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.

Friday, 10 June 2022

Trinity Sunday Year C 2022

 

Trinity Sunday (C)

(Proverbs 8:22-31; Romans 5:1-5; St. John 16:12-15)

 

 

What is happiness for a human being?  How is it to be found?   Can it be ultimately, definitively, acquired?

In answer to that last question ‘can happiness be ultimately acquired, gained for oneself?’ the Christian answer is ‘No!’; but, according to the Christian promise, it can and will be given by God to chosen ones, and we can be among those who will receive it from Him.

Let us now turn our attention to the other questions: what is happiness for a human being and how is it to be sought?   My answer is short and all the more sure because it is short: happiness is to live in harmony with and accordance to our fundamental make-up, and to aspire to our ultimate fulfilment.

In our first reading from the book of Proverbs we heard of the remarkably close relationship that exists between mankind and the rest of creation:

Thus says the Wisdom of God: The LORD possessed me, the beginning of His ways, forerunner of His prodigies of long ago; from of old I was poured forth, the first, before the earth.  When He established the heavens, I was there; when He made firm the skies above, when He fixed fast the foundations of the earth; when He set for the sea its limit.   Then was I beside Him as His craftsman, and I was His delight day by day, playing before Him all the while, playing on the surface of His earth, and I found delight in the human race.

Obviously, for Scripture, creation was indeed a joyful work of wisdom and love!!  The wisdom of God rejoiced supremely we are told:

Playing on the surface of His earth (where) I found delight in the sons of men.

There we can sense how close are the bonds uniting us with the whole of creation: bonds of deep sympathy and joyous compatibility, bestowed on us by God Who created the whole universe -- with mankind as its crown -- through His beloved Son, the Wisdom of God, by His nurturing and hovering Spirit of love.  Son and Spirit, the Father’s two creating hands!

Moreover, such bonds with creation are not just the indirect result of God’s creative activity, they are directly willed by Him for our well-being and creation’s greater glory; for man, as lord of earth and of the universe, was made indeed to be the channel of God’s presence and grace for creation:

The Lord God then took the man and settled him in the garden of Eden, to cultivate and care for it.  The Lord God formed out of the ground various wild animals and various birds of the air, and He brought them to the man to see what he would call them; whatever the man called each of them would be its name.  (Genesis 2:15,19)

God blessed them, saying: “Be fertile and multiply, fill the earth and subdue it; have dominion over the fish of the sea, the birds of the air, and all the living things that move on the earth.”  (Genesis 1:28)

Behold the richness of our human make-up, conditioned by so many and such varied, original and joyous, bonds: bonds of root compatibility with the whole of inanimate creation; bonds of appreciation for all living sources providing for the food and furtherance of our society; bonds of gratitude for all animals serving us and claiming our stewardship before God!!

Dear People of God, we are not wrapped up in our own selves; we are opened-up, so to speak, by our very position in creation!  Selfishness is not in harmony with, nor is it according to, our original, fundamental, make-up; and going in that way against the very grain of our being, can never bring us happiness; no, not even on the natural level. 

Our faith proclaims that we, unlike the rest of creation, are not made for a merely natural destiny; being specially created in the image and likeness of God, we are endowed with a supernatural potential and calling to share in the divine life of mutual love and commitment: 

God created man in His own image; in the divine image He created him; male and female He created them.  (Genesis 1:27)

Given, therefore, along with today’s serious, and indeed pressing, concerns for our present environment, and the life of future generations of men and women here on earth; the wide-spread alarm at the ever greater incohesiveness of human society  world-wide, let us look more closely at the relevance of the teaching we have just reviewed with regard to that ab-original concern of human-beings, "How is true happiness to be found today? 

Disciples of Jesus, children of Mother Church, dear People of God, our Faith teaches us that we are called to find our fulfilment by sharing, eternally, in the happiness of the eternal and infinite God Who made us, the God Who is One and Three: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, three divine Persons in the One Godhead: a plurality of Personal relationships both simple and spontaneous, sublimely beautiful and pure, yet rich beyond any measure or compare.

For such a fulfilment there is need of constant development for us, from the very origin of our spiritual life: development through our natural experience of personal life and social commitments, such as obedience, gratitude and love, co-operation and friendship; development through our willingness to share in working for the bettering of social life; above all, development through our gradual awareness of and response to the mercy and goodness of God calling us, drawing us, to His beloved Son, our Lord and Saviour, that we might find in Him an introduction to what will be eternal blessedness for us.  Life eternal, a life-experience totally unimaginable without Jesus, a life for which we are called to become  our truest selves in Him Who was sent to be One among us for a time, One with us and for us eternally.

Jesus has taught us that, in accordance with the faith and commitment we show in answer to our divine calling, we can begin, even here on earth, to experience a foretaste of the blessedness of heaven:

These things I have spoken to you, that My joy may remain in you, and that your joy may be full; (John 15:11)

My Father, Who has given (you) to Me, is greater than all; and no one is able to snatch (you) out of My Father's hand.  (John 10:29)

Therefore, since our eternal blessedness is bound up with the Three Persons in One God selfishness is once again found to be, fundamentally and totally, opposed to any aspirations for our true happiness here on earth; for, the intimate life of the Holy Trinity in which we -- in Jesus by the Spirit -- are called to ultimately participate, is a mystery of love, life, and commitment. 

Life, the glory, of the Most Holy Trinity is the expression of what is a divinely mutual and totally comprehensive knowledge:

No one knows the Son except the Father; and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal Him; (Matthew 11:27)

together with what is the only possible response to such comprehensive knowledge of divine Being and Beauty, namely, a transcendent love and commitment, as manifested in human flesh by Jesus in His Passion:

The hour is coming, yes, has now come, that you will be scattered, each to his own, and will leave Me alone. And yet I am not alone, because the Father is with Me. (John 16:32)

Father, the hour has come. Glorify Your Son, that Your Son also may glorify You,   

When Jesus had cried out with a loud voice, He said, "Father, into Your hands I commit My spirit."  Having said this, He breathed His last. (Jn. 17:1; Luke 23:46)

Love, based on knowledge of the truth, and issuing in commitment, is ultimately the best guidance that can be given to humanity in its supreme quest for happiness. 

People of God, even in everyday, ordinary, experience, those who are committed are also to some extent admired or even envied, because, having a purpose in which they can lose themselves, they become more or less free from the stifling bonds of self-concern.  The unity of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, in what we call the Holy Trinity, is the supreme Christian mystery: total love, based on comprehensive knowledge, evoking total commitment, and issuing into eternal Life and fullness of Being.  We are called to share in that Divine Blessedness as members of the Son and members of that Body of which He is the Head.  In Him, by His Spirit, we are destined to see the beauty and experience the majesty of the Father in all truth, and in a beatific response of love to that Vision to be, by the Spirit, entirely committed in total self-forgetfulness to praising the glory of the Father, and thereby come to the fullness of our life and being in Christ Jesus Our Lord.

Stand fast therefore in the liberty by which Christ has made us free, and do not be entangled again with a yoke of bondage. (Galatians 5:1)

People of God, our human nature, created by God for Himself, has, indeed, been vitiated by sin but it has not been destroyed; and so we are always liable to have what Wordsworth has described as ‘intimations of immortality’: insights, in this case, into ourselves and the realities of our life and calling, which far surpass in their penetration and perceptiveness all our normal surface observations and awareness.  Our deepest human longings for that freedom and fulfilment which alone can give us true happiness can be penetratingly clear, but too frequently that clarity of vision becomes clouded over when we turn to our own devices, and experience the deceits of men, or discover the vanity of the world’s easy promises.  We should learn today, and never again forget, to appreciate the treasures of our faith, and above all to look with ever deeper admiration, reverence, and awe, to the Holy Trinity -- Father, Son and Holy Spirit -- for that inspiration, enlightenment, and power, that will enable us to seek aright in this life and ultimately to receive in the next, God’s Gift transcending all earthly imaginations and desires: the Gift that will transfigure and glorify the whole family of God and establish for all eternity  the Kingdom where God is All in All.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, 2 June 2022

Pentecost Sunday Year C 2022

 

PENTECOST SUNDAY (2022, Year C)

(Acts 2:1-11; 1 Corinthians 12:3-7, 12-13; John 20:19-23)

 

 

No one can say, “Jesus is Lord,” except by the Holy Spirit.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, those words of St. Paul are special to me not only because of what they express but also because of what they embrace.  Jesus had said earlier (John 6:44):

No one can come to Me unless the Father Who sent Me draw him;

and so, we now know that no one can come to Jesus and learn from Him unless the Father first of all draws him, and then the Holy Spirit enables him to say “Jesus is Lord”.  That is, the goodness of the Father draws us to Jesus in order that subsequently, by the power of the Holy Spirit, we might confess and proclaim, Him.

The Father does not draw anyone to Jesus and just leave it at that. The Father, the Son (the Word of God), and the Holy Spirit, are One for Jesus the incarnate Word: the Father draws us to Jesus that we might, as true disciples, learn by the Holy Spirit to confess Jesus as both Lord (God) and Saviour.

Now, all that is mirrored in Jesus’ very first words to the disciples after having risen from the dead, and while they were still keeping behind locked doors for fear of the Jews:

Peace be with you.  As the Father has sent Me, so I send you: receive the Holy Spirit.  Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained.

In that way the Risen Lord showed Himself to be indeed the Lord and Master they had lovingly known and obediently followed; and He now confirmed His identity by means of the wounds of His body and the words of His mind and heart …. There was no room for doubt after such testimony!

‘Receive the Holy Spirit’ … such was to be their personal endowment when Jesus Himself would no longer be with them (Jn. 14:16-17):

I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Helper to be with you always, the Spirit of truth, Whom the world cannot accept, because it neither sees Him nor knows Him.  But you know Him because He abides with you (in Mother Church), and will be in you (personally as true disciples). 

Thus the gift of the Spirit was for their sanctification and peace in Mother Church and for their personal guidance, strength, and comfort as disciples of the Lord.  There was also, however, to be a special dispensation for them as Apostles: the Holy Spirit would inspire, support, and sustain their endeavours for the continuation of Jesus’ public ministry by their world-wide proclamation of Jesus’ Gospel of Salvation, and the Apostolic establishment of Mother Church as citadel and source of sacramental life and divine truth:

I have told you this while I am with you.    The Advocate, the Holy Spirit, Whom the Father will send in My name — He will teach you everything and remind you of all that (I) told you. (14:25-26)

They had to wait and pray in Jerusalem for a short while before receiving that promised gift of the Spirit … praying with Mary above all, and looking back to those days, months, and few years spent with the Lord: thinking over all that He had said and done in their presence, and wondering where the Spirit might lead them for Jesus’ glory. 

When the time for Pentecost was fulfilled, they were all in one place together, and suddenly there came from the sky a noise like a strong driving wind, and it filled the entire house in which they were.   Then there appeared to them tongues as of fire, which parted and came to rest on each one of them.    And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in different tongues, as the Spirit enabled them to proclaim.

Whom, what, did they proclaim?   The mighty acts of God manifested in Jesus, and proclaimed in the Good News of Jesus!

You knew that of course; but notice how they proclaimed Jesus: IN THE SPIRIT! 

Mother Church has never proclaimed Jesus merely as One attested by trustworthy historical records; her memory of Him is also and has always been her abiding experience of Him as the living Lord in heaven, and our loving Saviour still present to and working with His Church on earth through His most Holy Spirit.  And what exultation must have thrilled the hearts and minds of the Apostles when the Spirit came upon them in the presence of the assembled Church for the very first time, to inaugurate that abiding presence and power!

Now there were devout Jews from every nation under heaven staying in Jerusalem.   At this sound, they gathered in a large crowd, but they were confused because each one heard them speaking in his own language.  They were astounded, and in amazement they asked, “Are not all these people who are speaking Galileans?  Then how does each of us hear them in his own native language?   We are Parthians, Medes, and Elamites, inhabitants of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the districts of Libya near Cyrene, as well as travellers from Rome, both Jews and converts to Judaism, Cretans and Arabs, yet we hear them speaking in our own tongues of the mighty acts of God.”   They were all astounded and bewildered, and said to one another, “What does this mean?”

My dear brothers and sisters in Christ, let us give heart-felt thanks for, and lovingly meditate on, God’s Gift of the Holy Spirit Who is ours in a truly special way on this most holy day in Mother Church, for there is supreme comfort, confidence, and joy for us in the presence of the Spirit.

Above all, He is the Advocate, Strength, Light, and inalienable Hope and Peace of Mother Church, for He abides in her; but also, there is comfort in the Spirit for all true disciples wanting to know, seeking to serve, and longing to experience, Jesus as their very own Lord and Saviour. Only the most Holy Spirit can lead us, in conformity with the Scriptures, along the ways of Jesus to serve and help fulfil His saving purposes for our world today, and also to form us individually in the likeness of Jesus that we may find true joy in a personal relationship with Him.  For what deeper comfort and joy can there be, than that of becoming more and more one with Jesus, Perfect Man and Perfect God, the most beloved Son of His God and Father, and of thus discovering ourselves in Him as truly adopted children of the heavenly Father, fulfilling our deepest personal being and our highest spiritual aspirations.

But there is yet more, for there is also earthly power and purpose available for us in the Spirit; because each of us is offered, and can have, abilities and gifts able to respond to and conspire with such power.  All our hopes and aspirations can, in that way, find true fulfilment in the prospect and purpose the Spirit opens up before us: all that God has prepared for those who love Him here on earth:

 

To each individual the manifestation of the Spirit is given for some benefit.  To one is given through the Spirit the expression of wisdom; to another the expression of knowledge according to the same Spirit; to another faith by the same Spirit; to another gifts of healing by the one Spirit; to another mighty deeds; to another prophecy; to another discernment of spirits; to another varieties of tongues; to another interpretation of tongues.   But one and the same Spirit produces all of these.

My dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ that is yours, mine, and every faithful Catholic and Christian’s vocation:

            To each individual the manifestation of the Spirit is given for some benefit. 

And to discover, re-discover, confirm, and fulfil, that vocation it is necessary, above all, to let God speak to you; do not crowd His voice out, do not let His voice be crowded out by activities, thoughts and/or fears; that is exactly what so many do in order to avoid hearing God’s voice in their deepest heart and conscience, they are too busy, too occupied, too worried or fearful, to LISTEN.   They use such preoccupations as excuses; but those are truly foolish and futile excuses, because God most certainly does speak and can be heard by all who will to listen; and He wants to speak words of love and salvation to all.  To that end He has given His only-begotten and truly beloved Son Who, by the power and inspiration of the Holy Spirit (Mary of Nazareth listened to Him!) became Man … perfect Man.  And today, God offers and sends anew His most Holy Spirit to all who will, like Mary, allow themselves to hear and listen to his words of love and fulfilment, promise and peace – as calmly and quietly as they can, and with what love they have -- shutting out, not God this time, but the clamour of self and the world subject to the devil’s mockery, bombast, and lies.

(2022)

Friday, 27 May 2022

7th Sunday of Eastertide Year C 2022

 

7th. Sunday of Eastertide, (Year C)

(Acts of the Apostles 7:55-60; Revelation 22:12-20; St. John’s Gospel 17:20-26)


Our readings today began with the martyrdom of Saint Stephen, the first Christian to die for witnessing to Jesus as Lord and Saviour, and ended with Our Blessed Lord’s most solemn prayer for Christian unity, through the knowledge and love of God being inspired into the hearts and minds of all true believers by Jesus’ gift of His Most Holy Spirit:

When the Advocate comes, Whom I will send you from the Father, the Spirit of truth that proceeds from the Father, He will testify to Me.  And you also testify.

Our reading from the Acts of the Apostles told us that:

Stephen, filled with the Holy Spirit, looked up intently to heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God.

Saint Stephen was ‘filled with the Holy Spirit’ for two reasons:  that he, Stephen, might have the courage and strength to give such heroic testimony to Jesus, and that the Holy Spirit might perfect Stephen in the likeness of his Lord and Saviour: for, battered, bruised, and bloodied, with stones for testifying to Jesus, he breathed his last uttering words like Jesus’ own last words:

            Lord Jesus, receive my spirit; do not hold this sin against them.

The Holy Spirit, having gradually formed Stephen in the likeness of Jesus enabled and allowed him to say his, Stephen’s own version of Jesus’ ultimate prayer, as handed down to us in the Gospels: (Luke 23: 46; John 19:30; Mt. 27:50)

           Father, into Your hands I commit My spirit.

Jesus bowed His head and gave up His spirit.

Jesus yielded up His spirit.

There we have, dear People of God, the most perfect compendium of the work of the Holy Spirit in Mother Church for Jesus: teaching and forming His disciples, her children, in the likeness of their Lord and Saviour, Who Himself witnessed with incomparable wisdom to the beauty of divine Truth, and died most sublimely for Love both heavenly and humble-beyond-all-measure.  And the very first model we have of the Spirit’s artistry is exemplified in Saint Stephen, the first martyr of Mother Church; Stephen, whose very name witnesses to truth and beauty: a garland for Mother Church and resplendent crown among witnesses to Jesus.

Again, dear People of God, notice how Paul of Tarsus learnt from that martyrdom of St. Stephen which he, a young and most fervent Rabbi-in-training, and ardent persecutor of Christians, witnessed and approved of.  For, after his personal conversion when he himself was a prisoner in Rome for witnessing world-wide to Jesus, he wrote to the Christian converts at Colossae saying (3: 1-2):

If then you were raised with Christ, seek what is above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of God.  Think of what is above, not of what is on earth.

Which is exactly what he, years ago, had witnessed Stephen doing, for which very reason Stephen had been stoned to death.

And notice particularly what Paul as a Christian apostle, taught those Colossians:

(Through baptism) you have died, and your (true) life is hidden with Christ in God.

St. Paul the Christian Apostle to the Nations, believed that that was what had ultimately happened to Saint Stephen, for Stephen had indeed died witnessing to Jesus with God, in heaven!

How the memory of that incident had lodged itself in Paul’s own heart and mind: he was now praying that, by the grace of God, the very same love and commitment would also come to blaze in the hearts and minds of those Christian converts at Colossae:

             You have died (to the world), and your life is hidden with Christ in God.

Dear People of God, what sort of person was Stephen? I will give you a short summary of what led up to his martyrdom that you might judge for yourselves.

The Twelve called together the community of the disciples and said, “It is not right for us to neglect the word of God to serve at table.  Brothers, select from among you seven reputable men, filled with the Spirit and wisdom, whom we shall appoint to this task, whereas we shall devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word.” The proposal was acceptable to the whole community, so they chose Stephen, a man filled with faith and the holy Spirit, and six others.  They presented these men to the apostles who prayed and laid hands on them.   The word of God kept on spreading in Jerusalem, and Stephen, was performing great wonders and signs among the people.

Stephen was brought -- on trumped-up charges -- before the Council, and he delineated for them Israel’s spiritual history, ending with these words:

Which of the prophets did your ancestors not persecute? They put to death those who foretold the coming of the righteous one (Jesus), Whose betrayers and murderers you have now become. You received the law as transmitted by angels, but you did not observe it.” (Acts 7:52–53)

Stephen had his own particular vocation from God, but all that we today are called to imitate is his zealous commitment to his vocation.   As regards his martyr’s witness to Jesus, however, we are all called to want and hope to imitate such Christian witness if that were to be God’s will for us.

Finally, there is this aspect of Stephen’s relationship to and with Jesus of which we heard in our second reading:

I John heard a voice saying to me: Behold, I am coming soon. I bring with Me the recompense I will give to each according to his deeds. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end.”  Blessed are they who wash their robes so as to have the right to the tree of life and enter the city through its gates.

My dear friends in Christ, we know that Stephen has received his recompence from Jesus because we now know him as Saint Stephen, canonized by Holy Mother Church as one who followed Jesus most faithfully, little though he was in the original community in Jerusalem: just one of six chosen to serve at tables.  That is truly encouraging and inviting for all disciples: for it means that everyone can be eligible as future witnesses to Jesus, because all that they will need are God’s gifts guaranteed for those who ask with the right dispositions: sure faith in and confirmed obedience to Jesus; firm confidence in His Spirit, our Advocate and Strength; full commitment to and love for the Father: Jesus’ Father, our (in Jesus) Father; and the Source from which proceeds the Most Holy Spirit, our Advocate and Strength, and God’s great Gift.