Fourth Sunday in Lent,
Cycle B
General Intercessions
Celebrant: Seeking to love God and our neighbor with all our
heart, we pray for our needs and those of the world.
Deacon/Lector:
That the Church will lead us on our Lenten
journey with hearts and minds renewed, so we may enter more fully into the
mysteries of our redemption, we pray to the Lord…
That all Church leaders will be sources of
grace and inspiration for the people of God, we pray to the Lord…
That national and world leaders will have the
wisdom to discern what is best for their people, we pray to the Lord…
That God, who sent His Son to save and not to
condemn, will touch the hearts of all who have had abortions, and bring them the
gift of repentance, forgiveness, and healing, we pray to the Lord...
For those who are preparing for baptism and
reception into the Church this Easter, we pray to the Lord…
That that sick may be healed and that those
who have died may be granted a home in heaven, we pray to the Lord…
Celebrant:
Loving Father, as you hear our prayers,
grant that we may follow the life-giving words
of your Son Jesus Christ, for He is Lord forever and ever. Amen.
Bulletin Insert
The Most Basic Right
“The common outcry, which is justly made on behalf of human rights -- for
example, the right to health, to home, to work, to family, to culture -- is
false and illusory if the right to life, the most basic and fundamental right
and the condition for all other personal rights, is not defended with maximum
determination.” -- Pope John Paul II, Christifideles Laici, n. 38.
Homily Suggestions on Pro-life Themes
The Gospel
assigned for today brings us to the most well-known verse of the Bible, John
3:16 -- “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that everyone who
believes in him might not perish, but have everlasting life.”
As Lent draws
closer to its culmination in the Easter Triduum, it becomes clearer in the
readings and prayers of the liturgy that this season is a great preparation for
receiving the gift of eternal life obtained for us through the Lord’s Passion
and Resurrection. The Catechumens of the Church prepare to receive this gift in
baptism; the rest of us prepare for the renewal of our baptismal vows at Easter
Mass; for all of us, it is the fulfillment of John 3:16.
The homilist might
reflect that the purpose of Christ’s coming is that we “might not perish…but
have life.” As The Gospel of Life makes clear, this promise of eternal
life implies the sacrosanct character of natural life,
which provides the foundation and context in which we accept this gift of
everlasting life. His will is that human beings not perish – neither by losing
their salvation, nor by being deprived of the opportunity to grasp it by being
born and eventually hearing God’s word and living the faith. God always shows
himself to be on the side of human life.
Yet the acceptance
of life, natural and supernatural, and the defense of that life, creates
division. “The light came into the world, but people preferred darkness to
light.” This explains why we have to fight against the forces in our world that
would destroy human life. He who would destroy it “does not come toward the
light, so that his works might not be exposed.” Injustice in the world always
flourishes when it is hidden. Those who support the culture of death in all its
forms want to keep their actions hidden. Sr. Helen Prejean, who is a renowned
advocate for abolishing the death penalty, writes, “I am convinced that if
executions were made public, the torture and violence would be unmasked, and we
would be shamed into abolishing executions” (Dead Man Walking, p.197). Those
responsible for killing Terri Schiavo a year ago likewise kept people out of her
room – including volunteers in the very facility where she was staying. Armed
police officers manned the door at all times. As I revealed to the news media,
her death was far more horrific than the euthanasia advocates wanted the public
to believe. And, of course, the reality of abortion continues to lie hidden.
People never see the procedure on television or in print. People who do see it
are often converted on the spot.
The application
for us is that our Lenten journey, and our acceptance of light and life
(baptismal symbols) empower us to abandon denial and face both good and evil
head-on with honesty, and with confidence in the ultimate triumph of grace over
sin, truth over falsehood, and life over death.