APRIL 9, 2023
Rendezvous with Eternal Life
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Life is full of rendezvous: rendezvous with love, with joy, rendezvous with suffering and pain. There is also death, which looms on the horizon, appearing to us as the end of life. Every year we are graced with the celebration of Easter, which reminds us that death itself is not the final word on life and love, but rather a passage into eternal life.
Jesus Christ never stops knocking on the door of our hearts. He lives, and He comes to us, calling us to himself, so that we may know his Love, which is more powerful than death. Jesus Christ died on the cross, in prayer and with love. Jesus Christ rose from the dead and opened for us the way to eternal life, thus revealing the power of Divine Love.
In the same way that death could not keep Jesus Christ from being raised to life, nothing that befalls us in life, neither pain, sickness nor suffering, can prevent Him from transforming our death into a passage to eternal life.
Trust in Him. Commend your life to Him, surrender your illness and the hour of your death to Him. Your final destination is not death, but eternal life.
May we learn to surrender to God, with our eyes fixed on the Lord Jesus Christ crucified. He is risen.
I bless you with my whole heart:
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Happy Easter,
+ Christian Lépine
Archbishop of Montreal
march 31, 2023
Way of the Cross
The Communion and Liberation movement is once again be sponsoring
The Way of The Cross through the streets of Montreal, led by Archbishop Christian Lepine.
The walk will begin on Friday, April 7th at 9:30 a.m. from Notre-Dame-de Bon-Secours Chapel, 400 rue Saint-Paul Est.
For information, call 514-6678-5709.
march 31, 2023
— from Diocese Montreal
It might not always seem like it but, on Sundays, all the Christians of the world are celebrating. There are some assemblies that are very joyful, and others are quite timid, perhaps even a bit stiff…
No matter how they are, God is very much there, at the center of each church. He is often discreet, like a gentle breeze, but he can at times blow wildly like a storm!
Why do Catholics go to Mass each Sunday? For one good reason: to commune with Christ.
Okay… But what does communion mean? Of course, if we do not know what communion means then we cannot understand why Catholics would go to Mass on Sunday!
Mass is captivating, like a suspense movie, on the condition that we understand the intrigue.
God at work!
At Mass, we see, feel and hear God at work in and around us. When we feel this love of God very strongly, then we run to Mass as often as possible! When we don’t feel anything or we don’t see anything, well then, we still go! In faithfulness to that love.
It is like life as a couple! The passionate feeling of butterflies in the stomach may not always be there on a daily basis. Sometimes, we do not feel anything, but loving is a decision, because we have committed to it, and we want to stay true to that commitment, knowing that love is more a decision than a fluttering butterfly…
Then, in time, we realize that this loyalty is rewarded a hundredfold: we make this truth come true; we give, we receive, we live a life of sharing that heals all types of emotional wounds by filling up our great need to love and be loved.
That is what Communion with Christ is! In remaining true to Him, in making our hearts ready to receive His love and His life, in allowing him to get close to us, it is then that he teaches us, nourishes us, transforms us, and heals us… All this during the Mass! And after the Mass, filled up, strengthened and certain of this love, we want to live out of it and share it with others.
The Mass is the celebration of the love between God and ourselves; after the Mass is when we are sent out on mission to learn to love and be loved.
This is how God acts through us… if we let him! To let him is the only condition required. Why? Because with Him, it is about free Love. Real love.
We are not angels
When God created us, he took great care in creating us man and woman, that is, with a body and spirit that cannot be separated. We are both body and spirit, contrary to the angels who are pure spirits.
God created us this way so that we could search for him with all of our senses, and not only with our intelligence. That is the reason why He offers us his love through tangible signs that we can see, touch, hear, taste and smell! All this for love of us and so that our body would be as fulfilled as our spirit.
We call these signs sacraments. Jesus left them for us when he walked on this earth with us. He knew well our deep need for the beyond in our human life that often lacks depth and substance.
Thanks to the sacraments, our thirst for the infinite and the absolute is quenched. It is like when we were children; we needed to physically feel love from our parents. So, we would go climb into the arms of our mother, or go be cradled by our father…
Our Heavenly Father proceeds in the same way; so that we could physically feel his love, his Son Jesus gave us tangible signs of love: baptism, confirmation, Eucharist, reconciliation, anointing of the sick, holy orders and marriage. Each time we “run” to Mass, to adoration, to an evening of prayer, or to any other celebration such as Easter, Christmas, the Body and Blood of Christ, Pentecost, etc. we run to be snuggled, strengthened and nourished. In short, we place ourselves on the receiving end of love.
There are lots of people in the pews!
Any celebration, whatever it be, is captivating provided that we have understood that we come together not only to socialize and have a good laugh! Each celebration is an invitation from God to participate in His work of love, that is not negligible…
It is captivating because we are actors with Him, surrounded by our brothers and sisters, by all the Saints and the angels in Heaven… there are lots of people in the pews, even if we cannot see them with our eyes.
Catholics celebrate someone or something every day. They love a good party! They sing, raise up their hands, kneel, get up, give each other the Peace of Christ. All over the world, the liturgy is the same, offering a space and time to stop and meet God and celebrate His love. This is how God makes our life fruitful; interiorly, personally, in our family and our cultural – we leave having been filled up, calmed and enlivened. Why would we want to pass that up? Sunday is all that, and it is sacred. Yes, we are truly created for love. That’s a good reason to celebrate, is it not?