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23rd Sunday Ordinary Time

Wis. 9:13-18b; Ps. 90:3-6, 12-14, 17; Phmn. 9-10, 12-17; Lk 14: 25-33

“Do you love me?”  That is the question posed to Peter and the question of the day for us.  “In every age O Lord, you have been our refuge” for those who love you.  Beginning with Genesis the story of salvation history has 7 wisdom warriors against the sin of the world “plus one”.  They include Adam vs his fall; Abel vs Cain, Noah vs flood, Abraham vs wicked nations, Lot vs the wicked people, Jacob vs night visitor, Joseph vs. his brothers; and then comes plus one.  “Plus one” is Moses who represents a new era as he battles the pharaoh.  Moses brings in the era of Israel as a child of God.  What these eight warriors share is the discipleship of abandonment to God.

Jesus is calling us to a greater love, a love of abandonment to his sacred heart.  We hear the English word “hate” used by Jesus and for us that has a strong meaning of rejection and lack of love.  It appears to imply a lack of love of others and even our own life.  Jesus however is not posing a contradiction to his call to the greatest commandment for love of God and love of neighbor.  Do we hate mother and father against the fourth commandment?  No more than we would “hate” angels, saints or our Blessed Mother.  The Greek word translated into the English has a different emphasis meaning a “preferential treatment” of placing Jesus before all else in priority of life.  We are all made for the one body of Christ to be in communion.   Spiritually we should not place anything or anyone before Jesus and when we do, we should hate the act of doing it.

In the English context we don’t hate the gift of our life, we place God before us and that requires of us an abandonment to God’s will and carry our cross.  As disciples there is a sacrifice to bear.  To bring it home to our reality, Jesus institutes his body as church.  As members of that body we cannot be cafeteria Catholics, especially in matters of doctrinal teaching.  Imagine that at the moment of death we face Jesus and our only response is “I met you halfway, like a brother.”  Where will that get us, halfway to purgatory? 

Many listened to Jesus and went away having “calculated the cost” and feeling his teaching was too hard.  Others may think it sounds great but it is not the “real world” we live in.  In whose world do we want to live in?  The choice we make has eternal consequences.  What is lacking is the first commandment, the Love of God above all else.  Where else are we to go?  We cannot save ourselves but God cannot save us without ourselves responding to Him.  Love opens the heart and soul to wisdom from above.  We receive wisdom through the Holy Spirit to respond to God’s divine will.  

To please God, it begins with an abandonment to his love.  Love leads to God’s revelation and a response to the wisdom from above.  Left only to our humanity “deliberations of mortals are timid” and “what is within our grasp we find with difficulty”.  God is within our grasp here present at the altar of sacrifice in the Eucharist and yet with difficulty we come to him especially through the sacramental life of the church.  Baptism opens the door to the Holy Spirit to receive wisdom from above; then we need the gift of fortitude to have the courage to grasp it and make it our own.  This is the incarnation of truth in our souls to overcome “the corruptible body (that) burdens the soul”.  I find it amazing that by the grace of God there are the “Incorruptible” that is saints whose bodies have remained incorruptible.  They are a testimony of someone who abandoned themselves to the will of God having had the opportunity to travel and see some of them.  He is closer to us than we are to ourselves.  The question remains, “Do you love me?” 

Paul an “old man” not only “a prisoner for Christ” is our wisdom warrior abandoned to the love of God literally a prisoner awaiting his death sentence.  He is the spiritual father of a slave Onesimus.  We can say what the Pope is to Peter, the priesthood is to Paul, a spiritual Father to his people.  Onesimus is a slave owned by Philemon.  Paul is advocating for a slave to be recognized as a brother in Christ. 

When Jesus asks Peter “Do you love me?” three times we think of it as a reminder of Peter’s denial three times.  And yes, how often do we deny Jesus in his call to love him above all.  It is also believed Jesus asks the question using the Greek word “agape” for love meaning unconditional love and Peter responds with the word “phileo” for brotherly love.  If you have a brother or sister it is not always that hard to say “no” to them.  Unconditional love is what Jesus asks of us today.  Peter!  God is before you and you respond with a weak brotherly love?  How do we respond to God’s call?

In a world of hierarchy there is always an authority we respond to even within the church and yet obedience to authority is a fellowship of love in Christ for a greater good, the good of other.  Today we are reminded that discipleship is more than “phileo” it is “agape”, unconditional and sacrificial love.  Together we sacrifice and abandon ourselves to the love that is waiting for our response.  “Yes Lord, you know that I love you”.  It is a love without end.  Amen.

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Pentecost Sunday

Acts 2: 1-11; 1Cor. 12: 3b-7, 12-13; Jn 20: 19-23

Can you say “Jesus is Lord”?  I was listening to a program on ETWN with Dr. Ray.  He had a guest who had been a prison guard at a maximum security prison in California.  His shift was at night and finding little to do he requested to review the files of the prisoners.  He noticed that many of the prisoners had histories of “Satanism”.  When he went home and told his mother she warned him to be careful and said one thing they cannot repeat is “Jesus is Lord”.  Given his curiosity he decided to put his mom’s statement to the test.  At night he went up to a prisoner and offered him a nice meal if he would say three words.  Incredulously the prisoner agreed.  When he told him all he needed to do was say “Jesus is Lord” the prisoner started to attempt the words and he became possessed making evil sounds.  The guard quickly closed the solid door in front of the rails that secured the prisoner.  The next night he tried again with another of the prisoner and the same thing happened.  Soon he found out that all these prisoners with satanic history could not mutter the words “Jesus is Lord”.  “Only through the spirit can one say ‘Jesus is Lord’”.  

One tragedy of this story is that one of these prisoners is the serial killer who killed one of our youth from this parish. This community has dedicated a school after and she is our goddaughter in heaven.  Evil is real and we are in the battle against the “wickedness and the snares of the devil” but we have been given the greatest power to overcome evil.  Where does this power lie?  It is in the unity of the one body when we come together and receive of the different gifts.  Jesus appears to the disciples who are gathered together and “breathed on them and said to them “Receive the Holy Spirit”.  When we gather together in prayer and call upon the Holy Spirit, we are given the power to go forth and face our battles with courage transformed to witness our faith in action and we will “renew the face of the earth”.    

In the Old Testament you may recall how the people gathered together to build the tower of Babel.  They wanted to reach the heavens by their own power.  God sent them tongues of confusion that kept them from understanding each other and they were dispersed because of their pride.  God is now sending down his Spirit with tongues of fire to bring back the dispersed into unity with God through his Son and the Holy Spirit that we may be one in him.  They are “different kinds of spiritual gifts but the same Spirit…all baptized into the one body”. 

For those who say “I believe in God but I go my own way” listen to this.  Our own way is the way of pride and confusion and the evil one knows our weakness to bring us down.  In an article in the National Catholic Register (NCR 06/09/2019, by P.J. Smith) it reports a growing trend of “Nones”, that is persons who claim to have no religious affiliation.  The percentage is 23.1% of Americans but among Gen-Z, those between 18 and 22 years old it is 40.4% as “Nones” with 16.2% Catholic and 14.4% as evangelical.  This separation from faith begins with our youth as they move away to college and find themselves apart from the unity of a church community.  Gradually these believers are challenged in their faith.  They stop going to church and separated from any affiliation with a group of faithful Christians the evil one finds their weakness.  Slowly they move from practicing their faith, to non-practicing and end up as “Nones”. 

Our power lies in unity within a community of faith that shares in the different kinds of gifts for the good of the one body of Christ we all belong to.  No one person can bear all the gifts except the one from who they come but we can all share in them and in our charity and love draw from them for the greater good.  Will there be martyrs along the way who will be singled out for their faith?  Yes, history remind us well of all those who gave their life for their faith.  They are dressed in white robes to be reminders of the one true sacrifice we all share in.  God prepares a special place for them as the book of Revelations makes clear. 

Having returned from Italy where thousands were sacrificed as followers of Christ, one place we celebrated Mass was at a cave in the catacombs.  There are miles of tunnels and within the walls are carved out spaces where the dead were laid to rest.  Within the smell of the dying the early Christians gathered to celebrate life in the breaking of the bread for they had witnessed the resurrection of Christ and believed.  Along one of these walls is a mosaic dating back to the first centuries with the image of Peter and Paul.  Peter husky with a big head of white hair and beard and Paul slender dark skin and long pointed dark beard.  The keys of the kingdom and the spread of the gospel is given to the church in these two men and we are the inheritance of this treasure.  Let us remain faithful that is a people of faith, hope, and love. “Come, Holy Spirit, come!” 

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