Saint Coleman Church Podcast

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The Psalms: Treasure of the Church

In this episode of the Saint Coleman Catholic Parish podcast we delve into the significance of the Psalms in Catholic tradition. The Psalms are a source of comfort and strength and immersion in the Psalms is wonderful way to grow spiritually.


Notes

  • The Saint Coleman Catholic Church Podcast from Pompano Beach is celebrating its 69th episode since starting in December 2022. The podcast aims to reach 75 episodes before its three-year anniversary in December.
  • There will be no morning masses, confession, adoration, or novena on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday Sept. 16th-18th due to the priests attending a convocation in Miami. The convocation is an annual event where all priests of the diocese gather with the Archbishop for spiritual nourishment and fraternity.
  • On Saturday, September 20, the Saint Colman Men's Club is hosting the Duckhorn Portfolio Wine Dinner in the parish hall from 6:00 PM to 9:30 PM. The event features wines paired with food from Anthony's Clam House and Grill, espresso martinis, and happy hour drinks from Gulf Coast Distillery. Tickets for the wine dinner are $80 per person or $600 for a table of eight. More information and ticket purchases are available through the QR code in the bulletin or directly on the men's club website at stcmc.org.
  • Religious education for children, also known as Sunday school or CCD, is resuming. The church needs volunteers to help with teaching and supervising the children during these sessions. Volunteers for religious education don't need to create their own lessons, as the church provides pre-made textbooks. Those interested in volunteering can contact Marty in the church office for more information.
  • The Responsorial Psalm is an integral part of the Mass, serving as the theme and the congregation's response to God's word. The Psalms are considered the church's ancient prayer book and have been central to worship for millennia. The Book of Psalms contains 150 prayers and hymns traditionally attributed to King David. They were central to Jewish temple liturgy and seamlessly became part of Christian worship, prayed in catacombs, monasteries, and private homes.
  • The Psalms are the backbone of the Liturgy of the Hours, the church's daily prayer, which is prayed by priests, deacons, religious communities, and an increasing number of laypeople worldwide. This global chorus of prayer unites Catholics across the world.
  • The Psalms have sustained the church through trials and persecutions, offering solace and strength to saints throughout the ages. They explore the full range of human emotions, from praise and trust to lament and repentance.
  • To integrate the Psalms into daily life, one can memorize short Psalms, such as Psalm 51 for confession, and use them as a lifeline in moments of stress. Websites like divineoffice.org allow individuals to pray the Liturgy of the Hours daily, incorporating many Psalms.
  • By studying the Psalms, especially those prayed in moments of heartache, laypeople can be better prepared to evangelize and help others in need. Knowing the faith and the word can lead to life-changing moments for others and their descendants.

Episode Transcript

Welcome to the Saint Coleman Catholic Church Podcast from Pompano Beach. Be sure to follow us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify so that you could be notified every time we release a new episode from Saint Coleman.

Welcome to Episode 69 of the Saint Coleman Podcast. We started this podcast back in December 2022, and we're on our sixty ninth episode. Hopefully, we'll get to 75 episodes before our three year anniversary, which, of course, falls this December.

Hope you're enjoying a wonderful summer and staying cool, and now the children are headed back to school. We wanna remind you a couple of housekeeping notes. On the days of September, okay, this is going to be a Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. There'll be no morning masses at Saint Colman. There'll be no confession.

There'll be no adoration. There'll be no novena on these dates, September. Okay? And this is because our priests are going off to the convocation in Miami. This is where all the priests of the diocese come together with the archbishop for a time of spiritual nourishment and fraternity.

They do it once a year, but what that means is it's really hard to find other priests to cover because every priest from every parish is at the convocation, and so it's hard to find a replacement. Now it really kinda works out this year, especially because in the church, we've we've got a termite issue, and we're going to have to have the termite tenting done, which would close the church for a few days anyway. So we're scheduling this to occur during this time. But just remember those dates, September. You don't wanna drive up expecting to walk into mass and find out you can't do it.

So also pass the word to all the other parishioners. Well, we're always looking to grow our Saint Colman's choir. If you look at our bulletin, there is a QR code you could scan and go get more information about how you might join the choir. Also in September, on the twentieth of the month, so that is gonna fall on a Saturday, Saturday, September 20, in the parish hall, the Saint Colman men's club is having the Duckhorn Portfolio wine dinner. This is gonna go from six to 09:30PM.

Wonderful wines paired with delicious foods from Anthony's Clam House and Grill. There'll be espresso martini, the happy hour from Gulf Coast Distillery. More information in the bulletin. Once again, you'll see a QR code that you can scan to go right to the men's club website, or you can just go to the men's club website directly. It's stcmc.org.

Again, this is in the parish hall, Saturday, September 20, the wine dinner from the men's club. Tickets are $80 a person or $600 for a table of eight people. Well, religious education for our children is going to be resuming. You might call it Sunday school. Right?

In the old days, we called it CCD. But it's preparation for children to receive the sacraments. And we can't do this without volunteers. Are you being called to step up and serve the church? We also, in addition to people who will stand up and pass on the faith to the children, and there's there's great books, there's there's lessons pre done.

You don't have to originate this. You're just facilitating and teaching from from the textbook that the religious education department has chosen. If you maybe feel, well, that's a little out of my reach. We also just need volunteers. We need adults to be there, to keep an eye on the kids.

You can call Marty in the church office for more information about that. Every time we go to Mass, we hear the readings. Right? And one of the things we always hear at Mass is the Responsorial Psalm. And you might think of it as the theme of the mass.

The Psalms are a real treasure in the life of a Catholic. You might consider the Book of Psalms the church's ancient prayer book. The Psalms play a very important part in Catholic tradition. Now, what is the Book of Psalms? If you haven't opened your Bible and looked at it in a long time, it's a collection of 150 prayers and hymns that have been part of the worship for God's people across millennia.

And we traditionally attribute the Psalms to King David, but he didn't write every single one of them. The Psalms, of course, were central to Jewish temple liturgy. And as Christ fulfilled all of the Jewish scriptures, was crucified, died, and was buried, and then rose into heaven, the Psalms seamlessly became a part of Christian worship. The early Catholic church prayed them in catacombs, monasteries, and private homes. Saint Athanasius famously said that most scripture speaks to us, but the Psalms speak for us.

This sort of really captures the unique nature of this book in the Bible. They're not just words to be read, but they resonate with our own experiences so many times. We can see our joys and our sufferings when we read the Psalms. In Catholic tradition, the Psalms are the backbone of the liturgy of the hours. Now that is the church's daily prayer that's prayed by priests, deacons, members of religious communities, and an increasing number of laypeople Every day, through morning prayer, evening prayer, and other hours, there's a global chorus lifting the words of the Liturgy of the Hours up to God, always including readings from the Psalms.

Think about this. The unity of all of these different people around the world praying. It might be a farmer in rural Ireland, a nun in Rome, a truck driver in Miami, a seminarian up in Boynton Beach. We're all coming together as Catholics in this universal prayer that binds us together in Christ. He prayed the Psalms himself.

And we see in his cry, my God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Now as you know, when we're attending mass, we hear the responsorial Psalm right after the first reading. Now this isn't like filler. This isn't like we need to fill some space between the first and the second reading. The responsorial Psalm is our response to god's word.

It's a time to reflect and reply in song and prayer. Pope Benedict, in one of his weekly audiences, once reflected on Psalm one nineteen, which says, I will delight in your statutes. I will not forget your word. This reminds us that the Psalms anchor us in God's law, what's expected of us, and his love. The Psalms have sustained the church through trials, persecutions, schisms, and reforms, offering the saints through the ages both solace and strength.

Saint John Chrysostom once said, the Psalms are a treasury of divine utterances suited for every occasion. Consider the early martyrs of the church who might have chanted Psalm 46, God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble as they face certain death. Their courage reminds us that these aren't dusty old texts. But the words on the page in your Bible, in the book of Psalms, are actually a companion to go with you, to strengthen you, to remind you what God has done for you and what God has promised to do for you in the future. Now if you've ever read all 150 Psalms, which you could probably do in a week or two, even just reading a few a few of them a day, They really are a masterpiece.

The whole gamut of human emotion is explored. You have moments of praise, lament, trust in God, repentance, even prophecy. The very last of the Psalms is Psalm 150. It calls us to praise God in his sanctuary, with trumpet sound, with lute and harp. You know, this reminds us that being close to God is joyful and brings joy into our life.

And it's not a superficial joy. The joy of the church is a deep recognition of God's goodness. I mentioned Psalm 22 before, the words that Jesus spoke from the cross. That's verse one of that chapter. My god, why have you forsaken me?

But it ends in hope. I will tell of your name to my brethren. Now the categories of Psalms include the Messianic Psalms that foreshadow Christ's life, death, and resurrection. For example, Psalm one ten says, the Lord says to my Lord, sit at my right hand. During his lifetime, Pope Francis said, the Psalms are the prayer of Jesus for all season.

Jesus prayed the Psalms. Now how can we make the Psalms a living part of our Catholic life? They're not just for liturgy at the mass. You go, you hear them, and that's it. But, therefore, our lives, our mornings, our commutes to work, our quiet time at night, how can we integrate those into our spiritual life?

We'll start very simply. There are some Psalms that are pretty short. And if you memorize some very short Psalms, they'll come to mind from time to time when you need them. For example, when you're thinking about going to confession. Psalm 51, Create in me a clean heart, oh Lord.

Memorizing a verse or two can actually become a lifeline in moments of stress you will face in the future. There's a website, divineoffice.org, where you can actually pray the liturgy of the hours. If you make that a habit of doing every single day, you're gonna be incorporating many of the Psalms into your daily spiritual life. So don't think of the Psalms as as being something confined to the church. Right?

When we go to mass, there are things that stay in the church. Right? There's things like the what they call the thurible, right, where the that holds the incense, And there's the ambo, where the word is proclaimed. These things stay in the church. You know, you don't take things like this home.

But the Psalms should go with you. They should be your companion. They're not just something to hear when you come to mass. They're not like halftime between the first and the second reading. They're the theme of the Mass.

They're really the theme of our lives, because we're all gonna go through moments of joy. We're all gonna go through moments of sadness. Also, by studying the Psalms more, especially the ones that are prayed in moments of heartache, might just prepare us to evangelize. And, you know, I think I think a lot of us think this is the job of the priest. The bishop does this stuff.

But laypeople are called to go forth and spread the good news. In fact, at the end of every mass, there's the sending. Go forth. The mass has ended. That doesn't mean go forth and forget about what we just did here.

It means go forth and proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ, primarily through your actions. But imagine a situation at work where someone was received some upsetting news. And if you might suggest to them some of the different Psalms they might wanna read. You know, it it's not being pushy, but it's being prepared. It's knowing your faith.

It's knowing the word. And the Holy Spirit will provide you opportunities to help other people when they need it and when they're receptive. And you could really change the whole course of their life if there are people who don't believe in God and they come to him. Think of the beauty, the spiritual fruits, generationally, if they came into the church and their children were baptized. Just by knowing your faith, you could change someone's life very dramatically and the lives of their descendants.

And you know, with the Psalms, it's easy. These are beautiful. These are beautiful to read. It's not like dusting off a a book about the church fathers, which might be more academic and harder for a wide range of people to really dig into. The Psalms are for everyone.

Thanks for listening to the Saint Coleman Catholic Church podcast. If you wanna be notified every time we release a new episode, you can follow us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. And be sure to spread the word about our parish podcast.