About Me

I am a priest of the Archdiocese of Tororo, Uganda since my ordination on July 4, 1998. I am currently assigned as Professor of Theology and formator at Notre Dame Seminary in the Archdiocese of New Orleans, Louisiana.

Thursday, December 21, 2023

OPINION: Church Needs Formidable PR Machine to Counter Media

PS: I wrote this opinion piece in 2009, but unfortunately the article is now behind a pay wall.  So I publish it again here.

While the subject and the papacy were different, the principal points remaim the same.  I believe that the last point, about the need for good PR is still a relevant concern.


CISA News

OPINION: Church Needs Formidable PR Machine to Counter Media

Posted: Wed, Apr 01, 2009

By Fr. Deogratias Ekisa

Just as I was gathering my thoughts to shoot an article to CISA on the media coverage of Pope Benedict’s visit to Africa, Henry Makori beat me to it by penning an excellent analysis of the relationship between the media and the Vatican. I would like to discuss further some points the CISA editor raises.

Experts in interpersonal relationships say that when there is a breakdown in communication, it is best to start the discussion by taking the blame. For example, if someone did not understand something you said it is better to say, “I am sorry, it seems I was not very clear,” rather than, “I am sorry, you did not understand me.” In the recent media blitz against the Pope, however, I will dispense with the political correctness of this principle and lay the blame squarely where it lies.

As Makori hinted, much of the Western media is clearly the handmaid of secularism. (Secularism is an ideology which must be distinguished from the ideologically neutral concept of secularisation, the process of separating religion and secular society). Now secularism has an agenda, which is to drive out (not merely separate) religion from the public square. This ideology, which believes in the absolute primacy of reason and utility, considers religion to be an obstacle to its most cherished values. And so, if anybody seriously thinks that the recent media onslaught on the pope was about condoms, then they need to think again. For much of the Western media, this was a chance to put down religion and show how silly and opposed to scientific “progress” religion, especially the Catholic religion is.

But leaving aside the media’s secularist and ideological intentions, the modern press is inherently incapable of understanding what the Church teaches, since they operate in a different worldview and paradigm. The media looks for literal, straightforward meanings; the Church for the fundamental meaning of life. In the condom case for example, it is very clear for the media that condoms save physical lives; but that point of view is markedly different from the Pope’s position who is not commenting on the scientific capabilities of condoms, but on their capacity to promote a lifestyle that is inimical to life (both physical and spiritual). It is like the Pope and Western media were speaking different languages, since they were starting from different fundamental premises.

Even worse, much of the media is either incapable of understanding the subtleties of profound intellectual thought or merely ignores them. That is why they rightly consign scientific, economic and other specialised disciplines to esoteric specialist magazines and occasionally call in the help of expert scholars to enlighten the public about these complex issues. Religion, however, is considered to be a common man’s possession and is not conceded that luxury. But how can we expect the theologically untrained journalists to understand the theological nuances of Christian thought? Most of them do not even make the effort to inform themselves on the subject. Besides, religious thought does not seem to fit the categories of sound bites, which are the bread and butter of media coverage.

But we cannot blame the media alone. As I said earlier, any breakdown in communication could be caused by either the sender or recipient or both. We Catholics are sometimes unwitting supporters of this secularist attack on religion. This happens especially when we dissent loudly and virulently against the Pope and Church teaching. Of course there has always been internal dissent in the Church. One just has to refer to the differences between Paul and Peter on the requirement that non-Jewish converts observe Jewish laws. Various Early Fathers of the Church approached and explained the mystery of Christianity differently, sometimes disagreeing bitterly. Even saints have sometimes disagreed, like the different takes on the sacrament of penance by the Dominican position of St. Thomas Aquinas and by the Franciscan position of St. Bonaventure. These agreeable disagreements, however, have never been about the fundamental message of God’s saving love in Jesus Christ and his Church, which is an instrument of that message.

Now of course today’s disagreements by Catholics are on such issues as contraceptives, abortion, war, immigration, excommunications etc. One might argue that these are still those peripheral issues that are only tangentially related to the fundamental message of the Church. And sometimes that is truly the case. Often, however, is a naive interpretation of the situation. As I have said above, if anyone for one moment thinks that the “condom” issue on the recent papal trip to Africa was a debate about condoms, then they have another thing coming. This was a debate about the fundamental role of religion in life, with the media towing the secularist line, and the Pope promoting the Catholic vision of things. And so, when a Catholic who disagrees with the Pope on that or any issue attacks him like the media has done or dissents in a vehement way, he is in effect promoting the more fundamentalist secular agenda and not just that specific issue.

I am reminded of an incident a couple of years ago when President Hugo Chavez made a bitter attack on President Bush at the United Nations in New York; he compared him to the devil himself etc. When this happened, even starry-eyed left-wing Democrats who are naturally opposed to Bush and tend towards the liberal mindset of the Venezuelan President abandoned Chavez and ran to the defence of their President, because they realised that the stakes here were higher; it was the presidency itself and their country that were under attack and not Bush’s particular ideological stand.

Similarly, it is time for Catholics to discern when they can reasonably disagree with the Pope and Church teaching and when their disagreement constitutes an attack on the very foundations of the Christian faith. This call goes not only to the more progressive members of the faithful whose rebellion tends to be the loudest, thanks to the more liberal media, but also to the right-wing sections of the Church, who have been known to wage silent but equally vituperative attacks on certain members of the hierarchy whom they consider too liberal for their liking. Actually, in the 1960s and 1970s, the attacks from the right were the ones damaging the Church. Now when confronted by a common enemy, secularism, it is time for us to lay aside our ideological differences and confront that enemy. The very survival of God’s Church is at stake. If we let it fall, or in fact, if we assist in pushing it over, then we shall have failed in our mission, which is to establish the Kingdom of God here on earth. It is time to stand up and be counted. The battle lines have been drawn; on which side are we fighting?

An effective weapon to include in the Church’s arsenal for this battle is a radically new communication attitude and strategy for dealing with the media. Here I am not talking about the usual spiel about using the mass media for communicating Jesus’ message; we are doing this already through Catholic television, Catholic radio and Catholic print-media. I am instead suggesting a more profound public relations exercise. Let me explain what I mean with two examples.

Several years ago when I was a first-time parish priest, I had to preside over the election of the Parish Council officials. Naively, I thought that the best people would be elected, since “good always prevails over evil.” And so, I did not share with anyone my thoughts on the candidates, nor try to “campaign” for any candidate, trusting in the “inherently” just process of democracy. To my surprise, the candidates I thought would have been elected, barely got any votes; I later found out that some members of the Council, for obviously private interests, had done their homework and had ensured they had the votes to push their men into office. I admit that I failed miserably, in putting forward my vision of what kind of Parish Council leadership I thought was best for the parish.

I now turn to an example as far removed from the parish situation as possible. I recently learned that in the recent war between Georgia and Russia, the news we were getting about the war (or at least most of it) was being managed or influenced by two Western European public relations agencies based in Brussels. So, both sides hired (at great cost I suppose) two professionals to put their side of the story to the world.

This is the kind of strategy we need in the Church today: a full-fledged, professional, well-financed PR team to front the message of Jesus to the world. It is this kind of team that would advise, for example, whether a particular papal document would be more effective if released on a Friday rather than on a Monday. Such a professional PR machine would know who to contact in particular media houses or particular temples of power for the achievement of a specific goal. It is such a PR strategy that would organize a major media blitz to counter certain situations or to explain them.

Now some people might find my idea objectionable, on the grounds that God’s everlasting message is being subjected to secular concerns and being managed by methods more suited to the things of this world. Such an objection does not stand up to scrutiny, if one critically looks at how God has dealt with the world throughout the history of salvation. A cursory look at the Old Testament reveals that imperfect men Moses and David, imperfect institutions like sacrifice, imperfect methods like wars were used to achieve God’s plan of salvation. Even more fundamentally, the fact that the Son of God took on human nature (an imperfect condition), to bring about salvation shows that the things of this world can certainly be used for the achievement of God’s glory and the salvation of humankind. Even in post-biblical times, the Fathers and the Scholastics both used pagan philosophy to explain the mysteries of God. The structure of our Church has largely followed secular models of both monarchy and democracy.

And so, while the basic message of Christ has not changed, the way it has been expressed and presented to the world has changed over time. Today we need a serious public relations campaign to overcome the media machine that has been kidnapped by secularism or at least that chooses to operate on purely secularist principles. It is quite naive and disingenuous for anybody to think that because God’s Kingdom is the truth, it will just establish itself.

I repeat: the survival of the Church is at stake. The predator is attacking. We need to stock the Church’s armoury with the necessary weapons to help us win this battle. I suggest that part of this arsenal has to be not just a prayerful and exemplary life from all Catholics, but a media-savvy approach and all Catholics pulling together to publicly counter what is becoming a death blow to religion, even if it is often clothed in convincingly reasonable sheep’s clothing. It is time to wake up from our slumber!

[Fr. Ekisa is a priest of the Archdiocese of Tororo, Uganda, now at Pontificio Ateneo Sant’Anselmo, Rome]

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

Homily for All Souls Day: The Christian answer to death

 Homily for All Souls – November 2, 2023




Introduction

When my mother died two years ago, she was the closest person I know to die.  Although she had been sick for a while, her unexpected death, just two days before her 75th birthday was very difficult on me and my siblings and continues to be so.  Many people at the funeral told me that "she is now in a better place."  But I wondered, how do they know? Moreover, they didn’t live with her.  Her death has given me ample opportunity to reflect in a very personal way, on death. 

Scripture and Theology

Starting October 31st, yesterday November 1st and today, November 2nd, we celebrate what might be called the Triduum for the dead.  And it is an opportune time to reflect on the question “where is my mother now?”

We started the Triduum on 31st October with Halloween.  Although it was originally a Christian holiday, “All Hallows Eve” (All Saints Eve), the secular festivity of HALLOWEEN celebrates the departed who are lost; these are the ghosts.  While this secular version is not without entertainment value or even psychological benefit, it really offers me no answer to the question about my mom’s destiny.  In fact, my faith in the promises of Jesus Christ, give me the hope that my mother, through the many ways she tried to be a faithful disciple, is not among the lost spirits emphasised or rather mocked at Halloween.

The second day of this triduum, ALL SAINTS DAY, which we celebrated on NOVEMBER 1ST is a little more promising.  After all, my mother as we all are, was set on the journey to sainthood at her baptism.  That is what we heard St. Paul tell us in our second reading today: “that we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death . . . were indeed buried with him through baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might live in newness of life. For if we have grown into union with him through a death like his, we shall also be united with him in the resurrection” (Rm. 6).

And throughout her life as a disciple, as a wife (for a brief period), as a nurturing mother, and a dedicated teacher, she tried to be a saint.  The numerous eulogies from family and friends at her funeral attested to those qualities in her that aspired to saintliness.  And since All Saints Day commemorates not just the canonized saints, but indeed all those who are now “with God” and now “see him as he is” (1 Jn. 3:2), again my faith gives me the hope that she can be counted among that “great multitude, which no one could count, from every nation, race, people, and tongue. . . . [standing] before the throne and before the Lamb, wearing white robes and holding palm branches in their hands” (Rev. 7:9).

But this is only a hope, and not a certainty.  I would be doing my mother a disservice by ignoring all she taught me about the dangers of presumption, if I were to presume that she is already a saint in heaven and therefore fail to do for her what as a disciple and a son, I must do – pray for her.

And that is the purpose of the third day of the Triduum, today, ALL SOULS DAY, on NOVEMBER 2ND.  This day tells me that given her frail humanity, we must pray for her.  Most boys idolize their mothers and I am no different.  But as I have grown older, I have gradually realized that she was not perfect.  She really tried to live by the Ten Commandments, the Two Great Commandments, the Beatitudes, the Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy and taught us her children how to do so.  I could never have asked for a better mother, especially the single mother she was for most of her life.  She was basically both a mother and a father to the four of us.  But she was still a fallible human being and so we pray for her on this day, together with all the faithful departed.

I have received one more answer to the question, “where is my mother now.”  Friends have intimated that my mother is now an angel, with expressions like “she has earned her (angel’s) wings.”  Although a well-meaning answer, again, my Catholic faith tells me that it is not correct.  When God created my mother, he did not create her to be an angel, which is a different type of creature.  He created her with a body and soul (angels lack bodies), and through the saving work of Jesus Christ, destined her to share in his very divine life, in body and soul.  Therefore, while my mother might be in the company of the angels, she might even be like them now (having shed the limitations of the mortal body), my mother has never been, nor will ever be an angel, except in a manner of speaking.

Christian Life and Conclusion

That is why for the rest of my life, I am going to look for her among the faithful departed (The Church Suffering).  Besides heaven itself, in what better place could she be, than Purgatory, the anteroom to Heaven, where she is being prepared for eternal life?  That is why I am asking you to join me so that we (The Church Militant – not Church Belligerent) pray for her soul and the souls of the all the faithful departed, that they might be admitted into the Lord’s company for eternity (The Church Triumphant).  Also, pray that both you and I will persevere in faith, hope and charity, and join them in eternal life.

Although I have selfishly used my mother as an example, what I have said applies to all our departed mothers and fathers, our grandmothers and grandfathers, even our children and siblings, and all our departed relatives and friends.  What I have said should apply also for the forgotten dead, those who have no one to pray for them, those who graves in the cemeteries receive no visitors and no flowers.

May we be inspired by the words we shall say in the Eucharistic prayer as we ask God to give kind admittance to all our departed brothers and sisters.  We shall then go on to say:

There we hope to enjoy forever the fullness of your glory, when you will wipe away every tear from our eyes.  For seeing you, our God, as you are, we shall be like you for all the ages, and praise you without end.

Let this be our prayer, not just today, but always.

Homilia para Todos Los Fieles Difuntos: La respuesta cristiana a la muerte es orar

Homilía para Conmemoración de Todos los Fieles Difuntos – 2 de noviembre de 2023



Introducción

Cuando mi madre murió hace dos años, ella fue la persona más cercana a mí a morir. Aunque había estado enferma por un tiempo, su muerte inesperada, apenas dos días antes de cumplir 75 años, fue muy difícil para mí y para mis hermanos y continúa siéndolo. Muchas personas en el funeral me dijeron que "ahora su mama está en un lugar mejor". Pero me preguntaba, ¿cómo lo saben? Además, no vivían con ella. Su muerte me ha dado una amplia oportunidad para reflexionar de una manera muy personal sobre el tema de la muerte.

Escritura y teología

A partir del 31 de octubre, ayer el primer día de noviembre y hoy 2 de noviembre celebramos lo que podríamos llamar el Triduo de los difuntos. Y es un momento oportuno para reflexionar sobre la pregunta “¿dónde está mi madre ahora?”

Iniciamos el Triduo el 31 de octubre con Halloween. Aunque originalmente era una festividad cristiana, la Víspera de Todos los Santos, la festividad secular de HALLOWEEN celebra a los difuntos que están perdidos; estos son los fantasmas. Si bien esta versión secular no carece de valor de entretenimiento o incluso de beneficios psicológicos, realmente no me ofrece respuesta a la pregunta sobre el destino de mi madre. De hecho, mi fe en las promesas de Jesucristo me da la esperanza de que mi madre, a través de las muchas maneras en que trató de ser una discípula fiel, no esté entre los espíritus perdidos enfatizados o más bien burlados en Halloween.

El segundo día de este triduo, el DÍA DE TODOS LOS SANTOS, que celebramos el 1 DE NOVIEMBRE es un poco más prometedor. Después de todo, mi madre, como todos nosotros, emprendió el camino hacia la santidad en su bautismo. Eso es lo que escuchamos a San Pablo decirnos en nuestra segunda lectura de hoy: “Todos los que hemos sido incorporados a Cristo Jesús por medio del bautismo, hemos sido incorporados a él en su muerte. En efecto, por el bautismo fuimos sepultados con él en su muerte, para que, así como Cristo resucitó de entre los muertos por la gloria del Padre, así también nosotros llevemos una vida nueva.”

Y a lo largo de su vida como discípula, como esposa (por un breve período), como madre protectora y maestra dedicada, trató de ser una santa. Los numerosos elogios de familiares y amigos en su funeral dieron fe de aquellas cualidades en ella que aspiraban a la santidad. Y como el Día de Todos los Santos conmemora no sólo a los santos canonizados, sino a todos aquellos que ahora están “semejantes a él porque lo veremos tal cual es” (1 Jn. 3:2), nuevamente mi fe me da la esperanza de que ella puede ser contado entre esa “muchedumbre tan grande, que nadie podía contarla. Eran individuos de todas las naciones y razas, de todos los pueblos y lenguas. Todos estaban de pie, delante del trono y del Cordero; iban vestidos con una túnica blanca; llevaban palmas en las manos y exclamaban con voz poderosa” alabando a Dios (Apocalipsis 7:9).

Pero esto es sólo una esperanza y no una certeza. Le haría un flaco favor a mi madre si ignorara todo lo que ella me enseñó sobre los peligros de la presunción, si supusiera que ella ya es una santa en el cielo y por lo tanto no hiciera por ella lo que como discípulo e hijo debo hacer – orar por ella.

Y ese es el propósito del tercer día del Triduo, hoy el DÍA DE TODOS LOS FIELES DIFUNTOS, el 2 DE NOVIEMBRE. Este día me dice que, dada su frágil humanidad, debemos orar por ella. La mayoría de los muchachos idolatran a sus madres y yo no soy diferente. Pero a medida que crecí, gradualmente me di cuenta de que ella no era perfecta. Ella realmente trató de vivir los Diez Mandamientos, los Dos Grandes Mandamientos, las Bienaventuranzas, las Obras de Misericordia corporales y espirituales y nos enseñó a sus hijos cómo hacerlo. Nunca podría haber pedido una mejor madre, especialmente la madre soltera que fue durante la mayor parte de su vida. Ella era básicamente madre y padre para nosotros cuatro. Pero ella todavía era un ser humano falible y por eso rezamos por ella en este día, junto con todos los fieles difuntos.

He recibido una respuesta más a la pregunta: "¿Dónde está mi madre ahora?". Los amigos han insinuado que mi madre ahora es un ángel, con expresiones como “se ha ganado sus alas (de ángel)”. Aunque es una respuesta bien intencionada, nuevamente mi fe católica me dice que no es correcta. Cuando Dios creó a mi madre, no la creó para que fuera un ángel, que es un tipo diferente de criatura. La creó con cuerpo y alma (los ángeles carecen de cuerpo), y por la obra salvadora de Jesucristo, la destinó a participar de su divina vida, en cuerpo y alma. Por lo tanto, si bien mi madre podría estar en compañía de los ángeles, incluso podría ser como ellos ahora (habiéndose despojado de las limitaciones del cuerpo mortal), mi madre nunca ha sido ni será un ángel, excepto en una manera de hablar.

Vida cristiana y conclusión

Por eso, por el resto de mi vida, la voy a buscar entre los fieles difuntos (La Iglesia Sufriente). Además del cielo mismo, ¿en qué mejor lugar podría estar ella que el Purgatorio, la antesala del Cielo, donde se prepara para la vida eterna? Por eso les pido que se unan a mí para que nosotros (La Iglesia Militante – no la Iglesia Beligerante) oremos por su alma y las almas de todos los fieles difuntos, para que sean admitidos en la compañía del Señor por la eternidad (La Iglesia Triunfante). Además, oremos para nosotros mismos para que perseveremos en la fe, la esperanza y la caridad, y nos unamos a ellos en la vida eterna.

Aunque egoístamente he usado a mi madre como ejemplo, lo que he dicho se aplica a todas nuestras madres y padres fallecidos, a nuestras abuelas y abuelos, incluso a nuestros hijos y hermanos, y a todos nuestros familiares y amigos fallecidos. Lo que he dicho debería aplicarse también a los muertos olvidados, aquellos que no tienen a nadie que rece por ellos, aquellos cuyas tumbas en los cementerios no reciben visitas ni flores.

Que nos inspiren las palabras que diremos en la oración eucarística mientras le pedimos a Dios que dé amable admisión a todos nuestros hermanos y hermanas difuntos. Luego pasaremos a decir:

[allí] donde esperamos gozar todos juntos de la plenitud eterna de tu gloria;
allí enjugarás las lágrimas de nuestros ojos,
porque, al contemplarte como tú eres, Dios nuestro,
seremos para siempre semejantes a ti
y cantaremos eternamente tus alabanzas.

Que esta sea nuestra oración, no sólo hoy, sino siempre.

Sunday, October 29, 2023

Homily Ordinary 30A: We love because God has loved us and others first

Homily for 30th Sunday of Ordinary Time Year A 2023




Introduction

"Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?"  That sounds like a good question.  Wouldn’t we all want to know, which among the many laws of God in the Old Testament, those of the New Testament, and then those of the Church, even those of the state, which of them is the most important, so that we can keep that one commandment and thus make our way to heaven?

The scholar of the law who asked Jesus this question, did not have this same noble motivation, but did so to test him.  It is like,we heard last week the Pharisees and Herodians, asking Jesus whether paying taxes to Caesar was right or not.  And just like in last week’s gospel, any answer Jesus gave to this question would land him in trouble.  Which of the 613 laws would he pick without offending somebody?

But you can trust Jesus to find a way out of this pickled, just like in last week’s gospel.  How does he escape the trap set him by the scholar of the law?

Scripture and Theology

First, let us remember that the 613 laws in Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy were of three types: the ceremonial laws like washing, the liturgical laws like sacrifice, and the moral laws like the Ten Commandments.  From the whole gospel we know that Jesus more or less superseded the ceremonial and liturgical laws; that is why we don’t circumcise anybody or sacrifice animals.  However, the moral law, that we still keep, because it has everlasting value.  And so it is the moral law that he turns to for the greatest commandment.

So which of the myriad moral laws does he pick?  Well he doesn’t.  Instead, goes to what should be at the root and heart of all laws.  Jesus goes back to the Tradition, specifically to Deuteronomy 6:5 and pulls out this injunction of God: "You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.”  And then he says: “This is the greatest and the first commandment.”

For a person of faith, this should make sense.  God must come first, God must be the centre of our lives, since he created us, sent us a saviour and he continues to provide for us.  Any law that does not in some way love God is no law at all.  Underlying every law must be the desire to love God, with all our hearts, with all our souls, and with all our minds, that is, love him completely.

But Jesus does not stop there.  Although the lawyer asked for one commandment, Jesus gives him two.  For the other greatest commandment, Jesus draws from another Old Testament book, Leviticus 19:18 to say: “The second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”  Just like with the first one, any law that does not in some way do good for a neighbour is no law at all.

But why does Jesus include this second commandment about love of neighbour at all?  And why does he say it is like the first the commandment?  What does loving our neighbour have to do with God?

Let me illustrate this with a story that I once heard a story about a married couple.  For years they went to the opera.  Several years into their marriage, however, it slipped accidentally from the lips of the husband, that he did not like the opera at all.  When the wife asked him, "honey, why then did you go with me all these years?" he said: “I loved the opera, because you love the opera and I love you.”  That is when the wife also said, “I too only went to the opera, because I thought you loved it and since I loved you, I had to love it.”

Similarly, the second greatest commandment enjoins us to love our neighbour, because we love God, who loves our neighbour.  The spouses in the story I told you, loved the opera, not in itself, but because they loved the person, who loved it or whom they thought loved it.  And so we are enjoined to love not only God whom it is easier to love, and not just the neighbour that is likeable, cute, useful, pretty, and intelligent.  The real reason we must love our neighbour is because this commandment is based on the first one – we love our neighbours because we love God and God loves them.

Christian Life

That is why often God commands us to love neighbours that we would not naturally be inclined to love.  Today’s first reading gives us a few examples of neighbours we must love as we love ourselves because God loves them:

About migrants and refugees God says: "You shall not molest or oppress an alien, for you were once aliens yourselves in the land of Egypt.”  This country faces a real immigration problem, something that only the politicians can solve.  But what you and I do?  The one thing I suggest is we do not use demeaning language of our fellow man, simply because of his her immigration status of national origin. That would be falling foul of the second greatest commandment, which the Lord tells us is to love our neighbour, even our foreign neighbour as ourselves.

A Catholic Relief Services worker currently serving the people Gaza was asked why she was working in this Muslim region?  And her response was, we feed the need women and children, the refugees, not because they are Catholic, but because we are Catholic.  We love our neighbour, because God has loved them and frankly us first.

Our first reading also gave another example of loving one’s neighbour saying, “You shall not wrong any widow or orphan.” Today we don’t have too many widows or orphans, but at that time, the widow and the orphan were one of the most vulnerable people in society.  The widow had no husband to care for her, and the orphan had no parents.  That is why the Law of God enjoined the society at large for these most needy people.  Who are widows and orphans today, against whom we must do no wrong, who we must take care of?

One more law from the reading regards the poor who you happen to lend money or other help. God says: “You shall not act like an extortioner toward” them.  While justice demands that they pay pack what they owe, charity demands that you may have to forgive the loan or part of the loan and certainly the interest.  Who are the poor of today, whom we might be tempted to extort due to their poverty and lack of power, political or otherwise?

Jesus concludes his answer to the lawyer by saying: “The whole law and the prophets depend on these two commandments:” love of God and love of neighbour.  That is because these two summarize the Ten Commandments:

·        When we keep the first three commandments, the commandments of the first tablet of Moses, we in fact love God: by worshipping him alone, by not profaning his name and by keeping the Lord’s Day holy.

·        When we keep the last seven commandments, those on the second tablet of Moses, we in fact love our neighbour: by respecting our parents and elders, protecting life, observing marital fidelity, respecting the property of others, speaking the truth, avoiding envy of others’ property and spouses.

Conclusion

And so, although the scholar of the law had an ill intention in testing Jesus by asking “which commandment in the law is the greatest? he has provided the occasion for Jesus to teach us a fundamental truth.  We are now able to see good law, not as obstacle to our happiness, but rather as the concrete means for me to show my love for God and my love for neighbour.

Moreover, these loves are not separate.  As the First Letter of St. John tell us, “We love because he first loved us.  If anyone says, “I love God,” but hates his brother, he is a liar; for whoever does not love a brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen.  This is the commandment we have from him: whoever loves God must also love his brother” (1 John 4:19-21).


Homilia Ordinaro 30A: Amamos porque Dios nos ha amado a nosotros y a los demás primero

 Homilía para el 30º Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario Año A 2023




Introducción

"Maestro, ¿cuál es el mandamiento más grande de la ley?" Suena como una buena pregunta. ¿No querríamos todos saber cuál, entre las muchas leyes del Antiguo Testamento, las del Nuevo Testamento y luego las de la Iglesia, incluso las del Estado, cuál de ellas es la más importante, para que ¿Podemos guardar ese único mandamiento y así llegar al cielo?

El doctor de la ley que le hizo esta pregunta a Jesús no tenía la misma noble motivación, sino que lo hizo para ponerlo a prueba. Es como escuchamos el evangelio de la semana pasada a los fariseos y herodianos preguntarle a Jesús si pagar impuestos al César era correcto o no. Y al igual que la semana pasada, cualquier respuesta que Jesús diera a esta pregunta le causaría problemas. ¿Cuál de las 613 (seiscientos y trece) leyes elegiría sin ofender a nadie?

¿Cómo puede Jesús escapar de la trampa que le tendió el doctor de la ley?

Escritura y teología

Primero, recordemos que las 613 leyes del Génesis, Éxodo, Levítico, Números y Deuteronomio eran de tres tipos: las leyes ceremoniales como el lavado, las leyes litúrgicas como el sacrificio y las leyes morales como los Diez Mandamientos. Por todo el evangelio sabemos que Jesús reemplazó más o menos las leyes ceremoniales y litúrgicas; por eso no circuncidamos a nadie ni sacrificamos animales. ¿Sin embargo, la ley moral? Esta todavía guardamos, porque tiene un valor eterno. Y por eso es la ley moral a la que Jesús recurre en busca del mandamiento más importante.

Entonces, ¿cuál de las innumerables leyes morales elige? Bueno, no lo hace. En cambio, se dirige a lo que debería estar en la raíz y en el corazón de todas las leyes. Jesús vuelve a la Tradición, específicamente a Deuteronomio 6:5 y saca este mandato de Dios: "Amarás al Señor, tu Dios, con todo tu corazón, con toda tu alma y con toda tu mente". Y luego dice: “Éste es el más grande y el primero de los mandamientos”.

Para una persona de fe, esto debería tener sentido. Dios debe ser lo primero, Dios debe ser el centro de nuestras vidas, ya que él nos creó, nos envió un salvador y continúa proveyéndonos. Cualquier ley que de alguna manera no ame a Dios no es ley buena. Detrás de todas las leyes debe estar el deseo de amar a Dios, con todo nuestro corazón, con toda nuestra alma y con toda nuestra mente, es decir, amarlo completamente.

Pero Jesús no se detiene allí. Aunque el doctor de la ley pidió un mandamiento, Jesús le da dos. Para el otro gran mandamiento, Jesús se basa en otro libro del Antiguo Testamento, Levítico 19:18, para decir: “el segundo es semejante a éste: Amarás a tu prójimo como a ti mismo”. Al igual que la primera, cualquier ley que de alguna manera no beneficie al prójimo no es ley buena.

Pero, ¿por qué Jesús incluye este segundo mandamiento sobre el amor al prójimo? ¿Y por qué dice que es como el primer mandamiento? ¿Qué tiene que ver amar a nuestro prójimo con Dios?

Permítanme ilustrar esto con una historia que una vez escuché sobre una pareja casada. Durante años fueron a la ópera. Sin embargo, varios años después de su matrimonio, se le escapó accidentalmente de los labios al marido que no le gustaba la ópera en absoluto. Cuando la esposa le preguntó: "cariño, ¿por qué entonces fuiste conmigo todos estos años?" Él respondió: “Me encantó la ópera, porque tú amas la ópera y yo te amo”. Fue entonces cuando la esposa también dijo: “Yo también fui a la ópera sólo porque pensé que te encantaba y como yo te amaba, tenía que amarla”.

De manera similar, el segundo gran mandamiento nos ordena amar a nuestro prójimo, porque amamos a Dios, quien ama a nuestro prójimo. Los esposos de la historia que les conté amaban la ópera, no en sí misma, sino porque amaban a la persona, a quien la amaba o a quien creían que la amaba. Por eso estamos obligados a amar no sólo a Dios, a quien es más fácil amar, y no sólo al prójimo simpático, lindo, útil, bello e inteligente. La verdadera razón por la que debemos amar a nuestro prójimo es porque este mandamiento se basa en el primero: amamos a nuestro prójimo porque amamos a Dios y Dios los ama.

Vida Cristiana

Es por eso que a menudo Dios nos ordena amar al prójimo que naturalmente no estaríamos inclinados a amar. La primera lectura de hoy nos da algunos ejemplos de prójimos que debemos amar como nos amamos a nosotros mismos porque Dios los ama:

Acerca de los migrantes y refugiados Dios dice: "No hagas sufrir ni oprimas al extranjero, porque ustedes fueron extranjeros en Egipto". Este país enfrenta un verdadero problema de inmigración, algo que sólo los políticos pueden resolver. ¿Pero qué hacemos tú y yo? Lo único que sugiero es que no usemos un lenguaje degradante hacia nuestro prójimo, simplemente por su estatus migratorio de origen nacional. Eso sería incumplir el segundo gran mandamiento, que el Señor nos dice que es amar a nuestro prójimo, incluso a nuestro prójimo extranjero como a nosotros mismos.

A una trabajadora de Catholic Relief Services que actualmente sirve a la gente de Gaza se le preguntó por qué estaba trabajando en esta región musulmana. Y su respuesta fue: alimentamos las necesidades de las mujeres y los niños, los refugiados, no porque sean católicos, sino porque nosotros somos católicos. Amamos a nuestro prójimo, porque Dios los ha amado y francamente a nosotros primero.

Nuestra primera lectura también dio otro ejemplo de amar al prójimo diciendo: "No explotes a las viudas ni a los huérfanos". Hoy no tenemos demasiadas viudas ni huérfanos, pero en aquella época, la viuda y el huérfano eran las personas más vulnerables de la sociedad. La viuda no tenía marido que la cuidara, y el huérfano no tenía padres. Por eso la Ley de Dios ordenó a la sociedad en general cuidar de estas personas más necesitadas. ¿Quiénes son hoy las viudas y los huérfanos, a quienes no debemos hacer ningún mal, a quienes debemos cuidar?

Una ley más de la lectura se refiere a los pobres a quienes se les presta dinero u otra ayuda. Dios dice: “no te portes con él como usurero” con ellos. Mientras que la justicia exige que paguen lo que deben, la caridad exige que se tenga que perdonar el préstamo o parte del préstamo y ciertamente los intereses. ¿Quiénes son los pobres de hoy, a quienes podríamos sentirnos tentados a extorsionar debido a su pobreza y falta de poder, político o de otro tipo?

Jesús concluye su respuesta al intérprete de la ley diciendo: “En estos dos mandamientos se fundan toda la ley y los profetas:” el amor a Dios y el amor al prójimo. Esto se debe a que estos resumen los Diez Mandamientos:

      Cuando guardamos los tres primeros mandamientos, los mandamientos de la primera tabla de Moisés, de hecho, amamos a Dios: adorándolo sólo a él, no profanando su nombre y santificando el Día del Señor.

      Cuando guardamos los últimos siete mandamientos, los de la segunda tabla de Moisés, amamos de hecho a nuestro prójimo: respetando a nuestros padres y a nuestros mayores, protegiendo la vida, observando la fidelidad conyugal, respetando la propiedad de los demás, hablando la verdad, evitando la envidia, de los bienes ajenos y de los cónyuges.

Conclusión

Y así, aunque el doctor de la ley tuvo mala intención al poner a prueba a Jesús preguntándole “¿cuál es el mandamiento más grande de la ley?" ha brindado la ocasión para que Jesús nos enseñe una verdad fundamental. Ahora podemos ver las leyes buenas, no como un obstáculo para nuestra felicidad, sino más bien como el medio concreto para mostrar nuestro amor a Dios y al prójimo.

Además, estos amores no están separados. Permítanme dar la última palabra a la Primera Carta de San Juan, que dice:

Amemos, pues, ya que él nos amó primero. Si uno dice «Yo amo a Dios» y odia a su hermano, es un mentiroso. Si no ama a su hermano, a quien ve, no puede amar a Dios, a quien no ve. Pues este es el mandamiento que recibimos de él: el que ama a Dios, ame también a su hermano (1 Juan 4:19-21).


Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Homily Day of Prayer and Fasting for the Holy Land: For the Peace of Jerusalem Prayer

 Homily for Mass for the Preservation of Peace and Justice



Notre Dame Seminary, New Orleans LA

October 17, 2023

READINGS: Rd 1 - 888-3 - Jas 3:13-18, Ps - 889-3 - Ps 122:1-2, 3-4a, 4b-5, 6-7, 8-9, Ac - 890-1 - Matt 5:9, Gs - 891-2 - Matt 5:38-48

Introduction

“Prayer is the meek and holy force to oppose the diabolical force of hatred, terrorism and war.”  With these words at last Sunday’s Angelus, Pope Francis invited all believers to pray and fast today for the people of the Holy Land.

Inviting the faithful to pray is something that the Pope has consistently done, starting the very day he was elected pope.  He has invited the whole world to pray during the COVID crisis; he invited us to pray when the war in Ukraine broke out.  The terrorist attacks by the Hamas on innocent Israeli citizens is clearly another occasion for worldwide prayer.  For although the conflicts in Palestine have been going on for many decades, the ferociousness of these recent events has raised the stakes for violence and terror to new levels.  And as Catholics, one of our responses, is prayer.

Scripture and Theology

But what will prayer do, one might ask?  Is this not just another case of “thoughts and prayers” often glibly doled out by politicians and celebrities after a tragedy?

For us Catholics, prayer is how we deal with everything, the good, the bad and especially the ugly.  We turn to God. Our prayer today continues in the Old Testament tradition of prayer by lamentation.  A large portion of the psalms and the Book of Lamentations are exactly the kind of prayer we offer now. We cry out to God in agony, naming our terrible sufferings and asking God, as only he can, to save us.  Even when with Jesus we ask: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” we are not doubting him, but instead trusting him.  Because our relationship with him is that of a humble child talking to a loving father, we trust that he knows and will answer our prayers according to his will and in his time.  Our prayer of lament is not a sign of despair, but the antidote to it; it is not a sign of hopelessness, but a sign of hope.

Such prayer of lament also helps us be real and not live in the clouds.  We avoid the extremes of either sweeping our of pain under the rug or reacting in the kind of vengeful ways Jesus teaches against in the Sermon on the Mount.  We respond constructively by telling God, “This is what we are feeling.  Can you do something about it?” And then we leave it to him.

Besides lament, our prayer today is also a prayer of intercession.  We are praying primarily not for our own suffering, but for the suffering of others, even our enemies, real or perceived.  With Pope Francis, we are praying that “children, the sick, the elderly, women, and all civilians not be made victims of the conflict.”  We are praying for bereaved mothers who have seen their children die brutally, from both the attacks of Hamas and the indiscriminate bombings of Gaza by the Israeli military.  We are praying for the release of the Israeli hostages taken by Hamas, whose place Cardinal Pierbattista, the Patriarch of Jerusalem, has offered to take.  We are heeding the instruction of St. Paul to Timothy, “that supplications, prayers, petitions, and thanksgivings be offered for everyone, for kings and for all in authority” (1 Tim. 2:1).

Christian Life

But our prayer for the Holy Land must not leave us unaffected.  This day should inspire us to be better informed the complex situation of the Holy Land.

1.    Do we know enough about the Holy Land conflict to speak about it through the lens of faith and reason, and not that of ideology?  Do we know about the unspeakable living conditions of 2.5 million Gazan including 150 Catholic families?

2.    Do we know something about the on-going efforts at mediation, even by the Church?  Do we know about the two-state solution long supported by the Church, "which would allow Palestinians and Israelis to live side by side in peace and security", for peace can only come from justice?

3.    Do we know what the Church teaches about legitimate and proportional self-defence as opposed to vengeance?

Conclusion

Psalm 122, which we prayed for Vespers 1 this past Sunday says, “For the Peace of Jerusalem pray”.  And so, as we celebrate this Mass, this sacrament of unity, “Let us pray for the Israelis; let us pray for the Palestinians; let us pray for Christians, Jews, and Muslims.”  Let us pray for ourselves, that we may always work for peace and justice always.


Monday, August 14, 2023

Homily Ordinary 19A: Turning to Jesus in the storms of life

 Homily for 19th Sunday Ordinary Time Year A 2023


Introduction

Do you have a favourite apostle?  Mine is St. Peter.  And the reason Peter is my favourite apostle is not because he was chosen by Jesus to be the head of the Church, but that he is very much like me, very much like the Church itself.  He is imperfect, very imperfect.

He is often saying the wrong thing, doing the wrong thing.  How can we forget his boldly promising the Lord that he would stay with him even unto death, and then a few hours later, denying Jesus, not once, not twice, but three times!  How can we forget last Sunday’s gospel where in excitement he tells Jesus that he wants to build three tents so that they can remain on the mountain?  And in today’s gospel we see him in his impetuousness asking Jesus to have him walk on water, but then doubting and soon after beginning to sink.

If ever there was a patron saint for imperfect people, I think St. Peter would win that prize.  And today’s gospel story shows Peter and the disciples being their usual selves, their usual imperfect selves and so provide us with a model of how to deal with our own imperfections and like them become saints.

Scripture and Theology

Let us return to today’s gospel to reflect on three aspects of our journey from imperfection to perfection.

First, the setting of the gospel passage shows us what the Church is.  The apostles and disciples of Jesus are in a boat, a boat often being the image of the Church.  That is why the Church is often called the barque or boat of St. Peter.  And this boat is crossing the sea, from our side to the other side, to heaven.  But as often happens with sea voyages, sometimes the sea is rough and to get to the other side, we have to overcome some rough seas.

And like the disciples, when we encounter those rough seas, we are afraid, it even feels like Jesus has abandoned us.  In the gospel passage, where is Jesus?  Why is he not in the boat with the frightened disciples?  Therefore, feeling abandoned amidst the turbulent waves, the disciples were afraid and scared, just as we the Church today sometimes are also afraid.  What is happening to us? We ask.  What is going to happen to our church, to our society, to our children and grandchildren?  God why have you abandoned us, we lament.

This image of the crossing the Sea was already anticipated in the Old Testament at the crossing of the Red Sea by Moses and the people of Israel.  They too were troubled by the waters.  What did they do?  What do we do?

And this brings me to the second point; what is our response, our reaction to the storms of life?  What do we do when the boat of our lives is being tossed about?  What do we do when friends and spouses fail us?  What do we do when the leaders of the Church fail us? What do we do when our society seems to be falling apart?  What do we do when things we had endowed with importance in our lives are no longer that important?

There are at least three possible responses, two of them bad, and only one good.

1.    The ever-optimistic people among us, those who wear rose-coloured glasses, will not see a problem at all.  They will say, don’t worry. Everything is just fine.  What is a little storm!  These are the apathetic people.

2.    At the other extreme, the ever-pessimistic, will like Chicken Little shout that the sky is falling.  They will blow the storm out of proportion; perhaps even create a storm in a tea-cup.  They will stoke unfounded fears among people, making extraordinary claims that are not rooted in truth. 

3.    As usual, virtue lies in the middle.  The correct response is to tackle the storm head-on, appropriately recognising it for what it is, not too much, not too little.  This response turns to Jesus who guides is addressing the storm.

That brings us to the third point of our reflection. We have seen how we react.  But what is Jesus doing while all this happens?  Jesus has in fact not abandoned us.  Just as in the story he had gone to the mountain to pray, for us he has gone to the mountain of the Lord to intercede for us.  He continues to intercede for us at the right hand of the Father.  All he asks is that we turn to him and ask for his help.  He is not a ghost; he is real, albeit with the Father. He is one who tells us: “Take courage, it is I; do not be afraid." 

Rather than looking for him in all manner of places, sometimes unhealthy places, we should seek and find him where he is present among us.  Remember Elijah found God in the unlikeliest of places, in the whispering sound.  Where is Jesus to be found now, since the Ascension?

The Fathers of the Second Vatican Council, taught us where and how to find Jesus Christ, who continues to fulfil his mission among us. They named four main ways in which he is present among us.  And so they said:

To accomplish so great a work, Christ is always present in His Church, especially in her liturgical celebrations.

[First] He is present in the sacrifice of the Mass, not only in the person of His minister, "the same now offering, through the ministry of priests, who formerly offered himself on the cross" [Council of Trent, Session XXII, Doctrine on the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, c. 2.], but especially under the Eucharistic species.

[Second] By His power He is present in the sacraments, so that when a man baptizes it is really Christ Himself who baptizes [Cf. St. Augustine, Tractatus in Ioannem, VI, n. 7.].

[Third] He is present in His word, since it is He Himself who speaks when the holy scriptures are read in the Church.

[Fourth] He is present, lastly, when the Church prays and sings, for He promised: "Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them" (Matt. 18:20) .

Yes, Jesus is off to the mountain to pray, off seating at the right hand of the Father, but he is also present among us today in his Mass, in the Sacraments, in his Word and in the whole church especially when we are gathered together as a community. 

Application

My brothers and sisters, the fact is that the storms of the sea voyage on which we are, on our way to heaven, are not going to go away any time soon.  We better make peace with the fact that we have to confront them head-on.  And the Lord has told us that he is with us.

Like Peter does in this gospel and elsewhere, let us turn to the Lord when we are in fear.  We turn to him in the Eucharist and Sacraments, in his Word and in the gathered Church, drawing from these sources, what we need for spiritual strength and daily sustenance.  Even when we foolishly doubt and stumble as we try to walk on water like Peter, we can still cry out to him again in the same Eucharist and Sacraments, in his Word and the gathered community of the Church, crying out, “Lord save me, I am drowning.”

Besides the bumbling St. Peter, my favourite apostle, many other saints also show us how to handle distress and fear.  The saintly Mother Teresa was not without distress in her life, experiencing the dark night of the soul, experiencing an apparent absence of Jesus in her life.  But she never gave up. She still turned to him in prayer, to strengthen and guide her.

Conclusion

And so, let us remember, that Jesus is only a phone call away, as it were; he is just a prayer away, in the Eucharist, in the Sacraments, in his Word and in our brothers and sisters. He is not a ghost. He is really present, if only we call upon him.

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Homily Easter 3A: A journey from confusion to faith, from darkness to light

 


Homily for 3rd Sunday of Easter Year A 2023


Introduction

You probably know the saying: “The journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.”  Today’s gospel is literally a story about a journey, a journey of two disciples going to Emmaus.  Let us join them on this journey, which is indeed a journey of the spiritual life, from darkness to light, from confusion to truth.

Scripture and Theology

The story begins by telling us: “Two of Jesus' disciples were going to a village seven miles from Jerusalem called Emmaus.”  But why are they going in the wrong direction, away from Jerusalem?  Jerusalem is where all the action is.  Yet they are leaving it, maybe even running away from Jerusalem!

Does this not happen us to too?  When we leave the Lord, when we run away from the Lord and run towards lesser goods. Do you know people who have left the Church when something terrible happens?  Perhaps you too also once left the Church, your Jerusalem, and instead went elsewhere to your Emmaus?

The good news is that Risen Lord then approached them.  They are downcast! They are confused!  They do not know what to believe!  He joins them, “but their eyes were prevented from recognizing him” perhaps because of their desolation.

How often Our Blessed Lord meets us when we are drifting into despair and sin.  And we too don’t often recognize him immediately.

Fortunately, the Lord does for us what he did for these two disciples.  He met them where they were, in their disturbed condition, simply asking them: "What are you discussing as you walk along?"  He does not jump in guns blazing, but simply wants to find out in what spiritual state they are.  And although they are confused, they not totally without hope. They describe to him the events that have just happened very accurately, much like we profess them in the Creed.

·       That Jesus the Nazarene was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people,

·       That the chief priests and rulers both handed him over to a sentence of death and crucified him.

·       That on the third day some women from the group astounded them with the news that he was alive, something confirmed by other disciples.

They really seem to know their stuff. It is just that since they have not seen him themselves, they are still doubtful, still confused.

Is this not the same state in which we often find ourselves?  Often, it is not because we completely do not know the Lord that we are down in the dumps, but because there are gaps in our knowledge, we are somewhat confused.

Like any good minister, the Lord transitions from meeting them where they are, to moving them further on the journey of faith.  He chides them: "Oh, how foolish you are! How slow of heart to believe all that the prophets spoke!” Then he helps them to understand the events of the previous few days in the light of Scripture.  He goes back to the very beginning of the Old Testament, that is, to the writings of Moses and to the writings of the Prophets, and using those passages shows them that all those things that happened to Jesus were foreseen.  But more importantly when seen through the light of Scripture, these events make sense.  He shows them that the Messiah was to come, not in power, but in suffering and sacrifice, just as the Scriptures had promised.  They are slowly beginning to see the light.

How often do we turn to the Scriptures when we are lost? Do we realize that like these two disciples, we can find the answers to our questions in the Word of God? We simply need to open our eyes to see what the Lord has already revealed to us.

When the disciples arrive at their destination, they invite Jesus into their home.  What they do is nothing out of the ordinary for the time; with the lack of quick transportation, highways and highway motels, it was not uncommon for people to host total strangers and stranded travellers.  In this case, how could they leave stranded such a guest, who had just explained the Scriptures to them so well! They probably figured that he would not turn around at night and slit their throats.  

We too, when we are confused, must invite Jesus into our home. Only then will he continue to heal us, and bring us out of our confusion and sin.  For these two disciples, they were in for a great surprise.  Even though their actual journey had come to an end, the spiritual journey was still continuing.

We read in the gospel that “while he was with them at table, he took bread, said the blessing, broke it, and gave it to them.  You may recall that these are the very four actions Jesus had performed on two previous occasions:

·        When he fed the five thousand people, he also took the bread and fishes, said the blessing, broke them and then gave them to the crowds.

·        At the Last Supper, he also took the bread and gave thanks, broke and gave it to his disciples, saying: “Take and eat.  This is my body.”

Then the story tells us: “With that their eyes were opened and they recognized him, but he vanished from their sight.  The Lord has thus brought them to light, first through the Scriptures and now through the Breaking of Bread, the Eucharist.  That is why they said to each other, "Were not our hearts burning within us while he spoke to us on the way and opened the Scriptures to us?" We too find our answers in the Word and the Sacrament, the two parts of the Mass.

What next?  The gospel passage told us: “So they set out at once and returned to Jerusalem [and] the two recounted what had taken place on the way and how he was made known to them in the breaking of bread.” Imagine that!  They went to Jerusalem to share the Good News that the Lord is risen from dead.  Even though it was nightfall, even though they were getting ready for bed, they had to go.  For after arriving at the end of the journey, after encountering the Lord, they must go and share the good news with others; they cannot keep it to themselves.

Christian Life

My friends, don’t we also make this journey, this spiritual journey to Emmaus, when tragedy hits us, when disappointment visits us?

·        It could be the disappointment that a boyfriend or girlfriend, a fiancé or fiancée, a husband or wife turns out not to be what we thought they were.

·        Our disappointment might come from our job, our career, our future prospects; things don’t turn out to be what we thought they would be.

·        But we are at our worst, when our disappointment is spiritual in nature, when it has to do with our faith, our relationship with God.

Fortunately, the Lord does not live us without help.  Like the disciples, he often restores our hope, especially through the Word of God in the readings of the Mass, the responsorial psalm, the gospel acclamation, the gospel and the homily.  He also restores our hope in the liturgy of the Eucharist, and in the other sacraments, especially the sacrament of confession.  What do we do next?

Conclusion

We too, after hearing the Word of God and receiving his Body and Blood at Mass, must set out at once and share what we received.  That is what the dismissal by the deacon at the end of Mass, in any one of its four forms tells us:

·        Go in peace.

·        or Go forth, the Mass is ended.

·        or Go and announce the gospel or the Lord.

·        Or my favourite: "Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by your life."


Monday, April 17, 2023

Homily Easter 2A: Sent on a mission of mercy and reconciliation


 

Homily for 2nd Sunday of Easter Year A 2023


Introduction

Imagine being one of the disciples of Jesus in that upper room. You are in hiding, having run away from the Lord, having deserted him because you feared to suffer and die with him.  And now suddenly he shows up, and the first words out of his mouth are not, “Why did you abandon me in my suffering?  What kind of friends are you?” Instead he says, “Shalom, Peace be with you.”

These are words of mercy, God’s mercy, divine mercy.  On this Divine Mercy Sunday, I would like us to reflect on how Jesus in these simple words, teaches a twofold message of divine mercy. First he showers God’s mercy upon his disciples and then he charges them with sharing that mercy.

Scripture and Tradition

Peace be with be you.”  The priest in the prayer of absolution says something similar during confession, saying, “through the ministry of the Church, may the Lord grant you pardon and peace.”  For divine mercy is not just about pardon, but also about peace with God, with each other and with oneself.  That is what Our Blessed Lord is giving to these disciples when he first meets them after his resurrection and greets them, “Peace be with you.

A week later, when Jesus came back to them, again he greeted them, “Peace be with you.”  And this time round, Thomas who was absent the first time, cared enough to show up.  Again the Lord extends his peace, his mercy even to this disciple who has come down in history as the doubting Thomas. He tells him, “Put your finger here and see my hands, and bring your hand and put it into my side, and do not be unbelieving, but believe.”  Perhaps overwhelmed by this merciful reception Thomas is inspired to profess his faith in Jesus and say, “My Lord and my God!”  Although Jesus chides him a little for his unbelief, he does not berate Thomas and scold him for his unbelief.  He treats him better than he deserves, which is what mercy is.  He slowly brings him to full faith.

But mercy received must be mercy shared.  That is why after saying “Peace be with you,” the Lord adds, "As the Father has sent me, so I send you."  What he had done, preaching and bringing about mercy through his death and resurrection had to be continued, so that each generation until the end of time, will experience that divine mercy, that saving mystery.  That is why the Lord sends them forth, to do this through teaching, through baptising and many other ways.  But in a special way Jesus he tasks them with forgiving sins: "Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained."

The disciples, the Church, however, cannot do this enormous work on their own.  They need power from on high.  That is why Jesus first "breathed on them and said to them, 'Receive the Holy Spirit.'"  By doing so, he empowered them to be able to do supernatural things, like believing in things that seemed incredible, being courageous to give up their lives for his name, loving their enemy when every bone in them told them to do otherwise, and being able to receive grace and give grace, which is really the life of God.  They can now share God’s mercy with others, because he has not only shared his mercy with them, but has also empowered them with power from on high to do so, telling them.  "Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you." 

Christian Application

Our Lord also says these words to us today.  He both offers us his mercy and challenges us to share that mercy with others.  This celebration should inspire us to return to our roots, to that upper room where Jesus first appeared to us and hear again the generosity of God who says to us sinners, “Peace be with you. We must return to that upper room, to hear the urgency of the mission: "As the Father has sent me, so I am sending you."

As Pope Francis has tried to remind us repeatedly, we as Church are on a mission to bring mercy to this world.  The titles of his writings about mercy are very telling of this truth.  One writing is entitled, The Name of God is Mercy reminding us that God is essentially merciful.  And when he proclaimed the Year of Mercy a few years ago, the document with which he did it was called, The Face of Mercy, reminding us that Jesus is indeed the face of the Father’s Mercy.

We are recipients of this mercy in many ways, but especially in the sacraments of the Church.  Consider the three sacraments of initiation.

·        In baptism, original sin, any other sins and all the punishments due to sin are erased and we are set on the road that leads to heaven.

·        In Confirmation, as the Lord did to the disciples in the upper room, he breathes the Holy Spirit upon us, to strengthen us for the journey.

·        In the Eucharist, where we celebrate the Lord’s death and resurrection, the very events that save us, we are brought once again to the upper room, to receive in Word and sacrament, the peace of the Lord.

We are also recipients of God’s mercy in a perhaps more immediate way, in the sacraments of healing.

·       When we are sick and are thus burdened with the weight of pain and suffering, both physical and psychological, burdened with the prospect of death, the sacrament of the anointing of the sick, brings us God’s mercy, so that we can bear this human condition in peace and hope, and receive the healing of our souls.

·       When we sin and are thus burdened with the prospect of the punishment of hell, and the realization that I have offended “thee my God who are all good and deserving of my love”, the sacrament of penance and reconciliation, brings us God’s mercy.  And then we can leave the confessional relieved when the priest says to us, “The Lord has forgiven your sins.  Go in peace.”

We are truly fortunate to be recipients of such a great gift of divine mercy.

Now what do with it?  How do we do share it?  There are plenty of examples in the Scriptures.  But let us turn to the readings of today for some inspiration.

First, how do we treat those who don’t believe as strongly as we do?  How do we treat sinners?  Consider how the disciples handled the unbelieving Thomas.  Did they condemn him or berate him?  No.  They invited him to come with them to the upper room, the next Sunday, just in case the Lord would show up again – and show up he did.

When is the last time you invited a fallen away friend to Mass, or even just to a Church function, to the picnic or fair?  The disciples stepped up to the plate and were the voice of Jesus to Thomas, so that he would then eventually encounter the Lord himself.  Jesus is sending you and me to do the same for our unbelieving friends, to carry out the spiritual works of mercy, namely, (1) To instruct the ignorant, (2) To counsel the doubtful, (3) To admonish sinners, (4) To bear wrongs patiently, (5) To forgive offences willingly, (6) To comfort the afflicted, (7) To pray for the living and the dead.

Secondly, how do we treat the less fortunate among us?  We should follow the example of the first community of disciples we heard about in the first reading, who provide us with a model of how to be Church.  We heard that they devoted themselves to four things: to the teaching of the apostles and to the communal life, to the breaking of bread and to the prayers.  And then, they also shared what they had in common, sharing with the less fortunate, according to each one’s need, not necessarily, according to their contribution.  Today we do that in carrying out the corporal works of mercy, namely, (1) To feed the hungry, (2) To give drink to the thirsty (3) To clothe the naked (4) To shelter the homeless, (5) To visit the sick, (6) To visit the imprisoned, (7) To bury the dead.

Conclusion

"Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you."  Our response to this message is one of gratitude, as we sang in the Responsorial Psalm.  Let us give thanks to the Lord, for his mercy is everlasting.  But for his peace and mercy to be everlasting, we must not keep it to ourselves, but we must share it with others, now and always.