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Catechesis on the Liturgy

About the Project Vocabulary Liturgical Documents Planning Liturgy Sacraments Liturgy of the Hours Liturgy and Culture Liturgy and Justice Children in the Liturgy Liturgical Reform Roman Missal   

Resources for understanding and preparing 
Roman Catholic liturgy and the sacraments.

Liturgical catechesis aims to initiate people 
into the mystery of Christ (It is "mystagogy.") 
by proceeding from the visible to the invisible, 
from the sign to the thing signified, 
from the "sacraments" to the "mysteries."
Catechism of the Catholic Church #1075

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Featured Diocesan Website

 Diocese of Baton Rouge: Guidelines for Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion and Wedding Music, Sunday Liturgical Notes for Priests and Deacons

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RITUAL GESTURE

Featured Article

The Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults:
An Overview

J. Michael McMahon


Excerpted from
The Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults: A Pastoral Liturgical Commentary
by J. Michael McMahon.
© 2002 FDLC.

Documentation

Vatican Council II: Constitution on the Liturgy

64.       The catechumenate for adults, divided into several stages, is to be restored and put into use at the discretion of the local Ordinary. By this means the time of the catechumenate, which is intended as a period of well-suited instruction, may be sanctified by sacred rites to be celebrated at successive intervals of time.

65.       With art. 37–40 of this Constitution as the norm, it is lawful in mission lands to allow, besides what is part of Christian tradition, those initiation elements in use among individual peoples, to the extent that such elements are compatible with the Christian rite of initiation.

66.       Both of the rites for the baptism of adults are to be revised: not only the simpler rite, but also the more solemn one, with proper attention to the restored catechumenate. A special Mass “On the Occasion of a Baptism” is to be incorporated into the Roman Missal.

Vatican Council II: Decree on the Church’s Missionary Activity

13. …Under the movement of divine grace the new convert sets out on a spiritual journey by means of which, while already sharing through faith in the mystery of the death and resurrection, he passes from the old man to the new man who has been made perfect in Christ (see Colossians 3:5–10; Ephesians 4:20–24). This transition, which involves a progressive change of outlook and morals, should be manifested in its social implications and effected gradually during the period of the catechumenate ….

14.       Those who through the Church have accepted from the Father faith in Christ should be admitted to the catechumenate by means of liturgical ceremonies. The catechumenate means not simply a presentation of teachings and precepts, but a formation in the whole of Christian life and a sufficiently prolonged period of training; by these means the disciples will become bound to Christ as their master. Catechumens should therefore be properly initiated into the mystery of salvation and the practices of gospel living; by means of sacred rites celebrated at successive times, they should be led gradually into the life of faith, liturgy, and charity belonging to the people of God.

Next, freed from the power of darkness, dying, buried, and risen again together with Christ through the sacraments of Christian initiation, they receive the Spirit of adoption of children, and with the whole people of God celebrate the memorial of the Lord’s death and resurrection.

There is a great need for a reform of the Lenten and Easter liturgy so that it will be a spiritual preparation of the catechumens for the celebration of the paschal mystery, the rites of which will include their being reborn to Christ through baptism.

Christian initiation during the catechumenate is not the concern of catechists or priests alone, but of the whole community of believers and especially of godparents, so that from the outset the catechumens will have a sense of being part of the people of God. Moreover, because the Church’s life is apostolic, catechumens should learn to take an active share in the evangelization and the building up of the Church through the witness of their life and the profession of their faith.

Finally, the new code of canon law should set out clearly the juridic status of catechumens; they are already joined to the Church, already part of Christ’s household, and are in many cases already living a life of faith, hope, and charity.

 

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