Showing posts with label Mozart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mozart. Show all posts

16 November 2021

Confutatis and Lacrimosa

 Thirty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time
    One of my favorite pieces of classical music is Mozart’s “Requiem” Mass.  I first heard it by watching the movie “Amadeus,” which is the story of Mozart’s troubled and amazing life.  Part of the music which is, in my opinion, angelic, are the two movements: “Confutatis maledictis” and “Lacrimosa.”  These two movements come from the larger sequence, “Dies irae,” which used to be used in every funeral, or requiem Mass.  
    At first you might think that “Day of Wrath,” (which is what Dies irae means) may not be the music you want to hear at a funeral.  And that first verse is, “Day of wrath!  O day of mourning! / See fulfilled the prophets warning, / Heaven and earth in ashes burning!”  These images come from the Biblical images that we heard about in today’s readings.  In our first reading, we heard the Prophet Daniel prophesy, “it shall be a time unsurpassed in distress since nations began until that time.”  And even Jesus says the end shall include a time where “the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will be falling from the sky, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken.”  That is somewhat sounding like a Dies irae. 

   These very stressful images comes from God making things right again.  The world has a way it likes operating in its fallen mode.  It has become comfortable with sin and death.  But as Christ returns, sin and death will be brought to an end, which will be traumatic on the system of sin and death.  It’s like the world is a car driving 70 mph on the freeway, and Jesus’ return is kicking it into reverse while driving.
    But it’s not just the world.  As we think about the end, we can also examine our own lives.  In what ways have we become comfortable with sin?  What sins do we excuse as “natural” and “everyday” issues.  This is not to say that some sins are not more egregious than others; that’s why we delineate between mortal and venial sin.  But even the smallest venial sin is not part of God’s original or final plan for humanity and the world.  Even a venial sin offends God and made Jesus’ sacrifice on the Cross necessary.  So in our own life, if we are comfortable with sin, the change to no sin will seem quite traumatic for us, as traumatic as death is in the face of life.  We know death is not supposed to happen, and it pains us deeply.  In fact, we fight against it with all we have.  That will be like what happens when Christ comes to undo the reign of sin and death in us.  And that is why the Church talks about Purgatory as a purification.  Purgatory is that process after death of changing us from a life of sin to a life of holiness.  It’s a total overhaul.  And overhauls can be painful.  The end result is always worth it: eternal life.  But until the end product is achieved, it’s painful to be retooled.  
    Still, the end is worth it, and it’s not all pain and suffering.  Even in the Dies irae we hear verses such as: “Think, kind Jesu! –my salvation / Caused Thy wondrous Incarnation; / Leave me not to reprobation.” and “With Thy sheep a place provide me, / From the goats afar divide me, / To Thy right hand do Thou guide me.”  And the sequence even ends with, “Lord, all-pitying, Jesus blest, / Grant them Thine eternal rest.  Amen.”  
    The end of the change from a world of sin is the final completion of what Jesus achieved on the cross: the end of sin and death forever.  But, as with so many things in life, the peace only comes after the struggle.  However, with Jesus, the struggle isn’t a competition where we wonder who will win.  Jesus has already won, and we’re just waiting to taste the fruits of that victory.  
    So when we talk about the end times, do we, as Catholics need to fear?  We are, each day, one day closer to Christ returning in glory to judge the living and dead, as we profess each time we say the Creed.  Should the Day of Wrath be something that we fret about?
    That depends on how we’re living our life.  The more we live like we’re in heaven, the less that we will experience a Day of Wrath at the end.  The more that we’re responding to God’s will, saying yes to the invitations of God each day, the less painful it will be at the end of our lives.  The more we live like earth is all there is, the more we will be on a trajectory for “when the wicked are confounded, / Doomed to flames of woe unbounded,” and “that day of tears and mourning,” as the Confutatis and Lacrimosa state in the Dies Irae.  
    And the good news is that Jesus is there to help us.  He stands at the right hand of the Father, as we heard in our second reading, interceding for us, and showering His grace upon us so that we can live the heavenly life here on earth, and put to death on earth our fallen, sinful nature, while we rise to our glorified, heavenly nature.  For in the end, only Christ’s grace will be able to transform us.  Pie Iesu Domine, / Dona nobis requiem.  Merciful Lord Jesus, grant us eternal rest.  Amen. 

26 November 2018

Truth and Beauty

Solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe
When is a king most a king?  That might seem like a very academic question, but it impacts how we understand and celebrate this Solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe.  A king, I would suggest, is most a king when he has defeated his enemies, and his kingdom is secure.  The ideal of Jewish kings is King David, who conquered all of his enemies.  King Solomon, his son, is least kingly when he is conquered by his wives’ attachment to their foreign gods.  
So for we who celebrate this great festival, when is Jesus most a king?  When He has defeated His enemies, that is to say, Satan, sin, and death.  And when did Jesus do exactly that?  On the cross.  And so, Jesus is most kingly when He is on the cross, dying for our salvation, and, at the same time, destroying the reign of Satan over this world.  That helps us understand today’s Gospel, which is Christ being interrogated by Pontius Pilate.  Of course, this was right before Jesus was led away to His crucifixion.  Pilate asks about Jesus’ kingship, alleged by the chief priests, and Jesus answers that His kingdom is a kingdom of truth.  That truth was released upon the world in the most powerful way when Jesus was nailed to the cross, the truth that St. John the Evangelist also tells us, that, “God so loved the world that he gave His only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life.”
Truth is related to something else: beauty.  We so often hear the false, yet ubiquitous statement, “beauty is in the eye of the beholder.”  Beauty, though, is not subjective, because it is the splendor of the truth, and truth is utterly objective.  Something is beautiful as much as it is true, or reflects the truth.  Lies are ugly.  Tonight we enjoy beautiful music.  It’s beautiful not simply because of the number of people, not simply because of the instrumentation, nor even the notes themselves, but because it reflects the truth of heaven.  Now, maybe Mozart isn’t played 24/7 in heaven, but the genius of Mozart, why it has stood the test of time, is that he tapped into something otherworldly, something heavenly, which helps us recognize the grandeur, the immensity, the order of heaven.  And this particular piece was made for the Mass, where heaven and earth are joined in harmony with each other in this sacred space.  Mozart maybe isn’t played in heaven 24/7, but it helps us to recognize that in this church we straddle both heaven and earth as we worship Christ our King, which is true of every Mass.  

Today we worship Christ, the King, who reigned most perfectly from the cross, and who still reigns perfectly in heaven as He continues to pour Himself out fully to God the Father for Christ’s Bride, the Church.  May our adherence to the truth prepare us for what God destines for us, a place in the Kingdom of Christ the King, where we will experience the fullness of the Beauty of God, in which we participate today.