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16th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Woe to the shepherds

Jer. 23:1-6; Ps. 23:1-6; Eph. 2:13-18; Mk. 6:30-34

“Woe to the shepherds who mislead and scatter the flock of my pasture, says he Lord.”  We are all called to be shepherds within our flock be it our home, our schools, our church, our nation and our environment.  This week the readings began with a message of warning by Jesus from “I have come to bring not peace but the sword…Jesus began to reproach the towns…Woe to you Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida!”  He ends the week with a message of hope and love “Come to me all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest…’I desire mercy not sacrifice” and then proclaims today that “he is our peace”.  Looking for peace in this world then it can only be found in Jesus. 

Jesus not only speaks to the heart of individuals but to complete “towns” that make the citizenry as a whole.  The greatest enemy to a nation, a religion, and a home is the one who rises from within the flock dressed as a shepherd in search of its own power, glory, and prestige.  Without a foundation built on the common good, freedom, and faith in a power greater than ourselves we call God, nations, churches, and homes crumble from within and woe to those shepherds.  Woe also to those communities who together separate God from his people to create cities and nations of secularism.  God desires us to build up the City of God within his kingdom and it begins now in our own homes and communities. 

Many are the shepherds in public office who in a time of crisis see an opportunity to mislead and scatter the flock with a mantra “never let a crisis go to waste”.  In their governance their voices rise trying to guide the world to a new world order, to “reimagine” a new normal where identity does not come from God but is a choice, where equality and tolerance is a normalization of behavior against the natural law of God, where the right to kill the unborn is justified as a choice, where only the law and legal claims established by the ruling class have a voice, and where “The Lord our justice” is silenced not to be heard of in the public square. 

Woe to the shepherds of these nations who raise up children with obedience to only their laws and demand all must submit to the new “Caesar” of the land against individual rights and liberties of religion.  Woe to them who by decree demand us to “reimagine social justice” as a world filled with “rights” that normalize sin and silence the righteousness of God.  Recall Jesus warning to Chorazin and Bethsaida can befall a nation when it turns to its own idolatry based on an ideology and abandons God breaking the first commandment. 

Woe to the shepherds within religions who mislead and scatter when they approve of same sex marriages, abuse minors, promote a God of prosperity while neglecting the poor and suffering as their coffers grow in riches, and weaponize religion preaching death to others while raising themselves above to be first.  These will be among the last for the ones who more is given more is demanded. 

Woe to the shepherds of the household after being blessed with children turn to abuse, neglect, and/or exploit these little ones and drive them away from having any faith.  “The Lord our justice” comes to rescue his sheep without a shepherd.  As a culture of death surrounds us, the home is the last stand in defense of God’s righteousness.  Parent’s responsibility does not end with providing safety, food and shelter.  It is the beginning of love to raise our children to know God, love God, and to serve God.  Faith development begins in the home and we gather together in Mass to celebrate as a community our faith. Our legacy to our children is our faith and their greatest inheritance is God himself to be their peace.

“The Lord is my shepherd there is nothing I shall want.”  The Lord has placed his law within our hearts and comes to us in the mystery of faith to reveal his presence when we turn to him, repent, and seek his path of righteousness.  The Lord created the heavens and the earth to be a paradise, he created humanity to be holy, sanctified by his love but because of our fallen nature he came down from heaven to redeem us by his cross and shepherd us back to a state of sanctity.  Now the choice is ours to receive the gift and remain in his grace or wander on our own path.  Apart from God there is no paradise, no sanctity, no salvation. 

The Lord has appointed shepherds for us as he promised in Jeremiah.  Together we form the one universal Catholic and Apostolic church under the vicar of Christ, the pope leading the magisterium of the church.    There is a comfort in knowing what the church teaches does not come from the interpretation of the next bible preaching minister no matter how well intentioned their heart is but from the long history of hermeneutics, that is the interpretation and understanding of scripture and tradition going back to the Apostolic Fathers and Doctors of the Church. 

The truth of the gospel is built on a solid foundation handed on and guarded by the Holy Spirit.  Good intentions do not necessarily translate to truth and even a half-truth is misleading capable of dividing and scattering the flock.  New movements of faith rise and fall like the passing wind born out of the mind of shepherds in search of a flock.  It is God himself who calls his shepherds to be united to his body the church in obedience to what has been handed down and “woe to the shepherds” who take out or put in other teachings. 

The Lord refreshes our souls with the light of a new day reminding us to remain in him who is our hope.  The pastures he gives us comes from the breaking of bread to celebrate at the banquet of the Lord fed by his body and blood, taught by his word, and comforted by the heavenly hosts of angels and saints and by his flock when we gather together in prayer and thanksgiving. 

He guides us in right paths through the dark moments of life.  The right path is a two-edge sword of love and sacrifice.  When we call upon the name of Jesus, we receive strength and courage in our moments of weakness to persevere in difficulty, overcome suffering, and wait upon the Lord in God’s time to reveal to us his glory.  God’s time is not measured in human understanding but in the understanding of salvation and God’s mercy. 

He spreads the table before us at the altar to receive the sacraments of salvation to guard us against the enemy and our cup overflows with truth, goodness, beauty and unity.  Heaven does wait for tomorrow when the kingdom of God is already before us.  We are invited every day to enter into his kingdom, taste and see the goodness of the Lord and be blessed. 

Goodness and kindness follow when we enter into the sanctuary of his sacred heart as he remains in us and we remain in him.  The world does not know this for it seeks to build its own kingdom of power, pleasure, and profit destined to rise and fall as history has proven over and over again.  The house of the Lord is eternal and when we enter into the sanctuary of the church we are in the connecting halls of heaven and earth where angels descend and ascend in worship of Jesus in the eucharist.  This is the house the Lord has built, blessed are we who enter into it. 

The church cannot be defeated from without but we must guard from within the sanctity of being “church” to the world.  This sanctity of life is in a state of deterioration and we must return to a state of grace recognizing the sacredness of God’s creation.  Nature and matter were created by God as a blessing and we are being reminded by Pope Francis of the sacredness of the environment in the encyclical “Laudato Si”.  He calls it the “care of our common home” and is concerned with the growing “throwaway culture”.  There is a need to respect not only nature but also the natural law created by God.  We need to recognize that it is not “all about us”.  God created the heavens and the earth and declared them “good” and his goodness must be respected in his creation.

The sanctity of life has also become lost in a “throwaway” culture from the unborn to the elderly, from the poor to the disabled.  The right to choose death over life is not only a grave sin but the loss of an opportunity for redemptive suffering for a greater good.  In redemptive suffering we offer our suffering to God who unites us to his suffering and transform it into a testimony of love, holiness and conversion of souls. 

The sacredness of natural law has been discarded for the scientific drive of genetic manipulation that can create more deadly diseases such as “gain-of-function” research to make deadly viruses even worse and spread pandemics that kill millions.  Once created there is no control of their capacity to mutate and survive.  They seek to spread in hosts from animals in our food chain to humans.  Natural law is sacred and must be respected or it will turn against us to our own demise. 

Even though we walk in the “dark valley” we are to fear no evil for God is at our side.  We have been anointed with the oil of salvation from our baptism and confirmation.  We have been given the church to provide us the sacraments of salvation and this is the Lord’s house from age to age.  When the dark valley invades our hope and spirit and we find ourselves in a mental state of depression there is a cliché that says, “leave your home and don’t come back until the depression has lifted” meaning we don’t isolate ourselves but we go forth seeking to do good and God will be with us. 

The first place to go is to church where God is waiting, where his table is set with his own sacrifice of love for us, where he knows every hair of our head and where peace is waiting for us to meet.  This is that place, this is God’s house and together we build up the city of God in our common home. Thanks be to God for the calling of the good shepherds who know how to tend to the flock, pastor and carry their sheep with the love of God. 

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Ash Wednesday

Joel 2:12-18; Ps. 51:3-6, 12-14, 17; 2 Cor. 5:20-6:2; Mat. 6:1-6, 16-18

“Rend your hearts…now is the day of salvation.  And your Father who sees what is hidden will repay you.”  These lines coming from the three readings of today summarize today’s message of Lent.  Which is harder to make a spiritual inventory of our lives and reveal all the hidden sin we have covered up or to make a sacrifice of the flesh through fasting and almsgiving?  It is the former that is more difficult to make and it creates the “gift at the altar” for the latter to follow.  God’s blessing upon the latter is multiplied by the work of the former in a fearless moral inventory we rend our hearts to Jesus. 

To “rend your hearts” requires honesty of the ego to squeeze our hearts of the full significance of our sin.  It reveals the impact not only on the sinner but on everyone impacted by the sin.  It is tempting to reason “no harm done” when we skim the surface of our hearts than to consider the harm that does happen to our relationships with God and with others.  “Rend your hearts” to the truth that sin is the weapon that destroys our image of Christ and opens the wounds on the cross.  Bleeding is our integrity, honesty, faithfulness and our hope of salvation.  “Once saved always saved” is the lie of the evil one to deceive us and bring complacency and denial to our sins.  If sin is a rock that strikes the calm waters then the ripple effect is an honest appraisal of all impacted by that one act of sin. 

In the field of recovery from addictions there is the “Fourth Step” of the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions.  It states, “Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves”.  If fear is considered as inverted faith then our fears drive us away from faith and right action.  “If today you hear his voice harden not your hearts” with the courage of faith to search for the divine will ready to be the spoken word.  Faith delivers God’s mercy to liberate us of sin and bring truth to our moral compass. 

The liberated go forth to offer gifts of sacrifice in the form of prayer, penance, and charity.  It is surprising that the “old” tradition of fasting that has lost its brilliance in an age of indulgence is resurfacing for its great health benefits.  It is being promoted as a form of detoxifying the body yet the body and the soul are one.  What is good for the body is good for the soul and vice versa.  In fasting the soul is also being cleansed of its hunger for indulgence in the form of a spiritual discipline.  It is the one body and soul that is the temple of the Lord and together there is a purification in fasting to strengthen the virtue of temperance, that is regaining the right balance as the temple of God.  Who would of “thunk it” that the old returns as new again?  That is a recognition that there is one truth and it lies in God.  God is the creator of natural law we are called to follow.

In the perfection of obedience to the natural law of God we are purified to offer our gifts of charity and see them multiplied by grace.  It is the perfect way into the spiritual law of God to open our hearts to the great commandment to love God above all and our neighbor as ourselves.  In this is revealed the true image of Christ in us to be holy and perfect as your heavenly Father is holy and perfect.  It begins this day for those who take up the call to “rend your hearts…now is the day of salvation.  And your Father who sees what is hidden will repay you” beyond what our eyes have not seen and our hearts have not felt, what he has prepared for us. 

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15th Sunday Ordinary Time

Dt. 30: 10-14; Ps. 69: 14, 17, 30-31, 33-34, 36-37; Col. 1: 15-20; Lk. 10: 25-37

“…written in the book of the law”–The word “law” sets to mind a set of rules commanded and enforced by a controlling authority.  It is the first of several definitions but the most common understanding of the word.  Christ Jesus is the word of authority made flesh.  He is the antithesis of a controlling authority set by law to enforce rules.  The law is commanded by “being” a creation of God, a natural law “already in your mouths and in your hearts; you have only to carry it out”.  The controlling authority is our free will responding to the law within.  When we were born God gave us a gift.  It is the gift of self.  We fulfill the law through our free will. 

The “firstborn of all creation” came to rule by love, “the image of the invisible God.”  Jesus is God with us.  The bracelets that were popular for a while had the letters “WWJD” What Would Jesus Do.  We follow as Christians the will of God through Jesus.  We are called to be a visible image of the invisible God. 

The natural law of love is in our hearts, we have only to carry it out.  If love is in our nature one would think we are all great lovers of God and neighbor.  We have only to look at the world to see something went wrong.  Why is there so much evil then?  We can also ask ourselves “where is the peace and love in my life?”  What is missing?  Missing is uniting our will to the will of God.  The natural law of love is given at birth then the enemy of love comes.

Love is visible in an infant ready to respond to an act of love.  An infant is totally dependent on love to thrive.  Food and water alone are not sufficient nurturing for a child to thrive.  A child responds to two hearts of love beating in the womb, the child’s and its mother’s heart.  You are a child of God.  The heart of Jesus unites to our hearts in the Eucharist.  We are all the child in need of the mercy of God’s love. 

We are the victim on the street stripped of love.  We have been robbed of our innocence and purity when we are exposed to all the sins of the world seeking our weakness to cause our own fall from grace.  Who can resist the lure of the wolf in sheep’s clothing dressed in white and gentle to the touch?  Inside ready to be poured out is the trauma of a tragedy ready to happen. If we only understood the natural law of “consequence” we would seek first the will of God. 

Every act will have a just reward or punishment by consequence of natural law.  It may not only impact the person but generations to come.  The aborted child, the child raised by adoption, the sinner who turns their life around and uses that past to help others in the future has consequence.  One decision impacts a world of people.  The unknown is whether we will respond with “yes” to God or not. 

Love begets love and evil begets greater evil.  Those intoxicated with evil in any of its form sins against their own flesh and the outcome is but certain death.  It is death to self, to our identity as a child of God, to natural beauty and goodness.  In the end it is death to love, the essence of life left on the street of abandonment. 

Before we judge “not me, I have what I need” let us ask ourself “how well am I at loving?”  Am I one to show mercy when I am offended and hurt or when I see the less fortunate?  Is my love connected to them or only for myself and my select few?  Our capacity to love is our capacity to experience God and his mercy.  Our incapacity to love is our sense of abandonment from God’s mercy and love.  God is present yet without mercy we are isolated on “skid row” with poverty from love.  Life becomes a poverty without peace.

The command “Go and do likewise” is the assertion of truth.  It is not imposed on humanity it is what makes for humanity in God’s image.  This is what holds us together, the unity of the church with Jesus as our head to be Christian.  By nature, I am an introvert.  Introverts make the minority of the population 1:3 ratio introverts to extraverts.  Give me a book and a comfortable chair and I am detached from the world.  I would drive my mother crazy growing up because I buried my head in a book and people I avoided.  She would say, “I just want to hear you talk.”  If she could see me now standing before you preaching, maybe she is (after death).  God works miracles and has a sense of humor at it. 

Love is about attachment.  “Go and do likewise” is not easy and I must work at creating attachment, especially with the stranger.  There are some people who “never met a stranger” in the sense their interests in people moved them to reach out to others.  God bless them.  You may be like me or more of an extrovert yet both are commanded by love to reach out.  Love is transformative and it will change you as much as you allow to be that change agent in others. 

Christ is “the firstborn of the dead”.  He did not rise as a spirit but in body and spirit.  St. Thomas felt with his hands the wounds of Jesus and the disciples ate fish with him on the seashore.  He made himself present in the body.  We are to prepare our bodies for the resurrection.  Jesus carried the scars of the sins of others hate but we will carry the scars of our own sin as a sign of our redemption in Christ.  Now is the time to heal those scars before death and regain the purity of our bodies and souls. 

Before death as in after death our bodies and souls are our nature to live out in the image of the first born of creation, Jesus Christ!  “Go and do likewise”. 

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