OT II [B] 1
Samuel 3:3-10, 19; 1 Cor 6:13-20; John 1:35-42
All of us
here today want to know and follow God's will for our lives. Some
more and some less, but all of us share, at least to some degree, that
fundamental desire; it's one of the reasons we have come to Mass. This desire
is in itself a sign of God's presence in our souls, a sign that he
is guiding us. Many of our brothers and sisters in Christ have received
the same baptism and Catholic formation that we have, and yet, they don’t
come to Mass anymore. They no longer desire to follow Christ. But
somehow God has kept alive in our hearts that prayer uttered so
beautifully in today's Psalm: "Here I am, O Lord, I come to do your
will."
We should
be deeply grateful that God has kept that desire burning. But,
on the other hand, how can we discover what God's will is? Today, God is
reminding us of one of His most favorite methods of communicating his
will: through human messengers.
The young
prophet Samuel had been chosen to lead and instruct God's people and
to anoint the first two Kings of ancient Israel. But when God first started to
speak to Samuel's heart, the future spiritual hero didn't even know how to
recognize his voice. Eli, his spiritual guide and a priest of
God, had to teach him.
John and
Andrew had been chosen by God to become two of the twelve pillars of
the Church, the Apostles. And yet, Jesus walked right by them on the
bank of the River Jordan, and they didn't even recognize him. John
the Baptist had to point him out, twice, before they got the
message and decided to follow their calling.
Many times,
God speaks through human messengers. And sometimes God chooses us to be
messengers of God for others. Ever since our baptism, we have all had the
mission, the opportunity and responsibility, to be God's ambassadors,
his loudspeakers in this fallen world through our words, deeds, and
example.
God is
trying to reach someone in our circle of friends, relatives, and
acquaintances through each of us, just as he did with Eli and Andrew; he has a
message for them. Have we been good loudspeakers lately, or have we
been unplugged somehow?
John the
Baptist pointed out Christ to his own disciples to acknowledge him as the lamb
of God and to bear witness to him in an active enterprise. Knowing Jesus is a
matter of experience. One could know the Catechism of the Catholic Church, all
700 pages of it, by heart, and still not know Jesus. Bearing witness to Christ,
then, demands that we should have personal and first-hand experience of
Jesus. 1. We get this personal experience of Jesus in our daily lives –
through the meditative reading and study of the Bible, through personal and
family prayers, and through the Sacraments, especially by participation in the
Eucharistic celebration. 2. Once we have experienced the personal presence of
Jesus in our daily lives, we will start sharing with others the Good News of
the love, peace, justice, tolerance, mercy, and forgiveness that Jesus
preached.
Two men, who
had been business partners for over twenty years, met one Sunday morning as
they were leaving a restaurant. One of them asked, "Where are you going
this morning?" "I'm going to play golf. What about you?" The
first man responded rather apologetically, "I'm going to church." The
other man said, "Why don't you give up that church stuff?" The first
man asked, "What do you mean?" His partner said: "Well, we have
been partners for twenty years. We have worked together, attended board
meetings together, and had lunch together, and all of these twenty years you
have never asked me about going to church. You have never invited me to go with
you. Obviously, it doesn't mean that much to you."
To be
effective messengers of God we need to allow ourselves to be guided by God. How
deeply do I really want God to guide my life? On any given day, how much do
I pay attention to what God is trying to say to me?
God wants us
to be eager to hear his voice in our lives, just as Samuel was in
today's First Reading. We need constantly to make Samuel's prayer our own:
"Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening." This is the
attitude we need to adopt: to constantly listen, to actively pay
attention, to God. Adopting that attitude requires a conscious
decision. Most of us have probably made that decision at some point in our
lives, maybe at a retreat or after a good confession. But unless we renew it
periodically, it will get dusty and dull.
Why
not renew it today, during this Mass, when Christ, through the sacrifice
of the Eucharist, will be renewing his decision to give his life for
us and for our salvation?
God speaks
in so many ways, through so many messengers! We just need to tune
in. God likes to use messengers, especially messengers who stay focused
on the message. Let’s ask for the grace to have the attitude of sharing
our faith with those who need Christ and invite them to come and see him.
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