Fourth Sunday in Lent, Cycle A
General Intercessions
Celebrant: As we continue our Lenten journey, let
us not grow weary of begging the Lord for all our needs.
Deacon/Lector:
That our Holy Father and all bishops may be given
light and strength to carry out their vocation as successors of the apostles, we
pray to the Lord...
That government leaders may work untiringly for
that justice which is the foundation for peace, we pray to the Lord...
That those chosen to receive the Sacrament of
Baptism this Easter may continue to be enlightened by Christ the Savior, we pray
to the Lord...
That our society may be cured of spiritual
blindness and rediscover the equal dignity of the unborn, the terminally ill,
those on death row, and all who are oppressed, we pray to the Lord...
For an increase of vocations to the priesthood,
diaconate, and religious life, we pray to the Lord...
That those who are ill may be comforted, and
those who have died may be welcomed into eternal joy, we pray to the Lord...
Celebrant:
Father,
grant that as we bring our needs before you,
we may see your Son more clearly,
and receive his gift of holiness.
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Bulletin Insert
Bulletin Insert
Wisdom from a President
"Simple morality dictates that unless and until
someone can prove the unborn human is not alive, we must give it the benefit of
the doubt …and, thus, it should be entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness." (President Ronald Reagan, 1982).
Homily Suggestions on Pro-life
Themes
1 Sm 16:1b, 6-7, 10-13a
Eph 5:8-14
Jn 9:1-41 or 9:1, 6-9, 13-17, 34-38
The Lenten season is marked by the urgent call to repent. It is a call to make a
conscious and free choice to turn away from sin, which leads to death, and
embrace the Gospel, which leads to life. It is, in fact, the full flowering of
the call Moses issued in Deuteronomy 30:19, "I have set before you life and
death...Choose life!"
Today’s Gospel passage is that of the man born blind (John 9). This passage
forms a triduum along with those of the Third and Fifth Sundays of Lent, Cycle
A, emphasizing the baptismal themes of Water (the woman at the well), Light (the
healing of the man born blind), and Life (the raising of Lazarus). These
powerful readings remind those preparing for baptism, as well as all the
baptized, what this baptismal life is all about.
We see here the drama of the will to accept or reject the call of Christ. The
man born blind receives his physical sight early in the story, but the rest of
the drama traces the birth of his spiritual sight. At first, he calls Jesus a
man (v.11); then a prophet (v.17); then one who is "from God" (v.33), and
finally, "Lord" (v.38).He comes to see who Jesus is, because he has a
willingness to believe. "Who is he, sir, that I may believe in him?" (v.36).
This attitude of willingness stands in stark contrast to the stubbornness and
bad will of the Pharisees. Though confronted with the same evidence of the
physical healing, they try to explain away that evidence through their
interrogations of the man and his parents, and then by portraying Jesus as a
sinner, and finally by literally throwing the evidence out the door by ejecting
the healed man from their midst (see v.34).
The drama is repeated every day as our society struggles with the "Culture of
Death," which shows itself fundamentally in the ongoing tragedy of abortion. The
evidence is the same for all to see, made clearer than ever by genetics and
fetology, that abortion kills a human being. Some receive that evidence and,
with a willing heart, choose life. Others show the stubbornness of the Pharisees
and cling to their own ideology. For me the most stark example of this was the
day a group of pro-life people conducted a wake for an aborted baby in front of
an abortion facility. The baby, the size of a hand, was visible in a small white
casket. Some pro-abortion demonstrators looked at the child, and a pro-lifer
challenged them, "Look at the evidence right before your eyes. This is a baby!"
Believe it or not, the person's response was "That's your opinion!!"
Not to know the child in the womb is not a sin. But the refusal to know is.
Jesus declares to the Pharisees at the end of the drama of John 9, "If you were
blind, there would be no sin in that, but 'We see,' you say, and your sin
remains" (v.41).
"Repent and believe the Good News!" What good news? The good news, in the words
of Evangelium Vitae, that "life is always a good...manifestation of God in the
world, a sign of His presence, a trace of His glory" (#34). This Lent, let us
choose life again!
Liturgical Resources