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, 19 September 2024

25th Sunday Year B, 2024

 

(Wisdom 2:12, 17-20; James 3:16 - 4:3; Mark 9:30-37)

Dear Bothers and Sisters in Christ, today’s readings demand, I think, that we begin, beseechingly, with a Gospel question to Our Blessed Lord:  Teacher, which is the great commandment?  And now let us hear Our Lord Himself tell us the truth, the whole truth:

You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.  This is the great and first commandment.

And a second is like it, You shall love your neighbour as yourself.

And hearing the 12 noon BBC news today which told of such evil and suffering in our world, we must learn  from Jesus’ analysis of our human sinfulness.

Jesus was teaching His disciples and telling them, "The Son of Man is to be handed over to men, and they will kill Him, and three days after His death the Son of Man will rise."   But they did not understand the saying, and they were afraid to question Him.

The words of Our Blessed Lord were surely clear enough, People of God, but the disciples seemed not understand what He was saying.  Why?  That can only have been because the disciples did not want to accept that suffering should come into the life of Him Whom they acknowledged as the Christ of God, the glory of His People Israel, and their own, much loved and even more revered, Lord and Master.

The same attitude is still with us today: many people are unwilling to accept that suffering can have any salutary role in their own lives as Catholic Christians, thinking it wrong that anyone living, or trying to live, a good life as a disciple of Jesus the Lord, should have to experience unjust and undeserved suffering. And consequently, when suffering does come into their lives, they  allow themselves to be easily scandalized, and frequently they turn aside from discipleship in a greater or lesser degree.

Jesus, however, alone knew the wicked depths of those whom He had come to save, and our readings today give us an insight into that wickedness of men (including ourselves, each in our own measure) which is so often unnoticed because it is diabolical in origin and unrelentingly deceitful in its purpose … is not the Devil the father of lies?

Listen to words from our first reading:

Let us lie in wait for the righteous man, because he is inconvenient to us and opposes our actions; he accuses us of sins against our training … Let us test him …

The righteousness of Christ and the righteousness of authentic Catholic doctrine and Christian teaching, and that righteousness which is essential to all faithful Catholics is likewise ‘Inconvenient’: causing worry, annoyance, hindrance, to the today’s blatantly sinful Western society and our decadent Western world.

And yet there are so very many secular people professing to do good, even intending to do what they think is good  in their political and personal lives today; but, they reject the great and first commandment You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind, and they end up doing what they think is good! 

Some, following their predecessors who did ‘good things’ leading to the now-innumerable victims of abortion, today, want to lead the way to bring in their choice of ‘good things’ for the elderly, old, and the dying: beginning with legally-assisted dying.  If they were to go farther along that line, how many old people would be made to feel ‘inconvenient’ to young high-risers?  Oh yes, dear People of God:

            The fascination of wickedness obscures what is good … (Wisdom 4:12),

and our relatively prosperous Western society is,  as a whole, consciously, even deliberately, fascinated with wickedness, urgent to experience loathsome novelties, above all, those of a sexual nature: freedom to be and to do what you want is supremely desirable; a minimum of social restrictions alone are admissible; but religious restrictions are out of the question, because God -- for them -- is an unbelievable reality and an unacceptable idea.

Now, they do this because they have allowed themselves to become worldly in their thinking, as Jesus reproached Peter (Matthew 16:23):

Get behind Me, Satan! You are a hindrance to Me. You are not setting your mind on the things of God, but on the things of man.  

Having become worldly in their thinking, such people soon come to love nothing so much as themselves and their opinions.  As for Peter. challenged by Jesus at the very beginning of his worldliness, was -- ‘De gratias’--  humble enough to repent and grow in his love for Jesus to the extent that Jesus, before His definitive ascension into heaven was able to ask ‘Simon, son of John, do you love Me more than these?  Feed My sheep’ (John 21:15, 17)

Let us now see how Jesus persuaded His disciples to overcome their fears and change their ways:

They came to Capernaum.  And when He was in the house He asked them, “What were you discussing on the way?”  But they kept silent, for on the way they had argued with one another about who was the greatest.  

Jesus knew what had been going on -- quite literally, behind His back -- as He and His disciples had walked along, and He said to them all:

If anyone would be first he must be last of all and servant of all.  And He took a child and put him in the midst of them and taking him in His arms He said to them, “Whoever receives one such child  in My name, receives Me, and whoever receives Me, receives not Me but Him who sent Me”

In the ancient world children were thought little of, and frequently and publicly much abused.  Therefore, when Jesus took one such person, so insignificant and singularly unimportant in the eyes of the world, and said:

Whoever receives one child such as this in My name, receives Me,

He gave His disciples a picture that was so easy to remember as to be unforgettable, and yet at the same time one that offered them teaching of inexhaustible riches.

For the well-disposed and well-intentioned, above all for those small in their own conceit, even the least work is able to bring such a disciple to Jesus’ attention: for there is nothing too small, nothing too insignificant, which -- when done for Jesus’ sake -- does not bring such a disciple closer to his Lord, for God exalts the lowly and humble of heart. To be appreciated by the world, however, one has to be, or try to make oneself, noticeable, significant, successful, in other words,  one has to put on pride which separates, and can totally alienate  from the Lord whose prerogatives such people abuse.

They had walked the way to Capernaum but, on their arrival at the house, Jesus asked them, “What were you arguing about on the way?”  He would appear to have been walking ahead and alone, and they had been following as a group.  Why?  There was, obviously, something very different about Jesus, nobody walked alongside Him, shoulder to shoulder, as His equal, His special companion, not even Peter.  There was a distance between the disciples and their Lord: not one of separation, but rather, one of reverence.  We can see the same attitude in another detail mentioned in the Gospel reading: for, we are told, that although the disciples did not understand His teaching concerning His future Passion and Death: they were afraid to question Him. HeHHhhhhhhHhhhh

 

Now this was not a fear such as we usually have in mind when we use the word:  for it was a fear which in no way hindered them from following Him wherever He went.  It was such a fear as rises in every humble human heart in the presence of the One who is far greater than they, the presence of the One of Whom Jesus spoke when referring to the Temple in Jerusalem, known and admired far and wide in antiquity, and whose very stones still fill modern engineers with admiration and amazement:

I tell you, something greater than the Temple is here (and He is speaking to you at this very moment).The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath (Matthew 12:6, 8)

Before such a One, only the blindness of culpable ignorance and devilish pride, or  the fascination of wickedness could have rendered the Apostles incapable of feeling and of appreciating an instinctive fear rising in their hearts in His presence.

People of God, we should never be ashamed to fear the Lord, for it is proof of the authenticity of both our appreciation of Him and our knowledge of ourselves.  However, let it be a fear like that of the disciples on the way, a fear which, far from repelling them,  drew them after Him, irresistibly, wherever He went: pray that you too may progress along their way of discipleship, experiencing a like, reverential, compulsion to follow Jesus ever more faithfully, ever more closely, even though it lead to your sharing in His sufferings.  Indeed, look beyond the disciples, and pray that your reverential fear may become ever more and more like the reverential love which Jesus Himself, our Blessed Lord and Saviour, had for His heavenly Father when He said:

You heard Me say to you, 'I am going away, and I will come to you.' If you loved Me, you would have rejoiced, because I am going to the Father, for the Father is greater than I. (John 14:28)   

For this reason the Father loves Me, because I lay down My life that I may take It up again.  No one takes it from Me but I lay it down of My own accord. This charge I have received from My Father.  (John 10:17-18)  

I do as the Father has commanded Me, so that world may know that I love the Father. (John 14:31)

As you leave this Eucharist, dear friends in Christ, ask yourselves this question: Are YOU setting your mind on the things of God, or on the things of man??            


No comments:

Post a Comment