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, 29 July 2021

18th Sunday Year B 2021

 

 18th. Sunday, Year (B)

(Exodus 16:2-4, 11-15; Ephesians 4:17, 20-24; John 6:24-35)

 

 

     

Do not work for food which perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.  For on Him the Father, God, has set His seal.

Here we learn that it is with a view to Jesus, the Son of God made man, that God the Father offers us an eternal destiny and a heavenly home.  His only-begotten Son – knowing and loving His Father -- deigned to become one of us, sinlessly sharing our earthly experience by living humbly among us and, finally, by dying for us on the cruel, cruel, Cross. Therefore, God the Father wills that we – members of the Body of the Risen and glorious Christ -- be offered a share in His Resurrection.

It was ever so; for it was because the Son of Man, Jesus the Messiah, was to be born of the Israelite people -- children of Abraham. Isaac, and Jacob -- that God, long before, decided to lead those Israelites, under the guidance of Moses, out of slavery in Egypt to freedom in their own, God-given, land.

Now, those Israelites chosen to be rescued from slavery in Egypt, did not fully understand what God was offering them.  Their sufferings under the Egyptians had made them long for freedom, and their experience of God through His servant Moses gave them hope that freedom could be theirs.  But they had to learn that true freedom for human beings made in the image and likeness of God could not come cheap: it necessarily involved freedom of both body and soul, freedom from human coercion and freedom from slavery to sin. And so, when the going got hard in the desert, those Israelites began to hanker after the fleeting moments of pleasure that had come their way in bodily slavery; those moments when, for a very short period each day, they had been able to rest from forced labour and allow themselves to sink into the pleasure of eating the measure of Egyptian food rationed them, before falling asleep through exhaustion.  Thinking that their present journey through the desert was costing them more than they had anticipated, they thus began to lose hold of their erstwhile, God-given, desire for freedom, and began to fantasize over those occasional bits of food allowed them in Egypt:  wouldn’t it be wonderful to taste the like again!  Of course, indulged imaginations of that sort shared with relatives and friends in private conversations soon led to public grumbling and ultimately to confrontation with Moses and Aaron, the spokesmen and servants of the God they as yet so little understood:

The Israelites said, “Would that we had died at the LORD’S hand in the land of Egypt, as we sat by our fleshpots and ate our fill of bread! But you had to lead us into this desert to make the whole community die of famine!”

The people wanted food, proper food, here and now! Future freedom now seemed of very little importance in comparison.  Above all, freedom from sin ... what did that really mean?   Satisfaction, though short lived, was felt immediately; when would thoughts of human dignity ever bring anything other than thoughts??

The people were, however, being led by their God Who knew their true need and that   their present desire for freedom and food were idle imaginations never going to be given them by the Egyptians: as far as they were concerned, whatever pittance might again become Israel’s lot in Egypt it would involve yet more abject slavery.  As far as God was concerned, on the other hand, though they would have to learn what ‘true freedom’ meant, and what Food would bring them true fulfilment, all that was within their competence, and involved nothing other than their dutiful obedience to His commands now and in the land He would give them as their own.

Nevertheless, for the present they needed further time and experience in order to gradually appreciate the issues involved, and so God, backing up Moses and Aaron, nipped the people’s grumbling in the bud by immediately sending them  a large flock of quail that covered the camp, and then later by depositing on the ground overnight fine flakes of what looked like hoar-frost for them to collect as bread.

We can imagine with what eager abandonment those ex-slaves devoured the cooked quail after weeks of difficult desert travelling:

But while the meat was still between their teeth, before it was chewed, the wrath of the LORD was aroused against the people, and the LORD struck the people with a very great plague. (Numbers 11:33)

The Lord God – with Jesus in view -- was preparing them for an eternal and glorious destiny, and they, by wallowing so wholeheartedly in a pottage of quail, were disposing themselves to go back to slavery … following the example of Esau who had despised his birthright for pleasurable food:

Esau sold his birthright to Jacob, and Jacob gave Esau bread and stew of lentils; then he ate and drank, arose, and went his way.  Thus, Esau despised his birthright.    (Genesis 25:33-34)

And like Esau, who begged with tears that his birthright might be restored but to no avail, they too were punished severely for choosing to doubt the goodness of their Maker and despise their own dignity:

            The LORD struck the people with a very great plague.

People of God, there are many in our society today who imitate those Israelites of old: for example, some prefer to be permanently out of work, living idly, on hand-outs from the state, or from minor criminality; others are content to drink their time and money away, or waste their lives just seeking kicks from alcohol, sex, and drugs abuse.  This state of things is most displeasing to God, because such people and others like them are degrading themselves.  Friends and people around them can see that the pleasures they imagine themselves to be enjoying are affording them no true joy at all, but most assuredly robbing them of any prospects for future happiness or well-being.  And such is their pitiable state that there are some who feel moved to devote themselves to all kinds of social work to help such people in their need and out of their distress.  And such helpers not only see, but they themselves can suffer from, such experiences of worldly distress and the human tragedy of those so-called ‘drop outs’.

You, dear People of God, should therefore be able to imagine something of the compassion of Jesus when He came to rescue the whole of mankind who, despising that likeness to God which was their birthright, had degraded themselves by becoming slaves to the Devil and to sin, and were now incapable of fulfilling their human potential as children of God called to a heavenly destiny and eternal blessedness.  As you heard in the Gospel reading, Jesus said to the Jews, the people closest to God in the world of those days:

Do not work for food which perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.  For on Him the Father, God, has set His seal.

Just as a human being cannot find happiness living like an animal for the satisfactions of food and debauchery, likewise, one called to become a child of God cannot find authentic happiness and fulfilment by pursuing a merely human idea of life: our make-up and our calling demand that the life we live be both human and divine in the likeness of Jesus Who, though God, became one of us, in order that we, though fallen human beings, might, through Him, learn to live a life of righteousness before God and good-will with men in the power of the His gift: the Holy Spirit.

The great modern tragedy is that our Western societies have the power, the technology, and now the most abject will, to offer endless opportunities for people to enjoy the things of this world.  After having imperfectly learned over centuries something of God, and having gradually built up a measure of social coherence by the help of His Spirit among them, many are now despising their heritage of a heavenly calling, as did Esau and Israel of old: the imperfectly appreciated and understood promises and teachings of God seem  old hat in comparison with the new and immediately available pleasures of sinful modern life, with the result that many former Christians now prefer to grab for themselves what seems to be so readily available and at so little apparent cost, rather than to rely on the goodness of One Whom they cannot see, and Who, at the cost of their obedience to Him, seems to offer nothing better than promises of things to come.

However, we must not forget what history has to teach us, for we have heard what happened to Israel in the desert.  The People of Israel in the desert wanted quail; reminiscent of the delights of Egypt, they wanted food for present pleasure whereas God was offering them food for the long journey and hard battle that lay ahead of them, food that would keep them fit for, and see them through, the trials of the desert struggle.

In Jesus’ time the Jews also wanted food for present pleasure and fulfilment:

            You seek Me, not because you saw the signs, but because you ate of the     loaves and were filled.

They and their contemporaries wanted what was tangible: a Messiah who would be their miraculous and victorious leader against the Romans and indeed against the nations.   However, what Jesus offered, then as now, was His heavenly teaching and His Eucharistic Flesh and Blood -- prefigured by the desert manna -- as Bread from Heaven and as Food for a long and supremely important journey: the only ‘proper’ Food for those called to follow Him on pilgrimage to His and their heavenly Father’s home:

            I am the Way, the Truth and the Life.

Saint Paul faithfully echoes the call of Jesus writing to the Ephesians, as you heard in the second reading:

If indeed you have heard Jesus and have been taught by Him, put off your former conduct, the old man which grows corrupt according to the deceitful lusts, and be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new man created according to God, in true righteousness and holiness.

And now, dear People of God, each one of us has to make a definitive choice in his or her life; it was indeed ever so, as Moses warned the slaves escaping from Egypt (Deuteronomy 30:19-20):

 I call heaven and earth today to witness against you: I have set before you life and death, the blessing and the curse. Choose life, then, that you and your descendants may live, by loving the LORD, your God, heeding His voice, and holding fast to Him. For that will mean life for you, a long life for you to live on the land which the LORD swore He would give to your fathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.”

Our wondrous blessing is that One greater than Moses speaks to us today, People of God. Let us learn from the Scriptures to hear His message with our ears, understand and love His teaching with our mind and heart thanks to His Spirit of holiness and truth being offered us, and respond to His call by following His teaching handed down to us from His Apostles by Mother Church with sincerity and perseverance of heart.

 

 

             

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, 23 July 2021

17th Sunday Year B 2021

 

                 Seventeenth Sunday, Year B.

(2 Kings 4:42-44; Ephesians 4:1-6; Gospel of St. John 6:1-15)


 

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, notice first of all those words spoken by the people who witnessed and benefitted from Our Lord’s miraculous multiplication of the loaves and fish:

            This really is the Prophet Who is to come into the world.

How right were those words!

As you well know, that great miracle foreshadowed the Holy Eucharist, the Bread of Eternal Life, which Jesus was to give at the Last Supper.  You will also remember, I am sure, the story of those two disciples walking together to Emmaus and sorrowing over Our Lord’s recent crucifixion, who were overtaken and joined by the Risen Lord Himself; and how, despite conversation on their way together, it was only at the evening meal -- which they had charitably invited Him to share with them – that they eventually realized just Who their guest was as they saw Him bless and break the bread.

In both those cases, the miraculous feeding of the five thousand and the Emmaus incident, Jesus was recognized for Who He most truly was, Prophet and Saviour, in a Eucharistic context.  It is the same today, People of God; only in our Eucharist – only through participation in Holy Mass, only through our sacramental reception of the Body and Blood of Christ -- can we come to a full recognition of the truth about Our Blessed Lord.

This is confirmed for us by St. John who assures us that no one knows the depths of a man save the spirit within that man, and here in the Eucharist -- as we receive and consume the Sacred Host -- Christ bestows on us His own most Holy Spirit, to the fullest extent of our individual capacity and longing to receive Him: the Spirit of Wisdom and Power to lead and guide us, as children of Mother Church and members of the Body of Christ, through the trials of this life into all truth about Jesus and all love for Him and His Father.

This Eucharistic receiving-in-order-to-learn is a pattern that permeates the whole of Christian life:

first of all, for the consecration of both bread and wine in our Eucharist

            Blessed are You, Lord God, for we have received

then, in the case of the great Apostle of the Gentiles

For I received from the Lord what I also handed on to you, that the Lord Jesus, on the night He was handed over, took bread,  (1 Corinthians 11:23)

and then in the lives of each and every disciple of Jesus our Lord (Revelation 3:20),

Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, (then) I will enter his house and dine with him, and he with Me.

Dear People of God that attitude of receiving, of asking and listening, in order to receive and learn, should permeate the lives of each and every one of us, because our Christian life is a vocational search for knowledge of God’s truth and a right understanding of His love, and for the grace to respond as true children of God, in Jesus, the sublimely obedient Son and lover of us all.

And yet, as you heard, Our Blessed Lord can only say ‘if’:

Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will enter his house and dine with him sharing the bread of life and word of God, with the wine of wisdom, understanding, and power.

Today there are many, many people, scholars and authorities, writing and/or speaking much about Jesus or about what is good, better, and best for mankind and modern society, without any obedient acknowledgement of God, with no faith in Jesus, and who are strongly opposed to the very notion of any humble submission to His most Holy Spirit.   Consequently, all their conclusions concerning mankind’s intractable social problems and moral dilemmas are, at the best, but the result of human mental endeavour, directed by an individual ego: they are ‘excogitations’, mostly sparked off by, and developed along lines determined by, scholarly controversy. The result is not something gratefully received, lovingly heard, observed, admired, and treasured, but the product, so-to-speak, of a mental vine-press, where the grapes used are the fruit of scholars ‘up to the minute’ studies, bolstered by personal items contributing little more than some measure of ‘spikyness’, helpful to provoke present-day controversy among fellow scholars and to promote immediate sales for all.

Authentic Christian knowledge on the other hand is precisely the fruit of a gracious gift of God, a fruit to be subsequently matured under the sun of the Spirit’s grace: for, after having been gratefully received, such intellectual and spiritual awareness needs to be humbly appreciated and assessed, rigorously developed, and whatever else is humanly needed for its proper and fullest expression and understanding; but its origin is always a Godly gift, received not excogitated, a gift to be personally accepted with gratitude and faith before being lovingly shared and shaped with others’ help for a deeper understanding and appreciation of Mother Church’s treasury of God’s revelation, and for our own human joy as children of God delighting in the glory of God’s Kingdom taking shape before us and among us, and finding proper expression to the greater glory of God and the beauty of our Christian faith and hope.

That sort of knowledge, dear People of God, is the basis  of our Catholic and Christian Tradition, and that distinctive aspect of being received characterizes all truly great and profitable human knowledge and awareness, a characteristic which is impossible without much previous prayer and listening as well as present thinking, without humble waiting as well as hard work, without aspiring to what is above and beyond self and time as well as trying to appreciate what needs to be done here on earth, in our modern society and the world around us .

Jesus in His Eucharist is the only true source of Life for us, dear brothers and sisters in Christ, and that is what the bread and wine used at Holy Mass signify: the nourishment for our earthly life to be gradually transfigured into heavenly and eternal Life by the Spirit being offered us. 

When Jesus was talking to the crowd after this multiplication of the loaves and fish, He urged them:

Do not labour for the food which perishes, but for the food which endures to eternal life.

The wondrous nature of this ‘bread enduring to eternal life’, was foreshadowed by the fact of Jesus ordering that all scraps be gathered up: none were to be left for the birds of the air and beasts of the field, let alone to just corrupt as did even the miraculous manna of old left unconsumed overnight in the desert.  Moreover, 12 hampers’ full were gathered in total, foreshadowing such food – Jesus’ gift – intended for the feeding not only of the 12 tribes of Israel, but (John 10:16) also of all those:

Other sheep that do not belong to this fold. These also I must lead, and they will hear My voice, and there will be one flock, one shepherd,

for eternal life, through faith and obedience to God’s guidance of Law and Love.  Yes indeed, that bread blessed by Jesus was  wonderful both in its immediate significance for those original 5,000 who gratefully rejoiced on receiving it; but far, far more wonderful is the bread consecrated by Jesus, in its future promise for all those who would subsequently look with full faith, confidence and love, towards Jesus to lead them through the desert of this man-made world towards the promised land to come.

Whatever promise life may hold for us who are the People of God, whatever may be the meaning, purpose and goal of our individual lives, for each one of us, the fulfilment of it all and the consummation of all our deepest yearnings or aspirations is to be found in the Eucharist, for here we receive Him Who is Life itself.  In Him alone – and only by receiving His Spirit into our lives -- can we become fully, truly, and ultimately ourselves, the selves we were created and destined to become not only for our personal fulfilment, but for the blessing of our world and the greater manifestation of the glory of God our Father.

The Christ we receive in Holy Communion is the crucified Christ, now glorified and seated at the right hand of His Father in heaven.  He comes to us through the sacrifice of the Mass, and this Eucharistic Jesus we receive is the real Christ glorified in His Self-oblation to His Father for us.  He still bears the traces of His crucifixion, of the wounds in His hands, feet and side; it is part of His glory, He does not seek to obliterate the memory of His great suffering because that suffering was the supreme expression of His sublime love for His Father and the enduring witness to His love for us.

As with all human beings, suffering will inevitably have a significant, perhaps even vital part, to play in our lives, and as disciples of Jesus we aspire to embrace those sufferings by the power of His most Holy Spirit Who wills to transfigure us thereby into a Christ-like expression of love for the Father.

People of God, let us thank God with all our hearts for this supremely holy sacrifice and sacrament of Holy Mass, let us offer ourselves with Jesus and in Him to the Father, and

-- receiving Him in Holy Communion -- let us, in the power and love of His most Holy Spirit, express our willingness, our great desire, to learn from Him, to receive from Him whatever and all that will prepare us so that He might be able to take us by the hand and lead us in all things through life and death for the glory of His Father and the salvation of all those found to be of good will.

 

Thursday, 15 July 2021

16th Sunday Year B 2021

 

Sixteenth Sunday of Year (B)

(Jeremiah 23:1-6; Saint Paul to the Ephesians 2:13-18; St. Mark’s Gospel 6:30-34)

 

Under the guidance of the Holy Spirit the O.T. Scriptures, as we know them, were built up very gradually over more than a thousand years, with later ages adding new layers, strata, to traditions received from earlier times; and in some of the most ancient of these traditions thus providentially preserved and developed is the theme of shepherd:

Then (the prophet Micaiah) said, “I saw all Israel scattered on the mountains, as sheep that have no shepherd. And the Lord said, ‘These have no master. Let each return to his house in peace.’”  (1 Kings 22:17)

The Israelites were originally nomads, people wandering with their flocks and herds from one grazing land to the next, always in search of pasture for their animals.  This original, wandering existence -- bound by no ties other than the well-being of their flocks and herds and the constant search for the best available grazing -- this, in a word, nomadic life was very much admired in later ages by some of the great prophets of Israel who found themselves surrounded on every hand by decadence: by the luxury, violence, injustice, superstition and depravity of city life, and the abuse of settled agriculture in the pursuit of profit and pleasure.  They looked back with nostalgia for the old days because it seemed to them that as nomads they had lived with the dignity and simplicity of men who were free: being disciplined and protected by the tranquil rigours of desert life.  Yes, they regarded the original nomadic life as ideal for God’s Chosen People seeking, ultimately, only God’s will; while rejoicing in His great beauty and goodness in the world around and above all in their own national history and personal lives.

With such sentiments those prophets regarded the Exodus as the high peak of Israel’s spiritual experience, when – with God as her shield and guide – she came out of Egypt’s slavery and wandered over desert wastes learning to know her God on the way to the land He had promised them.  Moses appeared to them as the true shepherd and David -- their great king -- as his heir. 

            I will appoint shepherds for them who will shepherd them so that they need no             longer fear and tremble; and none shall be missing, says the LORD

This is the name they give him: “The LORD our justice.”  (Jeremiah 23:4-6)

After David, however, his royal successors failed to respond satisfactorily to their calling and so we heard Jeremiah declaring to them in today’s first reading:

Woe for the shepherds who mislead and scatter the flock of My pasture, says the Lord;

and looking to the more distant future the prophets foretold two things: God Himself would be the Shepherd of His People; as would also a future king, the Messiah of God. 

Behold, the days are coming, says the LORD, when I will raise up a righteous shoot to David.  As King He shall reign and govern wisely, He shall do what is just and right in the land.   In His days Judah shall be saved, Israel shall dwell in security.

These two traditions were fulfilled in the Person of Our Lord Jesus Christ … and the great work of Christ our Shepherd was to bring peace to His flock: peace with God and with men of good will, as Saint Paul told us in our second reading:

He came and preached peace to you (Gentiles) who were far off and peace to those (Jews) who were near, for through Him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father.

Sublime Peace; a peace not for idleness, but for progress: progress through faith in Jesus, by the power of His most Holy Spirit, leading ultimately to the Father’s presence.

Therefore, having heard in the Gospel reading that:

When Jesus disembarked and saw the vast crowd, His heart was moved with pity for them, for they were like sheep without a shepherd;

we can guess that He pitied them above all for the lack of peace in their hearts and of ultimate purpose in their lives and aspirations.

His Apostles had just returned from the missionary work on which He had sent them and they were so very excited about the results of their work: the conversions brought by their preaching, the cures they had wrought and the demons they had cast out.  Oh, how excited they were; and how glad, how anxious to tell Jesus all about it! 

Nevertheless, Jesus’ first care was to calm their over-excited minds and jubilant hearts:

He said to them, “Come away by yourselves to a deserted place and rest a while” (for) people were coming and going in great numbers, and they had no opportunity even to eat.

Dear People of God, notice Jesus’ guidance:  leave the crowd and learn to rest in (His) Jesus’ presence. 

And yet, on reading today’s Gospel passage I was a little puzzled by Jesus’ words, because I would have expected Him to say, ‘Come away with Me to a deserted place (away from the crowd) by yourselves’, but He does not say ‘Come away with Me’, but ‘Come away by yourselves from the crowd’.   Can it be that there Jesus does not explicitly promise to be physically with, or waiting for, His disciples; but rather, that by His use of the words ‘Come away by yourselves’, which, only imply His presence, He also wants to positively encourage them to actively seek Him there in that lonely place?

That guidance of Jesus, is, dear People of God of the utmost importance for ourselves whenever we can find such a place of solace for ourselves in the stresses of life.   He wants to be found indeed, but, nevertheless, He does not want to be thought of as being ‘automatically’ available?

Then, on seeing the crowds who had followed after Him, how He pitied them, how deep was their unrest!!

We notice a similar thing so very frequently these our days.  How easy it is, in a crowd, to forget oneself; how easy to be swept along from one absorbing interest to another, to be drawn into and embroiled in a kaleidoscope of ever-changing events and excitement!  But what about when people need -- as eventually they must -- to go their own ways when each is then left alone with his or her own thoughts?  How few can bear that silence: for some, a threatening loneliness, for others, oppressive boredom!  And what does that show?  Simply that, of themselves, they have little that is positively theirs: life for them is a wearisome business without the constant novelties of crowd-life, crowd-noise, crowd-provocation and excitement.  Look around you!  How often young people are to be seen with ear-phones pumping into their heads rock and pop music or whatever is the latest hit-style.  There is, of course, nothing directly wrong about that, but I’m sure Our Lord pities many such young people too, who cannot bear to be alone with themselves, to be aware of nothing but their own thoughts and fears, longings and regrets.  Why?  Because they don’t know where their life is going, they don’t have any ultimate guiding purpose.  Out of touch, out of tune, with any such aspirations, surrounding silence only seems to provoke deep and largely inarticulate longings, vague and unrecognizable feelings, which well up within themselves when noise and distractions from around cease.

Jesus came to bring peace to our souls by offering us TRUE LIFE: life such as the world cannot give; life with a calling and a purpose that endures throughout the variations, trials, and storms of eventful life and goes with us into and beyond the grave; life centred on a rock which no storms can unsettle let alone overthrow; life with a joy which cannot be taken away from us by worldly chance, because it wells up from within our own hearts and minds; life, drawing us with Jesus our neighbour our companion and friend, our Lord and Saviour, to God His Father and our fulfilment.  That, is the treasure offered us by faith in Jesus and the Gift of His Spirit in the Church.

People of God, don’t let yourselves get too wrapped up in the things of this world.  Take serious measures to be alone in the vicinity of Jesus at times: and then shut yourselves off from the noise around and open yourself up to be with Him in faith that He may deepen His Peace, His Life, within you.

Those words are emphasized because Christian prayer, and above all Christian contemplation are not to be entered upon in accordance with Yoga-like practices.    We Catholics and true Christians do not try use any technique on, we do not try to exercise any power (even persuasive) over, Him.   We turn to Him in our need, and in His Power is our contentment and peace; we hope in His great Goodness, and in His merciful Wisdom and Providence we confidently rest.

Thus, may we learn to say with all our heart on our daily way through life the words of today’s Psalm:

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.  He leads me in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.  Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil;

and may we ultimately find our lives fulfilled beyond all possible measure and desire in our faithful experience of those sublime words:

 Surely, goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.