'He’s giving us a model to follow: charity, which is love of our neighbor because of the love of God that we have in our heart.' — Bishop Peter Jugis
CHARLOTTE — On Holy Thursday, Bishop Peter Jugis celebrated the Mass of the Lord’s Supper at St. Patrick Cathedral. The Holy Thursday liturgy April 1 marked the start of the Triduum, the three holy days preceding the Resurrection of the Lord at Easter.
Unlike last year when churches were closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic and all Holy Week liturgies had to be streamed online, this year people were able to gather spaced apart in the pews in limited numbers in accordance with public health protocols.
The Mass of the Lord's Supper memorializes Jesus' celebration of the Passover meal, His washing the feet of His disciples, His agony in the Garden of Gethsemane, and His betrayal and arrest. It also commemorates the institution of the Eucharist, the priesthood and the Mass that we still celebrate today in His memory.
Jesus’ actions on Holy Thursday and leading up to His crucifixion on Good Friday illustrate how Jesus “loves to the end,” Bishop Jugis said in his homily. “The proper way to understand what is happening to Jesus these days is (as) an expression of His love.”
“Jesus is coming to the end,” the bishop explained. “He is coming to the supreme moment of His life – the reason He came, for the forgiveness of sins and for our salvation, by offering His life as the ransom for our salvation.”
Jesus willingly offers up His life when He is arrested, tortured and crucified. “He wills that, He wants that,” Bishop Jugis said. “It’s a sign of His love for us.”
“Everything He does, to the very end, is an expression of His great love for us.”
Furthermore, Jesus commands His disciples to follow His example of sacrificial love: “As I have done, you are to do.”
“He’s giving us a model to follow: charity, which is love of our neighbor because of the love of God that we have in our heart,” Bishop Jugis said. “Charity is unselfish love …thinking only of the good of others, as Jesus does.”
Not only is this the theme of the holy days of the Triduum, Bishop Jugis noted, it is the theme for this year’s Diocese of Charlotte Eucharistic Congress: “As I Have Loved You,” taken from the Gospel of John (13:34). The annual gathering of Catholics from across western North Carolina is scheduled for Sept. 17-18 at the Charlotte Convention Center.
The entire Scripture passage is what we should take to heart, the bishop said: “ As I have loved you, so you also should love one another.”
“Charity – that is what we are celebrating, the charity of Jesus Christ, which is a model: the giving of His life … for our salvation,” he said. “So, also, we are to offer ourselves in love (and) in service to one another.”
At the end of the Holy Thursday Mass, altars in every church were stripped bare, candles and lights were extinguished, and the Blessed Sacrament was transferred to a temporary altar of repose until Easter – outwardly demonstrating the sense of the Church's bereavement during the time of Christ's Passion and burial.
Catholics then spent time in Eucharistic Adoration, recalling Jesus' words to His sleepy disciples in the Garden of Gethsemane, "Could you not keep watch with Me for one hour?"
On Good Friday, no Mass is celebrated.
— Catholic News Herald. Photos by SueAnn Howell, senior reporter.
At top: Bishop Peter Jugis elevates the Host during the Mass of the Lord's Supper. Above: he carries the Blessed Sacrament, taken from the tabernacle in the cathedral, in a procession to an altar of repose for Holy Thursday night.
CHARLOTTE — Men of the Diocese of Charlotte gathered March 20 to pray, learn and deepen their faith during the 11th annual Catholic Men’s Conference.
The one-day conference, held in person at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Charlotte and virtually, featured Mass with Bishop Peter Jugis, Eucharistic Adoration and Benediction, confessions and prayer time, as well as talks by Bear Woznick, surf champion and author; Dr. William Thierfelder, Olympic athlete and president of Belmont Abbey College; and John Eades, author and motivational speaker.
The speakers encouraged the men to deepen their personal relationship with God and live up to their callings as Catholic men, husbands and fathers, focusing on the conference theme “As iron sharpens iron,” taken from Proverbs 27: “Iron is sharpened by iron; one person sharpens another.”
During his talk, Woznick described how he drifted away from his faith in adulthood, focusing on his work as a world champion surfer, stuntman and adventurer. But the more he achieved success, he said, the more he began to question his life, asking “Is that all there is? I want more.” His father gave him a copy of Stephen K. Ray’s book “Crossing the Tiber: Evangelical Protestants Discover the Historical Church.” Through prayer, study and self-examination, Woznick rediscovered his faith, and now he strives to help other men find that same connection to their faith and to the Church through his “Deep Adventure Ministries” podcast, books and motivational talks.
“The Church isn’t a club. It isn’t an organization. It’s an organism – it’s the living Body of Jesus Christ,” he said, challenging the men to explore their relationship with God and embrace His will for them.
Thierfelder echoed the same message, noting that money, power and fame are not the keys to true happiness – a relationship with God is.
“You will never have enough money, you will never have enough fame, or pleasure or power – you will never have enough,” he said.
It is in relationship with God and one another that we find love, he said, and while love requires sacrifice, it is the path to true happiness. He urged the attendees to go deeper with their relationship with God in order to fulfill their calling as Catholic men.
While the conference was also made available online, it was important to put on an in-person event within what public health protocols would allow, said Jason Murphy, one of the organizers.
“You just cannot replicate an event like this online,” Murphy said. “Guys need to be around other guys – see each other’s faces, hear each other’s voices, be a part of something greater than ourselves. There is nothing like the sound of 200 men praying and singing together. It is powerful, encouraging and uplifting as we storm heaven as a united battalion of Christian soldiers fighting the battle of our lives to be the men, fathers and husbands God has called us to be in the face of a world that does its best to stand in our way.”
— Catholic News Herald. Photo provided by James J. Sarkis