It is the First Sunday of Advent. Here is the Entrance Antiphon (Introit):
Unto you have I lifted up my soul. O my God, I trust in you, let me not be put to shame; do not allow my enemies to laugh at me; for none of those who are awaiting you will be disappointed.
V. Make your ways known unto me, O Lord, and teach me your paths (Ps 24:1-4).
From
Vultus Christi:
There is movement in today’s liturgy: a great sweep upward and away
from all that holds us bound and confined “in darkness and in the shadow
of death” (Lk 1:79). This is the ecstatic movement of prayer, of all
right worship: out of self, upward, and into “the fullness of God” (Eph
3:19). The Introit sets the tone, not only for this the first Mass of
Advent, but also for the rest of the Advent season and, indeed, for the
whole new liturgical year. “To Thee, my God, I lift up my soul” (Ps
24:1) or, as Ronald Knox translated it, “All my heart goes out to Thee,
my God.”
The heart, in going out to God, leaves much behind and cannot
look back. This is the law of prayer, this is what it makes it costly,
sacrificial and, at the same time, unspeakably sweet. The things we
leave behind are mere trifles but, oh, the hold they can have on us! The
old self, fearful and anxious about many things, grasps at every
illusory promise of security, clings to things, arranges them in great
useless piles, looks on them caressingly and takes inventory of them.
The loss of any thing, even the most insignificant, represents for the
old self, the loss of control, the loss of power, and of comforting
familiar pleasures. All of this in incompatible with the prayer that the
liturgy places on our lips today: “All my heart goes out to Thee, my
God” (Ps 24:1). The upward flight of today’s Introit has nothing to do
with cheap pious sentiment. It is an uncompromising call to detachment,
to poverty of spirit, and to an obedience that is off and running with
all speed, ready for the leap of hope.
From Dom Gueranger:
This Sunday, the first of the ecclesiastical year, is called, in the chronicles and charts of the middle ages, Ad te levavi Sunday, from the first words of the Introit; or, Aspiciens a longe, from the first words of one of the responsories of Matins.
The Station is at St. Mary Major’s. It is under the auspices of Mary –
in the splendid basilica which possesses the crib of Bethlehem, and is
therefore called, in ancient documents, St. Mary’s ad Praesepe –
that the Roman Church recommences, each year, the sacred cycle. It
would have been impossible to select a place more suitable than this for
saluting the approach of the divine birth, which is to gladden heaven
and earth, and manifest the sublime portent of a Virgin Mother. Let us
go in spirit to this august temple, and unite in the prayers which are
there being offered up: they are the very ones we also use, and which we
will now explain.
[* The Stations marked in the Roman missal for certain days in the
year, were formerly processions, in which the whole clergy and people
went to some given church, and there celebrated the Office and Mass.
This usage, which dates from the earliest period of the Roman Church,
and of which St. Gregory the Great was but the restorer, still exists,
at least in a measure; for the Stations are still observed, though with
less solemnity and concourse of people, on all the days specified in the
missal.] (Read more.)
Many people struggle with loneliness during this season of the year. Here are some words from the great Benedictine Dom Hubert van Zeller:
After sin, the three evils most to be dreaded are doubt, fear and loneliness. Of these, loneliness is the worst. Loneliness can give rise to doubt and fear, while if a man knows he is not alone he can fight his doubt, and disguise- which is half the battle- his fear. We can force ourselves to laugh at our doubts and fears, but loneliness forbids laughter. Loneliness is an echoing ache in the soul, it hollows out the heart and scoops away at our reserves. It even communicates itself to the senses, and all the outer world seems indifferent and hostile. We must have something with which to meet this evil. We must find something which will turn it into good....
This is where we need to have faith. This is where we pull ourselves up and cry "It's a mood. It will pass. It is only a mood." That désespoir des lendemains de fête will melt away in time, giving place to color and light and normality and, finally, joy. ~ Dom Hubert van Zeller's We Die Standing, pp.62-63