the life of faith. Certainly,
Christian joy must mark the whole of life, and not just one day of the week.
But in virtue of its significance as the day
of the Risen Lord, celebrating God's work of creation and "new
creation", Sunday is the day of joy in a very special way, indeed the day
most suitable for learning how to rejoice and to rediscover the true nature and
deep roots of joy. This joy should never be confused with shallow feelings of
satisfaction and pleasure, which inebriate the senses and emotions for a brief
moment, but then leave the heart unfulfilled and perhaps even embittered. In
the Christian view, joy is much more enduring and consoling; as the saints
attest, it can hold firm even in the dark night of suffering. (103) It is, in a
certain sense, a "virtue" to be nurtured.
58. Yet there is no conflict whatever between Christian joy
and true human joys, which in fact are exalted and find their ultimate
foundation precisely in the joy of the glorified Christ, the perfect image and
revelation of man as God intended. As my revered predecessor Paul VI wrote in
his Exhortation on Christian joy: "In essence, Christian joy is a sharing
in the unfathomable joy, at once divine and human, found in the heart of the
glorified Christ". (104) Pope Paul concluded his Exhortation by asking
that, on the Lord's Day, the Church should witness powerfully to the joy
experienced by the Apostles when they saw the Lord on the evening of Easter. To
this end, he urged pastors to insist "upon the need for the baptized to
celebrate the Sunday Eucharist in joy. How could they neglect this encounter,
this banquet which Christ prepares for us in his love? May our sharing in it be
most worthy and joyful! It is Christ, crucified and glorified, who comes among
his disciples, to lead them all together into the newness of his Resurrection.
This is the climax, here below, of the covenant of love between God and his
people: the sign and source of Christian joy, a stage on the way to the eternal
feast". (105) This vision of faith shows the Christian Sunday to be a true
"time for celebration", a day given by God to men and women for their
full human and spiritual growth.
The fulfilment of the
Sabbath
59. This aspect of the Christian Sunday shows in a special
way how it is the fulfilment of the Old Testament Sabbath. On the Lord's Day,
which — as we have already said — the Old Testament links to the work of
creation (cf. Gn 2:1-3; Ex 20:8-11) and the Exodus (cf. Dt 5:12-15), the Christian is called to
proclaim the new creation and the new covenant brought about in the Paschal
Mystery of Christ. Far from being abolished, the celebration of creation
becomes more profound within a Christocentric perspective, being seen in the
light of the God's plan "to unite all things in [Christ], things in heaven
and things on earth" (Eph
1:10). The remembrance of the liberation of the Exodus also assumes its full
meaning as it becomes a remembrance of the universal redemption accomplished by
Christ in his Death and Resurrection. More than a "replacement" for
the Sabbath, therefore, Sunday is its fulfilment, and in a certain sense its
extension and full expression in the ordered unfolding of the history of
salvation, which reaches its culmination in Christ.
60. In this perspective, the biblical theology of the
"Sabbath" can be recovered in full, without compromising the
Christian character of Sunday. It is a theology which leads us ever anew and in
unfailing awe to the mystery of the beginning, when the eternal Word of God, by
a free decision of love, created the world from nothing. The work of creation
was sealed by the blessing and consecration of the day on which God ceased
"from all the work which he had done in creation" (Gn 2:3). This day of God's rest confers
meaning upon time, which in the sequence of weeks assumes not only a
chronological regularity but also, in a manner of speaking, a theological
resonance. The constant return of the "shabbat"
ensures that there is no risk of time being closed in upon itself, since, in
welcoming God and his kairoi —
the moments of his grace and his saving acts — time remains open to eternity.
61. As the seventh day blessed and consecrated by God, the
"shabbat" concludes the whole work of creation, and is therefore
immediately linked to the work of the sixth day when God made man "in his
image and likeness" (cf. Gn
1:26). This very close connection between the "day of God" and the
"day of man" did not escape the Fathers in their meditation on the
biblical creation story. Saint Ambrose says in this regard: "Thanks, then,
to the Lord our God who accomplished a work in which he might find rest. He
made the heavens, but I do not read that he found rest there; he made the
stars, the moon, the sun, and neither do I read that he found rest in them. I
read instead that he made man and that then he rested, finding in man one to
whom he could offer the forgiveness of sins". (106) Thus there will be for
ever a direct link between the "day of God" and the "day of
man". When the divine commandment declares: "Remember the Sabbath day
in order to keep it holy" (Ex
20:8), the rest decreed in order to honour the day dedicated to God is not at
all a burden imposed upon man, but rather an aid to help him to recognize his
life-giving and liberating dependence upon the Creator, and at the same time
his calling to cooperate in the Creator's work and to receive his grace. In
honouring God's "rest", man fully discovers himself, and thus the
Lord's Day bears the profound imprint of God's blessing (cf. Gn 2:3), by virtue of which, we might say,
it is endowed in a way similar to the animals and to man himself, with a kind
of "fruitfulness" (cf. Gn
1:22, 28). This "fruitfulness" is apparent above all in filling and,
in a certain sense, "multiplying" time itself, deepening in men and
women the joy of living and the desire to foster and communicate life.
62. It is the duty of Christians therefore to remember that,
although the practices of the Jewish Sabbath are gone, surpassed as they are by
the "fulfilment" which Sunday brings, the underlying reasons for
keeping "the Lord's Day" holy — inscribed solemnly in the Ten
Commandments — remain valid, though they need to be reinterpreted in the light
of the theology and spirituality of Sunday: "Remember the Sabbath day to
keep it holy, as the Lord your God commanded you. Six days you shall labour,
and do all your work; but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God.
Then you shall do no work, you, or your son, or your daughter, or your servant,
or your maid, or your ox, or your ass, or any of your beasts, or the foreigner
within your gates, that your servant and maid may rest as well as you. You
shall remember that you were a servant in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your
God brought you out from there with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm.
Therefore the Lord your God commanded that you keep the Sabbath day" (Dt 5:12-15). Here the Sabbath observance
is closely linked with the liberation which God accomplished for his people.
63. Christ came to accomplish a new "exodus", to
restore freedom to the oppressed. He performed many healings on the Sabbath
(cf. Mt 12:9-14 and parallels),
certainly not to violate the Lord's Day, but to reveal its full meaning:
"The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath" (Mk 2:27). Opposing the excessively
legalistic interpretation of some of his contemporaries, and developing the
true meaning of the biblical Sabbath, Jesus, as "Lord of the Sabbath"
(Mk 2:28), restores to the
Sabbath observance its liberating character, carefully safeguarding the rights
of God and the rights of man. This is why Christians, called as they are to
proclaim the liberation won by the blood of Christ, felt that they had the
authority to transfer the meaning of the Sabbath to the day of the
Resurrection. The Passover of Christ has in fact liberated man from a slavery
more radical than any weighing upon an oppressed people — the slavery of sin,
which alienates man from God, and alienates man from himself and from others,
constantly sowing within history the seeds of evil and violence.
The day of rest
64. For several centuries, Christians observed Sunday simply
as a day of worship, without being able to give it the specific meaning of
Sabbath rest. Only in the fourth century did the civil law of the Roman Empire
recognize the weekly recurrence, determining that on "the day of the
sun" the judges, the people of the cities and the various trade
corporations would not work. (107) Christians rejoiced to see thus removed the
obstacles which until then had sometimes made observance of the Lord's Day
heroic. They could now devote themselves to prayer in common without hindrance.
(108)
It would therefore be wrong to see in this legislation of
the rhythm of the week a mere historical circumstance with no special
significance for the Church and which she could simply set aside. Even after
the fall of the Empire, the Councils did not cease to insist upon the
arrangements regarding Sunday rest. In countries where Christians are in the minority
and where the festive days of the calendar do not coincide with Sunday, it is
still Sunday which remains the Lord's Day, the day on which the faithful come
together for the Eucharistic assembly. But this involves real sacrifices. For
Christians it is not normal that Sunday, the day of joyful celebration, should
not also be a day of rest, and it is difficult for them to keep Sunday holy if
they do not have enough free time.
65. By contrast, the link between the Lord's Day and the day
of rest in civil society has a meaning and importance which go beyond the
distinctly Christian point of view. The alternation between work and rest,
built into human nature, is willed by God himself, as appears in the creation
story in the Book of Genesis (cf. 2:2-3; Ex
20:8-11): rest is something "sacred", because it is man's way of
withdrawing from the sometimes excessively demanding cycle of earthly tasks in
order to renew his awareness that everything is the work of God. There is a
risk that the prodigious power over creation which God gives to man can lead
him to forget that God is the Creator upon whom everything depends. It is all
the more urgent to recognize this dependence in our own time, when science and
technology have so incredibly increased the power which man exercises through
his work.
66. Finally, it should not be forgotten that even in our own
day work is very oppressive for many people, either because of miserable
working conditions and long hours — especially in the poorer regions of the
world — or because of the persistence in economically more developed societies
of too many cases of injustice and exploitation of man by man. When, through
the centuries, she has made laws concerning Sunday rest, (109) the Church has
had in mind above all the work of servants and workers, certainly not because
this work was any less worthy when compared to the spiritual requirements of
Sunday observance, but rather because it needed greater regulation to lighten
its burden and thus enable everyone to keep the Lord's Day holy. In this
matter, my predecessor Pope Leo XIII in his Encyclical Rerum
Novarum spoke of Sunday rest as a worker's right which the State
must guarantee. (110)
In our own historical context