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4th Sunday Ordinary Time – “Lest we die”

Deut. 18:15-20; Ps: 95:1-2, 7-9; 1 Cor. 7:32-35; Mk 1:21-28

Listen to him “lest we die.”  The “Holy one of God” has come, he is Jesus of Nazareth, and his voice is proclaimed today in the scriptures.  To him we listen “lest we die”.  We shall listen to no other voice and the voice that falsely speaks in his name “or in the name of other gods, he shall die”.  Who are these voices of our times that use the name of the Lord in vain or speak for other gods?  When the politics of government calls for the genocide of babies in abortion, or for the marriage rights of homosexuality in the name of God’s justice we have a false prophet on the path to death.  When people go to a spiritualist “espiritualistas”, hand readers, or guide themselves with daily astrology and zodiac signs they follow other gods on the path to death.  What voices do we govern ourselves by? 

Have you ever taken care of a child that is not your own and you give it a command only to have the child respond, “You are not the boss of me”?  Children learn to listen to their parents but they also are cautioned to not to listen to the voice of a stranger.  Last week we heard how the great city of Nineveh listened to the prophet Jonah and repented and today we have something greater than Jonah and Moses, we have Jesus, “the Holy one of God”.  He is “of” God not sent “from” God.  Being of God, he carries the authority and power of God the Father as the Son in the Spirit as one.  Are we ready to allow him to be “the boss of us?” The “boss” has given us a command, to listen to the voice of Jesus inscribed in our hearts and in his word. 

Are we ready to be obedient to his command?   His is the voice that can remove any unclean spirits from our lives.  In the gospel today, Jesus enters the synagogue and there was “a man with unclean spirit”.  This man was not out trying to sin in the world.  He had come on the sabbath to the synagogue following the Jewish custom.  He may have appeared as any other ordinary citizen.  He could be any of us today following the church customs yet living in bondage with a spirit of sin that possess us.  The voice of the spirit speaking the words “Have you come to destroy us?  I know who you are–the Holy one of God!” does not come from the man himself but from the evil one that has taken possession of him.  When we think of exorcism, we envision something radical like the movie the “Exorcist”.  The first exorcism of a Christian is in baptism to remove our original sin and allow the Holy Spirit to enter as a new birth in Christ.  The voice of evil is disguised in the ordinary of life. 

The Holy one of God comes with the promise of a kingdom, a kingdom in the spirit of God to remove the spirit of evil that prowls about the world seeking souls to enter.  What spirit has us in bondage that needs to release us and set us free?  Do we feel persecuted sometimes with a restlessness within our minds, hearts, and souls knowing that those thoughts, feelings, and compulsions are not rational or based on our circumstances yet we find ourselves overwhelmed seeking to be set free from within?  We need to come to Jesus, we need prayer, and we need to receive a blessing from a priest.  We need to pray a rosary to Mary and call for her intercession for she has crushed the head of the serpent and can crush the spirit that invades us. 

We don’t like to think or consider that we are not in control of ourselves or that we may be struggling with something evil yet where does lust, gluttony, rage, obsessions or suicidality find itself lurking in the lives of people.  Many will battle in silence, in shame, justifying their struggle as simply a human weakness, a character flaw or even a mental illness before considering that something greater may be lying within.  When science fails to justify the darkness within something more powerful than the human condition may have taken possession of a soul.  This is not to be confused with mental health conditions that have an organic origin from a chemical imbalance or from years of brain damage through drugs, alcohol or trauma.  The church always looks to science to determine and rule-out the organic cause before considering the spiritual cause. 

Jesus came to set the sinners free and heal the sick for he reminds us that the well have no need for a physician.  In the same way, the evil one is not concerned with those he already possesses from their own free will.  He is after those who oppose him who he yet wishes to conquer those who follow and believe in one God creator of all.  The evil one seeks to destroy us from the inside where our souls are destined for eternity and he has many spiritual weapons.  Jesus calls us to be vigilant not just for his coming but against the enemy.  The enemy can appear as a gentle lamb, he can come into those we love and use them to attack us. 

Recall how Jesus told Peter, “Get away from me Satan”.  He can even impersonate the dead  and falsely misguide us.  We are the first line of defense in the spiritual battle for the souls of this world.  We can even find ourselves fooled by an evil spirit.  Yet we are not alone in the battle when we pray.  When we find ourselves in a spiritual battle, we must call on the blood of Jesus, on the Holy Spirit, on the legion of angels and army of saints and always on our Blessed Mother.  We can easily claim we live in a “land overshadowed by death” but the death will not overcome us nor destroy the kingdom of God already giving us his light. 

In our second reading from 1st Corinthians, it reveals the Lord’s ways are not our ways in this teaching to the “adherence to the Lord”.  One spouse can oppose the other when practicing their faith, coming to church, or spending time in prayer.  These “anxieties” in which a married man or woman is “anxious about the things of the world” and how he or she may please their spouse is part of the sound doctrine for the call to celibacy “for the sake of propriety and adherence to the Lord without distraction” in the life of a priest or religious sister.  The sacrament of marriage is not to divide us from the love of God but to unite us as one in the love of God with God as the center of both of our lives.  To many marriages end in divorce because they begin with God as the “window dressing” of the wedding day and never grow beyond it. 

Finally, we see in the gospel that the “people were astonished at his teaching” with authority, driving out unclean spirits.  This concern with a “new teaching” caused disruption in the status quo and some even accused him of demonic possession, blasphemy and false prophecy.  They plotted to destroy him for what Moses cautioned his people “lest we die” in listening to all the false prophets of the world.  Who is truly the false prophet speaking to our hearts?  Moses prophesied the coming of Jesus who we are to listen to against the status quo of worldly prophets whose gods are the rise up of ‘isms” to rule our lives as in Marxism, Socialism, Capitalism, and Communism that end up in narcissism.  As Jesus taught the Pharisees who accuse his disciples of “doing what is unlawful to do on the sabbath…For the Son of Man is Lord of the sabbath” (Mt. 12:1-8).  Let us continue to listen to him who desires “mercy not sacrifice” (Mt. 12:7).  Let us allow our hearts to discern the truth already given to us in our hearts through the gift of the Holy Spirit. 

In mercy, our hearts carry a gentle soul, joyfully worshiping in our faith, with childlike hope.  Our hearts cannot be hardened or governed by ideologies of the world.  We recall how Jesus observed the Jewish law of his inheritance yet he claimed, “Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets.  I have come not to abolish but to fulfill.”  (Mt. 5:17).  We are called to fulfill his call for which we have been born and it comes through him who our Lord God called us to listen to him lest we die. 

We do not fear the storms of evil that bring pandemics, dictatorships, tragedies or even death.  We stand for mercy to defend life from conception to death.  This week was the 48th March for Life largely virtual with the theme “Together Strong: Life Unites!”  Our strength is from the Lord who made heaven and earth.  Life unites us to listen for his voice amid all the other voices in the world through prayer, through the celebration of the Mass, through the tenets of the Church, and in his teaching inscribed in our hearts and in his word.  The voice of God is for life and justice for all “lest we die”.    

We do not take God for granted thinking “I am baptized so let me go on with my life” lest we die.  We call out the evil one as Jesus did “Get away from me Satan”.  As a child there are good guys and bad guys and the good guys always win.  As we mature in our Christian faith, we recognize there is a battle between the saint and the sinner from within and the winner is?  Jesus, when we call out his name.  Jesus!

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1st Sunday of Advent – Be watchful!

Is. 63:16-17, 19b, 64:2-7; Ps. 80: 2-3, 15-16, 18-19; 1 Cor. 1:3-9; Mk. 13:33-37

“Be watchful!” in mindfulness.  We begin the new year in the Church this first Sunday of Advent mindful of a year overtaken by a pandemic and watchful of a continued virus threatening the world.  The Lord also calls us to be both mindful of the Lord “in our ways” and watchful in this the year of the Lord for his coming. 

“Mindfulness” is the current cultural trend in wellness as something new.  We learn however from today’s first reading that mindfulness is as old as the book of Isaiah in the words “that we were mindful of you (Lord) in our ways”.  In mindfulness the focus is remaining in the present awareness not only of your inner being but also of your “watchful” eye around you.  This keen awareness allows for the eye of the soul to focus on what matters apart from the noise that steals our attention cluttered with worries, temptations, constant distractions, and mindless activity aimed at filling in for the silence and avoiding the presence of God. 

We believe in the presence of God and we say “God is in control” but do we remain mindful of his presence in all “our ways”?  We must recall “our ways” are not his ways and here lies the great divide between what we profess and “our ways”.  Our ways focus on “self” according to pleasure, power, prestige, and profit.  However, the gospel of Mark reminds us “For what would it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul? (Mark 3:86)”.  The higher purpose of “mindfulness” is to unite our “self” to God’s way.  Our watchfulness is to see the hand of God at work in our ways and give glory and honor to our God. 

God’s way is to remain mindful of him as “our father, our redeemer”.  Mindful of God our father we recognize him as the “potter” and “we are the clay” seeking to form us in his loving hands into his image of love.  As a loving father he molds us by grace with all the spiritual gifts to enter into “fellowship with his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord”.  Mindful of God our redeemer is awareness “we are sinful…and our guilt carries us away like the wind”. Mindfulness of God allows us to also recognize the evil one coming in fear, temptation, distraction and mindless activity to separate us from the love of God. 

Mindfulness is to be watchful “as you wait for the revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ”.   In mindfulness we remain watchful “for the Lord hears the cry of the poor” and our poverty lies in our separation from all that is truth, unity, good, and beauty.  This is our separation from the love of God.  Be watchful for the coming of the Lord to lead us along the path of righteousness, to answer our prayers, to give us the grace to respond in our trials with the power of his love.  Be watchful as the Lord comes to destroy what is evil, to destroy the enemy of death, to purify the soul for the final coming to lead us home. 

In mindfulness there is an awareness that all things matter in spirit and truth.  This includes the awareness of sin.  We don’t live by the rule “I did not kill anyone” as if avoiding mortal sin is all that matters.  It recognizes if all things matter the smallest of venial sin matters in our awareness of having offended thee O’ Lord.   The evil one tries to convince us “no harm done” if we lie a little, cheat a little, steal a little after all when we did it when we were little it was cute.  Soon we believe no harm done in little things and become immune to bigger things. 

When I was little, we were poor but I didn’t know it.  Most of my toys were made up from my imagination until Christmas when Salvation Army came by to drop off a box with toys from stores.  One day my mother went to visit one of her friends who had children.  I saw all these toys in the house.  When we got home my mother noticed I was acting different.  She asked me, “what’s the matter?” in Spanish.  I said “nada” meaning nothing and started walking backwards.  I lead her to the bed where I had hidden a toy I took from the other children as I kept saying “nada”.  She made me take it back and treated it as not so cute.   Has your child ever taken a candy at the store and you made them take it back or was it just not worth it after all it is just a little thing?

Mindfulness is not obsessiveness.  Bad politicians like to say “never let a crisis go to waste”.  The devil could not have said it any better.  In this pandemic we see mental health issues, a rise in depression, addictions, anxiety, and suicide.  This is especially a time to be mindful of the evil ones’ opportunity to bring chaos into our relationships.  The evil one will lead your mindfulness to obsession and neurosis.  We are mindful of safety precautions with a virus and act prudently to protect ourselves but obsession creates such fear of germs as to become obsessed with washing of hands that it leads to neurosis.

As an introvert being intra-mindful is more natural than extra-mindful.  An introvert is simple task oriented focused on going deeper in spiritual awareness at the risk of not losing awareness of the beauty around us.  For an extravert it is more natural to be extra-mindful and better at multi-tasking to see the hand of God at work around us.  Whether we are being intro or extra-verts, God is above us, beneath us, behind us, before us and remains within us for our awareness as we go about our ways.

Father Miguel Marie from the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal on EWTN whenever he celebrates mass says “as if this was the first time, the last time, the only time”.  This is love.  This is an awareness of the significance of the moment of the presence of God.  Mass is an act of thanksgiving for the sacrifice of Jesus on the altar.  Each moment of life comes once at this time and moves us closer to the eternal.  Be watchful!

Until the hour of his coming we are to be mindful of our Lord in all our ways in order to be ready to receive him in all our heart, soul, and mind.  Who can we turn to in as our reminder of true mindfulness more than Our Blessed Mother who did all things with her watchful eyes of love toward her son. Thus, be watchful of his coming and mindful of his presence that we may follow his way to the eternal glory of God. 

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17th Sunday Ordinary Time

1 Kgs. 3:5, 7-12; Ps. 119:57, 72, 76-77, 127-130; Rom. 8:28-30; Mt. 13:44-52

The kingdom of heaven is not an entitlement we collect by simply claiming “I believe in God”.  The kingdom of God is something we must seek and sacrifice for to be given the understanding of Solomon.  We are to first be conformed to the image of his Son to enter the kingdom of God.  In an age where we value acceptance of “our identity” as we claim it, we lose sight of identifying with the image of God’s son who is “other” than ourselves.  We are “right” in seeking God’s image as our being and “wrong” in claiming our own as an entitlement. 

Wisdom is from God to give an “understanding heart…to distinguish right from wrong” and respond with prudence in doing his will.  In the gospel today, Jesus continues with his parables to the wise and prudent describing the significance of the kingdom of God to humanity as the eternal love and longing of our purpose of life.  The wisdom of Solomon was judging rightly with what to ask for in service to God’s kingdom.  Solomon’s love for God was in being the best he was created to be as the leader of his people.  Our love for God then is in being our best in responding to our calling in life in service to others. 

This is challenging and difficult if not impossible without the grace from God that comes by searching with the heart of understanding God’s will for our personal calling in life.  In the worst of situations and in the best of situations “all things work for good for those who love God.”  God is mercy when we seek our identity in him. 

For some time, it was popular with the youth to carry bracelets with the letters WWJD meaning “what would Jesus do”.  This is seeking out our identity in him, inviting him into our “space” and time which if we claim to belong to Jesus is his rightful space and seeking understanding through the Spirit to respond in his image in this moment of our being. 

Now is the time to recapture that moment of truth “what Jesus will do through his servant of love”.  Such great challenges have been conquered by the saints and souls who surrender to God actively seeking to do his will.  Have we asked him today “what is your will for me this day Lord?” 

Sometimes we compartmentalize life into steps, such as step one is to “pray” and step two is “go forth”, and step three is “action” as a cognitive process like learning to type where all the keys are and consciously thinking of all the keys.  Learning to type is a cognitive process but typing is the unconscious process of being able to “just do it”.  In the same way Christianity is taking all our prayers, devotions, and understanding to “just do it” in charity being the image of God through the Spirit that is with us.  Let us give God the freedom to “just do it” in our being through an act of the will and the mystery of his kingdom will reign in us. 

The evil one is “prowling about the world seeking the ruins of souls” when we see hatred, violence, and destruction justified a “right” and authority, order, and peace shamed as “wrong” in an effort to create a new “kingdom” not of God but of this world.  It is a spiritual battle for the souls of the people fought not only on the streets but in every church and home.  One day I was struggling with making a difficult decision as a child and I asked my mother for guidance in her “understanding”.  I was totally surprised when she responded “you will have to decide”.  In her wisdom the right answer needed to come from me through the Spirit given at baptism.  She understood I would be the one who would live with the consequences of the decision. 

This nation is facing a difficult decision and we each must decide where our Christian values are best represented and supported not simply in our inner being but in our outward expression in the public square.  As Catholics we value the outward expression of our faith in statues, crosses, the arts, and even the sciences together with our right to assembly and worship.  This cannot be governed, shamed, or silenced by an oppressive voice in the public domain.  Today “you will have to decide” to who you surrender power to, either God and the kingdom of heaven or the evil one and the kingdom of hell. Blessed Mother Mary pray for us.

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