Seventh Sunday
of Easter, Cycle A
General Intercessions
Celebrant:
With trust in the One who speaks to us from above and knows all our needs,
we now pray.
Deacon/Lector:
That all who have been
entrusted with the Word of the Lord may proclaim it without hesitation or
fear, we pray to the Lord...
That as Christ's
disciples who live in a Culture of Death, we may effective witnesses to the
Gospel of Life which has been entrusted to us, we pray to the Lord...
For all who suffer for
being a Christian, that they may carry the cross with joy and experience the
consolation of the Holy Spirit, we pray to the Lord...
For family members who
have strayed from the Church, that our example of holiness may bring them
back quickly, we pray to the Lord...
For family members and
parishioners in the hospital or nursing homes, or seriously ill at home,
that the healing Spirit of God may be upon them, we pray to the Lord...
That those who have died
may have eternal rest, and that we may always thank the Lord for their
lives, we pray to the Lord...
Celebrant:
Father,
You have made Your Word known to us
In Jesus, Your Son.
As you answer our prayers,
Give us grace to be his witnesses in the world,
for He is Lord forever and ever. Amen.
Bulletin Insert
Human
Life Exalted
Jesus prayed on the night before he died, "Father, give me the glory I had
with you before the world began." How is the glory he has in the Ascension
different from the glory he had "before the world began?" It differs only in
that now, he has it in a human nature. Our humanity has been taken to the
heights of heaven, fulfilling the destiny God intended for human life from
the beginning. Revelation 3:21 declares, "To the one who gains the victory,
I will give the right to sit with me on my throne." God’s plan for us is not
just that we will gather around the throne or fall down before the throne,
but that we will sit with him on the throne! This hope extended to the human
family by the Gospel is directly contradicted when the same human beings
destined for the heights of heaven are attacked by violence, degraded in
their dignity, or put to death by things like abortion. The human nature
Jesus brings to glory in the Ascension is the same human nature you and I
share, and the same human nature that the babies in the womb share.
Celebrating the Ascension in daily life means treating each human life as
one destined to sit with Christ on his throne.
Homily Suggestions
Seventh Sunday of Easter:
Acts 1:12-14
1 Pt 4:13-16
Jn 17:1-11a
The Ascension is a
powerful feast on which to preach the sanctity of human life, because at its
core, this feast is about our human nature being exalted to the heights of
heaven.
The “Bulletin Insert”
above contains a synopsis of what direction the homily of this Sunday can take,
whether it is the Feast of the Ascension, or the Seventh Sunday of Easter (on
which the Gospel reading for this year contains the quote from John 17 about the
glory Jesus had before the world began).
The faithful can be
encouraged to use this Sunday as a launching point to pray each day this week to
the Holy Spirit, as we approach Pentecost. The Spirit, who is the Advocate,
makes us advocates when he fills our hearts – advocates for the weakest and most
vulnerable among us, including the unborn. Priests for Life has prepared a
special pro-life “Pentecost Novena” prayer that people can download from
www.PrayerCampaign.org.
Liturgical
Resources