The HOLY THURSDAY REVOLUTION

Holy Thursday Rev picCLICK HERE to see Quick-View Presentation Slides:
Holy Thursday, The Ultimate Revolution

Beatrice Bruteau, in her book, THE HOLY THURSDAY REVOLUTION details two Jesus events that were and still are revolutionary challenges to the prevailing domination paradigm:

  • Washing the Feet of His Followers…where masters and lords are the ones to be served by “lower caste” in the domination paradigm.
  • Sharing Bread and Cup in Loving Communion of Equals…WITH those who considered themselves as less than their Teacher.

These two events were each strong statements and symbolic signs that the long-held paradigm of inequality and domination was repudiated, no longer to be held as God’s Will.

For this life-long breaking of domination cultural rules, Jesus was crucified and for this he rose again in the Jesus’ Movement that all generations may know… THAT THE WAY OF GOD IS COMMUNION, NOT the Domination Paradigm of INEQUALITY.   For this, many after Jesus have been “crucified and risen again and again” over the centuries in order that the Communion Paradigm of All People may not perish from this earth.

Download PDF Presentation Slides for Discussion:
Holy Thursday, The Ultimate Revolution

See Also:
Pope Francis stuns all as he kisses feet of African leaders…begging them to work for peace!

https://RiteBeyondrome.com

Pope Francis stuns all as he kisses feet of African leaders begging them to work for peace…A very Holy Thursday Event!

Pope Francis kissing the feet of President Salva Kiir and those of South Sudan's Vice Presidents

See article:  Pope Francis kisses feet of South Sudan’s leaders at conclusion of ecumenical retreat | ICN

Google “Pope Francis South Sudan” to see just how stunned people were.

Pope Francis kissing feet of South Sudan woman Vice pres 04_10_2-10 .jpg

“The pope encouraged the two leaders to find common ground.

‘I urge you, then, to seek what unites you, beginning with the fact that you belong to one and the same people, and to overcome all that divides you,’ he said.

…Then he sought the leaders’ permission to approach, and stunned the men [and woman] by kneeling.”  (parenthesis ours)

nytimes.com/2019/04/11/world/europe/pope-francis-south-sudan.html.

This April 2019 event…What outstanding witness to Holy Week and to a world caught up in ethic wars and political, social and religious polarization!

WHY DOES THIS NEWS FAIL to get larger
media coverage within the Church? 

…not simply the facts, but the SPIRIT of the event?
…in National Catholic publications and diocesan newspapers?
in sermons perhaps?
Instead we get careful words and more careful pictures
so as not to upset whom?

Video of pope struggling to get up and down several times was just removed even from webpage of article by Independent Catholic News.  Was that because we must not allow the world to see him struggling to do the very thing his heart and soul have called him to do?

Pope Francis’ actions in South Sudan were Eucharistic, closely connected to Holy Thursday and Jesus’ example as detailed in Beatrice Bruteau’s book,
THE HOLY THURSDAY REVOLUTION.

See and share short PDF slides:  https://ritebeyondrome.com/2018/03/21/the-holy-thursday-revolution/

 

 

Eucharist: My Broken Bread

“Unless you let your bread break and bless and feed others,
you will have no life in you.”
When he said it, they walked away.

Nearly everyone’s looking for better life,
more life, greater life than what is given.

Where’s it at?  Or is there no such thing?
Where’s it at and do I want to go there?

MY bread, MY everything,
My everything I think important,
I need let it break?
How could that be?

Let my bread be broke?
for WHAT?…I choke.
“No bread, No broke,
We’ll die,” they spoke.
And then they walked away.

Ah, there’s the rub against my soul:
MY Bread, MY BREAD…
No breaks allowed.
I want it how I want it
when, where and why.
MY Say…all else at bay.

You gotta have bread,
your very own bread.
Can’t give it away
or let it be taken.

Let your bread break?
Let it BREAK?
Let it break as it will?
Let it or NOT?

Broken Bread?
Won’t that make me a loser?
“Don’t we all lose our bread anyway?
Can’t take it with us.
“No, …but somehow it sustains us.

Broken bread, the hopes and dreams and visions
and things that seldom come true…
’cause life don’t make itself  small enough
just all ’round me and you.

Can’t break my bread…
for life has broken it on me.
“Poor me” the only bread I got…

Co-miserating’s what keeps me going
and going and going, round and round
over and over, back to where I began
…unless I let my bread break?
…those precious plans for how things ought to be?
how me and you and she and he
just “rightfully” ought to be?

The still small voice inside
the one that calls elsewhere,
the where and how and why that has no reason or resources,
the crazy call from unknown quarters…

So, unless I let my bread break,
there will be no life in me?…no life in what I do,
or just something terribly missing…

They said I’d be happy; they said I’d be safe.
Certainty and Security, my bedfellows, chafe.
Where, O where, is the bread I need break?

 by Sister Lea