If you are looking at a particular sermon and it is removed it is because it has been updated.

For example Year C 2010 is being replaced week by week with Year C 2013, and so on.

Thursday 30 June 2022

14th Sunday Year C 2022

 

The 14th. SUNDAY (Year C)

(Isaiah 66:10-14; Galatians 6:14-18; St. Luke 10:1-12, 17-20)

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In our first two readings we were given an appreciation of the essential character of Mother Church: she is -- and we her children are -- according to St. Paul:

          A new creation.

Recalling St. Augustine’s jubilation for Eastertide, we can truly say that for a new creation there must be appropriately new nourishment, as the great prophet Isaiah himself foreshadow long ago by saying:

Rejoice with (Mother Church) and be glad because of her: Suck fully of the milk of her comfort; carried in her arms … may your hearts rejoice and your bodies flourish;   

for even Isaiah could not conceive of God’s faithful being nourished by the very Body and Blood of His only begotten and most-beloved Son made flesh.

Now, in the Gospel reading we heard of the Lord Jesus sending out seventy-two disciples to proclaim the Kingdom of God in His name; seventy-two followers who had learned to delight in their proximity and communion with Jesus and the strength it afforded them: a proximity and joy that should be our present-day experience in Mother Church.

He sent (them) ahead of Him in pairs to every town and place He Himself intended to visit.

Their instructions were both simple and firm: first of all, they were being sent in Jesus’ name, they were not beggars; moreover, they had a clear message to proclaim, they were not to be pleaders or cajolers:

Into whatever house you enter, first say, ‘Peace to this household.’   If a peaceful person lives there, your peace will rest on him; but if not, it will return to you.   Stay in the same house and eat and drink what is offered to you, for the labourer deserves his payment. Do not move about from one house to another.

Whatever town you enter and they welcome you, eat what is set before you, cure the sick in it and say to them, ‘The kingdom of God is at hand for you.’

As you can see Jesus wanted His disciples to be single-minded and sincere: they were not to seek money, but neither should they be embarrassed about accepting whatever the house or town could offer by way of food and drink, for "the labourer deserves his payment".

Jesus likewise desired that they should be humble, but in no way lacking confidence in their mission: for their message was from the Lord, not from their own imagination or fancy.  In His name they were to announce a fact: namely, that "The Kingdom of God is at hand for you"; and to those willing to listen to their message they were to bestow a special Gift from the Lord:  'Peace to this household.'

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, today, I read at Mass a passage from the prophet Amos (3:1-8; 4:11-12) which I suggest you read for yourselves if you were not at Mass today, Tuesday of the 13th. Sunday), because we never hear anything like that in the universal Church these days.

Mother Church today almost exclusively speaks words of peace with and for the world; words expected of her by the powers that be, no matter what evils are openly being committed by men.  Neither does she interpret anything as a sign from God as did the prophets of old!  Has prophetic interpretation come to an end in the Church?  Has God no way of addressing, warning, men other than through channels closed to whatever is not welcome to modern men, be they religious or worldly?  For no matter what portents afflict mankind, even a lethal, world-wide, pandemic lasting for years; or ice-melting on mountain glaciers and in polar oceans, causing sea-levels to rise all over the world; while earth’s temperature rises causing climatic changes threatening food resources and human health;  in all these things Church leaders seem to say only what the world expects them, or their own fears allow them, to say.

Natural, though by no means normal, events which the prophets in our Scriptures thought demanded -- as communications from God -- to be explained and interpreted for the people, provoke no word of warning for our sinful and proud, deliberately-levelling-down-to-satisfy-all world.  Even a presidential promoter of abortion by words and official deeds is allowed to play the part of a ‘Communicating-Catholic’. What would have happened to Mother Church had Saint Ambrose thought in such ways?

Jesus did not want His disciples either to seek people's approval, or to hold back in their proclamation of His Gospel for fear of disapproval, and therefore He assured them:

Whoever listens to you listens to Me. Whoever rejects you rejects Me, and the One who sent Me.”

You can imagine how thrilled the disciples must have been when their mission proved to be a great success: the Lord gave the Word and great was the company of unseen angels contributing towards the accomplishment of the work; the disciples, to their amazement, simply gathered in the harvest.  Despite their initial fears -- arising from the awareness of their own incapacity -- they found that, in all their endeavours for the Lord, they had, most assuredly, been given:

Power to trample on serpents and scorpions and upon the full force of the enemy, (so that) nothing would harm (them). 

No wonder then that they "returned rejoicing!”   Why, even the demons had been subject to them in the name of Jesus! They were, indeed, amazed, thrilled, and astounded!!

However, notice what Jesus said in response to their enthusiasm:

Do not rejoice because the spirits are subject to you, but rejoice because your names are written in heaven.

And that is what St. Paul had in mind when, as you heard, he wrote:

May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world. 

St. Paul loved to teach his converts that belief in Jesus, together with baptism in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, makes us members of the Body of Christ.  He believed this so firmly, and understood it so concretely, that he could then go on to say that, having become members of His Body, we too, therefore, have been crucified in Him and with Him:

Through the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, the world has been crucified to me and I to the world.

Let us just try to understand what this meant for Paul.  In his contemplation of this union between Christ and the believer, Paul -- absorbed in divine truth and filled with an overwhelming desire to respond to and co-operate with the Father’s calling -- had been led to recognize that:

In Christ Jesus neither does circumcision mean anything nor does uncircumcision, but only a new creation.

No earthly power or pride can save us from the destructive power of sin; only the totally gracious gift of God’s Spirit in response to Jesus’ self-sacrificing love on Calvary can bring us salvation.

Paul had been granted the insight that, -- through the power of Christ’s Passion, Death, Resurrection and Ascension -- we, who as baptized believers have become members of His Body are a new creation, have also -- by the power of His Spirit -- risen heavenwards with Him.  We still live in, and experience, our weakness on earth; but we are now endowed with a share in Jesus’ heavenly life, a share that enables us to live, henceforth, in a more heavenly way for heavenly prospects.  Paul tells us that if one must boast, one should boast about what the Lord Jesus has done for us on the Cross, in His Resurrection, and by the gift of His Spirit.  Circumcision means nothing: that is, personal pride in one’s own holiness gained by legalistic observance of a written Law, and national pride in the exclusiveness of one’s birth; all that means nothing Paul says.  Uncircumcision too means nothing: the ancient Greeks' boasting in their superior wisdom, the Romans' vaunting of their worldly power, the modern super-powers with their super-bombs and missiles, all that too, ultimately, means nothing.

For a Christian there can be only one cause for boasting: what Christ has done for us and for all who are willing to accept Him as Lord, and to obey His Spirit bequeathed to us in Mother Church, the only power on which we can surely rely:

There are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit who works all in all; (for) one and the same Spirit works all these things, distributing to each one individually as He wills. (1 Corinthians 12: 6, 11)

He is, indeed, the Spirit of Glory, Who alone can ensure our names "are written in heaven". 

Therefore, People of God, we are encouraged today, by the prophet Isaiah, to rejoice in Mother Church: the Church Our Lord continually sustains, promotes, and protects through the working of His Spirit, so that, as He originally and enduringly intends, we may ever be able to drink deeply of, and find delight in, the abundance He gives her.

We are encouraged to rejoice in such a way over Mother Church because, as Isaiah foretold, it is in her and through her that:

The Lord’s power shall be known to His servants.

For, though scarred and disfigured by the sins of both high and low: by her hierarchy, by her ‘basic’ priests and ‘common’ people; though mocked and hated, ignored and abused, by a lustful and willful world all around, Mother Church is mankind’s only authentic meeting-place with God, thanks to His enduring faithfulness to us in Jesus.

In her, however, Jesus always meets us on His terms, not on ours:  He lovingly condescends, comes down, to meet with us; we do not in any way compel or require Him.  Above all, He comes thus freely and lovingly when, at Holy Mass, we do what He requires of us ‘in memory of Him’.

And this most sublime fulfilment comes our way today when, in response to His command, we assemble as one on His Sabbath Day, to offer worship, praise and honour, glory and thanks to God our Father.  On this glad occasion we share in the heavenly and eternal liturgy being celebrated by our High Priest and Saviour.  Here, He does indeed come to us Personally, in the Eucharist, and draws us, by His Gift of the Spirit, ever more and more with Himself towards the Father.  He inspires and enflames us with that Love which makes Him one with the Father and the Spirit; that Triune Fire of eternal Love which is the glory and the very Being of God, and which can – O wonder of wonders! -- be shared by us in Jesus as life everlasting.  A communion both total and fulfilling, with what sublimely transcends us: the Almighty God, hidden, yet humble and so very, very, good.  A communion causing us joy ever more fresh and fulfilling; a communion bestowing on us a peace beyond all previous awareness or present conception; a communion where both deep personal contrition and transfiguring delight in God can calmly embrace us and each other.