Homily – Respect Life Sunday (27th in Ordinary Time) 2011

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“…whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.”  These words are from our second reading today.

It is unusual for our Sunday readings to be as direct as today’s readings are, I think.  Many times, we have to hold up a lens and look at the readings, and try to make some connections that speak to our situation today.  I don’t think this is one of those times.

Today marks the beginning of Respect Life Month in our Church in the United States.  One would have to never read a newspaper, listen to a radio, or watch the news to be unaware of the situation facing the most vulnerable members of our society today, in the Culture of Death that is trying to take over our society.  Catholic organizations being required by regulation to provide for birth control; hospitals being forced to provide abortion services; a child killed after birth, and his mother given a suspended sentence.

What are we thinking about?  What are we allowing to happen in our culture?  And what will come of it? .

 

The first reading and the Gospel both use imagery of a vineyard to speak to us today.  And in both readings, there is mismanagement going on, isn’t there?

The reading from Isaiah laments that, even though the owner of the vineyard did everything he could to make the vineyard fertile, it failed to produce good fruit.  The consequence of that failure?  The owner gave up on it, and let it fall into ruin!  The owner knocked down the hedges so that sheep could graze.  He knocked down the walls so that people could trample it.  And he stopped cultivating it, so that weeds could take over.

And in the Gospel, Jesus speaks of tenants who try to steal the vineyard from its rightful owner.  Time after time, the owner of the vineyard sent people to get his produce.  The people he left responsible for the vineyard beat, stoned and killed everyone the owner sent, even his son!  And what happened to them?  The vineyard was taken away and given to other tenants!

Both readings were intended to be applied to those who heard them when they were written.  Isaiah’s parable referred to a coming time of trouble for Israel.  Jesus’ parable was directed at those who would reject Him, and pointed out that others would be brought in to produce fruit, in place of those who were out for their own ends.

We might be tempted to look at these stories and go, “Oh, poor Israel! Those poor Jews!  If only they’d listened!  If only they’d believed!”  We might be tempted, but we would be wrong.

These stories speak to us, too.  They speak to a culture that has taken what has been given to it, and turned it upside down.  They speak to a people who have, somehow, decided that things that are clearly wrong, well, they’re ok…I mean, we wouldn’t want to judge or anything.  The parables speak to a people whose judgments are sometimes so clouded that we produce robust federal laws to protect people from having to hear anyone tell them they might be making a mistake.  They speak to a culture that has forgotten that life, all life, is sacred, from conception to natural death.

And they speak to a culture that has made so many compromises with the Truth that it has, in some instances, lost its way.  We can now experiment on people (in the form of embryos) with the excuse that we might cure disease (killing one person to save another).  We can justify giving the government the authority to decide who should and shouldn’t receive life-saving or life extending treatments. 

And we can look the other way as millions of people are killed every year, in the womb, in the name of “choice”.

 

It’s horrible, really, when you think about it.  It’s so horrible, in fact, that many of us don’t want to think about it.  I can count myself in that number, at least at one time in my life; I walked out of a homily in a church in Lawton, OK, back in 1988, because I just couldn’t listen to some deacon tell me how wrong I was to support a woman’s “right to choose”.  I didn’t want to hear it.

But brothers and sisters, we have to hear it.  We have to hear the approximately 50 million voices silenced in our country alone since 1973 by the sin of abortion.  We have to hear the silent cries of the millions of women who have been harmed in our country by the lie of “choice”.  We have to reach out to them, not in judgment, but in compassion!  We have to at least be willing to welcome them back into our communion, and we have to be willing to help them heal! 

And we have to be willing to stand up for the Truth.  Our parish will take part in the Memphis 40 Days for Life campaign next Sunday.  Stand for life by coming out that day.  If you can’t come out, support those that can in prayer that day.  But, whatever we choose to do, we have to stand up.

The consequences of continuing on this path, as a country and a world, are terrifying to contemplate.  We have a choice.  We can stand up for the Truth.  We can defend life.  Or we can reap the consequences.

What is the Truth…about Life?  Where do we stand?  What are we willing to do to make that stand known?

Thank God my mother was pro-life when I was conceived.  Thank God your mom was too. 

“…whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.”  This is what Paul told the Philippians.  This is what Paul is telling us.

What are we thinking?

Homily: Passion Sunday 2010 (March 28) – Show Up!

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Audio of this homily is found here.

Everybody take a moment and collect yourselves.  That was a workout!

And, I fear…That’s the way we so often approach this Passion reading each year.  After all, we hear it twice, every year: once from a Synoptic gospel (Matthew, Mark, or Luke, then once from John on Good Friday.  I mean, the reading is almost as long as the rest of Mass combined, right? And we stand for all of it!

But, brothers and sisters…why do we do this?  Why do we suffer through so much verbiage on Palm Sunday?  And why do we go through such long liturgies during the rest of Holy Week?

This week, Holy Week, is the high point of our liturgical year.

But…why?

 Why is it Holy?

Holy Week is Holy Week because the events we re-present during this time are the events that saved us!  I mean, think about it:

  • Did Jesus Incarnation save us? No.  It was special, and we celebrate it at Christmas, but it did NOT save us.
  • Did Jesus save us by restoring sight to the blind?  Cool…but, NO.
  • Did Jesus set us free from sin by curing the lame?  NO.
  • Did He save anyone by Curing the deaf? Restoring speech to the mute?  No.
  • How about by feeding the 5,000 plus folks? NO.  Walking on water?  NO.  Raising Lazarus from the dead? NO.

No, NONE of those thing were what saved us from Hell.  What saved us from Hell is the choice Jesus made: the choice Paul discussed in the second Reading: 

“Christ Jesus, though he was in the form of God,
did not regard equality with God
    something to be grasped.
Rather, he emptied himself,
taking the form of a slave,
coming in human likeness;
and found human in appearance,
he humbled himself,
becoming obedient to the point of death,
even death on a cross.”

THIS is what saved us!  GOD…emptied Himself!  God the Son, obedient to God the Father, and died for us!  The Act that is saving us, even right now as we deal with the sin in our lives, is THAT ONE.  THAT’S why a Corpus is on every crucifix.  And THAT’S why this week is Holy:  because everything that happened to save, and to keep on saving every one of us happened during that week!

But…So what?

I’ll tell you So What.  SHOW UP. 

Our sin, brothers and sisters, was nailed to the Cross this week.

SHOW UP. 

Our savior became the first-born from the dead this week.  And His choice, HIS death, gave all of US the ability to be born to new life!

SHOW UP. 

The most important thing Christ left for us, and the most important thing He did for us, came about this week!

SHOW UP!

Show up for the Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday!  Show up to venerate the Cross of the Lord on Good Friday! And come see our new brothers and sisters in Christ be received into the Church at the Easter Vigil!  SHOW UP!

This Holy Week, remember what Christ did for us!  This Holy Week, ponder God’s goodness.  Think about God’s Mercy.  Consider His Love.

John 3:17 says, “For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him.”

The Most Important Things in your eternal life and mine are being made present in this sanctuary this Holy Week.  NCAA Basketball can’t touch this.

                   SHOW UP.

Homily – Feast of All Saints (2009): Who Wants to Be a Saint?

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Gospel reading Audio is here.  Gospel Text is here

Homily audio is here.

Who Wants To Be A Saint?

Have you ever thought about what it takes to be a saint?  We have feast days of saints all the time; our churches are named after them most of the time.  If our children are baptized or confirmed, we probably had to pick out the name of a saint for our child, or help them pick one.  There are even cities named after saints: St. Louis; St. Petersburg; St. Paul; San Francisco.  Saints are all around us.

But how often do we think about what it takes to be one?  The Feast of All Saints, which we celebrate today, was originally established in the fourth century to commemorate the martyrs of the early Church, those who were too many to name, or even remember individually.  Later, it was amended to include all the saints who’d died in Christ, all those who, by popular opinion had led a life of sanctity.  Today, the Church has extensive rules and processes for canonizing, or officially recognizing, a saint. But the Feast of All Saints recognizes everyone in heaven, saints named and unnamed, and celebrates their lives.

But what does it take, really, to be a saint?  And what does it matter to us

Today’s readings tell us a lot about who the saints are, and how they get to that status.  In the first reading, from the book of Revelation, John recounts a vision of heaven, in which he saw “of a great multitude, which no one could count” standing before the throne of God.  These people, dressed in white robes, were “the ones who have survived the time of great distress; they have washed their robes and made them white in the Blood of the Lamb.” These are people who have overcome sin in their lives through the saving power of Jesus’ blood.

Jesus Himself tells us about those who will be with God, in the Beatitudes. These eight categories of those who will be “bless-ed” tell us a lot about how we ought to live our lives; striving to do these eight things outlined by Jesus will make getting into heaven pretty simple!  If we can be humble of heart; submissive to God; mournful over the power of evil in the world; eager to grow in holiness; merciful toward the less fortunate; focused on seeing God’s glory; willing to make peace; and willing to suffer for the sake of God’s kingdom, we will be together with God in His kingdom!

But all of that “Church-speak” doesn’t really tell us anything about how we’re supposed to live, does it?  The Beatitudes don’t directly address the things that are problems for us…do they? 

Maybe they do.  Look for a moment.  If we are “poor of heart”, then money and things aren’t our first priority: God is.  If we have a sense of the greatness of God, then we will also understand why we need to submit ourselves to His will.  If the evil we see in the world makes us sad, and if we act to oppose that evil, then we’ll act to lessen its effects on people.  If seeking God is the first priority of our lives, then everything we do, every decision we make, will move us closer to Him.  And if we work to establish peace among men, and if we accept that people are going to beat us up for it, then we will establish the kingdom of heaven where we are.

It’s really pretty simple.  Jesus gives us the formula for achieving sainthood right here in this Gospel text!  And when we examine the lives of the saints, we see examples of all of these traits that we can follow.  The very reason we keep track of all of this is so that we will understand how to live holy lives! 

But if it were that simple, sin would already be defeated, right?  If it were just a matter of following eight simple rules, no one would ever have to worry about becoming a saint, would they?  Everyone would be a saint! 

Reality, though, is that we are constantly pulled in the opposite direction: much in our world is simply not of God, and is designed to pull us away from Him.  But, fortunately for us, God gave us tools to use to help us on our way.  First, he gave us the sacraments, those outwards signs instituted by Christ to give grace.  They are the most important weapon we have in fighting for sainthood.

More importantly, though, God gave us each other.  We all have a role to play in each others’ journey to heaven!  Look around you.  Husbands and wives, your first priority is to help your spouse get to heaven!  That’s your job!  Parents, as I have told so many of you at baptisms, your job is to keep little Johnny or Jane…out of Hell!  Those of you with brothers or sisters, it’s your responsibility to model what it means to be a Christian, to be a saint, for your siblings.

 Every one of us in the Body of Christ has a job to do: to help all the other members of that body get to heaven!  And if we’re all doing our job, then all of us will join the saints!   

What does it take to be a saint?  The Church has a lengthy process for “making saints”; it can take decades sometimes for the Church to officially recognize a saint.

But brothers and sisters, we all have the job, as Christians, of striving to become saints.  Sainthood isn’t easy; the lives of the saints are full of sacrifice.  But that sacrifice has a goal:  To be with God in heaven.

We’re not alone on that journey.  Everyone here around us should be helping us toward that goal.  And God wants us all to be with Him in Heaven.  

Think about it:  who’s helping you to become a saint?  Who are you helping?  What’s holding you back from becoming a saint?  And who might you be holding back?

Eucharistic Adoration at St. Ann (Reprise)

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back in the summer of 2008, I posted this challenge to the parish.  I was serious then, and I am still serious. I’ve had one mother of ten take me  up on my challenge; I told her that I could only count her older at-home kids, since the younger 5 are all under the age of 9, and had to go where she goes… :-)

Eucharistic Adoration is the single best gift that any of us can give to God and to the parish.  Spending time before the Blessed sacrament, especially in prayer for the parish, will bear more fruit than any other thing we can do.

So…go back and read my post.  the challenge was this:  I will spend an hour in Adoration for every three people who commit to an hour during the week.  I’ll pray for those folks, and I will pray for our parish an d our city.  And I will spend as much time as it takes to answer this commitment I am making.

So…how would you like to make me stay up at the church?  All it takes is showing up! Adoration hours are from noon to 10:30 pm every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, except for national holidays.  The Chaplet of Divine Mercy is prayed at noon, 3:00 pm and 6:00 pm each day; Evening Prayer is celebrated at 5:30 pm, and Night Prayer is celebrated before Reposition at 10:00 pm.

So…who’s showing up?

I am going to try this…

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I am I’m the tenth hour of a 13 hour drive with another adult and 12 teen homeschoolers, to visit our nation’s Capitol, and to stand up for the 50,000,000 children who have died at the hands of the abortion industry since 1973.

Since you’re reading this, you have access to YouTube; check this short video at www.catholicvote.com. These guys say more in 41 seconds than has been said in a while!

Please pray for us, for safe travel, for protection from the cold, and for an end to abortion on demand in our nation!