Or Fourth Sunday of Easter according to the old rite. From
Dom Prosper Gueranger:
Our Jesus has organized his Church, and confided to his Apostles the
sacred deposit of the truths which are to form the object of our faith.
We must now follow him in another work, of equal importance to the
world, and to which he gives his divine attention during these forty
days: it is the institution of the Sacraments. It is not enough that we
believe; we must, moreover, be made just, that is, we must bear upon us
the likeness of God’s holiness; we must receive, we must have
incorporated within us, that great fruit of the Redemption, which is
called Grace; that thus being made living members of our divine
Head, we may be made joint-heirs with him of the Kingdom of heaven.
Now, it is by means of the Sacraments, that Jesus is to produce
in us this wondrous work of our justification; he applies to us the
merits of his Incarnation and Sacrifice but he applies them by certain
means, which he himself, in his power and wisdom, has instituted.
Being the sovereign Master of his own gifts, he can select what means he pleases whereby to convey Grace to us; all we
have to do is to conform to his wishes. Thus, each of the Sacraments is
a law; so that it is in vain that we hope for a Sacrament to produce
its effects, unless we fulfill the conditions specified by our Redeemer.
And here, at once, we cannot but admire that infinite goodness, which
has so mercifully blended two such widely distinct operations in one and
the same act—namely, on the one side, the humble submission of man and,
on the other, the munificent generosity of God.
We were showing, a few days back, how the Church, though a spiritual
society, is also visible and exterior, because man, for whose sake the
Church was formed, is a being composed of body and soul. When
instituting the Sacraments, our Lord assigned to each an essential rite;
and this rite is outward and sensible. He made the Flesh,
which he had united to his Divine Person, become the instrument of our
salvation by his Passion and Death on the Cross; he redeemed us by
shedding his Blood for us:—so is it in the Sacraments; he
follows the same mysterious plan, taking physical things as his
auxiliaries in effecting the work of our justification. He raises them
to a supernatural state, and makes them the faithful and all-powerful
conductors of his grace, even to the most intimate depths of our soul.
It is the continuation of the mystery of the Incarnation, the object of
which is to raise us, by visible things, to the knowledge of things
invisible. Thus is broken the pride of Satan; he despised man because he
is not purely a spirit, but is spirit and matter unitedly; and he
refused to pay adoration to the Word made Flesh. (Read more.)