Catholic Liturgy is the public and official worship of  God by the  Church, as distinct from personal spiritual practices.  Liturgy  comprises the Mass, the sacraments and the daily office. The Pope, speaking of the  Eucharist, said that it is "the center and permanent source  of the Petrine ministry, the heart of the Christian life, source and  summit of the Church’s mission of evangelization." It is the public work  of the Church to which we are called to participate  weekly.
The   Catholic Times' editorial this week brings our attention to the recent  founding of the Liturgical Institute which will try to educate our  Catholics to a mature understanding of the liturgy. In our teaching of  the catechism liturgy has not been given the importance that it should  have. The teaching has three phases: giving witness to the words and  teaching  of Christ in our life and actions, following our Lord by being  the salt and light of the world, and participating fully in  the liturgy. We have this presented to us in The Acts: "They devoted  themselves to the  apostles' instruction and the communal life, to  the  breaking of bread and the prayers"(2:42).
The editorial tells us that many Catholics feel they know what the  liturgy is all about, but this is usually a superficial understanding of  the rites and not their meaning. The hope is that the Liturgical  Institute will provide a new way of making liturgical life a  daily reality. 
  
The Institute describes its mission in the following ways: To  promote and develop liturgical learning, to give life to liturgical  practices in the  parishes, to deepen our liturgical spirituality, to publish and  translate books on liturgy, to work to have some uniformity in the words  we use, to begin a school on liturgy, and to recruit future  members--all part of the dream of  the Institute.  They have their own Internet  site and will continue to  develop  this along with many other possibilities. 
The first president of the Institute, in his interview with the Peace Weekly, gave as the  reason for starting the institute: "Catholics know something about the externals of the liturgy but not the  meaning, which is sad. The reality  today is that those attending Masses do not find it a joy but a burden; this I want to change. I want to help our Christians to participate with enthusiasm."