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, 15 July 2022

16th Sunday Year C 2022

 

 16th. Sunday, Year (C)

(Genesis 18:1-10; Colossians 1:24-28; Luke 10:38-42)

 

 

 

 Mother Church has set before us today readings from the treasury of her Scriptures which urge us to pay careful attention to the sort of welcome we give to Jesus in our lives.

The Gospel reading told us:

Jesus entered a certain village and a certain woman named Martha welcomed Him into her house;

and in the first reading we were told of a theophany in which Abraham:

(Seeing) three men standing nearby ran from the entrance of (his) tent to greet them; and bowing to the ground, he said: “Sir, if I may ask you this favour, please do not go on past your servant.  Let some water be brought, that you may bathe your feet, and then rest yourselves under the tree.  Now that you have come this close to your servant, let me bring you a little food that you may refresh yourselves; and afterward you may go on your way.” “Very well,” they replied, “do as you have said.”

Both accounts told of a sincere welcome being given to divine and angelic visitors.   Abraham, on the one hand, was as attentive as he could possibly have been: 

He took butter and milk and the calf which he had prepared, and set it before them; and he stood by them under the tree as they ate.

Martha, on the other hand, in our Gospel reading, was not so selflessly whole-hearted:

(She) was burdened with much serving, and Jesus said to her, “Martha, Martha, you are anxious and worried about many things.”

What was Martha so anxious about?  First of all, something that perhaps she did not recognize, namely, her desire not only to prepare well for Jesus, but also to be seen to prepare well. 

There was something else and Jesus had noticed that she was not only “anxious” but also "worried" about something.  Now Martha had a sister, a younger sister, Mary, and it may perhaps have been the case that Martha, being the elder, and also a dynamic sort of person, was accustomed to taking or giving a lead, and the difficulty, the "worrying" aspect for her today, was the fact that Mary was not following her lead, for:

Mary sat beside the Lord at His feet listening to Him speak.  

And so, it was not possible for Martha to be whole-hearted in her welcome of Jesus because she was both concerned about her own image, and, at the same time, irritated by what she considered to be her younger sister’s lack of consideration; and being an honest -- even blunt -- soul, could not restrain herself from making known to Jesus what was, indeed, troubling her:

She approached Him and said, "Lord, do You not care that my sister has left me by myself to do the serving?  Tell her to help me."

Looking again at Abraham, we see that he had been well rewarded for his hospitality and attentiveness; but not only Abraham, for Sarah too had shared fully with Abraham by preparing food for the guests in the background.    Both, therefore, had been rewarded with the promise of a son, the child for whom they had prayed long and hard but who, they had come to think, would never be theirs. 

In the Gospel story, however, although Jesus appreciated Martha's work and solicitude, He considered Mary's attentive love and self-forgetfulness to be of another order, and so, speaking as bluntly as Martha herself had just done, He said:

Mary has chosen the better part and it will not be taken from her.

Mary’s selfless commitment to, and appreciation of, the Word that Jesus was speaking, was a choice valid for eternity and it won her a blessing that would never be revoked.   Her love for the beauty and authority of Jesus’ message caused her to forget herself; whereas Martha, though she truly loved Jesus, most certainly could not forget herself: she could not humbly work whole-heartedly, as Sarah, Abraham’s wife had done before, when plagued with the thought that she was not being sufficiently appreciated.

Now we are all here at Mass to welcome Jesus -- all of us, I myself, just as much as you – and the welcome we give is, as our readings show, mysteriously significant and important.   Each of us must welcome Jesus, first of all, into our own heart, and then, all of us together, into our parish community and thereby into His universal Church, and finally, let us never forget it, through us and His Church He must be welcomed into our world:

Lord, may this sacrifice which has made our peace with you, advance the peace and salvation of all the world.

At this moment then, the Universal Church and the whole of mankind, are relying, to a certain extent, upon us, and upon the sort of welcome we give to Our Lord: because, the deeper, the more sincere and whole-hearted the welcome, the greater the blessing, for ourselves, for the Church, and for the world.

The apostle Paul, speaking to us in the second reading, said:

I became a minister in accordance with God’s stewardship given to me to bring to completion for you the Word of God, the mystery hidden from ages and from generations past.

Let us now, therefore, listen carefully to him telling us something of the Word he had been sent to preach to us and for us.  It is, he says:

The mystery hidden from ages and from generations past, but now manifested to His holy ones, to whom God chose to make known the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles: IT IS CHRIST IN YOU, the hope for glory.

So, the apostle was to proclaim the mystery of Christ dwelling in all who become His faithful disciples in Mother Church: to make known the riches of this mystery by enlightening our minds with the prospect of eternal glory promised by Our Lord, and opening up our hearts for the influx of a joyous and inspiring hope through the gift of His most Holy Spirit. 

The question now is, of course, what sort of welcome are you and I giving, even here and now, to Paul’s proclamation and explanation of the mystery of Christ in us and at work in us through His Spirit?

For some misguided, half-hearted, Catholics Mass begins and ends with Holy Communion.  Now how can such people truly welcome Christ in Holy Communion when they ignore Him in His Holy Word, having no interest in the God-given power, privilege, and duty of Mother Church and her priests to proclaim and explain the mystery of Christ in the Scriptures and in us?  How can they welcome into their own lives Him Whom they can't be bothered to understand in His Body, the Church?  Who can be filled with gratitude for riches of which they choose to be ignorant?

Holy Mass starts at the very beginning of our assembly when we first ask God to free us from our sins.  We do that so that we may be able to celebrate the whole Eucharistic offering aright: first of all by hearing God's word with our ears, as it is read, and then appreciating it with our minds and embracing it in our hearts as it is proclaimed in the homily.  After having thus welcomed Christ in His Word we are thereby enabled and called to fittingly offer ourselves, in Him and with Him, to the Father for His glory and the salvation of mankind, before finally receiving Jesus and welcoming His Gift of the Holy Spirit into our very hearts and lives in Holy Communion.   That is the mystery of the Catholic and Christian life: CHRIST IN US through the Eucharist and Scriptures of Mother Church, and through our openness to the guidance of His most Holy Spirit in our lives.

It is particularly important for us today, however, to give attention to the welcome we accord to the Word of God, to Jesus in the Scriptures proclaimed by Mother Church.  Commonly, these days, people want short readings and almost demand short sermons; and it nearly always raises an easy and rather cheap laugh if this attitude is made into a sort of joke: "If you can't say what you want to say in five minutes, it's not worth saying".   This was not the attitude of the early Church, as can be appreciated from the following account to be found the Acts of the Apostles of a church meeting led by Paul at Troas:

On the first day of the week when we gathered to break bread, Paul spoke to them because he was going to leave on the next day, and he prolonged his message until midnight.  There was a young man named Eutychus sitting on the window sill sinking into a deep sleep as Paul continued talking, and overcome by sleep, he fell down from the third story and was picked up dead.  Paul went down, threw himself upon him, and said as he embraced him, “Don‘t be alarmed; there is life in him.”  Then he returned upstairs, broke the bread, and ate; after a long conversation that lasted until daybreak, he departed.  And they took the boy away alive and were immeasurably comforted. (Acts 20:7-12)

Obviously, what is prolonged for no good reason is not welcome.  On the other hand, however, no one, having some treasured possession, is ever content to look at it, rejoice in it, mention and show it to friends, just once, and then take further delight in it.  Now the Scriptures are like a field that contains countless hidden treasures.  If you are computer-wise you will be aware of some programmes where certain words or links are signalled, which, if you press on them, up pops further information, further enlightenment.  Holy Scripture is something like that.  A Scripture reading might seem, at first, to be just a long sequence of not very interesting words, phrases and sentences, but, by the grace of God, any one of those sentences or phrases, indeed almost any one of those words, can be found to contain so much that is beautiful beyond measure.  Now, the only way to discover such treasures contained in the Scriptures is, by learning from the wisdom of Mother Church, and entering into a personal relationship with the Holy Spirit of Jesus, allowing the Him, Who first inspired those sacred words, to reveal something of their meaning to you.  If, however, you do not prayerfully approach the Scriptures, you will hardly be able to patiently hear them proclaimed, and most certainly you will not want to respectfully listen to explanations of them.  When that is the case, then the Holy Spirit will in no way lead you to find the treasures the Scriptures contain, for did not Jesus Himself once say to His Apostles (Matthew 7:6):

Do not give what is holy to the dogs; nor cast your pearls before swine.

However, those who do reverence the Scriptures, receive a blessing from the Lord Who spoke through the prophet Isaiah saying:

On this one will I look: on him who is poor and of a contrite spirit, and who trembles at My word.   (Isaiah 66:2)

They are the ones who, by the guidance of the Holy Spirit, discover and delight in the hidden treasures of the Scriptures; for them, the words of the Scriptures are revealed as words of life, as Jesus Himself said:

It is written, 'Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.'   (Matthew 4:4)

That is the manna God offers us His People as He leads us through the desert of this world to our home in heaven; it is the food we need for a journey which can be long, the food meant to be our comfort and strength here on earth while it leads us to eternal peace and joy in our heavenly home.  May all of us gathered here today be enabled to receive and experience it as such, through the loving kindness and mercy of God our Father, Jesus our Saviour, and the Holy Spirit Who is God’s Gift to each and every one of us in Mother Church.

 

Thursday, 7 July 2022

15th Sunday Year C 2022

 

 15th. Sunday, Year (C)

(Deuteronomy 30:10-14; Colossians 1:15-20; Luke 10:25-37)

 

 

In our readings today we have an embarrassment of riches, and so it is a matter now of picking out one or two jewels, for in no way can I pretend to open up to your gaze the beauty and wealth of all that we have just heard.

In the Gospel we were told of a Scribe, an expert in the Jewish Law, who approached Jesus in what is, truly, the only way in which Jesus can be rightly approached:

            "Teacher," he asked, "what must I do to inherit eternal life?"

That should be our attitude at this very moment as we try to understand and learn from the Gospel, before going on to offer Jesus' self-sacrifice to the Father, and then finally, in Holy Communion, surrendering ourselves to Jesus that He might draw us with Himself to the Father:

            Lord Jesus, what must I do to inherit eternal life?

Jesus replied by asking the Scribe what the Law had to say about the way to eternal life and he responded without hesitation:

'You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength, and with all your mind,' and 'your neighbour as yourself.'

Jesus had nothing to add to that.  However, the Scribe -- not wanting to seem foolish for having asked a question to which he already knew the answer -- went on to justify himself and also pay Jesus a notable compliment by asking Him:

            And who is my neighbour?

Yes, he was an expert in the Law who knew well the words of the Law, but here he was asking Jesus to tell Him what the words really meant: that was the humility of a man sincerely seeking to find the way to eternal life. 

With our modern proliferation of books and skill in information technology, it is easy for people to be satisfied with knowing about the words of Scripture while appreciating little of their meaning and spiritual significance.  Too often today self-styled experts and militant proselytizers attempt to show off their knowledge of the Bible by writing or reciting words: words are their favourite medium, for they trip so very easily off the tongue or pen, one after another, so easy to count and multiply.  Spiritual appreciation, on the other hand, is a much more demanding than mere facility with words: it requires that understanding which only comes from deep reverence for, and humble submission to, God's revelation; it involves humility and patience, prayer and open-ness, devout sensitivity and loving obedience to the P/personally secret guidance of the Holy Spirit.

            Lord, WHO is my neighbour?

Jesus, in answer to this learned man's humility, told him a parable about one, whom today we call the Good Samaritan, encountering a man who had fallen into the hands of thieves.  This unfortunate victim -- probably a Jew and possibly a priest -- was going down the road from Jerusalem to Jericho.  It was the most public road in all Judea and the only road between those two cities for thousands of priests and Levites who, after having served in the Temple at Jerusalem according to a fixed rota system, would then return home until their next period for service.  For all these priests and Levites, Jericho was their chosen place of residence, while the Temple in Jerusalem was their destination for work and worship.   Despite being much used, this road was extremely dangerous for travellers, twisting and turning through rocky desert, and -- in the course of about 20 miles -- falling steeply some 3000 feet from the chill heights of Jerusalem to the near tropical depths of Jericho.  Jesus’ parable, therefore, when it told of a traveller falling into the hands of robbers, was recalling an all-too-frequent occurrence that many had suffered before and many others would continue to experience in the future.  The bandits of the Judean desert did not scruple to kill at times, but in this case, having robbed the man, they were content to leave him, wounded and helpless, by the side of the road. 

Now, a priest, making the same journey from the Temple in Jerusalem down to Jericho, came upon the wounded man, and:

            When he saw him, he passed by on the opposite side.

Then a Levite, having likewise completed his rota of service in the Temple and returning back to his home in Jericho:

When he arrived at the place, came and looked, and passed by on the opposite side.

Both the priest and the Levite would have recognized the victim as a neighbour, a fellow Jew, indeed, perhaps as a fellow priest or Levite.   And yet, both of them, out of considerations for legal purity possibly, for personal and family reasons, or because they simply did not want, or did not even dare, to get involved with him, passed him by.  Finally, a Samaritan arrived on the scene.

Now, Samaritans, though closely related, were regarded as enemies by the Jews, and, generally, Samaritans had a like opinion of the Jews.  In this case, however, the Samaritan of whom Jesus spoke, having chanced upon the wounded man:

Was moved with compassion at the sight.  He approached the victim, poured oil and wine over his wounds and bandaged them.  Then he lifted him up on his own animal, took him to an inn, and cared for him.  The next day he took out two silver coins and gave them to the innkeeper with the instruction, 'Take care of him.  If you spend more than what I have given you, I shall repay you on my way back' 

Jesus was indeed revealing the meaning of the word "neighbour" to the Scribe: for His story showed that that neighbour might turn out to be someone most unexpected; and consequently, it raised, for this Scribe, the question whether Jewish national pride and religious exclusiveness could have any further role to play in God's coming Kingdom that would transcend all such human boundaries and limitations.

The passing priest and Levite had the word of God on their lips, as Moses said:

            The word is very near to you, already in your mouth.

That word they could repeat, discuss, dispute about, and perhaps use to display their learning.  However, it was so very easy, on such occasions, to forget that Moses had gone on to say that ‘the word’ was also:

            In your heart, that you may obey it.

Now, there have always been worldly men able to use the Word of God as a weapon for personal advancement on earth, and those who use their facility with the Word of God in such a way need only to apply their natural talents and human techniques in order to win earthly patrons and stir up simple supporters, by making and championing short-term and shallow judgments in tune with popular sentiments.  On the other hand, those using God’s Word as a guide to our heavenly home, have to humbly ask and long for, patiently knock and wait for, and lovingly pray with sincere devotion to, Him Who is infinitely above us and Who judges the hidden secrets of each and every human mind and heart. Only then will they be enabled to proclaim and manifest something of His divine truth and heavenly beauty before men.

The Word of God is meant to be ever at work in our lives, as the prophet Isaiah, speaking in the name of the Lord (55:11) tells us:

So shall My word be that goes forth from My mouth; it shall not return to Me void, but it shall accomplish what I please, and it shall prosper in the thing for which I sent it.

The Scribe, as a Jew, preferred to limit the word "neighbour" to his fellow Jews; but, nevertheless, He felt uneasy about it and so he asked Jesus, "who is my neighbour?" whereupon Jesus showed him that it was not possible to limit the significance of God's Word according to human expectations or prejudices.  Nevertheless, despite such teaching, when -- at the end of the parable -- Jesus asked:

Which of these three, in your opinion, was neighbour to the robbers’ victim?

the expert in the Law still could not bring himself utter the words "the Samaritan", so ingrained was his Jewish prejudice!  He could only prevail upon himself to say:

            The one who treated him with mercy.

We are like that in so many ways, and that is why the same prophet Isaiah proclaimed

The Lord says, ‘on this one will I look: on him who is poor and of a contrite spirit, and who trembles at My word’. (66:2)

We cannot determine or fix beforehand where the Word of God will lead us; Isaiah says we should tremble -- perhaps even thrill -- at the sound of it, because the Word of God is meant to work in us, and -- by the power of the Holy Spirit -- to change us, in accordance with whatever plans God has for us: it is a harbinger of beauties as yet unseen and of possibilities as yet unknown.

As we heard in the second reading all the fullness of God dwells in Jesus, and that is why we cannot try to restrict the effect of His Word in our lives.  We are called to become children of God in Jesus and, if we are to be found in His likeness, we must allow ourselves to be formed by His Spirit according to His Word.  We must allow His Spirit to lead us wherever He wills if we are to reach the blessings prepared for us, blessings we cannot even begin to imagine of ourselves, let alone prepare for.  The Spirit alone knows the depths of God, He alone is Holy and Wise, and we must trust ourselves to Him.

There are still today many who seek to control the effect of the Word and the work of the Holy Spirit of God in their lives.  Like the Jews of old, they want to form themselves according to their own fancies or in accordance with ideas of goodness and holiness popular in society around them.  Today, for example, most people's idea of Christian goodness enables them to recognize and appreciate work done for the poor and for children in need; a life devoted to prayer, however, especially as a monk or nun in relative solitude, seems alien to them, perhaps, even inhuman.  Modern ideas of sanctity usually involve soft words and attractive, pleasant, attitudes; on the other hand, clear doctrinal teaching and firm discipline in moral matters is thought to be unacceptably rigid and unsympathetic.  And so, many modern pseudo-disciples of Jesus may be found trying to interpret the guidance of His Holy Spirit along broad, loose, lines acceptable to modern ideas of human rights, the freedom of individuals, and God’s accommodating goodness.  However, holiness of this sort is just as false and inadequate as, and probably much less sincere than, the exclusive holiness of the Scribes and Pharisees in Jesus' times.

People of God, listen to the Word of God as proclaimed by Mother Church, not that glibly quoted for popular acceptance by frequently self-appointed and self-taught gospellers.  Beg the Holy Spirit to lead your life along the way of Jesus, to form you in Jesus’ likeness, and then try to answer God’s call to faith, trust, and love with a humble simplicity of mind and heart; do not allow your own prayerful thoughts and conscientious actions to be distorted or determined by the selfish pride, prejudices, and fears, or above all, by the excitement of modern society.

The Spirit first led Jesus out into the silence of the desert and then along the most unlikely way of the Cross: the disciple of Jesus is not greater than his Master; he or she too, must be open, willing, and obedient, enough to follow the lead of the Holy Spirit.  As Jesus said (John 3:8):

The wind blows where it wishes and you hear the sound of it, but cannot tell where it comes from and where it goes. So is everyone who is born of the Spirit.

Finally, let us look at what is perhaps the greatest jewel hidden in the field of today’s readings: Who was, Who is, the Good Samaritan?   How could he just postpone, or at least seriously interrupt his journey to spend a night at the inn, where he was not likely to have been popular as a Samaritan?   Why was he alone able to deal with the man’s wounds?  Why did he not just pay the hotelier extra for that first day’s extra care, as well as for subsequent days’ care, ‘bed and board’?     Was the Samaritan a real person or a possibly-real person, or was he, in actual fact, a picture of Jesus Himself?  For He interrupted His journey by His suffering and death on Calvary; He alone, by His Gospel provides essential medicine for fallen man.  Jesus did, indeed, continue His journey to His heavenly home and thus definitively cured man’s grievous wound by committing him to the care of His Church, the inn and hotelier for all seeking true rest and eternal life, by saving faith and baptismal grace.

Today we are invited to humbly rejoice in the wonder and mystery of Jesus; we are invited to think over, meditate on, His goodness, His wisdom, and the challenge His sublimity offers our understanding and appreciation of His oneness with us.  A Sunday can pass by quite quickly chewing such cud!                                                                                        

 

 

 

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.  

 

 

 

Friday, 24 June 2022

13th Sunday Year C 2022

 

13th. SUNDAY of the Year C

(I Kings 19:16, 19-21; Galatians 5:1, 13-18; St Luke’s Gospel 9:51-62)

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Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, we have something about the nature of an authentic Christian vocation in our Gospel reading today, something we need to think about and try to learn from.

First of all, we heard that the Sons of Thunder, James and John, on hearing that the Samaritans of a village they were approaching would not welcome Jesus destined for Jerusalem, wanted to call down fire from heaven to consume them, but:

            Jesus turned and rebuked them, and they journeyed to another village.         

Jesus had called the two sons of Zebedee, fellow-fishermen with Peter and Andrew, but at the present He was having to be very patient with them because their natural impulsiveness and decisiveness needed to be firmly tempered and gradually reformed for Jesus’ own purposes but, most certainly, without being crushed.

As they proceeded on their journey someone said to Jesus:

            I will follow You wherever You go!

And Jesus answered him:

Foxes have dens and birds of the sky have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to rest His head.   

Those were words of enlightenment so that the enthusiastic young man could make a better judgement of what he wanted for his future.  Nothing further is heard of him in the Gospel.

However, there is another man they met, and Jesus said, as soon as He saw him it would seem:  Follow Me.

Obviously, Jesus saw something very good in him; something we can only try our best to fathom out what it might have been.

The Gospel goes on and tells us that the young man heard and understood what Jesus had said to him:

            But he replied, ‘Lord, let me go first and bury my father’.

Notice that he answers Jesus immediately as ‘Lord’; from that call of Jesus, the young man knew Jesus as his ‘Lord’.  Others will say ‘I will follow You Lord, but …’   This one, chosen and called by Jesus, says first of all ‘Lord’.

He then went on to ask, as you have just heard, ‘let me go first and bury my father’.

First of all, wanted to do what he considered an important duty, that is, as son, to bury his father.  Now, Jesus above all loved His Father, and that surely made the young man’s request echo deeply in Jesus’ own heart. 

But that was by no means all.  Jesus knew intimately the prophets of Israel, the great ones who foretold of His coming and destiny but also those nearer to His day who spoke of the times He might well experience Personally, and one of them, Malachi, had these words about times soon to come (Malachi 4: 5-6):

Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the great and terrible day of the Lord comes.  And he will turn the hearts of fathers to their sons and the hearts of sons to their fathers, lest I come and smite the land with a curse.

We are well aware that Jesus knew that passage from the prophet, because He told His questioning disciples that John the Baptist had been the Elijah mentioned by the prophet; and now, here before Him at this very moment, was a young man whose heart was indeed being turned to his father, asking Jesus that he might go and fulfil his duty to his recently deceased father.

But there is something yet more, something much more mysterious, for Jesus – giving the permission requested of Him – said:

            Let the dead bury their dead.  But you, go and proclaim the Kingdom of God.

You, young man, whom I have just called to follow Me and who have, indeed, recognized Me as your Lord, you are not one of the dead whom I tell you to let them bury their dead: I have just chosen you because My Father has already chosen you for Me, therefore, I tell you:

            YOU, go and proclaim the Kingdom of God.

Now, we know from the Gospel that Jesus proclaimed the Kingdom of God from the very beginning of His public ministry exclusively, save for the Twelve alone whom:

He (once) called together and gave them power and authority over all demons, and to cure diseases.  He sent them to preach the kingdom of God and to heal the sick. (Luke 9:1-2)

We hear no more of that very special young man chosen by Jesus, save that Jesus did Himself say later:

The law and the prophets lasted until John; but from then on, the kingdom of God is proclaimed, and everyone who enters does so with violence. (16:16)

Dear People of God, be well aware that the Father can call, speak to, souls before the call of Jesus reaches them, or sounds meaningfully in their minds and hearts, but that prevenient call of the Father always urges towards Jesus Who most assuredly knows who is being thus sent to Him by the Father,, and why.

We have yet another possible-vocation who said to Jesus in the Gospel today:

I will follow you, Lord, but first let me say farewell to my family at home. 

He says he will follow, but first ….

Jesus, for him will be Lord, when … 

Moreover, he requests the opportunity to do not an important duty so much as an emotional leave-taking of family and, most probably, friends at home; which in no way relates to an immediate and life-changing vocational opportunity from God.

             

(To him) Jesus said, “No one who sets a hand to the plow and looks to what was left behind is fit for the kingdom of God.” (Luke 9:62)

 

Dear friends of Jesus in Mother Church, so much is done these days in response to people, so little in response to Jesus. People at the best can be ministers, guides, helpers, even a few can be authorities in the way of Jesus … but not to the extent of being reverenced, ‘worshipped’, as the nearest to Jesus for us here on earth.

Jesus is our all and He is ‘available’ to us, and for us, here on earth: we have His Spouse, His infallible Church, our Mother, in which His most Holy Spirit abides; and we have Jesus’ own real, sacramental Presence – His very Body and Blood – in Mother Church’s sacrifice of Holy Mass.

Jesus’ Holy Spirit abides in no individual person however holy … and that means that no individual whomsoever can stand-in for Jesus in our soul and conscience.  Jesus alone merits our all, and that is, in Him and with Him, for the Father’s glory in heaven and His will on earth.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, what a privilege it is for us to be disciples of Jesus, sons and daughters of Mother Church, moved by the most Holy Spirit to walk along the ways of Jesus, outlined for us by Mother Church and her Scriptures, in the hope and anticipation of finding our ultimate home in heaven, celebrating our Father’s feast of love, gratitude, and thanksgiving.

 

(2022)

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

62 (To him) Jesus said, “No one who sets a hand to the plow and looks to what was left behind is fit for the kingdom of God.” Luke 9:61–62 (NAB)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Malachi 4:5-6 (NAB)

Now I am sending to you Elijah, the prophet.  Before the day of the LORD comes,  the great and terrible day; He will turn the hearts of fathers to their sons, and the hearts of sons to their fathers, lest I come and strike the land with utter destruction.

 

 

 

 

Friday, 17 June 2022

Corpus Christi Year C 2022

 

CORPUS CHRISTI (C)

(Genesis 14:18-20; 1 Corinthians 11:23-26; Luke 9:11-17)

 

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, today’s three readings for Mass give clear guidance for our thoughts about devotion to the Eucharist in Mother Church, among the Catholic faithful, today.

Our first reading, a piece of ancient history or historical tradition, concerned Abram who had just rescued Lot, together with his family and possessions, from four invading kings, perhaps from areas such as modern Iraq or Iran, who had been ravaging Canaan.  Abram, at the head of his victorious forces, was met by Melchizedek, the priest king of Salem (later our Jerusalem) with the words:

Blessed be Abram by God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth.  And blessed be God Most High, Who delivered your enemies into your hand.

Melchizedek is a very mysterious figure for us, but he was doing what all priests of ancient times were appointed for and expected to do: bring God’s blessings down upon their people’s needs, and then be channels whereby gifts of praise and sacrifice from men might ascend, and be acceptable, to God.   Melchizedek, a priest-king, had come to congratulate and thank Abram and his men for delivering Canaan from those northern invaders, and he came with bread and wine to refresh Abram’s battle-weary forces.

As a priest bringing bread and wine, of course, we immediately see Jesus in Melchizedek, and our Eucharist in the bread and wine of Melchizedek, and that is the first type of devotion to the Eucharist in Mother Church today to which I wish to draw your attention: communicants who like to consider their reception of the Eucharist at Holy Mass as a sort of reward for the good they have done, or tried to do, previously; they gratefully receive Holy Communion as a recognition of, and reward for, their fidelity.

Our second reading gave us a snippet from St. Paul writing to his converts at Corinth in Greece, where he tells them and us that:

As often as you eat this Bread (which Jesus says is His Body) and drink the cup (which Jesus says is the new covenant in His Blood) you proclaim the death of the Lord until He comes.

There we have a second type of Eucharistic devotion, one which is very liturgical: many receive Holy Communion as part of ‘being at Mass’: because without that participation their presence at Mass, they think, would be incomplete, not ‘proper’ in some way, certainly not properly ‘fruitful’; indeed, some such disciples might easily come to consider Mass without Communion as not worth continuing with.

Now, we should turn to our Gospel reading where Jesus, surrounded by a crowd of people, had been:

Speaking to them about the kingdom of God, and curing those who had need of healing.  

His Twelve disciples were apprehensively aware that the day had been long and darkness was approaching, and so they came to Jesus saying:

Dismiss the crowd so that they can go to the surrounding villages and farms and find lodging and provisions, for we are in a deserted place here.

Jesus acknowledged what they were saying, but said something which, at first sight, seemed rather pointless:

            Give them some food yourselves.

They could find nothing more than five loaves and two fish to hand.

Of course, Jesus was fully aware of the situation and He had only wanted to focus His disciples’ attention on what was needed and what was about to happen; and so it behoves  us also today, People of God, to attend to and learn from Jesus as did the Twelve.

First of all, notice that Jesus had said, ‘give them (the listening people) some food yourselves’.  Today Jesus still expects His priests to give His People, food.

Moreover, He had the people sit down in groups of fifty to receive the food the Twelve would give them … they were not to grab it for themselves, they were to receive it from Jesus’ apostles then, as from His priests today.

We are told next that:

Taking the five loaves and two fish, and looking up to heaven, Jesus said the blessing over them, and gave them to the disciples to set before the crowd.

Whereupon:

            They all (the crowd of five thousand) ate and were satisfied.

Dear People of God, we rightly see that wonderful miracle of Our Blessed Lord as a foreshadowing of the Holy Eucharist in Mother Church today. Could the twelve basketfuls of remnants, collected after the people had eaten, possibly have been a grateful sign of Jesus’ recognition of the Twelve walking with, learning from, serving, indeed seeking to look after him,  that day??

However that may have been, notice this one thing above all, dear friends, on this Sunday when we are considering devotion towards the Eucharist: Jesus gave His blessed bread as food to sustain: not only the crowd that day, but also all His future faithful followers, food they would need if they were to continue following Him and become true disciples furthering His mission.  That is the very basic attitude, the root devotion, we should have towards our reception of holy communion at Mass these days:

We, who are trying to be faithful followers of Jesus, our Lord and Saviour, NEED to receive His heavenly gift of His own Body and Blood for our sustenance, strength, and progress, for the furthering of the Kingdom of God in our lives and in the world today.

There can be other devotional attitudes for the reception of Holy Communion at Mass, but they can only be supplementary to what is basic: we need the food Jesus offers us, and we are called to receive it not as an indulgence of any, sort but as the NEED of our Catholic and Christian lives.

As regards the two other devotional, eucharistic, ‘attitudes’ previously mentioned, both need strengthening, purifying, by a more personal relationship with, towards, Jesus, giving Himself as Lord, giving His Personal Self as Saviour, to us; not just as, a supposed reward, not even as the summit, the crown, of our liturgical offering, but as a Person, our sublime Lord and Saviour, wanting to establish, build up, an intimate and uniquely personal relationship with each of us, whereby His Spirit might guide, rule, and form us as authentic disciples of Jesus, and fulfil us as adopted -- in Jesus -- children of God, able to rejoice wholeheartedly at Our Father’s heavenly banquet.

(2022)