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All too often we think of the liturgy as something we do for God. But in fact, the liturgy is first and foremost the work of the Trinity Father, Son and Holy Spirit. We see the role of each Person of the Trinity by considering the prayers of the liturgy itself.
Most liturgical prayers are addressed to God the Father. The Church begs the Father that we might share, through the power of the Holy Spirit, in what Christ has done to save us. Through the liturgy, the Father fills us with his blessings in the Word made flesh who died and rose for us and pours the Holy Spirit into our hearts (221). Filled with these blessings from above, we ascend in worship, praise and thanksgiving to God, the Father of life and love.
The second Person of the Trinity, Christ the Son of God made man, is our great high priest who acts on our behalf in and through the liturgy. The work that Christ accomplishes in the Mass and sacraments is the re-presentation of the Paschal Mystery. In other words, the mystery of love at the heart of Gods plan for the worlds salvation the suffering, death and resurrection of Christ is signified and made present (222). This means that the words and gestures of the liturgy not only remind us of Christs saving deeds, but also make them active in our midst. How does this happen? By giving the Holy Spirit to his Apostles, Christ entrusted to them and their successors the power to make present his saving work, through the Eucharistic sacrifice and, indeed, all the sacraments (222). In the power of the Holy Spirit, Christ acts through sacramental signs to give grace a sharing in divine life to his people of every time and place.
Finally, we should have the highest appreciation for the work of the Holy Spirit in the liturgy and the Churchs sacramental life. As we have seen, the Holy Spirit is the soul of the Church and thus her living memory. The Spirit prompts the Church to ponder Christ in her heart; recalls and re-presents Christ to the members of the Church already enlightened by faith; makes Christ truly present; unites the Church to Christ and his mission; and makes the gift of her union with Christ bear abundant fruit in the Church and in the world (223).
May this new liturgical year be a time when we allow the Holy Spirit to deepen in us the new life Christ won for us by his death and resurrection, so that we may truly worship the Father in spirit and in truth (Jn 4:24).
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