Perpetual Adoration
St. Joseph's has established Perpetual Adoration of the Eucharist.
We are still signing people up for their slots. We ask you to sign
up for just one hour per week to spend with the Lord. If you would
like to sign up for a time, please call the office at 405-321-8080.
Meantime, here's some background material on Perpetual Adoration...
What is Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration?
Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration is when a parish sets aside a little
room, or chapel, that is open seven days a week, 24 hours a day
with permanent exposition of Jesus in the Most Blessed Sacrament.
Why is Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration necessary?
The more we limit the hours of Adoration, the more we limit the
availability of Christ to His people. The more we expand the hours,
the more we extend the opportunity to adorers. When a chapel is
open all the time, then everyone in the parish can participate.
Through Perpetual Adoration with exposition we proclaim to our parish
and community that Jesus is here, truly present among us today.
Pope John Paul II said, "Your faith will help you to realize
that it is Jesus Himself who is present in the Blessed Sacrament,
waiting for you and calling you to spend one special specific hour
with Him each week."
Why is Exposition Necessary?
The difference between spending time with Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament
exposed in a monstrance, rather than in the tabernacle, is the same
as the difference between conversing with a friend face to face
instead of having a closed door between you. Most adorers say that
seeing Jesus under the appearance of the Sacred Host is much more
conducive to intimacy than Him being hidden in a tabernacle. It
helps adorers to be faithful to their scheduled hours, because they
know that Jesus cannot be left alone in the Blessed Sacrament exposed
in a monstrance. The scheduled adorers are guardians of the Blessed
Sacrament, so their presence is necessary. Yet, the most compelling
reason for exposition is because the Holy Spirit asks for it. During
his Eucharistic discourse, Jesus made this unmistakably clear:
"Indeed, this is the will of My Heavenly Father, that everyone
who looks upon the Son and believes in Him, shall have eternal life.
Him I will raise up on the last day." (John 6:40)
What are the benefits?
Each person that spends time in the presence of Jesus in the Most
Blessed Sacrament grows in holiness. Communally, increased Mass
attendance, conversions, the return of the fallen away Catholics
and vocations to the priesthood and religious life are among the
many fruits of Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration. Through our Holy
Hours of prayer, Our Holy Father declared that we are contributing
to "the radical transformation of the world," the "establishing
of everlasting peace," and the coming of Christ's Kingdom on
earth.
How can my Holy Hour change the world?
The Holy Eucharist is the mystery of our faith. Jesus said that
faith can move mountains. One person coming before Jesus in the
Blessed Sacrament represents all of humanity.
Every man, woman and child on the face of the earth receives some
new, wonderful effect of God's goodness, of God's mercy, of God's
grace and of God's love, when they put their faith into action and
come to visit Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament.
When you come before Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament, He appreciates
this so deeply that you release the power of His love and graces
to all of His children throughout the world.
Is this the mission of the laity?
Vatican II emphasized the importance of lay involvement in the mission
of the Church. Perpetual Adoration is coordinated by the laity,
in cooperation with the clergy.
Isn't it dangerous to have Adoration 24 hours a day?
Many pastors have witnessed that since Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration
has started in their parishes, the crime rate in their community
has drastically decreased.
"We had prostitution and drugs being sold right out in front
of our church. When we took on Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed
Sacrament, this all stopped. When our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament
is exposed on the altar, crime leaves the area. I am convinced of
that." (Fr. James Swenson, St. Bridget Catholic Church, Las
Vegas, NV)
Pope John Paul II and the Great Power: Perpetual Eucharistic
Adoration
On December 2, 1981, Pope John Paul II began Perpetual Eucharistic
Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament in a chapel at St. Peter's Basilica
in Rome and urged all parishes to do the same.
In his homily at the 45th International Eucharistic Congress in
Seville, Spain, in June 1993, the Holy Father said, "I hope
that this form of Perpetual Adoration, with permanent exposition
of the Blessed Sacrament, will continue into the future. Specifically,
I hope that the fruit of this Congress results in the establishment
of Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration in all parishes and Christian
communities throughout the world."
Mother Teresa and Peace on Earth
"Perpetual Adoration, Eucharistic Adoration offers to our people
the opportunity to join those in religious life to pray for the
salvation of the world, souls everywhere and peace on earth. We
cannot underestimate the power of prayer and the difference it will
make in our world." (Mother Teresa of Calcutta)
The Missionaries of the Blessed Sacrament share the Pope's dream.
For many years, they have helped parishes begin and organize Perpetual
Eucharistic Adoration worldwide. Perpetual Adoration has begun and
is spreading across North America, South America, Asia, Africa,
Australia and Europe.
Related link: http://www.acfp2000.com
Here's something from Cardinal Ratzinger:
Why Eucharistic Adoration is a Good Idea
VATICAN CITY, MARCH 17, 2003 (Zenit.org).- Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger,
who worked closely with John Paul II in the forthcoming encyclical
on the Eucharist, has just published a book on this sacrament.
"In the crisis of faith we are experiencing, the critical
issue seems to be increasingly the correct celebration and correct
understanding of the Eucharist," the cardinal says in "An
Intimate God" ("Il Dio Vicino," St. Paul Editions),
which has just gone on sale in Italian.
Vatican sources say the encyclical on the Eucharist will be published
in April.
"All of us know the difference between a Church that prays
and a Church that has been reduced to a museum," explains Cardinal
Ratzinger, prefect of the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith.
"Today we run the risk of having our churches turned into
museums and ending like museums: If they are not closed, they are
pillaged," he says. "They have no life. The measure of
the Church's vitality, the measure of its interior openness, will
be reflected in the fact that its doors remain open, precisely because
it is a church where there is constant prayer.
"The Eucharist, and the community that celebrates it, will
be full in the measure in which we prepare ourselves in silent prayer
before the presence of the Lord and become persons who want to communicate
with truth."
The cardinal leaves room for arguments that are sometimes heard
nowadays: "I can also pray in the woods, submerged in nature."
"Of course one can," Cardinal Ratzinger replies. "However,
if it was only that way, then the initiative of prayer would remain
totally within us: Then God would be a postulate of our thought.
That fact that he responds or might want to respond, would remain
an open question."
"Eucharist means: God has responded," the cardinal continues.
"The Eucharist is God as response, as a presence that responds.
Now the initiative of the divine-human relation no longer depends
on us, but on him, and so it becomes really serious.
"This is why, in the realm of eucharistic adoration, prayer
reaches a totally new level; only now it involves both parties,
and only now is it something serious. What is more, not only does
it involve the two parties, but only now is it fully universal:
When we pray in the presence of the Eucharist, we are never alone.
The whole Church that celebrates the Eucharist prays with us."
"In this prayer we are no longer before a God we have thought
about, but before a God who has really given himself to us; before
a God who has made himself communion for us, who thus liberates
us from our limits through communion and leads us to the Resurrection,"
Cardinal Ratzinger concludes. "This is the prayer we must seek
again." ZE03031702
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