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13th Sunday Ordinary Time – The Lord speaks!

1Kgs. 19:16b, 19-21; Ps. 16:1-2, 5, 7-11; Gal. 5:1, 13-18; Lk. 9:51-62

The Lord speaks!  The Lords speaks the words “Follow me” to each of us this day.  Elisha is anointed by Elijah and immediately Elisha recognizes the call by Elijah to follow him “as his attendant” his understudy “as a prophet to succeed you (Elijah)”.  In the same way in today’s gospel, the Lord Jesus speaks calling some to follow him but like Elisha they desire to attend to their personal and family needs before accepting the call.  Jesus words are definitive “let the dead bury their dead” and “no one who…looks to what was left behind is fit for the kingdom of God.”   The Lord speaks clearly to be his follower is a call to sacrifice for the greater kingdom. 

We are all called to the kingdom of God, but some receive a higher calling, to leave everything behind and “go and proclaim the kingdom of God.”  The church has discerned that the Lord speaks of this calling as special grace given to the priesthood and religious life. They leave behind not only the family of birth but the hope of marriage and personal family for the kingdom of God.  Perhaps this is why we dare not ask the Lord “Speak, Lord your servant is listening”.  The Lord speaks of a complete surrender to him something we fear and would respond to with the same desire to say “yes, but…let me take care of what is in my heart first”.  When the Lord speaks it is for us to place him in our hearts before all else. 

We too are baptized priest, prophet and king called to leave behind a life of sin in a world that seeks its own kingdom. We are called to sacrifice in union with the heart of Jesus.  This month is celebrated the Sacred Heart of Jesus with the church recognizing in June the Friday after the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, (last Sunday) as the Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus.  The heart is a symbol of love and the image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus surrounded by the crown of thorns reminds us of his passion and death “for the ungodly” as proof of his love for us.  Even now as baptized and reconciled to him he gives us his promises to join our hearts of flesh with his most sacred heart when we come to him.  So, what do we fear? 

We fear surrender of our will, we fear what the Lord may ask of us, we fear the unknown.  We hold onto what we know and our desire for control and our illusion to live this life for ourselves as the center of our universe.  We don’t know how to detach, to let go and let God. To surrender to God is to gain everything while to hold on is to lose even ourselves for we are dust and to dust we shall return but to those united to the Sacred Heart of Jesus is to gain what is eternal. 

We pray prayers, we pray what is in our mind, but do we call out to God to say “Speak, Lord, your servant is listening”?  Are we listening?  Jesus is not speaking in the wind, he is not speaking in the fire, or the constant noise around us.  He said he would put his law of love in our hearts.  We have to search our hearts before we hear his voice and “the words of everlasting life”.  An examination of our heart brings us to Jesus and his Sacred Heart, to the truth of the gospel, and to where we are to go and follow him.  Dare we go there?  The real question to ask is “dare we not go there?”  Eternity depends on it. 

The Lord speaks of being called for “freedom”, a freedom from the flesh, a freedom from being focused on oneself, a freedom to “love your neighbor as yourself”.  The flesh is driven by the senses “what feels good” as the pleasure principle that no matter how much we try to satisfy the senses there remains a hunger for more.   The focus on self is driven by the mind to build oneself up, to be first among others, to create an image of false pride as if we did it “our way” and God was simply a spectator.  How foolish!   For the Christians, God is always active in our lives.  The freedom to love your neighbor as yourself is driven by the will that we may be one in union with God called to be one in the Trinity, in the communion of saints and in this world with your “neighbor”. 

The senses of the flesh are for us to taste, see, touch, hear and smell the goodness of the Lord in his creation.  They lift our spirit up to God.  Taken wrongly they become the purpose and not the means to a greater good.  We have all heard the expression of someone who “lives to eat” rather than “eat to live”.  This is indicative of misguided passions.  The mind is our connection to the truth of God set free to discern his presence in our life as a listening servant to do his will.  The mind can fool itself into thinking what it believes is the only truth that matters to claim for itself.  The freedom to love the other as yourself is an act of the will to do God’s will even when the other is unwilling to love.  It is the freedom to love that can protect us from sin and by not doing to others what we would not want for ourselves. 

Do we welcome Jesus into our heart and into our home?  Imagine Jesus walking into our home what he would see, feel, say and receive.  Would he see his peace and unity given to us as his followers or would he see individual battles being fought to gain control?  Would he feel the love of his sacred heart pouring out for the good of each other or would he feel the hurt, bitterness, anger of being offended by the insensitivity of others?  Would he say I recognize my own and my own recognize me or would he say “I do not know you” and would we even recognize him?  And what would he receive from us, our love, a place of rest to lay his head, a place at the table to break bread as a family or our complaints?  Consider and let us ask ourselves are we more prone to rejoice in what others do and celebrate life or to complain for what we want them to do? 

This week marks a major victory for the defense of life for the unborn child against the claim of individual rights to choose and privacy as a “constitutional right”.  There are limits to our freedom and privacy in many of the laws for a better society.  The right to choose and privacy does not exist when an adult commits the crime of child abuse and molestation within the privacy of their home.    The state recognizes the need for defense of the most vulnerable in our society.  That defense is now possible to extend to the unborn child in the womb.  While the battle will continue, we now recognize in science what was not known before in terms of the potential for viability and humanity of the unborn.  It is a child with the full potential to live in this world as a gift of life from God.  The Lord speaks for the unborn as his sacred heart calls out “let the children come to me and do not prevent them; for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.” (Lk. 18:16)

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Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ

Gen. 14:18-20; Ps. 110:1-4; 1Cor. 11:23-26; Lk. 9:11b-17

To all the fathers, Happy Father’s Day!  Today we celebrate the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ as the summit of our Catholic faith.  From Melchizedek in Genesis in his priesthood with “bread and wine” as a foreshadow of Christ himself to St. Paul looking back to the command of Jesus to “do this in remembrance of me” to Christ himself in the multiplication of the loaves and fish, it is a manifestation of the sacrifice of Jesus giving up his body and blood to nourish our lives, remain with us, and lift us up to heaven. 

God the Father has given us his Son for our salvation.  Jesus the Son gives us himself as a sacrifice of love of himself and the Father.  Together they are the epitome of what our lives as Father’s with our children are to reflect.  Our children are a gift from God and we are to give them up to God by raising them to be his children by coming to know, love and serve God.  Jokingly a parent may express their rights over a child with the words “I brought you into this world and I can take you out”.  Nothing can be a more distorted view of life that this, to assume “our” children means total rights over their life.  They as we are a child of God first and we carry a right of responsibility to bring them up as a child of God. 

Fathers are the first image of God the Father to be head of the domestic church at home.  This is a right to make the greater sacrifice for them.  It is in the sacrifice that we gain our authority to lead them in the way of God the Father.  Nothing gives a child more of a lesson of love and humility than to see their Father bow his head and pray, to listen to a Father’s prayer of surrender to God, to hear a Father’s words of love for God and their family.  In a Father’s prayer the mask of false pride and power is removed and the truth of our weakness and trust in God is revealed.  A father’s love is a powerful sign of our heavenly Father to grow in faith, hope and love.

Children believe what their fathers do more than anything they say so that our words may confirm what our actions reveal about our own faith and obedience to God.  If we desire the best for our children, it will never come from what we can give them of the world.  The best for our children comes from our relationship with them learn from us how to be the best God created us to be, to discover purpose and meaning in life, and to see in Jesus that it is in giving of ourselves that we receive the kingdom of God for eternal life.

If we truly believe there is a heaven and a hell and we will determine our eternal destiny by the way we live this life then there is only one thing that matters above all.  It is the “one way” God has provided for us to his glory.  The rest is just a “supporting cast” of gifts from God to live this one way to heaven.  Our home, our work, our friends and family all are a gift of God’s love and mercy.  The Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ is a reminder of the “one way” we die to ourselves that we may rise to eternal glory.  Let this be the day others see in us our love manifested in our acts of charity to be the true image of God in this world.  Then we will truly live our call as “fathers” making every day a Father’s day. 

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Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity – One in God

Prov. 8:22-31; Ps. 8:4-9; Rom. 5:1-5; Jn. 16:12-15

One in God and three in one we celebrate this Most Holy Trinity.  The mystery of faith is this unity to be one in God united to the Most Holy Trinity.  Called to be children of God can we say, “The Lord possessed me”?  From the beginning who is this “I” poured forth “before the earth”?  “The love of God has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit” and through the blood of the Lamb in Jesus Christ.  God is love thus God has poured out himself throughout the earth giving of himself to us.  The Son of God “was his delight day by day, playing before him…When the Lord established the heavens” he was there.  Father, Son and Holy Spirit is there and there is now here with us and for us to be one in God. 

The “Spirt of truth” brings us the voice of God in the Son to guide us and strengthen us that we may even “boast of our afflictions in hope of the glory of God”.  The Lord finds “delight in the human race”.  We are his delight as a son is to his father who in his fatherly wisdom is guiding us through our afflictions to grow in sanctity that we may be perfect in faith, hope and love.  The struggle of humanity is recognizing when we fall from our sinfulness we may rise again by the mercy of a Father’s love.  When the world drives us to follow our own way limited by what little we know the Father sent us his Son to follow his way by the revelation of truth and the guidance of the Holy Spirit.  God is truth in its undefiled and unblemished totality coming to us in the Spirit.  

We pray “I believe in one God” Father, Son, and Holy Spirit and in “one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church”.  The Church is the bride of Christ who has received the revelation through the Spirit of truth in its holy servants who by tradition and word have given us “the Word of God”.  Before the word was written down as scripture, before Word was made flesh in the Son of God, in the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God one in being and was poured forth “beside him as his craftsman”.  

One in God the Lord takes delight in us partakers of his creation.  Belonging to creative matter still “little less than the angels” we are to have “rule over the works of your hands” as trusted caretakers of creation.  The Spirit of truth comes that we may begin by taking care of our bodies to be kept holy as the temple of the Lord.  The Spirit of truth comes that we may care for the environment of whose elements our bodies are formed and sustained.  The Spirit of truth comes into our souls that we may be prepared to receive the gifts of the Spirit to be transformed even further into the image of God. 

Let us lift our voices up and proclaim “the Lord possessed me”, I am his and he is mine.  The Lord’s possession is one of love not as slaves.  We belong to a kingdom of love where treasures are there for us to possess as gifts of the Holy Spirit.  These gifts are the power to bring down other kingdoms of evil, to overcome spirits of darkness, to lift up others from their fallen state of death.  Possessed by the Lord we have the Spirit of truth, the power of love, and the victory over death.  Here lies the human dilemma none of this is possible by any act of our will but by our surrender to God that we may be possessed by him.  As we surrender to God we no longer live for ourselves but for his will to be done in us, we no longer seek our way but his way by having a true relationship of love with God, and we no longer belong to the kingdom of this world but to the kingdom of heaven one with God we remain in his presence. 

Most Holy Trinity come to us and remain with us as we rise up to the reality of the eternal kingdom among us for the glory of heaven, here I am. 

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Pentecost – Solemnity “If only!” 

Acts 2:1-11; Ps. 104:1, 24, 29-31, 34; 1 Cor. 12:3b-7, 12-13; Jn. 20:19-23

“If only the Spirit of God dwells in you” then we are alive because of the righteousness of Jesus Christ who brought death to sin in the flesh.  Are we alive in the Spirit?  Surely in baptism we received the gift of the Holy Spirit and were confirmed in the same Spirit in Confirmation.  If alive in the Spirit, then sin cannot reign in our life for good and evil cannot share in the one body.  Temptation to do good or evil can enter the mind but the Spirit of love has one choice to follow.  Yet we are a sinful people in need of redemption called to return to the Lord through the sacrament of confession.  How is it for us to be in the Spirit and not fully there yet?  Called to be perfect the stain of sin can also rise again by our free will and enter to ruin the soul. 

“If only we suffer with him so that we may also be glorified with him.”  Here lays the human dilemma to take up our cross and follow him in our suffering.  Such was the faith of the early church Fathers and martyrs to suffer and die for their faith in the risen Lord.  Such is our calling to accept that which we cannot change and make it an offering to the Lord.  Suffering does not come from the Lord as Jesus gave witness to bring healing to the suffering.  Suffering is from the world where disease, violence, hate, evil, and tragedy enter and the evil one waits to see if we will weaken in faith and pounce upon the souls of the vulnerable.  It is in offering our suffering up that we become glorified in him. 

If only we believe willing to follow all that we have been commanded and keep his word out of fire of our love for him.  Fear is not to be the source of obedience to the law of God but love is.  Love is a relationship of knowledge where we come to know the three persons in one God and desire to be united to God doing his will out of love for him.   This is the sign of faith when we proclaim we believe we also follow our proclamation with the right action under the law of love for God.  If we say we believe only to follow our own way we only deceive ourselves.  And what about following our conscience?  Conscience is always associated with unity of thinking “con” meaning “with” someone.  Who is our thinking united to?  Is it with God, our friends, the norms of the world?  Our thinking is not our invention it is our alliance to something or someone? 

If only we can say “Jesus is Lord” to receive his spiritual gifts.  We say it in word and deed coming from the spiritual gifts, baptized and united to the one body of Christ.  “There are different kinds of gifts…different forms of service…different workings but the same God”.  Do we recognize the gift(s) we have received and practice the service that God is working through us? We are to be aware of the Holy Spirit at work in us and through us bearing fruit for the kingdom of God.  Otherwise, we may be like those who Jesus described as saying “Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy…drive out demons…do mighty deeds in your name?  Then I will declare to them solemnly, ‘I never know you.  Depart from me, you evildoers.’” (Mt. 7:22-23) Lesson learned, doing the will of the Father is not “window dressing”, looking the part and going through the motions of being called “Christian”.  Doing the will of the Father is a conversion into his very likeness. 

If only we were doing the will of the Father, then the words Jesus spoke “As the Father has sent me, so I send you” would be fulfilled.  To the disciples who he instituted as the priesthood “he breathed on them and said to them ‘Receive the Holy Spirit.  Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained.”  The gift to act in the person of Christ and forgive sins was given as a primordial commandment to the disciples with the Holy Spirit.  This came after the institution of the Eucharist when he said to the disciples at the Last Supper “This is my body, which will be given for you; do this in memory of me.” (Lk. 22:19).  These foundation stones of the church in the body of Christ are what many followers who say “Lord, Lord” have left behind. 

Many may say “if only I can pick and choose at will and still be saved” but that is not doing the will of the Father.  God said to Moses, say that “I Am has sent me to you.”  Am I living the “I Am” that is doing the will of the Father?  Is the Father in me and I in the Father as Jesus was in the Father and the Father in him?  The Holy Spirit comes as the Advocate that we may know he is in us and we are in him doing his will. 

Did you know that the words “I am” appears over 300 times in the Bible from Genesis to Revelations?  Jesus made seven profound “I am” statements “I am the bread of life…I am the light of the world…I am the gate…I am the Good Shepherd…I am the resurrection and the life…I am the way, the truth, and the life…I am the true vine” (google search).  In what way am I now able to claim I am living the gifts of the Holy Spirit by doing the corporal and spiritual works of mercy?  This is not a mystery but a divine revelation given to us to follow. 

If only we would “fear not” to do the will of the Father.  Did you know the words “Fear not” appear in the Bible 365 times” (google search)?   Essentially one for every day of the year, we are to fear not answering the call to holiness.  When we fear not, we walk in faith.  Where does our faith lie?  It lies in the mind of Christ being outward focused.  Where does our fear lie?  It lies in our mind being inward focused.  The more we focus away from ourself we put fears to rest in the hands of God and go forth.

“If only” implies not there yet.  We cannot get there on our own but the Advocate is given to transform us from a people of waiting upon the Lord to receiving the Lord and acting upon the Lord.  Let us eliminate the “ifs” in our lives and stay focused on “only”.  Only in God we trust.  Only in the gifts of the Holy Spirit does the fire of love come to know and serve our God.  Only in Jesus Christ and his seven “I am” proclamations does salvation come to us.  Only I can accept salvation by going from the fear of “am I?” to the transformation into “I am” a child of God come to do his will.  Peace be with you.  And with your Spirit.  As the Father has sent us Jesus, Jesus now sends us forth.  Amen. 

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