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 12 July 2013

15th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C, 2013


Fifteenth Sunday, Year C

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





My dear brothers and sisters in Christ, in the first reading we heard:


The Word is very near to you; it is in your mouth and in your heart so you may obey it. 


Now listen to the New Testament and recognize the difference between the Old and the New:


The Word became flesh and made His dwelling among us.  We have seen His glory, the glory of the One and Only, Who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.  (John 1:14)


The first lesson almost all religions can accept, for all -- more or less -- have their own teachings which they hand down the generations with like encouragement: the word is very near to you; it is in your mouth and in your heart so you may obey it. 


And peoples thus shepherded do think that they can indeed obey that teaching -- whatever it may be -- and find the salvation promised by, for example, Mahomet, Confucius, Buddha, and many others ... they all follow the same principle: listen, learn, do, and you will find what is promised.


Moreover, in the book of Deuteronomy we heard what was promised:


Then the Lord your God will make you most prosperous in all the work of your hands and in the fruit of your womb, the young of your livestock, and the crops of your land.   The Lord will again delight in you and make you prosperous, just as He delighted in your fathers. (30:9)


Promises were made which would attract mankind: prosperity, children, success and security ... everyone can appreciate such things, most indeed want them.  Such promises were given to encourage the Chosen People to do what all mankind thinks they can do: listen to the teaching, learn from it, and then practise it.   They tried for nearly two thousand years and never succeeded:


            As it is written, ‘There is no one righteous, not even one.’ (Romans 3:10)


The revelationary fact is that God was leading His Chosen People – ultimately for the good of mankind -- to a previously unappreciated awareness of the human  condition and the unfathomed depth of human sinfulness; and also, thereby –  most gently and gradually -- opening their minds and hearts to an initial comprehension of the hidden presence and power of sin in mens lives and of Satan’s personal dominion over them ... before ultimately leading them to a stark and crystal-clear realization that their need for salvation and the price of their redemption could only be met by the infinite goodness, power, and faithfulness of the one true God of their fathers: ‘don’t think you have only hear the truth and you will recognise it and be able to practise it; you are in far, far greater need than that!’



The Word became flesh and made His dwelling among us.  We have seen His glory, the glory of the One and Only Who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.  (Romans 3:10)


The Word was not just audible sounds making instructive teaching; no, the Word was a Person, the very Person of the Son of God, and Christian salvation would come from faith in Him, communion with Him:


Jesus answered, ‘I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.  No one comes to the Father except through Me.  (John 14:6)



And the promises made in the New Testament are not earthly joys on a bigger and grander scale, for as we learn from St. John (1:12-13):


To all who received Him, to those who believed in His name, He gave the right to become children of God; children born not of natural descent, not of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God.


Through faith in, communion with, Jesus, we are called, by His Spirit, to love God  our Father as His adopted children:


With all our heart and with all our soul, and with all our strength and with all our mind;


 and for the ultimate glory of the Father Who loved us and sent Him among us:

            to love our neighbour as ourself  (Luke 10:27);


that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that You (Father) have sent Me, and have loved them as You have loved Me (John 17:23).


And so, People of God, let us all clearly recognise that we are not just to hear the teaching – above all the teaching of Jesus and His Church – and try to keep it ourselves, because we most certainly cannot keep it of ourselves and any attempt to do so would be thinking presumptuously of ourselves and showing no true appreciation of Jesus our Saviour.  We have to aim in all things at communion with Jesus, that is why He gives Himself to us in the Eucharist:


Jesus said to them, ‘I tell you the truth, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood, you have no life in you.  For My flesh is real food and My blood is real drink.  Whoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood remain in Me and I in him.  Just as the living Father sent Me and I live because of the Father, so the one who feeds on Me will live because of Me. (John 6:53-57)


Through Jesus’ presence and His Gift of the Spirit to us in the Eucharist, and through the manifold helps provided by our sharing in the life and communion of Mother Church, we have to learn to love Him Who became a human being like us, because:


All things were created through Him and for Him and God the Father wants all things to be reconciled through Him and for Him;


as St.Paul (Colossians 1:16, 20) tells us.  And then will be fulfilled what the Psalmist (37:5-6) taught:


Commit your way to the Lord; trust in Him and He will do this:  He will make your righteousness shine like the dawn and your cause like the noonday sun.

           

Saturday 6 July 2013

14th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C 2013



14th. Sunday (C)


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



In the Gospel reading for last week, the 13th. Sunday, St. Luke told us that: 

Jesus, resolutely determined to journey to Jerusalem, and sent messengers ahead of Him.  On the way they entered a Samaritan village to prepare for His reception there, but they would not welcome Him, because the destination of His journey was Jerusalem.

Today we learn that, subsequently:

The Lord appointed seventy-two others whom He sent ahead of Him in pairs to every town and place He intended to visit.

We can suppose that Jesus had originally sent a single pair of messengers to the Samaritan village appearing before Him on their way to Jerusalem; but what a difference now: He sends 72 others ahead of Him, two by two!!  Why such a striking difference, why such a specific number? 

The first disciples had been sent to a village on the way to prepare an overnight resting place for Jesus and His disciples, but they had not been welcomed by the villagers concerned. Today’s mission would seem to have been sent symbolically to the whole world, in preparation for Jesus’ coming to the whole of mankind in the persons of the twelve Apostles and His Church; for there were 70 ancients of Israel, plus Moses and Aaron, to ratify the Covenant of Sinai; there were also 70 leaders in Israel, plus Eldad and Medad who were given a share in Moses’ prophetic spirit when he found it too hard to lead Israel alone; there were also 70 nations on earth we are told in the book of Genesis (10).

These are the clans of the sons of Noah, in their nations, and from these the nations spread abroad on the earth after the flood. (Genesis 10:32)

In sending out the 72 messengers to prepare for the coming of the word of God which the Apostles would proclaim, Jesus was recalling the Old Covenant ... now to be replaced by the New Covenant in Jesus’ blood, the old prophetic message of Moses, now to be replaced by the Good News of Jesus; and on the return of the 72 – rejoicing -- we are told, Jesus Himself revealed and proclaimed the momentous, indeed the apocalyptic, import of their work of evangelization:

I have observed Satan fall like lightning from the sky.  Behold, I have given you the power to tread upon serpents and scorpions and upon the full force of the enemy and nothing will harm you.

You will remember the following incident from the Acts of the Apostles when the Gospel message of Paul and Barnabas was rejected by the Jews at Antioch:

When the Jews saw the crowds, they were filled with jealousy and talked abusively against what Paul was saying.  Then Paul and Barnabas answered them boldly: ‘We had to speak the Word of God to you first.  Since you reject it and do not consider yourselves worthy of eternal life, we now turn to the Gentiles.  For this is what the Lord has commanded us: “I have made you a light for the Gentiles, that you may bring salvation to the ends of the earth.”’  (13:45-47)

Paul was a great disciple of Jesus; he may well have known of Jesus’ rejection by the Samaritans (regarded, in those days, as bastard Jews) and of His symbolic ‘world’ mission of 72 followers ... did the Spirit recall to his mind what Jesus had said and done in this regard?   However that may be, the fact is that Paul and Barnabas on their first missionary journey in the name of the Church of Christ, followed Jesus’ own example, and, in the power of His Spirit, took the word of God – after its rejection by the Jews of Antioch -- to the nations, thereby initiating the unfolding of Satan’s fall seen in anticipation by Jesus.

Oh, for a mind and heart able to see and appreciate something of the wonder of God’s wisdom and beauty to be found in the Scriptures of Mother Church:  Jesus sending out the 72 not only recalls the beginnings of mankind and of God’s direct dealings with His Chosen People but also foresees from their endeavours in His name the ultimate downfall of Satan and the heavens opened to welcome saved mankind!!

Let us now look at another aspect of today’s Gospel reading:

Whatever town you enter and they do not receive you, go out into the streets and say, ‘The dust of your town that clings to our feet, even that we shake off against you.  Yet know this: the Kingdom of God is at hand.’  I tell you, it will be more tolerable for Sodom on that day than for that town.

And we have verse 16 omitted in our reading today:

He who listens to you listens to Me; he who rejects you rejects Me; but he who rejects Me rejects Him Who sent Me.

Notice; those who reject, no, even those who do not welcome, will not listen to, the Word will be rejected.  How can that be?  It can only be because mankind, being made in the image and likeness of God, is made for the Word of God.  The Good News of Jesus is the natural food for those whom God has made in His own likeness.  Just as a child finds its natural food at its mother’s breast, so too mankind is made in such a fashion as to find supernatural nourishment from the Word of God and the Sacrament of His Church:

Exult with her, all you who were mourning over her!  Oh, that you might suck fully of the milk of her comfort, that you may nurse with delight at her abundant breasts!  For thus says the Lord: Lo, I will spread prosperity over Jerusalem like a river, and the wealth of the nations like an overflowing torrent.  As nurslings you shall be carried in her arms, and fondled in her lap; as a mother comforts her child, so will I comfort you; in Jerusalem you shall find your comfort.  When you see this your hearts shall rejoice and your bodies flourish like the grass; the Lord’s power shall be known to His servants.

We are made for God; and if we, ultimately, cannot rejoice over, will not welcome, do not trust His Word of Truth and His Spirit of Love then we will die. There can be no excuse for we would have destroyed our very selves.

People of God, today the Western world is, in so many ways, literally falling over itself to separate itself from any acceptance of the wisdom of an authoritative and loving God: when ‘husband’ is not to refer, necessarily, to a man, nor ‘wife’ to a woman, when, in fact, ‘husband’ can be a woman, ‘wife’ can be a man;  when children are no longer God’s gift to human nature, but can be of human procurement – proclaimed as loving and caring -- against nature.  In these modern times of moral darkness when passing ideas and current fancies, mistaken ideals and febrile, fruitless, hopes are picked up and proclaimed by so many seeking to be their own masters in all things, and attempting so proudly to masterfully guide their own society and the world around from their own pitifully and appallingly limited awareness and understanding, we can profitably notice and learn from St. Paul’s words in our second reading:

Peace and mercy to all who follow the rule of Christ; for through the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, the world is being crucified to us, and we ourselves to the world.  Let nothing make trouble for you, for you are part of a new creation.  The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit.

Friday 28 June 2013

Saints Peter and Paul 2013



SAINTS PETER & PAUL (2013)


(Acts of the Apostles 12:1-11; 2nd. Timothy 4:6-8, 17-18; Matthew 16:13-19)



Peter and Paul have always been the pride of the Church at Rome, where both of them died for Christ after having openly proclaimed His Gospel there, in what was the then centre of the whole world.

We learnt, from the second reading, with what good reason the Church at Rome could glory in St. Paul, when he was able to declare near the end of his life:

I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Finally, there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will give to me on that Day, and not to me only but also to all who have loved His appearing. 

The Lord stood with me and strengthened me, so that the message might be preached fully through me, and that all the Gentiles might hear. 

Paul was both deeply learned and extremely courageous: he could dispute with any adversary of Christ; and was quite prepared to endure bodily privations and dangers, as well as sustain all the physical assaults of his enemies:

I know how to be abased, and I know how to abound. Everywhere and in all things I have learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. (Philippians 4:12)

From the Jews five times I received forty stripes minus one.  Three times I was beaten with rods; once I was stoned; three times I was shipwrecked; a night and a day I have been in the deep; in journeys often, in perils of waters, in perils of robbers, in perils of my own countrymen, in perils of the Gentiles, in perils in the        city, in perils in the wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils among false brethren. (2 Corinthians 11:24-27)

Having heard the Gospel proclaimed and expounded to them by an Apostle able to give and willing to suffer so much in order to bring them the authentic Good News of Christ, the Christians at Rome were not only privileged to have received the offer of salvation, but also understandably proud of the messenger who after having so fully, faithfully, and fearlessly proclaimed it to them, finally sealed his witness by suffering martyrdom in their midst.
The glory and significance of Peter for Rome and the Church as a whole, however, is of another sort.  He would, like Paul, win the crown of martyrdom for Jesus and the Gospel at Rome. However, the real glory and significance of Peter lay in the fact that he had been uniquely and most sublimely chosen: first by the Father to proclaim Jesus as the Christ, and then by Jesus to receive the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven and supreme authority in the Church of Christ on earth....

Simon Peter answered and said, ‘You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.’  Jesus answered and said to him: ‘Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but My Father Who is in heaven.  And I also say to you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.  And I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.

Later on, Jesus confirmed Peter as the rock for His Church saying:

I have prayed for you, that your faith may not fail; and when you have turned again, strengthen your brothers.         (Luke 22:32)

However, Jesus’ ultimate and possibly His most solemn deployment and confirmation of Peter as supreme shepherd for the Church occurred when Our Lord, after His Resurrection, appeared by the Sea of Tiberius to Peter and six other disciples as they were fishing.  Jesus gave them a wondrous catch of fish, foreshadowing their future mission and work in and for the Church He was committing to them; moreover, He had made preparations for breakfast after they had managed to land their catch.  And then, in front of them all:

When they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter (notice the solemn use of his full name), ‘Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these?’  He said to Him, ‘Yes Lord, You know that I love you.’  He said to him, ‘Feed My lambs.’  (John 21: 15-17)

This was repeated for a second and for a third time, thus comprising what a modern scholar has described as, according to ancient oriental custom, a most solemn conferral of absolutely valid authority. 

Why did the Father choose Peter first of all?  We do not know.  But Jesus recognized, accepted and confirmed His Father’s choice; and so, Peter, though we know of no mystical experiences like that of Paul, nevertheless he is for us, essentially, the man of mystery and grace: specially chosen by the Father to recognize Jesus first of all as the Christ of God and love Him more than all as the Son of Man; and then by Jesus Himself to serve as the earthly rock of His Church and chief shepherd of His people.  

Paul was outstanding for his wisdom and understanding (2 Corinthians 11:5):

I consider that I am not at all inferior to the most eminent apostles; 

while in his tireless endeavours and great sufferings for Christ he was incomparable:

I ought to have been commended by you; for in nothing was I behind the most   eminent apostles, though I am nothing.  Truly the signs of an apostle were            accomplished among you with all perseverance, in signs and wonders and mighty deeds. (2 Corinthians 12:11-12)

There can be no doubt that St. Paul was, and remains, the most profound and dynamic man of Christian understanding and apostolic endeavour the Church has ever known. 
But that is not the whole of Paul, for he tells us of his sublime mystical experience:

I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago—whether in the body I do not know, or whether out of the body I do not know, God knows—such a one was caught up to the third heaven.  And I know such a man—whether in the body or out of the body I do not know, God knows—how he was caught up into Paradise and heard inexpressible words, which it is not lawful for a man to utter.  Of such a one I will boast; yet of myself I will not boast except in my infirmities. (2 Corinthians 12:2)

The leading Churches in the burgeoning universal Church gloried in those apostles and evangelists they regarded as founding fathers, or martyrs, in their midst: Alexandria rejoiced in Mark the evangelist and disciple of Peter, Ephesus in John, James the Less was the pride of Jerusalem, while Constantinople tried unsuccessfully to claim St. Andrew.  Therefore today, People of God, we rightly rejoice with the Church at Rome, our Mother Church and head of the Universal Catholic Church; we rejoice in Peter and Paul, both great apostles of Rome: one, the foundation Rock of the Church, the other, Doctor of the nations.   In Peter and Paul we can see both aspects of the life of Mother Church -- the active and the mystic -- distinct but not separated, each complementary to and provocative of the other.  Moreover, behind, over-and-above so to speak, the human personalities of Peter and Paul, we recognize the divine consortium manifested at the very origins of the Church of Rome: the Father who had first chosen Peter; the Son Who appointed and commissioned both Peter and Paul; and the Holy Spirit Who called Paul from the church at Antioch to go forth and preach the Gospel before the Emperor in Rome and to all nations.

St. Irenaeus, martyr bishop of Lyons, who had been brought up under the influence of St. Polycarp, himself a disciple of St. John the apostle, bears witness to the early standing of the church of Rome in the Universal Catholic Church:

The apostolic tradition and faith announced to mankind has been brought down to our time by successions of bishops in the greatest, most ancient and well-known church, founded and established by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul, at Rome... With this church, because of its more powerful pre-eminence, all other churches in all other places must be in agreement, since in it Christians of all places have the apostolic tradition preserved.

Today, therefore, let us recall and put into practice the words of the Psalmist:

It is good to give thanks to the LORD, and to sing praises to the name of the Most High. (Psalm 92:1-2)  

On this great feast, however, let us not forget that we do not just celebrate the wondrous vocations of two great apostles, we celebrate Mother Church herself, and, above all, we give thanks for and rejoice in the Gift of God’s Spirit, Who first established, and now sustains and guides, her.  

One noted Catholic biblical scholar recently asked himself, in a Catholic newspaper, ‘What really happened at Gethsemane?  How do we know the words of Jesus’ prayer?’  And he came up with the answer: ‘(The disciples) made it up!’   They projected onto Jesus – so he tells us -- the emotions that they imagined they themselves would have experienced had they suddenly realised their death by torture was imminent.  Moreover, our author’s research also led him to come up with the idea that one of Mark’s sources told of Jesus having a ‘brief nervous breakdown’:  ‘When realising the imminence of his own demise, Jesus was deeply distraught and troubled, out of control.’

What are we to think of such ‘scholarship’ above all what are we to think about such supposedly catholic scholarship’?   

Let us look closely at our Catholic faith.  Jesus said quite clearly (John 16:13):

When He, the Spirit of Truth, has come He will guide you into all truth.  He will glorify Me, for He will take of what is Mine and declare it to you.  All things that the Father has are Mine.  

Our author seems to disregard truth in favour of words: he wants a verbatim report of any and all words used!  Jesus went three times to pray alone to His Father during His agony in the Garden.  Why?  Surely to lay before His Father His human agony, so that, with His Father’s grace and blessing, He might understand, then master and make use of such emotions for His Father’s glory and our salvation:  Father, not My will, but Yours be done.  Did the Father just let Him suffer a nervous breakdown?  Since the Son of God could not -- so we are told -- face up to His, admittedly immense, earthly trials, how then can ordinary weak and sinful human beings of today be expected to endure, let alone overcome, their life-troubles and spirit-trials? 
The Holy Spirit infallibly guides Mother Church into all truth, Jesus says …. Surely such truth is necessary and required above all for the Gospel proclamation of Our Blessed Lord’s Passion, Death, and Resurrection!  Our author can himself imagine and proudly proclaim what he thinks did or did not happen in the Garden, but the Evangelists ... one of whom, John, was close at hand, and, on being awakened by Jesus just come from the Garden, was addressed by Him minutes after the event … are reduced to pure ‘imagination’ as to what had just happened to their Lord and Saviour!  Did Jesus’ general bearing, His eyes, His face, speak nothing?  Did those disciples ask Him nothing?  Or if they did ask Him,  did He manage to answer them absolutely nothing, so that they had not the slightest inkling about His traumatic experience, and were left with only their individual imaginations about what they themselves might have felt if….
Our author wanted words, a verbatim account, without which -- according to him -- what we have in the Gospel are merely the unsubstantial imaginations of evangelists; which, of course, cannot be compared with his own scholarly fancies!

Mother Church believes Jesus’ word and promise that we have Gospel TRUTH; truth -- concerning Jesus’ prayer and suffering in the Garden -- that was probably learned by Mark from Peter who was close to Our Lord at the time and was most passionately and lovingly concerned about such truth; truth that was gathered by John from his own personal experience and by what he learned from Mary -- now his mother living in his own house with him -- after long, intimate, discussions together about what had happened to and with their beloved Lord, her Son.   In other words, I believe, not a proud old man carried away with his own scholarly intuitions, imaginations, and vanities, but a Spirit-guided Church; I believe the truth, expressed and written down under the inspiration of God’s Holy Spirit Who, on the day of Pentecost, established our Catholic Church and still, most assuredly guides her to, and confirms her in, all TRUTH, as Jesus Himself promised and as Mother Church teaches.