Where is Our Catholic Yom Kippur?
We Catholics in New York enjoy the ?high holy days? of our Jewish
neighbors, and are inspired by the seriousness and sincerity with which they
approach their feasts. Join me in wishing them God?s blessings on their special
days!
They began their observance last week with Roshashana, the Jewish New Year,
and will conclude evening and tomorrow with Yom Kippur, the great Day of
Atonement.The message of their celebrations, if I understand it correctly, is one of spiritual renewal, fresh starts, and repentance. Our Jewish friends pray, fast, reflect, resolve, ask God to forgive their sins as they repent, and start anew with festive meals and gatherings with family and friends!
Not bad at all!
They are only being faithful to their Scriptures. God so often coaxed His
Chosen People, ?Come back to me with all your heart!? How is that done? God
tells us: ?A humble, contrite heart I will not spurn.?
There it is again: repentance!
God the Son learned from his Father, because Jesus made repentance the core
of His invitation to His followers.
What?s that mean? Simply put, it means turning away from sin and turning to
the Person, message, salvation, and call to discipleship of Jesus.
We Catholics used to be constantly aware of this repentance!
Reminisce with me . . .
. . . An examination of conscience and act of contrition prior to falling
asleep at night;
. . . frequent confession;
. . . Friday abstinence from meat as an act of penance for our sins, in
union with our Lord?s death on that Friday called ?good.?;
. . . ?Ember Days? ? - remember! ? - at the change of each season, with
fasting and the invitation to the Sacrament of Reconciliation;
. . . Fasting on the vigil of holy days, so we could feast all the better
on the day itself;
. . . Never receiving the Eucharist if conscious of grave sin, without
first approaching the Sacrament of Penance;
. . . First Friday union with the Sacred Heart of Jesus through confession
and Mass;
. . . First Saturday Mass and rosary in response to our Lady?s call at
Fatima to conversion of heart and repentance;
. . Fasting from food at least three hours before Holy Communion;
. . . And, of course, the season of Lent, intended as a forty-day Yom
Kippur.
Am I on the wrong track in thinking that most of this is now gone?
Now, I admit, customs, traditions, practices change. Often it?s good when
they do.
What can?t change is the call to repentance and conversion of heart at the
very core of the Jewish-Christian Scriptures, and of our traditions. The how we
respond might change; that we do penance cannot change.
Our Jewish friends have not forgotten about repentance and conversion of
heart, as is so obvious in New York these ?high holy days.?
Have we Catholics forgotten it?
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