Fruit of the Same Tree: St. Valentine and Ash Wednesday

Fruit of the Same Tree

St. Valentine’s Day and Ash Wednesday, believe it or not, are fruit of the same tree. Granted, that’s not apparent to everybody. The last time the two feasts shared the same space on the calendar a priest well known on theh internet posted the following: “This year nothing says happy Valentine’s Day like taking your date to get your ashes in church and reminding each other that one day you are both going to die.”  

Romantic, no? Fr. was making a knowing nod to the fact that some people don’t see the convergence. And there does, on the surface, appear to be a conflict between bright pink hearts on the one hand, and ashes against a deep purple backdrop on the other. In my own diocese the bishop has already pre-emptively announced that he will not be granting any dispensations from the mortifications of Ash Wednesday in deference to the yearly love fest.

“Remember, Man . . .”

But is there a conflict, really? The coincidence of these two days should not be a problem for us if we hold to the Faith As Handed Down To Us.  The “Valentine’s Day” promoted by retailers and other secular sources, after all, started out as the Feast of St. Valentine, who was a 3rd century Christian martyr. Not only do both observances spring from the same Christian tradition, they actually complement each other in a way that is particularly relevant to our current situation.

“Remember that you are dust . . .”

     Let’s start with Ash Wednesday, which marks the beginning of the great penitential season of Lent. Its name comes, naturally, from the imposition of ashes on the forehead, along with the admonition “remember, man, that you are dust, and unto dust you shall return.”

The Fall

This reminder of our dusty origin is taken from Genesis 3:19, at which point the Lord is expelling Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden. This after our first parents have eaten, at Satan’ behest, from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. In our Ash Wednesday observances we have a concrete reminder that, through original sin and its effects, The Fall is still an operative reality in our lives.  

The Fall destroyed the close relationship between humanity and God, which we see when Adam and Eve hide from their Creator in the Garden. It likewise creates division in the one-flesh union between the two of them. Consequently, they now feel the need to hide their bodies from each other with clothes, since each now feels the greedy power of lust as a consequence of original sin, and perceives it in the other.

Carnal Desire

Concupiscence is the theological term for the attraction to sin that is one of the consequences of Original Sin. Lust is by no means its only manifestation, but it has always been one of its most prominent features, and one which heavily overshadows our age. In fact, lust lies at the heart of virtually every major point on which the secular world, and the culture of dissent within the Church that is secularism’s close ally, takes issue with traditional Catholic moral teaching.  Lust permeates our popular culture.  

It is not surprising, then, that as the Feast of St. Valentine has been gradually transformed into the bacchanalia known as Valentine’s Day (or sometimes simply “V” Day) it has become, more or less, a straightforward celebration of carnal desire.

    

Carnality, however, was not the program of the real St. Valentine (as I detail in a previous post, “St. Valentine, Patron of Agape”). The historic Valentine was put to death by the Romans, according to some accounts, for consecrating Christian marriages.  Now, the Romans married as much as anyone else, there was no crime in presiding over marriages per se.  The crime was in the consecrating of Christian marriages.  St. Valentine was a champion of marriage as raised to a sacrament by Jesus Christ.  He willingly sacrificed his own life for this understanding of marriage.

The Convergence

It is here that we begin to see the convergence between the supposedly divergent observations of Ash Wednesday and St. Valentine’s Day.  We see how they can be the fruit of the same tree. On Ash Wednesday we are called to repent, to turn aside from concupiscence in all its forms and surrender ourselves to Christ.  The Christian marriage for which St. Valentine gave his life likewise calls us to turn aside from selfish lust, and, in imitation of Jesus, sacrifice ourselves for our spouse.  As St. Paul says:

. . . walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us, a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God. (Eph 5:2-3)

Later he adds:

Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the Church and gave himself up for her, that he might sanctify her . . . (Eph 5:25-26)

Christian love consists in sacrificing oneself for the good of others, and a Christian expresses sexual love precisely by sacrificing oneself for one’s wife or husband within the sacramental covenant of marriage.  Most often this also includes sacrificing one’s own wants, desires, and comfort for the good of the children that result from the union.

Sanctify Each Other

     Let’s return for a moment to that first human marriage in the Garden of Eden. We saw how concupiscence is an impediment to love: love between the spouses, and love between the spouses and God.  Turning away from sin (i.e., repenting) is the only thing that makes true love possible. If we want true love, we must indeed “Repent and believe the Gospel”.

     Love and Repentance, fruit of the same tree. This Ash Wednesday my date, as the internet priest put it, will be my lovely bride. That is, my sweetheart of more years than I care to enumerate (along with at least one of our fair offspring).  We’re going to church and getting our ashes  .  .  .  that we might sanctify each other.

Please see also:

The Midpoint Between The Nativity and The Passion

 The Midpoint

Today is the midpoint, the end of the beginning and the beginning of the end.  Which is to say, today is the Feast of the Presentation, a perfect microcosm of both/and.  The official Christmas Season ended a couple weeks ago on the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord. The Presentation of the baby Jesus in the Temple forty days after his birth as prescribed in Jewish law, however, is the concluding celebratory event of the scriptural nativity narrative. My wife’s forebears in Poland always extended their Christmas celebration until the Feast of the Presentation on February 2nd. This is still the practice in some places (including the Vatican).

     At the same time, Lent is bearing down on us.  The connection is clear in the traditional liturgical calendar, where Pre-Lent starts on Septuagesima Sunday, three-and-one-half weeks before Ash Wednesday.  The Church just observed Septuagesima Sunday this past weekend, which you would have seen if you attended the TLM. While Pre-Lent is not formally part of the Ordinary Calendar anymore, it’s still there in the readings. You might have noticed that the response to the Psalm at the Ordinary Form mass this past Sunday was the Lenten verse: “If today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts”. So, this year post-Christmas and Pre-Lent actually overlap by several days.

Simeon: Both/And

     The both/and, Christmas/Lent aspect of the Presentation is personified in Simeon. He is the prophetic old man who has God’s promise that he will see the Messiah before he dies. Simeon takes baby Jesus in his arms and first intones a prayer of thanks and praise. We call this prayer the Nunc Dimittis from its open words in Latin. In English it begins: “Now, Lord, you let your servant go in peace . . .” (Luke 2:29-32).

The Midpoint
Simeon the Righteous, by Alexey Yegorov, 1830s-1840s

     That, however, is not the end of it.  He next turns to Mary and says:

Behold, this child is set for the fall and rising of many in Israel,
and for a sign that is spoken against
(and a sword will pierce through your own soul also),
that thoughts out of many hearts may be revealed. (Luke 2:34-35)

Small wonder that the Presentation/Prophecy of Simeon provides both one of the Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary and one of the Seven Sorrows of Mary.  You can see the whole scene wonderfully played out in Caravaggio’s characteristically dramatic painting of the Presentation. The painting appears below. I also use it as the backdrop to my video of Holst’s magnificent choral setting to the Nunc Dimittis.  

Caravaggio’s Painting

When we look at the painting the brightest figure in picture immediately catches our eye. That’s baby Jesus, in the middle of the left half of the composition.  We then take in the shadowy image of Simeon holding the child, along with the prophetess Anna. She has also been awaiting the Messiah in the Temple. Our gaze then moves right, where we notice a befuddled looking Joseph at the margin. Our eye finally comes to rest on Mary, the blood-red of her tunic the deepest color in the picture.  At last, we settle on her hands, which clutch the heart that Simeon has just told her will be pierced by a sword.

The Presentation in the Temple, Caravaggio

Joy and Sorrow

     The Presentation is not the only place where we see this unexpected (to us) combination of joy and sorrow.  Let’s look back a little earlier in Luke’s Gospel, where Mary sings the canticle we know as The Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55). This song is her greeting to her cousin Elizabeth (who is herself pregnant with John the Baptist).  The Magnificat is closely modeled on an Old Testament canticle sung by Hannah, the mother of Samuel (1 Samuel 2:1-10). Given the close resemblance of the two songs, we are clearly expected to see Hannah as a type, or prefigurement, of Mary.

Hannah’s is not simply a ritual presentation of her son to The Lord, by the way. She brings little two-year-old Samuel to the temple and leaves him there, to be raised by Eli the priest.  This was the child for whom she wept and prayed, but she only received him after she promised to give him back to God, which she does, literally.

God’s Ways

The Midpoint
The Presentation of Christ in the Temple, by Hans Holbein the Elder, c. 1500

     There is something here that is true to motherhood in general. Mothers receive their children only to give them up in the end. The joy comes at the price of the sorrow.  There is something deeper going on as well, something about the nature of Christian discipleship. But before we get to that, I’d like to take another look at the liturgical calendar.  

It’s interesting that the liturgical year doesn’t unfold in the order we might expect.   We have the beginning and the end, Christmas and Easter with all their drama, in the first half of the year. Then, in the last six months we have what seems like it should be the middle. It feels, however, like one long denouement until it all starts up again on the first Sunday of advent.

This is not how you or I would have planned it, but God’s ways are not our ways, and his thoughts are not out thoughts (see Isaiah 55:8). We could point out that the dates of Easter and Christmas were established independently, at different times and for different reasons. The date of Easter isn’t arbitrary. It follows the dates of the Crucifixion and Resurrection. These happened at the time of the Jewish Passover. Passover is a movable feast, but always happens around the same time in Spring.   Easter, consequently, is likewise a movable feast, falling somewhere between March 22nd and April 25th. The Church has celebrated the Resurrection since its very beginning.

The Way of the Cross

The celebration of Christmas, on the other hand, didn’t become common until several centuries later. In this case Holy Scripture gives no certain date. Christians in the west seem to have settled on the date of December 25th some time in the 4th century.  

The Midpoint

     There is no clear record of how the Church made the final determination for the date of Christmas. There was, as it happens, an earlier consensus on the date of the Annunciation. Logically Christmas should follow nine months later, shouldn’t it?  That agreed upon date for the Annunciation, by the way, was the one we still observe: March 25th.  

There was a widespread belief in the early church by the way, that whatever the liturgical date of the Easter celebration, the actual date of the Resurrection was also March 25th . . . so maybe the dates are not so independent after all. Whatever factors went into it and however the liturgical calendar took on its current form, it seems that that close proximity of Christmas and Lent gives us little time to forget that our savior came into this world for the explicit purpose of following the Way of the Cross.

Pick Up the Cross

The Midpoint
Christ Crucified, by Diego Velazquez, c. 1632

     We might want to consider that the baby Jesus we see in the Presentation grows up to tell his disciples: “If any man would come  after me, let him pick up his cross and follow me” (Matthew 16:24).  We have heard of the crucifixion so often that it can become an abstraction. We’ve seen it so many times in tidy, pious pictures, that perhaps we can’t understand how viscerally shocking that image was to the disciples.  They were personally familiar with this hideous form of execution. They had seen men undergo the wrenching, tortuous death inflicted by the hideous instrument, the cross, crux in Latin, that gives us our word excruciating. One does not lightly or casually pick up one’s cross.

A Double Edged Sword     

There really is a lot going on in this one feast day. We see the two-edged prophecy of Simeon, linking Salvation and Sorrow. Likewise, we see the placement of the feast day as the midpoint, the intersection of Christmas joy and the penitential season of Lent. Finally, we find ourselves wondering at the  departure from chronological order that puts those two seasons right next to each other, when we would expect to find them at opposite ends of the year. All those things come together in the Presentation to remind us that Christ is our Savior, but he has not come to save us from sorrow or suffering in this world. No, he’s come to save us from sin. Hhe doesn’t save us from the cross, he saves us through the cross.

Bells 10th Day of Christmas

The Wrong Shall Fail, The Right Prevail: 11th Day of Christmas

The Wrong Shall Fail

“The wrong shall fail? since when?”  

Today I’d like to take a look at a particularly moving Christmas song. There’s a story behind the creation of every song, and sometimes knowing the story can make the song all the more meaningful.  This is one of my favorites.

The story begins on Christmas Day, 1863, when the American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote a poem called “Christmas Bells”.   

Wadsworth starts his poem with church bells ringing out the joy of Christmas:

Longfellow - Christmas Bells
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 1868

I heard the bells on Christmas Day
Their old, familiar carols play,
and wild and sweet
The words repeat
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!


And thought how, as the day had come,
The belfries of all Christendom
Had rolled along
The unbroken song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!


Till ringing, singing on its way,
The world revolved from night to day,
A voice, a chime,
A chant sublime
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

The Cannon Thundered

The poet, however, was not filled with unmixed good cheer.  His wife had recently died a tragic death in a house fire. On top of that, he had just received news that his son Charles, who had left without his knowledge or consent to fight in the bitter Civil War that was then embroiling the United States, had been wounded in battle . . .

Let the Children: 10th Day of Christmas and St. Genevieve

Let the Children

“Let the children come to me, and do not hinder them; for to such belongs the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 19:14)

. . . and a little child shall lead them. (Isaiah 11:6)     

Merry Christmas!  Today is the 10th Day of Christmas, as we continue to celebrate the birth of our Lord and Creator as a little human child. It is helpful when we think about the meaning of the Nativity to remember that our ancestors generally did not fully share our sentimentality towards children.  Our God, however, never fails to defy our expectations. The quotes above, for instance, from Our Lord Himself and from the prophet Isaiah, would indeed have been startling to previous generations.

A Little Child

Annointing of David 10th Day of Christmas
Annointing of David by Samuel, by Felix-Joseph Barrias, 1842

    All the same, throughout the Old Testament we see that God has a way of working in the world through small and apparently innocuous instruments (which I explore in more depth in my post from the 4th Sunday of Advent). There’s Joseph, a young boy sold into slavery (Genesis 37:18-36). We also see David, who was so young and unimpressive that his father Jesse left him in the fields when the prophet Samuel came to choose a new king from among Jesse’s sons (1 Samuel 16). When God shows Himself to the prophet Elijah, he comes in the form of a tiny whisper (1 Kings: 11-13) . . .

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God’s Ways Are Not Our Ways: 9th Day of Christmas

God’s Ways 

God’s ways are not our ways.  We hear a lot of Isaiah through the seasons of Advent and Christmas, but the passage below expresses with particular clarity one of the most striking and curious things about Christmas:

For my thoughts are not your thoughts,
     neither are your ways my ways, says the Lord.
For as the heavens are higher than the earth,
     so are my ways higher than your ways
     and my thoughts than your thoughts. (Isaiah 55:8-9)

Yes, God’s ways are not our ways.  It’s easy enough to say, but it can sometimes be difficult for us to accept.  Why does God not answer our prayers the way we would like? Why does He allow bad things to happen?  Why, when it comes down to it, does he not do what we would do, if we were God? Why does God always surprise us?

One of Us Yet Mother of God: 8th Day of Christmas

One of Us

We must start with the fact that Mary was one of us, fully human. As Charles Dickens says in the opening lines of A Christmas Carol:* “This must be distinctly understood, or nothing wonderful can come of the story I am going to relate.”  Just as Marley’s death is an essential element in Dickens’ tale, the Incarnation’s meaning for mankind is directly connected to the Blessed Mother’s humanity. After all, if Christ isn’t born of a human woman, He’s not fully human himself. How else can He die and redeem humankind? Mary is the guarantor that Jesus, while He truly is God, is truly one of us.

Virgin and Child, by Jacopo Bellini, 1465

We celebrate that wonderful yet confounding reality today. The World knows today, the Eighth Day of Christmas, as New Year’s Day. In the Church it is the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, the final day in the Octave of Christmas.  The secular observance celebrates no more than another turning of a calendar page, but in the Church we look at time with an eye on eternity. The Nativity of Christ turns around all of human history. That’s why we eventually adopted the BC/AD arrangement of the centuries with its mirror-image numbering of years. The Nativity is at the center of time.  Jesus’s mother, Mary, plays an essential part in that unique and astonishing event.

Last year’s post for the Solemnity of Mary-

Holy Family Gennari

The Holy Family and the Crisis of Our Family: 7th Day of Christmas

Holy Family 

The Holy Family, whose feast we celebrate today, commemorates the Holiest Family, Jesus, Mary, and Joseph. But, as always, there’s more to it. The name of the feast also reminds us that “the family” in general, composed of father, mother, and children, is itself “holy.” It is, in fact, a gift of God.  

St. Paul underscores the sanctity of the family, qua family, in his letter to the Ephesians: 

“For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.” This is a profound mystery—but I am talking about Christ and the church. (Ephesians 5:31-32)

Alarming Trends 

Today’s feast, much like the Solemnity of Christ the King, is a fairly new addition to the liturgical calendar. Devotion to the Holy Family had been growing for some time. The formal feast did not join the ranks of official observances until 1921. Pope Pius XI established it in response to increasing threats to the integrity of the traditional family.  

The trends that already looked alarming a century ago have now grown and metastasized in ways that would have astounded our great-grandparents. The family in its traditional configuration is tottering under open and sustained attack . . .

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St. Thomas Becket - 5th Day of Christmas

The Paradox of Christmas and St. Thomas Becket: 5th Day of Christmas

St. Thomas Becket, Christmas Martyr

Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, met a violent end on this date in the year 1170. Knights loyal to Becket’s former patron and friend, Henry II of England, burst into his cathedral. There they murdered the archbishop as he was celebrating Vespers. And so the 5th Day of Christmas (oh yes, Merry Christmas!) is also the feast of St. Thomas Becket, bishop and martyr.

Peter O’Toole as King Henry II (l) and Richard Burton as Thomas Becket (r) in the 1964 film Becket

       It’s striking how many martyrs’ feast days we observe during the Christmas season: St. Stephen on the 2nd Day of Christmas, The Holy Innocents yesterday; on Christmas Day itself the Church used to celebrate a second mass, not for the Nativity, but for the martyr St. Anastasia.  Today’s martyr has attracted the attention of numerous authors over the years . . .

The Beloved Disciple at the Foot of the Cross: 3rd Day of Christmas

St. John the Evangelist

The Beloved Disciple, St. John the Evangelist, stands for all of us at the foot of the Cross:

So the soldiers did this. But standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother, and his mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus saw his mother, and the disciple whom he loved standing near, he said to his mother, “Woman, behold, your son!” Then he said to the disciple, “Behold, your mother!” And from that hour the disciple took her to his own home. (John 19:25-27)

The Beloved Disciple

St. John the Evangelist, by Alessandro Turchi, 17th Century

May God bless you on this 3rd Day of Christmas!  Today we observe the Feast of St. John the Evangelist. He is author not only of one of the Gospels, but (possibly) also three New Testament letters and the Book of Revelation. Sacred artists have traditionally depicted St. John as an eagle. He appears as a great bird because he “soars” to greater heights, theologically speaking, than the other Evangelists.  He also carries the name “The Beloved Disciple” because in his Gospel he often refers to himself as “the disciple whom Jesus loved.”


   Many people have wondered over the centuries why John makes such a point of depicting himself as The Beloved Disciple.  On one level, of course, it must reflect his lived experience . . .

St. Stephen and Good King Wenceslas: 2nd Day of Christmas


Good King Wenceslas on the Feast of Stephen

Good King Wenceslas looked out
On the Feast of Stephen
When the snow lay round about
Soft and crisp and even  

Merry 6th Day of Christmas! The Christmas Season abounds with all nature of celebrations and observances. We might be surprised that a large number of those observances involve martyrs. Even the joyous celebration of Christmas itself, as we saw yesterday, is also the feast of the martyr St. Anastasia. And we see the same thing today. The very first day after we celebrate the birth of our savior we commemorate the death of his first martyr, St. Stephen.

We read the story of his martyrdom in the Acts of the Apostles (chapters 6-7)We also know St. Stephen’s name from the Christmas carol “Good King Wenceslas.”  The song does not actually tell us anything about Stephen himself. It instead describes how Good King Wenceslas goes out on the saint’s day, in an act of Christian charity. His mission is to share his Christmas bounty with a lonely and poverty-stricken old peasant.  

A Christian King

Whether or not the incident recounted in the song ever happened, Wenceslas himself really lived and reigned . . .