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26th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Am. 6:1a, 4-7; Ps. 146: 7-10; 1 Tim. 6:11-16; Lk. 16:19-31

“Lay hold of eternal life” and fight the good fight!  Jesus became poor in the flesh yet remained rich in his divinity to pour out riches to those who “pursue righteousness…Compete well for the faith” says the Lord.  We are born with a competitive drive in fact, we love a good fight to win just look at all the sports options to drive our competitive fire.  Friday night lights in every community are ready for the intensity of the game, the rush and the thrill of victory.  How well do we compete for our faith?  “Blessed he who keeps faith forever, secures justice for the oppressed, gives food to the hungry” and finishes the marathon of life.  May we be blessed to say “I have run the race and fought the good fight…it is finished”. 

We are reminded “Woe to the complacent in Zion!”  Complacency is more than taking our faith for granted.  It is depriving it of nourishment so that when the test comes, we find ourselves surrendering without a fight.  The first nourishment and line of defense is the sacraments of the church. These prepare us for the fight as the foundation of faith.  Through the sacraments Jesus pours out his riches in grace to provide us the weapons of virtue, knowledge, and wisdom.  This does not come to the complacent but to the those who seek through prayer, devotions, study, and fellowship. 

How much time do we spend in fellowship as a community?  Tis the season for church festivals uniting ourselves in support of our parish.  Study of our faith is power to be good in apologetics defending the faith.  We recently had Scott Hahn speak at our parish, a minor miracle given his international ministry and we were blessed to have a packed church.  Devotions both private and as a community like coming to Mass the first Friday of every month fill us with grace.  Prayer is God’s time we give to be open to the spiritual work God wants to do in us. 

Complacency says “not now God”, see in the intensity of life there is always something that is demanding attention, time, priority.  The intensity of the world becomes the normative way and it deprives us of our time to mature in faith and wisdom of God.  We judge ourselves as not complacent because we adhere to the intensity of worldly demands yet the spiritual life is dormant.  We carry the spiritual life of a child hoping for the best and fearing the worst. 

We are called to “Lay hold of eternal life” that is our mission statement.  We do this when “we give life to all things…with faith, love, patience, and gentleness”.  The rich man did not give life to all things, beginning with Lazarus “who would gladly have eaten his fill of the scraps that fell from the rich man’s table”.  The self-indulgence of the rich man landed him in the “netherworld, where he was in torment.”  There was no escape yet he begs for his five brothers to be warned.  Abraham prophetically tells him “If they did not listen to Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded if someone should rise from the dead.”  So true for Jesus came suffered died and rose from the dead and the world continues addicted to the sin of self-indulgence, they will not repent. 

To fight the good fight in the world the first battle to be won is internal.  It is the one that draws us to the intensity of sins of self-indulgence.  Like an addict we keep seeking the intensity of a new high or chasing the memory of a past experience because the current experience has created a vacuum.  The vacuum can only be filled by Christ.  The battle within cannot be won without the power from above, God’s mercy and love.  To lay hold of eternal life in this world is the victory for Christ and he shows us the way.  St. Augustine says, “Trust the past to God’s mercy, the present to God’s love and the future to God’s providence.” 

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Fourth Sunday of Easter

Acts 13: 14, 43-52; Ps 100: 1-3, 5; Rev 7:9, 14b-17; Jn. 10:27-30

“All who were destined for eternal life came to believe”.  Who is destined and how do we know?  I have often asked the question in RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults) who believes in predetermination or self-determination.  Answers vary in the group with some feeling in the tradition of Calvinism that God has predetermined everything and we are living out the plan.  Others go to the other side of feeling in the tradition of Gnostics that God created us and placed us here to work out our salvation but remains distant from interfering with our life.  Then there are others who simply never considered the question and have no idea.  Where would you stand as a believer? 

The believer who does the will of the Father is destined for eternal life.  This does not imply that God is simply an observer of our daily life waiting to determine our destiny simply by our actions.  Jesus stands at the door of our hearts knocking ready to engage us in our daily life but our hearts must respond to receive him.  Is there a plan of salvation written into our hearts for each of us?  Absolutely, it is custom drawn to go with our personal state of life for us to follow.  God also knows our inherent weakness and free will and will continue to knock on our hearts to return to his plan for us.  The prodigal father and son remind us of this reality.  No matter how much we turn away from him he cannot deny himself and his love is everlasting.  Yet not all live to do the will of the Father.  In predetermination there is an individualized plan but not all follow. 

“Follow me” is the core message of last week meaning follow Jesus.  Self-determination then is our journey of faith governed by our free will, intellect, and emotions that are the essence of our soul.  To unite our free will, intellect, and emotions is to unite our soul in relationship with the Father’s will, the mind of God, and his love.  The perfect union is the ecstasy of grace one in being with the Father in the Holy Trinity.  Into this plan of truth, goodness, beauty, and unity we are a people of God.  If this does not excite us then we are not ready to simply let go and let God be my Lord and savior. What is the resistance that keeps us from being glorified in the word of the Lord?  We remain set on going “my own way”. 

“No one can take them out of the Father’s hand”.  This is not predetermination that “once saved is always saved.”  We choose to take ourselves out of the Father’s hand in our self-determination.  The word has been given to us since our baptism.  God is waiting for what we choose to do now.  Signs to awaken us to his presence surround us.  We have Jesus life, death, resurrection, the descent of the Holy Spirit, his body and blood in the Eucharist, and the church to serve as his authority.   Follow these signs and graces will pour out of his riches in glory.   

“My way” does not listen for the voice of the Lord.  It is not watchful and attentive to a God who is nearby.  The soul wanders seeking to discover “the way” as the Israelites in the desert who were never far from the promise land but kept wandering within a region while God waited for the conversion of their hearts.  In what ways are we wandering in search of truth, goodness, beauty and unity without turning to our God?  God waits for our conversion and it begins with an act of the will to let go and receive him who is love.  Jesus is the way to follow to the promise land “and they will never perish”.   In God are truth, goodness, beauty and unity of love.  Let us answer the call and follow the good shepherd and we will know we remain in his hands. 

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Wednesday 9th Week in Ordinary Time II 2018

2 Tm 1: 1-3, 6-12; Mark 12: 18-27

Our first reading is about our calling from God the Father.  Paul is “in persona Cristi” as father to Timothy calling him “my dear child”.  That is the love of God the Father for us all.  Through the imposition of the hands it is about the call to the priesthood and for us now deacons also.  It is a gift of “power, and love and self-control…to a holy life not according to our works but according to his own design.”  God has designed a mission and purpose for each of us.  It is a gift, what gift?  The gift of salvation, “he saved us” through baptism we are saved from our sins with the power to overcome sin with love and self-control.

Salvation leads to service, “the calling”.  In baptism we all share and receive the calling as priest, prophet and king.  “A calling is something you live and are willing to die for.  That is the essence of the sacrament of marriage.  In marriage preparation a good question to ask a couple who claims they are ready to get married is, “So this is the person you’re willing to live and die for?”  That is the level of commitment in a covenant.  The bride of a priest is the church “entrusted to me” says Paul and by extension the priesthood “until that day”.  That day is the day of immortality approaching us and is already here for our loved ones who have passed from death to light immortal.

Paul is “appointed preacher and Apostle and teacher”.  We are appointed father, mother, teacher nurse, doctor, farmer, coach, business owner, administrator and more but also to preach by our witness of faith, apostles to evangelize beginning at home and to teach in raising our families in the faith.  At the end of Mass we say “Go forth” meaning go forth to fulfill your mission.  Mathew Kelly in his book Perfectly Yourself says “mission is a meeting between self and service”.  We receive the gift of grace to be formed in his image to respond to his call.  Paul reminds us it is not about us, “our works but according to his design.”  Fulfilling our mission has a place in the salvation of the world.  We have been called by name and today we have an opportunity to give our fiat as the Blessed mother surrenders complete faith and trust.  Let us also say, “yes Lord I have come to do your will, teach me, guide, and give me your grace to walk boldly in faith, hope and love.”

In the gospel, the Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection.  One would think that is a good hope to have.  It appears they were more interested in their earthly inheritance and building up their earthly treasures.  In fact the Sadducees were part of the priestly class in power to rule over the people.  To believe in the resurrection meant to believe in judgment for their actions.  To deny the resurrection meant no eternal consequences.  Jesus however responds with the same scripture Book of Moses with the quote from God, “I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob?  He is not God of the dead but of the living.”  This they cannot deny.  The God of the living has that day also marked a the day of judgment.

None of us have reached the resurrection so we only have a sense of this mystery from Jesus and scripture, “they are like the angels in heaven”, “We shall be like Him as he is” (1 Jn. 3:2), “Never again shall they know hunger or thirst, nor shall the sun or its heat beat down on them for the Lamb on the throne will shepherd them.  He will lead them to springs of live-giving water, and God will wipe every tear from their eyes” (Rv. 7:15-17).  In heaven, “They will look upon his face, and his name will be on their forehead.  Night will be no more, nor will they need light from lamp or sun, for the Lord God shall give them light, and they shall reign forever and ever” (Rev. 22:4-5).  This is our faith, this is our hope, and this is why there is a crucifix reminding us of the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross, his covenant with us.   We share invited to share the cross on the journey to get to heaven.  It is our gift for purification.

This reminds me of my early childhood when families looked to children as an inheritance that provided more workers in the fields and everyone turned over their pay to the father to manage the household.  Big farming families or big migrant families the bottom line was more is better.  In the past it was common to lose a child from any number of diseases something we have come a long way in preventing.  Today the world preaches less children is better and more makes for more poverty.  Today children are still being born in large numbers but lost in conception through an ideology of less is better with contraception, abortion, genetic manipulation, in vetro fertilization and end of life decisions on health care with no fear of eternal consequences.  In heaven there is no marriage because there is no more reproduction but love remains.

God keeps his promise.  Let us not be “greatly misled”.  We are his children of the faith.

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