The Good Catholic Life #0246: Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Published: Feb. 28, 2012, 10 p.m.

b'Today\\u2019s host(s): Scot Landry and Fr. Chris O\\u2019Connor\\nToday\\u2019s guest(s): Fr. Tommy Lane, Associate Professor of Sacred Scripture at Mount Saint Mary\\u2019s Seminary\\nLinks from today\\u2019s show:\\n\\n\\n\\nToday\\u2019s topics: Scripture for Catholics in Lent\\nSummary of today\\u2019s show: Since Vatican II, Catholics as a whole have been gaining a deeper appreciation for Scripture, but there\\u2019s so much more to do. Scripture scholar Fr. Tommy Lane joins Scot Landry and Fr. Chris O\\u2019Connor to talk about the importance of reading, studying, and praying with Scripture, even to venerating Scripture as we venerate the Eucharist. Let this Lent be a time when the Word of God takes deeper root in your life and brings you closer to the Lord as you contemplate His \\u201clove letter\\u201d to all men and women.\\n1st segment: Scot and Fr. Chris talked about Fr. Chris\\u2019 visit to Norfolk state prison last night to celebrate Mass with the inmates. Fr. Chris noted that the congregation included a dog, because one of the inmates trains service dogs for the disabled. He told the men that Lent is a boot camp and we use this time to chip away at those things in our lives that aren\\u2019t Christ-like.\\nScot asked what changes happen in the season of Lent at St. John Seminary. Fr. Chris said throughout Lent they have a book or two that they read in the refectory during lunch, about 15-20 minutes of reading, instead of conversations. They are also served soup and bread on Wednesdays and Fridays as a Lenten fast. On Fridays, where the men usually go out for pizza or a movie the rest of the year, during Lent they spend the time in the Stations of the Cross. This year, they are reading a book on Blessed Charles Foucauld and the imitation of Christ.\\nFr. Tommy Lane is the guest. He\\u2019s on a sabbatical from Mount Saint Mary\\u2019s Seminary in Emmittsburg, Maryland, in Boston for study and spending time at St. John\\u2019s Seminary while he\\u2019s here. He is a Scripture scholar.\\n2nd segment: Scot welcomed Fr. Tommy to the show. He grew up on farm in County Cork, Ireland. He has one brother who is now looking after the dairy farm. He grew up in the country, which is a nice place to think about God and vocation. He was in second grade when he first began to think about. It was watching the priest celebrate Sunday Mass. Near the end of high school, he met the vocations director and then went to seminary where he studied Latin and Greek. He studied his theology at Maynooth near Dublin. He went on to Rome for graduate work in Scripture study where he earned degrees, including a Doctorate in Sacred Theology. Fr. Tommy said there was something about the priest in the sanctuary that attracted him to the idea of priesthood at such a young age.\\nScot asked when Fr. Tommy\\u2019s love of Scripture began. Fr. Tommy said about halfway through high school he began to read the Bible every evening before bed. One of the Sisters of Mercy in the high school teaching religion who made everyone in class buy a Bible and they would read it in class.\\nScot asked how seminary formation in Ireland is different. Fr. Tommy said back in the 80s, they didn\\u2019t have formation advisors at the time. Also every seminarian does pastoral work for a half-day every week. At the time, it was optional and there was much less emphasis on it.\\nThere is one seminary for Ireland, St. Patrick\\u2019s College in Maynooth. All the smaller diocesan seminaries have been closed and merged with Maynooth.\\nAfter ordination, he continued with all his studies and after getting his doctorate, he served in various parishes. He also taught adult education in his diocese every week, several weeks. From there he taught in the seminary in Ireland and when the one he taught at closed, the bishop told him to apply to any seminary to teach Scripture. A priest friend in America told him of an opening at Mount Saint Mary\\u2019s in Maryland and he applied.\\nFr. Chris said one of the hardest degrees to earn in Rome is the Scripture degree Fr. Tommy earned. The hardest part for him was the Hebrew. He\\u2019d already studied Greek in undergraduate, but Hebrew is so completely different from any languages he\\u2019d known. Every word is formed with three consonants and the vocabulary is limited so you make words by adding prefixes and suffixes. But it\\u2019s great to read the Scriptures in the languages in which they were written. During exams, you would be allowed to bring Scriptures with you to quote from, but they only allowed the Greek and Hebrew Scriptures.\\nFr. Tommy said reading in Greek and Hebrew allows more precise understanding of what was being said than reading the translation in English. He cited the Annunciation, which in English usually just has Gabriel says \\u201cRejoice, o highly favored daughter\\u201d or \\u201cHail, full of grace\\u201d, but the Greek word used there carries a lot more meaning, such that the angel is saying to Mary that she is full of grace in such a way that she has always been full of grace, which infers the state of the Immaculate Conception.\\nScot asked how Scripture was developed and what languages was it written in? Fr. Tommy said the New Testament was written in Greek and the Old Testament was written in Hebrew and just a very small part in Aramaic. When he studies the New Testament, he studies it in Greek. It was translated later in all the various languages. He said biblical Hebrew and Greek are not the same as modern Greek and Hebrew, although he can sometimes understand many of the words he sees. The Hebrew he learned has vowel signs in it, while modern Hebrew does not, which makes it difficult for him to read, for example.\\n3rd segment: Scot said most Catholics don\\u2019t have a deep appreciation for Catholics and asked Fr. Tommy why that is. Fr. Tommy said there may be some historical reasons, but Catholics are reading Scripture much more now. However, Catholics have always meditated on Scripture in the Rosary and in the Mass and in other indirect ways. Scot guesses half of all Catholics have never read a book of the Bible from beginning to end. He said the Scriptures are a love letter from God to us, as Vatican II said.\\nFr. Tommy said when you have a conversation with someone there is some content. When you pray, you want to nourish your prayer life. Scripture does those. He tells people to read a passage of Scripture before you pray, to help you enter into a deeper prayer life. He suggests people pray for the Holy Spirit to open up the Scripture to them.\\nScot asked what central things he tries to teach Catholics who come for their first Scripture course. Fr. Tommy said he always starts with the inspiration and composition of the Scriptures. One common misunderstanding is that the Scriptures just sort of fell out of heaven. Of course, God is the Author of the Scriptures, but people don\\u2019t understand the human element involved in the composition of the Scriptures. At Mass we say \\u201cThe holy Gospel according to Luke\\u201d because it is Luke who put it into writing and his character comes through. Scot said the human authors are not God\\u2019s robot, but he is inspired to write what God intends to be written. Fr. Tommy said they were real authors.\\nFr. Tommy spoke of the difference between teaching Scripture to seminarians and teaching it to lay adults in faith formation. He would tell laypeople that we can read Scripture, we can study it, we can pray it, and he wanted them to do all three. About halfway through each night, they would pause for a 15-minute guided meditation on Scripture, which turned out to be the most popular part of the programs. In seminary, he doesn\\u2019t need to do that because they already have spiritual directors and others teaching them to pray with the Scriptures, so he can dedicate his time to more academic study of the Scriptures. Seminarians must get an academic understanding of the Scriptures.\\nFr. Chris asked Fr. Tommy which one of the Gospels he would take with him to a desert island. Fr. Tommy said that would be Luke, who is sometimes called the Gentle Scribe. He likes his portrayal of the gentleness of Christ, who is always reaching out to others, especially those on the margins. Fr. Chris said he\\u2019s heard it as the Gospel of hospitality.\\nScot asked if Luke is more Marian than the other two synoptic Gospels, Mark and Matthew. Fr. Tommy said we could say that because the Christmas narratives come from Luke, with so much about Mary in the Annunciation and the Visitation and the Nativity. Fr. Chris asked Fr. Tommy to explain what are the synoptic Gospels. Fr. Tommy said synoptic is two Greeks words meaning \\u201cseeing together\\u201d. Those Gospels have avery similar presentation of the life of Christ. Those are MAtthew, Mark, and Luke. John has a different presentation, where he goes to the Passover in Jerusalem three times, instead of the one in the others, and he gives long speeches instead of the parables in the others. Scot said the synoptics are more about what Jesus did while John is more about who Jesus is and what he does for us.\\nFr. Tommy said the Last Supper Discourse in John is Jesus giving his instructions for the Church, which is why we read the Gospel of John in Easter season.\\nScot said during the season of Lent we encourage people to deepen their knowledge of God and grow in faith. What would we encourage moms and dads and their kids to do to grow in Scripture during Lent? Fr. Tommy said when praying with young children, use one paragraph, perhaps from one of the Gospels with Jesus in it, something that would appeal to the kids, to love Jesus and show Jesus\\u2019 love for them. For an adult studying for themselves for the first time, he suggests two ways: the Scripture readings from daily Mass or pick one Gospel and read it from beginning to end. You might want to pick up a commentary on the Gospel to help, for example, the Navarre Bible Commentary.\\n\\nIn Lent the two readings for daily Mass are especially chosen because they connect with each other in some way. The rest of the year, they are not chosen to be linked in a particular way.\\n4th segment: Scot said on Fr. Tommy\\u2019s website, he saw something from one of the courses he teaches that he\\u2019s never seen before. He said that we should venerate the presence of God in the Scriptures as we would venerate the presence of God in the Eucharist.\\n\\nIn our Catholic tradition we have been accustomed to giving devotion to the Eucharist a privileged position. Vatican II calls us to give equal reverence to the presence of God in his Word and in the Eucharist. Dei Verbum 21 states that the Church has always venerated the Scriptures as she venerated the Lord\\u2019s Body. This is repeated in CCC 103. This may be a new way of looking at the Scriptures for you. I cherish the following quotation from Origen, a third century preacher, \\u201cYou receive the body of the Lord with special care and reverence lest the smallest crumb of the consecrated gift fall to the floor. You should receive the word of God with equal care and reverence lest the smallest word of it fall to the floor and be lost.\\u201d\\n\\nScot said he doesn\\u2019t know many Catholics who venerate the Word of God with that same passion as they devote to Eucharistic adoration. Fr. Tommy said Cardinal Arinze has made that phrase famous. What Fr. Tommy does is that he has a special place in his rooms for Scriptures to give them a place of prominence in your home. Scot said it\\u2019s easy to have the Bible on a shelf among other books, but its better to put God\\u2019s love letter to us in a special place. Fr. Tommy said it\\u2019s different from all other books.\\nFr. Tommy said it\\u2019s appropriate to have the family Bible blessed by a priest.\\nFr. Chris said you often see the four evangelists represented by an ox (Luke), an eagle (John), an angel or man (Matthew), and a lion (Mark). Fr. Tommy said they are taken from the four creatures in the Book of Ezekiel and the Book of Revelations. The eagle is John because John has such lofty theology. Luke opens with the angel Gabriel appearing to Zechariah, the priest sacrificing in the temple, and oxen were sacrificed in the temple. Matthew is normally said to be a human, which refers to the gospel opening with the family tree of Jesus. And Mark is a lion because it opens with John the Baptist preaching int he wilderness, roaring like a lion.\\nFr. Chris asked Fr. Tommy what he does to prepare a homily as a Scripture scholar. Fr. Tommy begins preparing on Monday before Sunday\\u2019s Gospel. He uses it for prayer and meditation and focuses on what the Lord might be saying through the Scriptures to his people. As the week goes on, he reads Scripture commentaries and might look for answers on various questions that arise and tease out deeper meanings of the passage.\\nScot said Fr. Tommy publishes his homilies on his website and over time the same readings elicit different ways to approach them. Fr. Tommy said God is always speaking to us in a new way through Scriptures. He\\u2019s trying to link with the lives of the people he\\u2019s speaking to. There may be situations or questions that cause people to seek answers. He wants Scripture to meet people where they are in some way.\\nScot said at the end of Lent we read some of the most powerful Scripture passages starting with Palm Sunday and ending on Easter. Some say the Palm Sunday Passion reading so long that it\\u2019s tough to get everything out of them. Fr. Tommy said reading the Passion at home beforehand would be great. We should understand how the Passion narratives work: Last Supper, Gethsemane, Jesus arrest, the religious trial before the Sanhedrin, the civil trial before Pilate, the condemnation,. and Jesus carrying his cross. Seeing this structure in can help guide us through it.\\nFr. Tommy finds the way we read the Scriptures helpful, with the congregation saying the words of the crowd. We don\\u2019t like to think about it, but it\\u2019s because of our sins that Christ is crucified. Scot said when we in the pews say \\u201cCrucify him\\u201d we in some ways might not want to acknowledge it and it\\u2019s very difficult for him to say this because its by our sins that we are saying \\u201cCrucify him\\u201d.Every time we sin, we choose Barabbas instead of Christ.\\nFr. Chris said one of the men at Norfolk told him that we forget that Barabbas was the first man that Jesus saved.\\nFor people who want to deepen their lives in Scripture, they can read Fr. Tommy\\u2019s homilies on his website and there\\u2019s also a few excerpts of Scripture courses. He\\u2019s on sabbatical right now to write a book on priesthood and Scriptures. The first part is on priesthood and the Old Testament. The second is on Christ the high priest of the New Testament. The third section is Christ sharing his priesthood in two ways with his apostles and the lay faithful.'