Fulfilling the Catholic Church's Call to Penance and Repentance

in the Modern World

The Confraternity of Penitents

"You shall love the Lord your God with your whole heart, with your whole soul, and with all your mind, (and) you shall love your neighbor as yourself."  (Jesus's words as recorded in Matthew 22:37-38)

On the Meaning of the Mass

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Saint Ignatius of Antioch

(died 107 A.D.)

Try to gather more frequently to  celebrate God's Eucharist and to praise Him. for when you meet with frequency, Satan's powers are overthrown and his destructiveness is undone by the unanimity of your faith.

--St. Ignatius of Antioch


The whole sanctuary and the space before the altar is filled with the heavenly Powers come to honor Him who is present upon the altar.

-- St. John Chrysostom


There's nothing so great, my children, as the Eucharist.  If you were to put all the good actions in the world against a Communion well made, it would be like a grain of dust against a mountain.

--St. John Vianney


Ceremonies may be shadows, but they are the shadows of great truths, and it is essential that they should be carried out with the greatest possible attention.

-- St. Vincent de Paul


Yesterday, on approaching the Most Blessed Sacrament, I felt myself burning so violently that I felt obliged to move away.  I was burning all over; it rose even to my face.  Living Jesus!  I am astonished that so many who receive Jesus are not reduced to ashes.

-- St. Gemma Galgani

Last Supper

by Jacopo Bassano (1542)

"Repent and believe the Good News!" 

Penance means conversion. The Confraternity of Penitents is a world wide private Catholic association of the faithful, completely loyal to our Pope and the Magisterium. 

Our Rule of Life has been reviewed by our bishop and recognized in these words:  "this Rule does not contain anything contrary to our faith; therefore it may be safely practiced privately by you or by anyone inclined to do so.  . . . His Excellency is appreciative of your efforts to live and promote Franciscan spirituality and especially promote the neglected practice of penance and he wishes you success" (January 30, 1998). 

 Members of the Confraternity of Penitents live this Rule in their own homes, devoted to prayer, penance, fasting, conversion, and works of mercy modeled on Jesus Christ and inspired by the lives and teachings of

St. Francis,

St. Dominic,

St. Therese,

St. Benedict,

St. Augustine,

St. Ignatius,

and all the saints, most especially Mary, the Mother of God, who lived a life of true penance (conversion) in perfect union with our Lord.

May Our Lady and all the saints intercede for all who wish to embrace a life of penance, anywhere in the world, so that the grace of God will assist them to obtain every virtue necessary for a life of holiness and surrender to the Will of God! Amen.

PRAYER OF PENITENTS
"Most High, Glorious God, enlighten the darkness of my mind, give me right faith, a firm hope and perfect charity, so that I may always and in all things act according to Your Holy Will. Amen." (Saint Francis's prayer before the San Damiano Crucifix)


MISSION OF PENITENTS
"Go and repair My House which, as you can see, is falling into ruin." (The message given to St. Francis in a voice from the San Damiano Crucifix.)


ACTION OF PENITENTS
To pray for God's specific direction in one's life so that, through humbly living our Rule of Life, each penitent may help to rebuild the house of God by bringing love of God and neighbor to his or her own corner of the world.


ON THE MEANING OF THE MASS

Interview With President of Pontifical Liturgical Institute, Father Juan Javier Flores, OSB. 

ROME, SEPT. 23, 2005 (Zenit.org)

Q: What is the Mass?

Father Flores: The Mass is the Lord's Supper. The Mass is the celebration of the paschal mystery of Jesus Christ. Christ instituted the Eucharist in the cenacle on Holy Thursday, in the framework of the Jewish Passover, to leave to all Christians the new Passover with its saving presence until the end of time.

Christ's supper is united to his redeeming cross, that is why the supper is the ritual anticipation of the sacrifice of the cross which comes to us in the form of a banquet and in this way we have the three elements that are fundamental in any Mass or Eucharist: the sacrifice of Christ, the memorial of his death and resurrection, and the festive banquet where we eat the Body of Christ and drink his Blood.

Thus we see clearly that the Mass or Lord's Supper is at the same time and inseparably: sacrifice, in which the sacrifice of the cross is perpetuated; memorial of the Lord's death and resurrection; [and] sacred banquet, in which by communion with the Body and Blood of the Lord we eat the Body and drink the Blood of Christ.

Q: Are some of these dimensions -- sacrifice, memorial, banquet -- more important than others?

Father Flores: These three dimensions of the Eucharist are inseparable. The sacrifice perpetuates the sacrificial death of Christ on the cross.

The memorial transmits to us and actualizes this death of Christ through the centuries, and the banquet takes us to the cenacle where Christ instituted the Eucharist, anticipating ritually and sacramentally the sacrifice of the cross.

It is necessary to consider the Eucharistic mystery in its totality under its different aspects, so that it will shine before the faithful with due brilliance, and the understanding will be brought about which the Second Vatican Council proposed to the Church.

In No. 47, the constitution on the liturgy states this with clarity and precision: "At the Last Supper, on the night when he was betrayed, our Savior instituted the Eucharistic sacrifice of his Body and Blood. He did this in order to perpetuate the sacrifice of the Cross throughout the centuries until he should come again, and so to entrust to his beloved spouse, the Church, a memorial of his death and resurrection: a sacrament of love, a sign of unity, a bond of charity, a paschal banquet in which Christ is eaten, the mind is filled with grace, and a pledge of future glory is given to us."

It is a profound and synthetic text, a magnificent synthesis of ecclesial faith in the most holy sacrament of the Eucharist. It is certainly worth underlining the specific intention of the cited text to accentuate the objective and concrete character of Christ's words: "Do this in memory of me."

It is a memorial, that is, of a salvific event that is actualized every time it is repeated. Moreover, the Eucharist is entrusted to the Church, Bride of Christ and everlasting repository of the Lord's memorial. The Eucharist is the pledge given to the Church by her Lord.

The Eucharist is the memorial of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. In it is recalled the "blessed passion, resurrection from the dead and glorious ascension into heaven" of Christ Jesus.

Q: What is its relationship with the Jewish Passover?

Father Flores: From all this, one deduces that the Eucharist is the center and synthesis of Christ's paschal mystery and because of this the center and summit of the whole of Christian life.

The Second Vatican Council text is heir of other texts pf the Council of Trent. In keeping with the apostolic and patristic tradition, Trent saw in the death of Christ the fulfillment of the ancient paschal event and distinguished the Jewish paschal rite from the memorial event celebratory of Jesus Christ.

But, in turn, this relationship between the Jewish Passover and the death of Christ is present in the evangelical accounts themselves, as in Matthew 26:2: "You know that after two days the Passover is coming, and the Son of man will be delivered up to be crucified." And in John 13:1: "Now before the feast of the Passover, when Jesus knew that his hour had come to depart out of this world to the Father ..."

All the liberating, salvific and spiritual force of the ancient Jewish Passover has passed to the Christian Easter which finds its full realization in the Eucharist, but with the fundamental novelty and basic component that Christ himself gives, who has given it a new meaning, assuming and continuing the previous one.

The paschal rite prolonged in time the Passover of the Exodus that was the deliverance of Israel and its election to be a holy people. Now Christ sees in his paschal sacrifice the full and total deliverance of man, his redemption from slavery, his elevation to holiness.

The Church, perpetuating in time this Passover, ancient and new, has gathered all its liberating potential, offering it to man. And as the Jewish Passover had become a rite, that is, it had been ritualized and every year a memorial is made of it, so would be the case with the Passover-death of Christ, ritualized sacramentally in our Eucharist.

For Christ, his death is the true Passover, his passing from the world to the Father, a passage which includes the full redemption of men. For Christians, this Passover is the origin of their existence, because it is the origin of the Church, born from the side of Christ.

The Eucharist is the continuation of the mystery of Christ; the moment in which the same worship that Christ has given to the Father becomes our worship, in which we now participate.

The Eucharist as paschal sacrifice of Christ, of his death and resurrection, reflects in itself the whole reality of the Church; it synthesizes it, makes it concrete, represents it, is its source and summit.




 


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