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Saturday, April 8, 2023

Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community Easter Vigil Liturgy, April 8, 2023






Zoom link: 

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81534075389?pwd=TTdGY2NxS3AzTW13ODJESkdYME9aUT09


Meeting ID: 815 3407 5389
Passcode: 803326


MMOJ Liturgical Ministers for Easter Vigil:
Presiders: Bridget Mary Meehan, Elena Garcia, Michael Rigdon, Kathryn Shea, Lee Breyer, Dotty Shugrue, Readers: Mary Al Gagnon, Anna Davis, Joan Pesce, Prayer Leaders: Beth Ponce, Jim Brandi, IT: Cheryl Brandi




Gathering and Welcome:


Elena: We warmly welcome you to our celebration of the Easter Vigil, a holy and blessed night in which we recall the reawakening of Jesus to new life. We are so happy you have joined us and we welcome you to share in our eucharistic celebration of Hope as we gather around this zoom table of friendship and unity.


Service of Light


Elena: The Divine Mystery, which is our Lover, the power of the Beloved which rises in every act of love and the Breath of Love which breathes in, with and through and beyond the Cosmos is with you, within you and beyond you.  (Dawn Hutchings)


On this most sacred night, in which Jesus Christ passed over from this earth to a new life, the People of God everywhere come together from all over to watch and pray.


 Like Mary Magdalene and the other women, who came to the tomb weeping and, there, encountered the Risen One's  ongoing presence with them, our tears and longings move us more deeply into union with God and with our sisters and brothers everywhere. 


Blessing of the Fire and Paschal Candle


Elena: We begin our liturgical celebration today by blessing the Easter fire, lighting our Easter Candle and our individual candles – a symbol of the Risen Christ, alive in and around us. Hallelujah!


Elena sets the fire.  When lit, the fire is blessed.


Elena: Let us pray. As we bless this new fire -- and may our paschal celebrations,  be inflamed with new hope.  May our Easter celebration empower us to make possible the impossible. Christ is raised from the dead, and as his sisters and brothers, we are raised with him imbued with Resurrection power.  


Preparation of the Paschal Candle

Elena:    

Christ, yesterday and today (pause);    The Beginning and the End  


The Alpha and Omega;    (first pin is inserted)   


 All time belongs to God;    (second pin is inserted) 


 And all the ages;     (third pin is inserted) 


 To Jesus, be glory and power;     (fourth pin is inserted) 


Elena:    Through all time and all places,  Amen      (fifth pin is inserted) 



Elena and All:    May the light of Christ - rising in glory - dispel the darkness of our hearts and minds.  We Rejoice.  We Remember.


Michael:    The Christ – a spark that lit the cosmos at the beginning of time.

Michael and All:    We Rejoice. We Remember.


Michael: The Christ – a spark that is expanding across time.

Michael and All:    We Rejoice.  We Remember.


Michael:    The Christ – a spark that was borne, sheltered and passed to us by our ancestors.

Michael and All:    We Rejoice.  We Remember.


Michael: The Christ – a spark that was fanned into flame by those who ignited our lives in love and wisdom and joy.

Michael and All:    We Rejoice.  We Remember.


Michael    The Christ – a spark that is a sacred trust held by us to pass on to generations yet to come.

Michael and All:    We Rejoice.   We Remember.  We celebrate. 

        (Alexander J. Shaia) 


Procession 

As our individual candles are lit from the Easter Candle, The Cantor will sing three times, each time on a higher note  Lumen Christi, light of Christ,”  and all will respond with Michael: 

Deo Gratia, thanks be to God.


This is the time when you light your candles and hold them up so that they maybe symbolically joined to the many candles on this table that represent our loved ones who have transitioned into eternal life and are united with us in a communion of saints.


Michael: Lumen Christi, light of Christ.    (3 Xs)

Michael and All: Deo gratia.  Thanks be to God!  



Easter Proclamation

Michael: At the Easter Vigil, the Church proclaims the Exultet, a glorious hymn of praise, about the Holy One’s compassionate presence in creation, the liberating history of the people of Israel, the story of Jesus’ life, death and resurrection.   In the radiant presence of the Risen Christ dwelling within us and present everywhere, we are filled with hope for the transformation of our suffering world in the embrace of infinite love.  May we be filled with joy as we experience a contemporary Easter Proclamation.


Copelands “Fanfare for the Common Man” played by an orchestra in Dublin Airport.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltBX_AhuaWc
 



The Liturgy of the Word


Lee: First Reading:  A Reading from "Jesus at Easter: Individual Ascension or Universal Resurrection?" 

Every major event in Jesus' life is described in the gospel texts except the Resurrection. there is no description of the actual moment of Jesus' transition from buried death to visionary life. 


To fill in the absence of any gospel description of the Easter moment itself, two divergent theologies and iconographies were developed within Western and Eastern Christianity.


In the Empty Tomb Tradition, female and male disciples discover the vacant tomb on Easter Sunday Morning. This involves one (john 20:1-2,

two (Matt. 28:1, three (Mark 16:1)or more women (Luke 24:10). It also involves men in some competition with one another (Luke 24:12; John 20:3-10).


In the Multiples Appearances Tradition, Jesus appears to and speaks with both female and male disciples... {but} only two named individuals are singled out by themselves as recipients of such apparitions: Mary in John 20:1-18 and Peter in Luke 24:34.


In Western Christianity, the Easter moment was already depicted with Jesus' symbolic body by 400, and by his physical body by 900. From 900-1300, Jesus' physical body was depicted first inside the tomb, then emerging from it (one leg still in, the other already out) and finally hovering outside and above the tomb.


In Eastern Christianity, the Easter moment is radically different. Jesus appears invading hades -As Death's -Prison by trampling underfoot Hades as Death's Warden and liberating- hand to-hand- the whole human race represented by and incarnated in Adam and Eve. Created by 700, this tradition develops and expands across 1300 years but never deviates from the vision of what we should call the Universal Resurrection of Jesus-and-Humanity. Jesus never arises alone in Eastern Christianity. Next, more than that, Jesus raises the whole human race with him. 


In the Easter imagery of Eastern Christianity is that Jesus almost always carries a cross symbolic of his Execution. Eastern iconography holds closely and visually together the individual execution of Jesus and the Universal Resurrection with Jesus. 


When Jesus was executed for nonviolent resistance to violent injustice and carrying the cross of that execution, grasps the hands of Adam- and -Eve , that is , of all humanity and liberates them from death, that images makes this claim and has this meaning: only nonviolent resistance to violence can liberate our species from death, can save humanity from an escalatory violence that leads inevitably to cosmicide. That is the challenge of Christianity's Anastasis to Humanity's Evolution. 


These are the inspired words of John Dominic Crossan and we respond, Thanks be to God.  


Responsorial Psalm: Praising Song with Karen Drucker and MMOJ Community: 





https://youtu.be/aeXmPLVs13I

We live resurrection power when we empower one another to rise!




Gloria A Joyful Gloria by Linda Lee and Rick Miller


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_lA5I0nODZI



:    Second Reading: A Reading from the Letter to the Romans (6:3-4)

Sisters and Brothers, are you aware that we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were indeed buried with him through Baptism into death, so just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of God, we too live in newness of life. 

These are the inspired words of Paul in the Letter to the Romans and we respond,  Thanks be to God.



Alle, Alle, Alleluia: Linda Lee


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ID5UGWcS6Ws



Gospel from the apostle John, with commentary from Elizabeth Johnson


Joan P: On the first day of the week, early in the morning, while it was still dark, Mary of Magdala went to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed.  So she came running to Simon Peter, and to the other disciples and said to them: “They have taken away the Master out of the tomb, and we do not know where they laid him!” So Peter started off with John the disciple, and they went to the tomb. When Simon Peter entered the tomb, he looked at the linen wrappings lying there, and the cloth which had been on Jesus’ head.  Then the other disciple who had reached the tomb first, went inside too, and he saw for himself and believed. For they did not understand the writing which says that Jesus must rise again from the dead. The disciples then returned to their companions.


Dotty:   Meanwhile, Mary was standing close outside the tomb weeping. Still weeping she leaned forward into the tomb. After again seeing the empty tomb, Mary turned around and walked to the garden.  She turned and looked at Jesus standing there, but she did not know that it was Jesus.  “Why are you weeping? Whom are you seeking?” he asked. Supposing him to be the gardener, Mary answered: “If it was you sir, who carried him away, tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away myself.”  “Mary!” said Jesus. She called out and exclaimed in Hebrew: “Rabboni!” (which is to say, “Teacher.”) “Do not touch me,” Jesus said; “for I have not yet ascended to God but go to my brothers and sisters and tell them that I am ascending to my God and their God.” Mary of Magdala went and told the disciples that she had seen the Risen One and that he had said this to her. 

(Excerpts from the Gospel of John)  (Mary’s leadership after the resurrection and ascension) 


Commentary from Elizabeth Johnson


Joan P:  Jesus’ death is a consequence of the hostile responses of religious and civil rulers to the style and content of his ministry; to which he was radically faithful with a freedom that would not quit. But contrary to this judgment of the powerful against him, the resurrection discloses that in and through and beyond his death, God’s loving power and wisdom are winning. Despite all appearances to the contrary, it turns out that God did not abandon Jesus on the cross after all. Rather, when human beings had done their worst and there was no future left for this victim of unjust state punishment, then the vivifying Spirit of God quickened him to life. Instead of dying into nothingness, Jesus dies in the living mystery of God. 


Dotty:    The resurrection of Jesus did not end the suffering of the world. Crosses keep on being set up throughout history, and agony perdures. But Christ crucified and risen discloses the truth that divine justice continuously leavens the world and does so in a way different from the techniques of dominating violence. The victory is won not by the sword of a warrior god but by the power of compassionate love that brings the living God into solidarity with those who suffer in order to heal and set free. 


Jesus’ resurrection is the beginning of the resurrection of all the dead.  It inserts that future as a reality already here in the struggling world. Just as the living mystery of God enveloped Jesus at the end of the darkness of death, we too can trust that God will have the last word in our lives as indeed God had the first, and it is the same word: Let there be life. 

Excerpts from Abounding in Kindness by  Elizabeth A. Johnson. (pp. 192-194)



Homily Starter – Bridget Mary Meehan



Just as the living mystery of God enveloped Jesus at the end of the darkness of death, we too can trust that God will have the last word in our lives and it will be as indeed God had the first, and it is the same word: Let there be life. “ (E. Johnson)


In the New York Times bestselling book: Evidence of the AfterLife, radiation oncologist and near-death experience (NDE) expert Dr. Jeffrey Long gathered findings from the Near- Death Experience Research Foundation that pointed toward a strong scientific case that there is life after death. He shares testimonials from near- death experiencers who meet God, venture into heavenly realms, reunite with deceased loved ones and meet spiritual beings before returning to our world to report their journey. 


In one of these stories that give us a glimpse of life after death, we meet Nan who should have died from the overdose of medication that she took. Her consciousness traveled out the top of her head. Guided by two beings, she zoomed toward a pinpoint of light hat became larger and larger: “As I got close to the Light, I saw tens of thousands of beings dressed in white gowns all facing the Light and singing music I had never heard the likes of before… The Light was filled with the most extraordinary, overwhelming, and indescribable feeling of Love. (p. 146.)


Like Nan and the The message of the angel to Mary Magdalene and the women at the tomb 

“Do not be afraid. Go tell everyone that Christ is Risen” we are filled with joy in the Presence of new life beyond our imagination.


“It is not insignificant that it took a woman who first loved Jesus personally to build the bridge from Jesus to Christ,” Richard Rohr writes, “Mary Magdalene serves as a witness to personal love and intimacy, which for most people is the best and easiest start on the path toward universal love. Then, in the garden, she experienced a sudden shift of recognition toward the universal Presence or Christ. He, in fact, is the gardener! He has become every man and every woman. She was not mistaken at all when she “supposed he was the gardener.” (John 20:15) The Risen Christ surpasses the bounds of time and space, ethnicity, class, gender and nationality. If God is God, then the Divine Presence must necessarily be everywhere and universally accessible.” (The Universal Christ, pp. 193-194) This means that the Risen Christ is in you and in me and in all of us, rising up to new life everyday.


According to Acts 1:22, the definition of an apostle is a “witness to the resurrection.” Mary Magdalene was the first witness to encounter the Risen Christ. She was the first apostle. In all four Gospels, It was Mary and the other women who in spite of possible danger courageously ventured into the darkness to meet the Risen One. 

In an article entitled “Mary the Tower: What would Christianity be like if Mary Magdalene hadn't been hidden from view?” Rev. Diana Butler Bass asks: "What kind of Christianity would we have if the faith hadn’t only been based upon, "Peter, you are the Rock and upon this Rock I will build my church"? But what if we’d always known, “Mary, you are the Tower, and by this Tower we shall all stand?” (see blog article by Diana Butler Bass that explains the correct translation of Magdalene not as a place, but as a title: Tower. 

This makes me wonder if instead of being a Church that emphasized rigid adherence to man-made doctrines and canon laws, we focused more on following the way of Jesus, would our history have been different? Certainly, patriarchy would not have dominated our lives for centuries and women and men and all genders would be equal partners in all ministries in the Church!

https://bridgetmarys.blogspot.com/2022/07/mary-tower-what-would-christianity-be.html

In early Eastern Christianity, the Resurrection is depicted as a communal event. The imagery shows the Risen Christ leading Adam and Eve, and the people in the Hebrew Bible out of Hades into paradise. This reflects a deep belief that the Resurrection of Christ includes all humanity, all creation throughout time. In the Divine Mystery of Love, we are all one- connected to those who have gone before us, to those who are living now and to all life in the universe- women and men rich and poor- everyone!


As Pastor Dawn Hutchings said in one of her Easter homilies, “LOVE rises over and over and over again. LOVE, the LOVE that IS the MYSTERY we call GOD, rises in, with, through, and beyond us, now and forever! LOVE IS Risen! LOVE IS Risen in us! Alleluia!”


When we care for one another, comfort those in distress, give generously to those in need, work for peace and justice, and do good deeds, 

the Holy One lives and breathes in us, heals and loves through us and beyond us so that together we may raise one another up.  We are part of the Divine Dance of Love, in which Christ rises again and again with us, within us and through us. We live resurrection power when we empower one another to rise!


Let us rejoice that everyday is Easter! 

Happy Easter!



Shared Homily:

Reflection Question for shared homily:

What does Jesus' resurrection mean to you and to our world?


Renewal of Baptismal Promises


Kathryn: Do you promise to see what is good for your sisters and brothers everywhere, rejecting injustice and inequity and living with the freedom and responsibility of children of God?

Seth and All: Yes!


Kathryn: Do you promise to work for the realization of God’s vision of harmony and right relations among people and peoples, rejecting the idols of money and property and color and sex and position?

Seth and All: Yes!


Kathryn: Do you promise to seek peace and live in peace in one human family, rejecting prejudice and half-heartedness in every form, and all barriers to unity?

Seth and All: Yes!


Kathryn: Do you promise to cherish the universe, and this precious planet, working creatively to renew and safeguard the elemental sacraments of air, earth, water?

Seth and All: Yes!


Kathryn Do you believe in God, the great Spirit of Creation, in Jesus, the simple servant of justice and love who lived among us so that all might live with abundant fullness; in the breath of God’s center, the Spirit who continues the work of forgiveness and reconciliation, birthing and blessing, challenge and hope, so that together we can continue the work of creation?

Seth and All: Yes!

  

Source: Baptismal Promises: Jay Murnane



Prayers of Community


Lee: That every person in this Mary Mother of Jesus community will experience your indwelling life and boundless love within them.  

Lee and All: We hope in You


Lee That your indwelling life will be that which we radiate to the world.  

Lee and AllWe hope in You


Lee That your indwelling life will sustain all those who have poured out their own lives for those suffering in our world.

Lee and All: We hope in You


Lee That your indwelling life will comfort those who have lost loved ones to violence and war and disease.

 Lee  and AllWe hope in You


Lee That your indwelling life will lift the fog that clouds understanding between people, allowing hate to dissipate and be transformed into life-giving love.   

 Lee  AllWe hope in You


Lee That your indwelling life will bloom as peace in families, in the workplace, in government and between nations.   

Lee  and All We hope in You


Lee  That your indwell life in creation will be cherished by all on earth.

Lee  All: We hope in You


Lee:We invite Joan Meehan to share  requests from our community prayer list.


Lee: For what else do we pray?

(Please voice your petition)


 Lee and All:  We hope in You.


Lee : Divine Healer,  we share these prayers of our community, spoken and unspoken. We trust in your wisdom and healing love within us to enlighten and strengthen us. May it be so. Amen.


Liturgy of Eucharist


Preparation of the Gifts 


Bridget Mary:Blessed are You, O Holy One, through Your divine providence we have this bread to offer, it will become for us the Bread of Life. 

Bridget Mary and All: Blessed are You forever.   


Beth P: Blessed are You, O Holy One, through Your divine providence we have this wine to offer, it will become our spiritual drink. 

 Beth and All: Blessed are You forever.


Jim: Nurturing One, we are united in this sacrament by the love of Jesus in communion with all who proclaim the liberating power of  your Spirit, rising in our midst.

Jim and All: Amen.



Preface:   Eucharistic Prayer


Beth P: O Lover of  All, You dwell in us,

Jim and All: And we dwell in You.


Beth P: O Pursuer of Justice, You speak truth through us,

Jim and All: In service to our sisters and brothers.


Beth P: O Source of All Life, in you we live and move and have our being,

 Jim and All: All the days of our lives.



Beth P: Your Spirit, who raised Jesus from the dead, is rising up in our struggling world.  Just as the Holy One enveloped Jesus at the end of the darkness of death, we too can trust that God will have the last word in our lives as indeed God had the first, as we join the angels, and saints and all people in joyful praise for the gift of life.    


Holy, Holy, Holy (Karen Drucker) Linda Lee Miller



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=orKBBIj5LZA



Eucharistic Prayer


Jim B:  O Heart of Love, Your Spirit moved through Mary of Magdala and the Easter women as they stood by the broken body of Jesus and encountered the Risen One.  Your Spirit moves through us as we serve the broken body of Christ rising up in love in our world today.


Please extend Your hands in blessing.


Bridget Mary and All:  Pour out Your spirit anew upon this bread and wine and upon us as we become more deeply the Christ Presence in our world.  On the night before he died, Jesus came to table with the women and men he loved.   Jesus took bread blessed and broke it, saying,

“Take, eat, this is my body.  Do this in memory of me.”


Pause


Bridget Mary and All:  After supper, Jesus poured a cup of wine and shared it with his friends, saying,

“This is the cup of the covenant of my love.  As often as You drink of it, remember me.”

Let us proclaim the mystery of faith:


Beth P. and All:

Christ has died in all who have died.

Christ is rising within us each moment.

Christ comes again and again everywhere each day.


Jim : Embracing Presence, we remember all the companions who have gone before us:  Mary, Mother of Jesus, Mary of Magdala, and all holy women and men who rise up in loving service to transform our world.   For it is through living as Jesus lived, and loving as he loved, that we awaken to Your Spirit empowering us to work for justice.  


Great Amen by Linda Lee 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dy76fpfkNsg



COMMUNION RITE


The Prayer of Jesus

Beth P: Let us pray as Jesus taught us. 

 Beth and All:  O Holy One, you are within, around, and among us.

We celebrate your many names.  

Your wisdom come, 

Your will be done, unfolding from the depths within us.  

Each day you give us all we need.  

You remind us of our limits, and we let go. 

You support us in your power, and we act with courage.  

For you are the dwelling place within us, the empowerment around us, and the celebration among us, now and forever.  Amen

(Adapted, Miriam Therese Winter, MMS)


Sign of Peace

 Jim B: Jesus said to his disciples, “My peace I leave You.  My peace I give You.” 

The peace of the Holy One is also with You.  


Let us sing this beautiful song of peace especially for peace between Russia and Ukraine and for all war-torn areas.

Peace Throughout the Land by  Mindy Lou Simmons 



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1rmFnIrfsKs



Bridget M: Please join in praying the Litany for the Breaking of the Bread: 


 Bridget M and All:

Holy One, You call us to speak truth to power; we will do so.

Holy One, You call us to live the Gospel of healing and justice; we will do so.

Holy One, You call us to be Your presence in the world; we will do so.


Bridget M: This is the bread of life and the cup of blessing.  Blessed are we who are called to the table.

 Bridget M and All: We are the Body of Christ.


Communion Song


Arise, Three Altos, Video Denise Hackert Stoner


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pYgJqEmbE38



Prayer after Communion  

Beth P: Divine Presence, we are strengthened by sharing this Sacred meal as community.  We go forth from this celebration to rejoice that Jesus came and lived among us, he taught us how to take his teaching and to apply them to the way we live in our world, reaching out to the outcast, caring for the sick and the poor.  Bless our efforts to live your ministry through good works and/or deep prayer.  And together we say, Amen  


Thanksgivings, Introductions and Announcements:


Concluding Rite


Bridget Mary: The Holy One is within You. 

Jim B: And also within You.


Blessing


Bridget M and All: Please extend your hands as we pray our final blessing.

May we be the face of God to each other.  May we call each other to extravagant generosity!  We go forth with the energy of Spirit within us to heal and transform our church and world. 


Closing Song:  Dance Then Wherever You May Be


https://youtu.be/L6R6_Qz6_dU



Eucharistic Prayer written by Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan 


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Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community
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Jmeehan515@aol.com


www.marymotherofjesus.net






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