The deacons are preaching this weekend and so you won't find a posting of my homily this weekend.
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Saturday, September 1, 2012
O.T.XXII
[B] Dt 4:1-2,
6-8; Jas 1:17-18, 21b-22, 27; Mk 7: 1-8,
14-15, 21-23
William
Barclay tells the story of an old Jewish rabbi in the Roman prison who was diagnosed
with acute dehydration which would have led to his death. The prison guards insisted that the rabbi was
given his quota of drinking water. So
the prison doctor and the officer in charge instructed the guards to watch the
rabbi and ascertain what he was doing with his ration of water. They were shocked to find that the rabbi was
using almost all his water for traditional ritual washing before prayer and
meals. Today’s gospel tells us how the
tradition-addicted Pharisees started questioning Jesus when his disciples
omitted the ritual washing of hands in public before a meal.
Today’s
readings explain what true religion is. It is not simply a scrupulous, external
observance of rules, laws, traditions and rituals. It is a loving, obedient
relationship with God expressed in recognizing His presence in other human
beings and rendering them loving and humble service.
Prayers,
rituals, sacraments and religious practices in the Catholic Church are intended
to help us to practice this true religion in our daily lives.
Why is religion so
important? It is because it puts us in touch with a special revelation from God
that we would not otherwise receive. The Jews believed that through their
religion they could know the God who had freed them from slavery in Egypt and who
had promised them life. God had given them the Law which instructed them how to
remain free and not relapse into idolatry. They were proud that God had chosen
them to show the rest of the world what a wonderful God they worshipped. “What
great nation is there that has its gods as near as the Lord our God is to us whenever
we call upon them’.
The Jews developed their
purity laws as a way of guarding their faith, keeping certain boundaries so
that that they were not just absorbed into the gentile world. Most religions
develop traditions, which help them to interpret the basic commandments of
their religion in the new situations which arise. There is always the danger
that these religious traditions can gradually become more important than the
basic commandments. Then religion becomes corrupt. The solution is not to get
rid of religion but to purify it, so it plays its essential role of mediating
God’s love and justice to us. And this is what Jesus is doing in today’s
Gospel.
Jesus is not dismissing the
externals of religion in favor of just an interior spiritual attitude. He is
pointing to a danger which afflicts all religious people Jew and gentile,
catholic and protestant. We can develop religious traditions, whether they are
the meticulous details of eating regulations or the intricate instructions of
liturgy, which take on a greater importance than the basic commandments of our
religion.
Jesus
describes true religion as serving God and all His children with a pure and
holy heart. God cares more about what
happens on the inside of our lives than what happens on the outside: he wants our hearts. That's what he's trying to
explain to the Pharisees, and to all his disciples, and to us. It is quite
possible to appear perfectly Christian on the outside while being perfectly selfish on the inside. We can go to Mass
regularly, avoid obviously lewd or sinful behavior in public, say prayers so
that others will notice - we can do all those things exteriorly while constantly entertaining evil thoughts
and self-centered desires in our hearts. That kind of divided life, which is called hypocrisy, can't last. As the old
saying goes, unless we live according to what we believe, we will soon start believing in accordance with what we live. Or, as Jesus puts it
elsewhere in the Gospels (cf. Matthew 6:21): where our hearts are, there our treasure is. True followers of Jesus Christ can never
be satisfied with merely exterior piety; we can never consider ourselves superior to others just because our sins are less visible. That's what the Pharisees did, and it blinded them to God's love; in fact, it tragically
turned them into enemies of God. True religion has exterior manifestations, certainly, but they are
meant to flow from and give expression to the experience of the heart. The
heart is the place where we decide for or against our conscience, for or against God's will. Our friendship with
Christ, and the purpose, strength, and vigor that flows out of that friendship,
depend on our inner
allegiance to him. Jesus doesn't care what we look like to others; he cares about who we really are. And so, that's what we should care about too.
When we come to worship we
are invited by Jesus to examine our own religious practices. Do we come to Sunday liturgy because we want to get something
or to give something? The reason we should come to Sunday Mass is so that we
can share our faith, enter into the celebration with spirit, with life, with
joy, with enthusiasm. Giving of oneself in the celebration enriches oneself and
others in the community. That could happen if we came to our Sunday celebration
not out of habit, not out of conformity, and not out of obeying a law, but
because we want to come and praise and thank God with all the spirit that we
can bring forth. That could happen if we came to every Sunday liturgy with the
conviction that this is a time when we pour forth our love for God and our love
for one another. Then we enrich ourselves and enrich one another. If we had
this attitude, every Sunday celebration would be filled with a joyous community
of people praising God and enriching one another.
Let’s also not forget the
words of St.James: Be doers of the Word and not
just hearers, lest you deceive yourselves. In the sight of God, pure and
blameless religion lies in helping the orphans and widows in their need and
keeping oneself from the world's corruption.
Let
us avoid the tendency to become cafeteria Christians by choosing certain
commandments and Church laws to follow, and ignoring the others as we do in a
cafeteria or buffet restaurant. Let’s ask God for the grace to worship Him in
Spirit and truth.
Saturday, August 25, 2012
O. T. XXI –B- JOSH 24: 1-2,
15-17, 18; EPH 5: 21-32; JN 6: 60-69
A
group of Christians gathered for a secret prayer meeting in Russia , at the
height of the persecution of all Christian churches. Suddenly the door was
broken by the boot of a soldier. He entered the room and faced the people with
a gun in his hand. They all feared the worst. He spoke. "If there’s anyone
who doesn’t really believe in Jesus, then, get out now while you have a
chance." There was a rush to the door. A small group remained - those who
had committed themselves to Jesus, and who were never prepared to run from him.
The soldier closed the door after the others, and once again, he stood in front
of those who remained, gun poised. Finally, a smile appeared on his face, as he
turned to leave the room, and he whispered "Actually, I believe in Jesus,
too, and
you’re
much better off without those others!"
The
main theme of today’s readings is that Christian life is a series of daily
choices for God or against God, as we choose to live out or reject the truths
He revealed through His prophets in the Old Testament and especially through
His Son Jesus in the New Testament. The fundamental choice we make determines
how we live our lives, deciding whom we will serve.
The Israelites had just entered
the Promised Land, and it was filled with pagans who worshipped many gods. So
Joshua told them, "Decide today whom you will serve." The God who
brought you from Egypt
to this lush, fertile land, or the gods of the Amorites in whose territory you
now dwell? The choice is up to you. And while still pondering the decision they
must make, he added the now-famous statement, "As for me and my household,
we will serve the Lord." Fortunately for themselves and their children,
they responded, "We also will serve the one Lord God." Notice that
Joshua did not just say: As for me I will serve the Lord, but he said, as for
me and my household, we will serve the Lord. He as the head of his household
took the decision to serve the Lord. It is a challenge and an invitation to the
heads of the families today to take up the responsibility of making his family
follow the Lord. Rather than just say when my children grow up to adulthood
they will make the choice themselves.
In today's Gospel, Jesus also puts the choice to His apostles of following Him, or of leaving Him. Many of the Lord's followers had left Him because of His teaching that He Himself is the Bread of Life. If they were willing to eat of His flesh and drink of His blood, they would live forever. Otherwise, they would die. Many were shocked and offended. Others thought the message was too good to be true. So they "walked with him no longer."
Jesus turns to the Twelve and says, "Do you also want to leave?" It's as though He had added, "It's your decision. I'm not going to make your minds up for you!" Fortunately for them and for the future Church, they have enough faith to reply, "Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.
In today's Gospel, Jesus also puts the choice to His apostles of following Him, or of leaving Him. Many of the Lord's followers had left Him because of His teaching that He Himself is the Bread of Life. If they were willing to eat of His flesh and drink of His blood, they would live forever. Otherwise, they would die. Many were shocked and offended. Others thought the message was too good to be true. So they "walked with him no longer."
Jesus turns to the Twelve and says, "Do you also want to leave?" It's as though He had added, "It's your decision. I'm not going to make your minds up for you!" Fortunately for them and for the future Church, they have enough faith to reply, "Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.
The
Old Testament, the New Testament and the history of the Church tell the stories
of brave men and women who heroically exercised their freedom of choice for God
and
His commandments and courted martyrdom. II Maccabees 6: 18-31 describes how the
90 year old saintly Scribe, Eleazar, welcomed martyrdom instead of eating the
flesh of pork. The same book describes another heroic
Jewish
mother and seven of her brave children who lost their lives by resisting the
order of the Greek commander to reject their Jewish faith. The martyrdom of St.
Stephen is described in the Acts of the Apostles. The first three centuries saw
thousands
of Christians heroically choosing Christ
and courting the cruel death inflicted by the pagan Roman
Empire . St. Thomas More was the second in power in
and
divorce instead of choosing their king’s view. Today’s readings challenge us to
make a choice for God and His teachings or against God.
It
is high time that we also reflected to find out where we stand, as his
followers. Majority of us identify ourselves with the vast crowd that were not
able to accept the challenges that Jesus placed before them. Like them we also
disappear from the scene. We silently assent to the decisions and practices of
the majority, even if there is a constant reminder from our conscience that
what we do is not correct. Silently consent the injustice, exploitation and
human right violations. Because, we do not want to risk our name; we do not
want to risk our positions; we do not want to risk the comforts that we enjoy. Remember
Jesus came to comfort the afflicted, but he also afflicted the comfortable in
their conscience.
It's
a hard teaching the people said to Jesus (Jn 6:60). This applies not only to
Jesus' words on the Eucharist, but also to His words on many other things. The
message of the cross is absurdity. There are many former Catholics who find the message of the
Church "too much for them." Some have left because of Church
doctrine, others because of the stand of the Church on abortion, contraception
or same sex marriage.
The
heavenly Bread and the Holy Spirit will give us the courage of our Christian
convictions to take a stand for Jesus, to accept the Church’s teachings and to
face ridicule, criticisms and even social isolation for our adherence to sound
Christian principles in our lives. That
is what we mean by our “Amen” while receiving Jesus in Holy Communion. Christ’s
thoughts and attitudes, his values, his life-view must become totally ours
before we are able to say: as for me and my household I will serve the Lord. There were many things that Peter
did not understand when he said yes to follow Jesus. But there was something in
Jesus that held him fast to Jesus, that was his personal experience of Jesus. Christian
life is not just adherence to a well set doctrine of dogmas, or a credible
philosophy, but simply a personal relationship with Jesus. Let’s develop a deep
personal relationship with Jesus, so that we will be able to respond to Jesus,
Lord, whom shall I go, you have the worlds of eternal life.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
ASSUMPTION
OF MARY.-2012
The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into
heaven was one of the last dogmas the Church formulated and declared. It was
formally declared by Pope Pius XII in 1950, but the idea of it has been around
for centuries. As early as the 6th century we have writings of St.
Gregory of Tours
who spoke of Mary being taken up to heaven. It is one of those long-standing
beliefs that has been codified into an essential teaching of the faith.
There is an ancient legend about today's feast. It seems that St. Thomas was not
present at Mary's death. So when he finally arrived, possibly from far-off India , he asked
to see her body one last time. But when her resting place was opened, there was
nothing there - except beautiful, fresh flowers. One tradition tells that at
the end of her earthly life, Mary was taken up body and soul into heaven, even
before death.
Many popular paintings exist which portray the
Assumption, often using the description in the Book of Revelations of the woman
clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of
twelve stars,” (12:1) which we read in the first reading today.
The Assumption of Mary can be adequately
explained by only one word: love. Based on our experience, love is
overpowering. It is a force that moves us towards the object of love and be
united with it. People who love money are always running after money and
grasping it so tightly. Those who love cars are always with their cars. And couples
who are in love tend to be together all the time, longing for physical and
spiritual intimacy. There is some irresistible force in love that pulls the
person towards the beloved. In the case of Mary, her love of God is so great
that her whole being is pulled closer to God. It practically lifted her up to
heaven, body and soul. In Mary, the true meaning of love is clearly shown
– love always leads to God. This is what St.
John wrote: “No
one has ever seen God. Yet if we love one another, God remains in us and his
love is brought to perfection in us…God is love, and whoever remains in love,
remains in God and God in him” (1 Jn 4:12,16).
Bishop Fulton Sheen expressed it beautifully: “If the distant moon moves all the
surging tides of sea, then the love of Mary for Jesus and the love of Jesus for
Mary should result in such an ecstasy as to ‘lift her out of this world’” (The World’s First Love, p. 134). He
mentioned the example of the saints who, overfilled with love and deeply
immersed in prayer, experienced the spiritual phenomenon of levitation, that
is, they “are literally lifted off the earth.” This levitation would be very
natural for Mary, for her whole being, body and soul, free from all sins and
thereby free from all inner tensions and divisions caused by sin, has no
opposing force that would pull her down. Everything in her is perfectly united
and integrated, and moving only in one upward direction towards complete union
with God. The Psalmist eloquently expressed this desire of the soul: “O God, you are my God – for you I
long! For you my body yearns; for you my soul thirsts, like a land parched,
lifeless and without water”(Ps 63:2).
The
story of the Fall is not only the story of Adam but the story of Adam and Eve.
If Jesus is the new Adam, Mary is the new Eve. Just as the full story of our
Fall cannot be told without Eve, so also the full story of our Redemption
cannot be told without Mary. There are many revealing parallels between the old
Adam and Eve on the one hand and the new Adam and Eve, Jesus and Mary, on the
other.
In
the old order, Eve came from the body of Adam, but in the new order Jesus comes
from the body of Mary.
In
the old order, Eve first disobeyed God and led Adam to do the same, in the new
order Mary first said "Yes" to God (Luke 1:38) and raised her son
Jesus to do likewise.
Adam
and Eve had a good time together disobeying God, Jesus and Mary suffered
together doing God's will. The sword of sorrow pierced their hearts equally
(John 19:34; Luke 2:35b).
In
the old order Adam and Eve shared immediately in the resulting consequences and
punishments of the Fall. In the new order, similarly, both Jesus and Mary share
immediately in the resulting consequences and blessings of the Redemption, the
fullness of life with God; Jesus through the Ascension and Mary through the
Assumption.
The
Assumption is the ultimate proof of the equality of man and woman before God.
It also shows the sacredness and eternal destiny of the human body. The
Assumption enables us to tell the full story, the full gospel that salvation is
for all Men, male and female, and for the whole Man, body and soul.
There
is a perfect harmony of wills and hearts between Mary and Jesus which we see
most clearly in the Wedding Feast at Cana
where Mary commands us: "Do whatever he (Jesus) tells you" (John
2:5).
This is a great feast of hope. Mary entering triumphantly into heaven
gives all of us hope in our eventual entry as well. As we celebrate Mary’s
assumption let’s live our lives magnifying the Lord and rejoicing in the Lord
our Savior as Mary did all her life.
Friday, August 10, 2012
O.
T. XIX [B] I KGS 19:4-8, EPH.
4:30-5:2, JN. 6:41-51
A hungry man passing a
store with a sign in the window, "We Sell Bread." He entered the
store, put some money on the counter, and said, "I would like to buy some
bread." The woman behind the counter replied, "We don’t sell
bread." "The sign in the window says that you do," the hungry
man said. The woman explained, "We make signs here like the one in the
window that says ‘We Sell Bread.’" A hungry man can’t eat signs.
Life sometimes fools us
too. What seems to be satisfying our hunger some times does not satisfy our
hunger. That is why Jesus said: man does not live by bread alone, but by every
word that comes from the mouth of God. To the Samaritan woman he said: One who
drinks this water will thirst again, but those who drink the water I give will
never thirst again. Today’s Gospel lesson picks up where we left off last week
in John 6. Like the crowds looking for something else or that man looking in
the wrong store, we often miss the point when God offers us enduring life in
Jesus.
First, he points out the mystery of faith, that no one can believe in him "unless he is drawn by the Father."
Faith in Jesus Christ supplies us with life's only dependable fuel, and yet, faith in Christ is God's gift, no one can conjure it up on their own, in a chemistry lab. When we look at the small white Host, no scientific test can prove that Jesus Christ is truly present there, body, blood, soul, and divinity. And yet, we know that he is; we have been given the gift of faith. This is why the priest says, after the consecration at each Mass: "Let us proclaim the mystery of faith." Second, this faith in Christ leads to "eternal life." Later in the Gospel, Jesus tells us that eternal life consists in knowing "the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom God has sent" (John 17:3). In Biblical language, "knowing" implies deep interpersonal intimacy, the kind of relationship we all yearn for. That we can have a relationship like that with God himself, who is more lovable, more beautiful than any other person is or can be, is the Good News of Jesus Christ. Third, Jesus himself is the "bread" of this eternal life, its source and sustenance. Without bread, without food, physical life perishes. Without Jesus, without his "flesh for the life of the world" in the Eucharist, our life of intimate communion with God will perish. It's that simple - and it's that crucial. Eleven times in this discourse Jesus speaks of himself as the bread of life; he's really hoping that we'll get the message. The gift of faith gives us access to eternal life, and the Eucharist makes that life grow within us.
When we receive Holy Communion, our natural desires will be transformed
from within, just like the wafer is transformed from within at
the words of consecration.
CCC 1377 teaches that: “The Eucharistic presence of Christ begins at
the moment of the consecration and endures as long as the Eucharistic species
subsist. Christ is present whole and entire in each of the species and whole
and entire in each of their parts, in such a way that the breaking of the bread
does not divide Christ.” Hence, it is clear that the whole Christ is real and
truly and substantially present in even a small particle of a Host or in a
small drop of the Precious Blood.
Here the Church emphasizes
that there is no part of the Host which is not Christ Jesus. And, we further
maintain, no part of the Host is a mere part of Christ, but each part of each
Host is the whole Christ present in his entirety. Like if you stand before a
big mirror, you find your one large image. But if you break that mirror into 4
pieces, you will see 4 images in all the four, full image.
Therefore, those who are not
careful with the Eucharistic particles, or who outright deny that Jesus is
present in even small pieces of the Host, either do not believe in the
Eucharist at all or are very foolish (since their own reasoning is
self-contradictory).
A piece of the Host which is
visible to the human eye (under usual conditions and without assistance) as
what appears to be a piece of bread, is surely Jesus. However, those particles
which are so small as to be invisible to the human eye, or to be
indistinguishable from a particle of dust – these cannot any longer be the
Eucharist.
The Church teaches that the
Eucharistic Presence remains “as long as the Eucharist species subsist”. This
means that Jesus is truly present in the Eucharist, so long as the Eucharist
retains the accidental properties of bread and wine. Hence, if a Host is
dissolved in water (as is done when the Host has become putrefied, as through
vomiting after the reception of Communion), upon being dissolved it is no
longer the Eucharist. Likewise, the Precious Blood, when the Chalice is
purified with water, is no longer the Eucharist.
The same must hold true for
those particles which are so small as to be unrecognizable as “bread”. If the
fragment is so small as to appear to be dust or a speck of some other
substance, rather than a “crumb” of bread, it can no longer be the Eucharist.
Likewise, those microscopic particles which fall from the Host are not the
Eucharist, since they clearly do not retain the appearance of bread. Excessive
scrupulosity about such things will only cause the true faith to be ridiculed.
In order to teach his disciples that the Eucharist is truly his own
Flesh and Blood, he first instructed them to gather up the “fragments” which
were left over from the multiplied loaves – if such care was taken for the mere
symbol of the Eucharist, how much more must we care for the Real Presence! So,Jesus
taught his disciples that the Eucharistic particles must be cared for, even
after the conclusion of the Mass.
If the pastors of the Church
do not care for these fragments, the people will soon lose their faith in the
Eucharist. Indeed, this has already happened to a large extent in most of the
western world.
It was really shocking to read that Communion was distributed to a dog on
August 5 at a liturgical celebration of “Inclusive Catholics,” a Melbourne movement
launched by Father Greg Reynolds, a suspended priest. After calling for women’s
ordination in a 2010 homily, Father Reynolds had his faculties suspended. He
currently organizes services for a varied group of disaffected Catholics. A
woman led the service, while
Father Reynolds "played as small a role as he could." So, it seems
unlikely, therefore, that the ceremony was a valid Mass, or that the bread was
actually consecrated. It goes beyond doubt that they don’t believe in the real
presence of the Lord in the Eucharist. Jesus clearly said that holy and
precious things may not be thrown before dogs and pigs.
The Eucharist and the
Sacraments are not any body’s personal right. No body can lay a claim to it. It
is given to the Church by her Lord and so it belongs to the Church. A priest, a
bishop or a Pope cannot say it is mine. If it is theirs as soon as that person
is dead it would no longer exist. It belongs to the Church, the Church exercises
it through her ministers. Minister is a servant, not the master. So he cannot
decide how the sacraments should be celebrated. He has no right to. The Church
does. The Church is the body of believers united in the Holy Spirit. That is
why you and me are the temple of the Holy Spirit. Jesus is the head of the
Church. The head decides all the actions of the body. The head holds the mouth
and the food that gives us eternal life. The holy Spirit, the breath of God and
Eucharist the food from God come to us through Jesus the head of the Church. An
individual member of the Church, like Fr.Reynold or me therefore, cannot make
any claim on the sacraments and decide how the Mass should be celebrated.
Each time therefore when we
attend the Mass or come up to receive the Holy Communion, let us call to mind
that it is for holy people and it is God’s greatest desire to commune with me
that he has given this privilege to receive him. So, let’s have the attitude of
the woman who wanted to touch the fringe of his garment or the Centurion who
admitted that he was not worthy to have Jesus under his roof.
Friday, August 3, 2012
XVIIIth
Sunday: Ex.16:2-4, 12-15; Eph 4:17, 20-24; John 6:24-35
In
1980 a missionary who was working in Zambia
went on vacation to South
Africa , then known for apartheid and racial
segregation. He returned to Zambia
after his vacation excited to tell everyone how much better South Africa was in comparison to Zambia . He told
of the wonderful preaching he gave in South Africa , calling on the youth
to give up their anti-apartheid struggle. His reasoning was that since Zambia had Black majority rule and its economy
was in shambles, and since South Africa
had White minority rule and its economy was doing much better, they should give
up their struggle for Black majority rule unless they wanted to be poor like Zambia .
Another
missionary working with him had a different idea. "Why don't we do
this," suggested this other missionary. "We lock you up in prison and
then give you everything you want to eat and drink, but still keep you locked
up in prison." Immediately he got the point. The hunger of the human
spirit goes beyond the hunger for food and drink. We may have all the material
food in the world but if we lack such spiritual food as freedom, truth and love
our hunger will ever be unsatisfied and our hearts ever restless.
Human
beings need two basic kinds of food to attain perfect happiness and
satisfaction: food for the body and food for the soul. Both are necessary.
Which one of these ranks higher in the teaching and example of our Lord Jesus
Christ? It is spiritual food. That is why he says in Matthew 4:4 "One does
not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of
God." And in John 4:34 he says, "My food is to do the will of him who
sent me and to complete his work."
When
he multiplied bread to feed the hungry he did not mean to say that the solution
to the deep hunger of the human heart is to give people more bread. No. He
multiplied bread only as a sign, a sign pointing to the higher spiritual food
that he was providing for the human soul.
But
the crowd we see in today's gospel mistake the sign for the substance. They
clamor for Jesus because they want more bread. They want to make him king, a
king who fills the human stomach with bread. "Sir, give us this bread
always," they pray (John 6:34). But Jesus berates them for not seeing beyond
their stomachs: "Very truly, I tell you, you are looking for me, not
because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of the loaves. Do not work
for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life,
which the Son of Man will give you" (John 6:26-27). Because of this, Jesus
hid away from them. Jesus did not want to be identified primarily with feeding
stomachs. He wanted to be seen primarily as one who has come to nourish the
human spirit with the food that satisfies every hunger of the human heart, the
food that does not perish but stays good and gives life eternally.
This
echoes the words that are found in the Book of Isaiah in the Old
Testament. "Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread, and
you labor for that which does not satisfy? Listen carefully to me, and eat what
is good, and delight yourselves in rich food. Incline your ear, and come to me;
listen, so that you may live. " [Is. 55:2-3].
The
big problem that Jesus had with the crowds seeking him was that while Jesus
spoke of spiritual reality they misunderstood him to be speaking of material
things. Jesus had a similar problem when he met the woman of Samaria at Jacob's well. Jesus spoke to her
about the spiritual water that he came to give: "Everyone who drinks of
this water will be thirsty again, but those who drink of the water that I
will give them will never be thirsty. The water that I will give will become in
them a spring of water gushing up to eternal life" (John 4:13-14). But the
woman understood it in terms of ordinary water and replied, "Sir, give me
this water, so that I may never be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw
water" (verse 15). Materialistic minds cannot comprehend spiritual truths.
The
challenge for us today is to recognize that the false god of materialism, which
promises satisfaction but leaves us ever more hungry, has seduced our society.
We hear the spiritual truth of the word of God but we understand it in terms of
satisfying our selfish desire for wealth and power.
When Jesus asks for their
faith, they ask him for a sign, as if he hasn’t already given them one. They saw
the miraculous feeding. But still they ask for more sign. This is what is wrong
with seeking for material things. Even if you see as something satisfying at
one point, the next moment that very same thing would turn out to be very unsatisfying.
Every day you really want something new: a new TV,
a new car, a special pair of shoes, whatever. Then we buy it and we love having
it for a few days. But over time we get bored or it wears out. You can see this
pattern repeated constantly in our own life. For example, your parents and
grandparents likely spent thousands and thousands of dollars on toys for you as
you were growing up: Dump trucks and Barbie dolls and video games and electric
cars and on and on and on. All of those toys got boring or broken or outgrown
eventually. They brought happiness for a moment or a week, but over time they
became worthless and your desire turned to a new object.
The
cure is to follow the instruction of Jesus and flee the worldly allure and
promises of materialism. This we can achieve as St.paul says today, only when
we put away the old self corrupted through deceitful desires, and be
renewed in the spirit of our minds, and put on the new self, created in God's
way in righteousness and holiness of truth. Otherwise we would be seeking after
Jesus only for material food and not for spiritual food that lasts for ever.
And we will never be fully satisfied in our life.
Saturday, July 7, 2012
XIVth
Sunday in Ordinary time.
EZ
2: 2-5; II COR12: 7-10; MARK 6: 1-6
In the first reading, the prophet
Ezekiel is told that he will face rejection of his message. Ezekiel's mission
was to speak the truth despite apathy and resistance. In the second reading, St. Paul speaks about his
mission of preaching God's word despite his weakness, "a thorn in his
flesh." This Gospel story is a kind
of home coming for Jesus. The first reaction of the people in the synagogue to
Jesus' words was one of astonishment. Many who
heard him were astonished. And they
said, "Where did this man get all this? What kind of wisdom has been given
him? What mighty deeds are wrought by his hands!
They
knew him only as a carpenter from a poor family, with no formal training in
Mosaic Law. They “knew” that he could not be the promised Messiah who would
come from Bethlehem
as a descendant of David’s royal family.
The town’s folk needed to see His diplomas, His credentials for getting
up there like that. “Who does he think he is!”
Certainly, they thought, he had gone far beyond the point one of his
status as a humble carpenter should go. Instead of accepting Jesus’ message
because of the evidence, the people rejected Jesus because they knew Jesus’
background.
One
of the dreams of Martin Luther King was that people "would be judged not
by the color of their skin but by the content of their character". Jesus’
neighbors could not understand how a mere carpenter could be their political
Messiah who would liberate them from Roman rule and reestablish the Davidic
kingdom of power and glory.
Very
often our friends, families, or childhood companions fail to listen to and
refuse to accept the words of grace, love and encouragement that we offer to
them, because they are too familiar with us. Hence, they are unable to see us
as God's appointed instruments, the agents of God's healing and saving grace.
And it happens in the reverse order too. We fail to see our friends and
co-workers as God’s agents speaking to us. St. Paul teaches us that
we don't have to be perfect to be instruments of God, like he had a thorn in
his flesh, and he was not perfect. But we should never give up speaking the
truth.
By
our baptism, God calls us to share in Jesus’ prophetic mission. The task of a
prophet is to speak God’s truth. We must never be afraid of this call. We may
rely on Jesus to supply us with the courage to oppose the many evils in our
society. Our society tells youngsters that promiscuous sex, drugs and alcohol
are means by which they express their individuality. It is here that our
country needs Christians with the prophetic courage of their convictions to
fight against such moral evils.
The Jews rejected Jesus because they were relying on their knowledge but
Jesus was inviting them to go beyond what they did know into the relationship
of faith to which He was inviting them. What we’re dealing with here then
is something much more serious than a mistake in reasoning. It’s the deliberate
rejection of something one knows to be true. It’s the turning away from a good,
one recognizes and accepts as desirable. In such negative attitude God cannot
work with us.
“And
he could do no deed of power there, except that he laid his hands on a few sick
people and cured them.” (Mark 6:5). This is one of the most shocking statements
in all the Gospels – that Jesus could not perform miracles. Not that he would
not but that he simply could not. Is anything impossible with Jesus? Today’s
gospel says yes. It is impossible for Jesus to perform miracles in a situation
where there is no faith. Jesus could do all things and wants to do all things
for his people. But he needs our faith to release his power. Remember last
week’s gospel of the woman with the flow of blood. Many people were touching
and pushing against Jesus. Nothing happened because they did not touch with
faith. But as soon as the woman of faith touches him, healing power comes out
of Jesus. As all-powerful as Jesus is, we have the capacity to disable him by
our lack of faith. Faith is like a switch that turns God on, lack of faith
turns God off.
Remember Jesus said to the Jews, looking at the
stubborn, non accepting attitude that: all the sins will be forgiven but the
sin against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven ? There is nothing that God
cannot forgive, but the deliberate hiding of the truth is a sin which prevents
God’s forgiveness. Because there is no openness towards God there. It is like:
I am terribly thirsty, and you give me water and I say no, that is not water
and don’t take it. What will happen, I will die of hunger. That is why Jesus
told the Jews, I will go, but you will die in your sins. St.Augustine said the God
who created us without our consent will not save us without our consent. So,
God takes our consent in working his grace into us.
While Mark says: “he could work no miracles there,”
Matthew says, “He did not work many miracles there”
(13:58), making it look more like a decision on Jesus' part. It is a
frightful thought that we have the ability to prevent miracles, to tie the
Lord’s hands.... How many miracles have I prevented in my life? Or this
week? Why are my wife and children so quiet? Are they sinking into
despair? Or have I a way of making my husband feel so bad that everything
he might do or say is condemned in advance?
When
we blame God for doing nothing while we suffer all things here below, does God
perhaps blame us for our unbelief that has made it impossible for Him to act?
Let’s
not try to place God or others in our boxes, trying to limit them by our
limited understanding of them. Let’s be open to God for God to work in and
through us.
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