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5th Sunday of Easter – Remain in me

Acts 9:26-31; Ps. 22:26-28, 30-32; 1 Jn. 3:18-24; Jn. 15:1-8

“Remain in me, as I remain in you.”  In Jesus we can do all things and bear fruit for whatever we ask.   Jesus reminds us, “because without me we can do nothing”.  This bears the question, “how much are we doing to bear fruit for the kingdom of God?”  Does it cross our mind or even a concern of ours that God has a purpose for us?  We did not come into the world to be our own God as the secular world leads us to believe.  It is not all about “Me” it is about “Him”.  Jesus did not come into the world to be served but to serve and be one with the Father.  This is how we remain in him when we allow him to be one with us.  Why would we not desire his oneness in us and in all who we love? 

The power of God’s grace is there for us to take up on the road to holiness.  Remaining in Jesus is an act of the will to keep his commandments, an act of faith to believe in the name of Jesus Christ, and an act of love for each other in our charity.  In Jesus we see the fruit of our every day blessings those we bring to each other when we remain in him.  Apart from him only darkness and sin remain with death as the companion. 

Spiritual formation calls for pruning the spirit to grow straight towards the “Son”.  The first pruning is in baptism for the removal of original sin.  It does not end there it is just beginning.  In the first reading Barnabas takes charge of Saul and brought him to the apostles because they feared him.  In life we don’t get to heaven “figuring it out” by ourselves.  Parents take charge of their children to bring them to the waters of baptism, to send them to catechesis and to bring them to Mass.  Parents who say let them grow up and “figure it out” if they want baptism or what faith to follow, are not taking charge of the faith of their children as stewards of their flock.  There is a reason for children to be called “kids” like goats because they need the pruning of discipline and guidance not just for behavior but for spiritual development. 

If we reflect back on our faith, we will recognize a “Barnabas” in our lives who took charge of bringing us to Jesus.  Often it is our parents who read us bible stories, shared their faith and taught us to come to church but not all.  Unfortunately, there are many stories by adults who grew up with no faith development and yet along the path a “Barnabas” came into their lives and invited them to church or shared their conversion story, or just by the fruit of their faith demonstrated a peace and joy that attracted others to seek that peace.  Who was “Barnabas” to you that has you here this day instead of “out there” trying to figure it out on your own? 

In my own story, I identify my mother as the “Barnabas” who took charge of me bringing me as an infant to be baptized to receive not only the gift of the Holy Spirit but for Jesus to remain in me as I struggled with my own faith growing up.  She taught me to seek him in scripture and made sure I prayed each morning before going to school and each evening kneeling down by my bed before going to sleep.  That alone remained with me during my wandering days as a youth and young adult.  We should say a prayer of thanksgiving for our “Barnabas”. 

Sometimes it is the one who brought us back to give the church an opportunity for hope and direction in our lives.  It can happen in a retreat, in a confession or even in the workplace.  It can be our spouse, a sponsor for our sacraments, our grandparents, or simply a friend but the miracle of conversion comes through relationship.  Saul’s conversion began with Jesus appearance speaking to him.  Jesus sent Ananias to open the eyes of Saul in his conversion after being blinded by Jesus appearance. Then Barnabas took charge of him to bring him to the apostles as the visible church of Christ.  In Saul’s conversion it was a series of people who took charge to fulfill on step in his journey.  We too can look back to how in each step of our faith development it may not have been just one person but a number of people that kept us going in the right direction. 

God not only puts others in our path of faith but he is also calling us to be instruments of his love in the faith of others.  Who do we claim to have served as an instrument of God in bringing them one step closer to their conversion?  Ultimately it is God who does the miracle but by remaining in Jesus we will “bear much fruit”.  In the end God will reveal to us the fruit we have produced and it may surprise us…all the lives we impacted for his glory.  He will also reveal the fruit we were to produce and did not and what we will bear in our purgatory for in the end justice belongs to God. 

God desires us to be difference makers, the one he calls to be the difference.  We can be as much of a difference for good and righteous as for evil and injustice.  In the end it will be one or the other.  Good and righteous does not just happen.  We take up our cross daily and prepare ourselves to respond one way or the other but nothing is neutral including the choice to not respond is an act of omission.  Better to try and do poorly than to avoid and fail completely.  If we say, I don’t want to try and fail then we have already failed by failing to try.  God rewards the effort and is in charge of the outcome. 

As Jesus remains in us, we are being pruned by our response to our daily struggles, joys, offerings and sacrifices.  In his divine providence no day goes without how we have responded to him down to even our thoughts and feelings.  Do we let go and let God work through us as we trust in him?  Problems don’t go away.  How we respond to them is what makes for holiness.  The best response begins with prayer and leads us to follow a path guided by the Holy
Spirit.  It helps when we also call upon God’s saints, our Blessed Mother Mary and our guardian angel to intercede for us.  In fact, this is the year of St. Joseph and recall St. Joseph is the terror of demons so we can make a consecration to him to be at our side as we overcome our trials and tribulations.  But nothing will happen with all the heavenly hosts unless we place our trust in God.  Here then is the stumbling block. 

How are we to learn to trust when our lives have already felt the sting of being hurt, betrayed, rejected, and even abandoned?  Jesus lived through all of this and more in his passion and death.  In the passion of Jesus, he remains in us to overcome our suffering with us.  He is the power to live through anything and everything when he remains in us and we remain in him.  In his death he surrenders to God his spirit and gives us his spirit to fear not.  In his victory over death, he makes all things new.  We can be made new in our faith, hope, and love through the resurrection of Jesus.  He lives and remains in us.  In the resurrection we learn to trust as we focus on the risen Lord, his power to rise up in the fullness of his divinity and humanity.   The light of new hope is Jesus resurrected.  This is our Easter time to celebrate Jesus rose from the dead to remain with us. 

At the end of the diaconate program there was a celebration with the Bishop and I was given the opportunity to speak on behalf of the candidates.  I gave the Bishop a gift.  The gift was pruning shears and asked him to be gentle as we move into our call as deacons.  Jesus is the gentle shepherd who does his shearing of us that our wool will serve to make great blessings in the lives of others and then as sheep we grow new wool that is even greater graces coming from God. 

Psychology teaches that our temperament is inherited at 60% and our character is learned at 40% and together that makes our personality.  That 40% that we learn in our character is the pruning we gain in our life experiences to grow straight as we allow God to remain in us.  In God we gain the wisdom to see his hand in our lives and take each moment to be the best we were created to be making it a God moment. 

Remaining in Jesus is placing our trust in him and this is where the pruning is a true sacrifice.  Let Jesus be our voice and the Holy Spirit our heart and the Father’s will our action.  That is grace at work. 

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4th Sunday of Lent – Rejoice, O Jerusalem!

2 Chron. 36:14-16, 19-23; Ps: 137:1-6; Eph. 2:4-10; Jn. 3:14-21

“Rejoice, O Jerusalem” “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life.”  John 3:16 is printed in posters, cups, shirts, billboards and proclaimed by all Christian people. It stands as a foundation of faith in Jesus Christ and unity for his people and we rejoice in Laetare Sunday to be children of God.  In the darkness of sin comes the light of faith bring hope into the world. 

Faith and works unite as one when we act in faith and allow the works of God to be his love through us.  We live in it we rejoice in it and we fulfill the works of God in it.  It is in the ministry of the priesthood that accomplishes the works of God in the church.  It is the works of God seen in the service of the laity coming from our baptism and the gift of the Holy Spirit.  Faith and works are not to be divided any more than our soul is to be separated from our body for we are given both to serve as one in this world. 

John 3:16 is one of the most quoted verses of the bible by Christians of all denominations.  Human nature being what it is has in the same way created disunity among Christian people when it comes to salvation between those who profess “saved by faith alone and not by works” and Catholic faith in salvation by grace in unity with works.  James 2:26 reminds us “For just as a body without a spirit is dead, so also faith without works is dead”. 

Today Ephesians makes a strong argument for faith, “For by grace you have been saved though faith, and this is not from you; it is a gift of God; it is not from works so no one may boast”.  Saved by grace and rich in mercy is our God who desires us to recognize how great is his love that he gave us his only Son to save us.  It is clear salvation is a gift of grace from God who is “rich in mercy.”  We may ask how one confession wipes away all my sins if not by the rich mercy of God.  How can any of our works be considered justification for salvation since we believe in John 3:16, Jesus died in atonement for our sins that we “might not perish”?  The simple answer is we don’t.  An act of faith opens the gates of salvation to receive the grace of mercy from God.  So where does “works” stand in salvation? 

“Works” are the visible signs of God’s work in us “so no one may boast” as their achievement but give God the glory who is at work to bring salvation to the world.  Salvation is a gift “though faith” visible in the works of the faithful.  Anyone who claims to have “faith” gives light to their faith in the visible works of God as we surrender to him.  Consider the works of Moses, Elijah, and all the great prophets and all that God accomplished through their faith and trust in God and became the “handiwork” of God “for the good works that God has prepared in advance” for them.  It is our turn now as a people of faith to be the handiwork of God for the works he has prepared in advance for us “that we should live in them”. 

If we live in God’s works prepared for us then we live in the light of salvation but if we turn to the “infidelity” of our own works then we live in darkness of a faith that is dead. “Infidelity to infidelity practicing all the abominations…until there was no remedy.”  Does this sound like ancient medieval times or modern times?  We live in a time of infidelity practicing all the abominations going from good to evil, from the sovereignty of human life to calling for the rights of abortion to end life, from made in the image of God to made in the image of genetic manipulation to create an alternative life, from God’s natural law of sexual identity to human law of identity preference, from the right to life until the end of life to the right to die at the time of my choice.  Works that stand for death stand against the fidelity to God as an abomination. 

Not only have we lost the commandment to keep holy the “Sabbaths” but all the other commandments are no longer the tradition of the public square.  They are being held captive to remain within the walls of the church not to be seen in public not even on the walls of anything considered a wall of the State lest we be canceled for infringement on the rights of the anti-commandment culture of death.  Where does freedom come from? Is it by authority of the State or by authority of God through his command of life? 

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”  (Jn. 1:1) We are reminded in the gospel of John that “all things came to be through him, and without him nothing came to be.  What came to be through him was life”.  Our lifeline is God and without God we are already the walking dead “in our transgressions”. If the State by the authority granted unto itself chooses the darkness of death then let us stand apart as “the light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it” (Jn. 1:5) Take courage in that our kingdom is not of this world as children of God. 

What is the remedy?  Perhaps the critical question is “what is the remedy God will bring upon this world?  Perhaps it has already begun as we see the hand of God amid all the crisis in the world “until the land has retrieved all its lost sabbaths.”  The remedy is Jesus Christ!  The remedy is a call to repentance and retrieve the “lost sabbaths” by returning to the commandments of God.  The remedy is a contrite heart in confession for the times we failed to answer the call to holiness and purity of heart.  The remedy is the courage to give witness to our faith in the works God desires to work through us.  The remedy is more than being “called” children of God, the remedy is to be children of God by the testimony we give every day in every way as the visible sign of his work in us.  As Catholics the remedy is the sacrifice of the Mass in atonement for our sins and the sins of the world. 

Salvation is a gift of grace “through faith”.  The gift is there but it requires action on our part and the first act is an act of faith to believe followed by the natural works that respond to our beliefs that give life to our faith and glory to God.  The mystery of faith is Jesus Christ and the works of faith are the children of God who radiate the light of faith in a world of darkness.  The works of faith, that is the children of God is the treasure he came to save and raise up from death into everlasting life and glory.  The train has left the station since over two thousand years ago and it is making its journey calling the faithful to come aboard.  The ticket to ride is an act of faith but there is work to do on the train of salvation to reach our journey’s end.  The one who does not work does not eat of the bread of life. 

We are reminded that the harvest is ready but the workers are few, not a good sign for this world.  The faithful are becoming the silent minority as less people return to the pews.  We are reminded that “Early and often did the Lord, the God of their faithers, send his messengers to them, for he had compassion on his people and his dwelling place.  But they mocked the messengers of God, despised his warnings, and scoffed at his prophets, until the anger of the Lord against his people was so inflamed that there was no remedy.”  Jesus is the messenger mocked, despised for his warnings, and scoffed as a prophet then and now when we dare to speak for the truth of God. 

It is not personal it is the universal battle between good and evil taking place in our times.  We are called to battle for our faith, we are called to be the remedy.  If not us then who?  Jesus has already come to give us life and to bring about his works through us.  If not now when?  Are we going to witness the enemy “burn the house of God”?  It is already happening in other parts of the world as Christian temples are destroyed.  The “walls of Jerusalem” the city of God is being torn down because those city walls are the walls of our heart that bind us to the heart of Jesus.  All “its precious objects” are the lives of the unborn, the sick, and the poor destroyed in a culture of death. 

“All the kingdoms of the earth” have been given to us as an inheritance and we are his people called to go up to the city of God.  Let us sing to the Lord a new song of love and devotion and give him our troubled hearts.  “Laetare Jerusalem” “Rejoice, O Jerusalem” and be glad while there is still time.  Mother church rejoices in the children of God and we rejoice in Mother Church to bring us the miracle of the body and blood of Jesus in the Eucharist.  The heavens rejoice with us united to our Blessed Mother Mary, St. Joseph and all the angels and saints.

Let us remember that the Church has declared this the year of St. Joseph to be with us as our intercessor.  He who was the defender of the Holy Family may have been silent in the scriptures but not in his fatherhood to Jesus and spouse of Mary.  Just this week in the news a Christian school is promoting that the children no longer refer to their parents as mother and father.  The attack against faith enters through the back door in the form of language to change behavior only to fall into the pit of abominations.  Destroy the family unity and you destroy faith. 

Today in Mass is our portion of the city of God and may our “tongue” never be silenced, may we never forget the giver of life, and may our God be with us all the days of our life until we too are lifted up into eternal life. The “verdict” is in for those who live the truth “so that his works may be clearly seen as done from God.”  Let us rejoice as family! 

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3rd Sunday of Lent – God commands “You shall not!”

Ex. 20:1-17; Ps: 19:8-11; 1 Cor. 1:22-25; Jn. 2:13-25

“You shall not” is given eight times by the Lord in issuing the ten commandments with only twice speaking in the affirmative.  “You shall not” does not leave any discretionary judgment in following the Lord’s commandments.  The two affirmative statements include “keep holy the sabbath” and “Honor your father and mother”.  As clear and direct as these statements are, we see in the gospel of John “But Jesus would not trust himself to them (Jews or Gentiles) because he knew them all, and did not need anyone to testify about human nature.  He himself understood it well.”  What does Jesus understand well of human nature?  Could it be that human pride stands in the way of obedience with a humble heart?

Regardless of how clear the word of God is human nature looks for signs and wisdom to believe the word but the true sign of the power of God’s word is Jesus crucified, “a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles”.  In other words, human nature looks to itself to transform the word into its own wisdom when Jesus crucified is the call to a transformation of self by faith.  Let’s consider the wisdom of human nature.

God says, “You shall not have other gods besides me” but it is said the world revolves around money so that remains a priority and major concern of life so much that we value “climbing the financial ladder” more than climbing the spiritual ladder to the kingdom of God. 

God says, “You shall not take the name of the Lord, your God in vain” but it is said if I am upset and cry out in in frustration “Jesus Christ” at least my anger is misdirected at him and not at someone else, besides it is only a common expression many others say. Normalizing sin does not make it right.

God says, “Remember to keep holy the sabbath day” but it is said if it is between coming to church or sleeping in on Sunday as the only day of rest then God understands we need our rest, or does he?  It reminds me of scripture where two shall be in bed, one will be taken to heaven and the other not. 

God says, “Honor your father and your mother” but it is said I have a right to live my life first after all they lived their lives and made their choices, now I have to make mine.  It reminds of the Pharisees who were called “hypocrites” because they accepted money as atonement for the people not taking care of their parents, widows, and children.  Is there any justification for neglect of those who cared for us in our youth? 

God says, “You shall not kill” but it is said if the law allows it then it is acceptable after all it is my body, my choice to give birth or have an abortion or even to end my life when I determine my suffering I cannot bear. The gift of life comes from God and in rejecting his gift we reject him also.  In birth God’s gift of life is a treasure, what we do with this treasure is our gift back to him.  Killing is a rejection of his love. 

God says, “You shall not commit adultery” but it is said if someone was unfaithful to you then you have a right to move on with your life onto another relationship. How many husbands did Jesus claim the woman at the well had and the one she was with at the time was not her husband?  Breaking the bond of marriage opens the soul to a life of infidelity not just to the other but to oneself.  We can convince ourselves “this is the one” only to recognize we have lied to ourselves. 

God says, “You shall not steal” but it is said if it is for a good cause to follow the “Robinhood” rule, steal from the rich to give to the poor then it is right because it is wrong for the rich to be so rich. Remember the parable of the laborer who was hired early in the day and those who were hired later, they all received the same pay. To human nature it seems unfair but God is generous according to his purpose.

God says, “You shall not bear false witness” but it is said that if spoken as a “white” lie to protect yourself and others then there is a good cause.  It reminds me when Jesus claimed it is not what comes into the mouth that is defiled but what comes out of the mouth.  Silence is a virtue. 

God says, “You shall not covet your neighbor’s house” but it is said that it is only natural to have “healthy competition with the Jones’s” for being the best on the block.  Then again when we live beyond our means it does have a way of coming back to “bite” us. 

God says, “You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife…nor anything else that belongs to him” but it is said a little jealousy cannot be helped.  But it is also said jealousy is a sign of unfaithfulness and without faith we die. 

But who says these things anyway?  Now it seems human nature is able to find qualifiers and disqualifiers to the commandments. There is always a loophole human wisdom can create to allow for what is being denied.  This comes from the “stubbornness” of the human heart not ready to follow the sign of Jesus crucified but wanting justification for the exception to the commandment rather than recognizing “The law of the Lord is perfect” and “the command of the Lord is clear”. 

When we create our own justification, we turn the temple of the Lord into a “den of thieves”.  The “temple” Jesus speaks of is his own body crucified on the cross which we carry in our lives and “destroy” when we sin.  If we accept the words of scripture “Zeal for your house will consume me” let us consider how Jesus is also consumed by his love for each of us knowing we allow sin into his house in our souls to destroy his temple in us.  He desires not one to be lost but all to be saved.  God has a “zeal” to bring us to salvation that we may celebrate the “feast of Passover” meaning the Passover of death into life eternal and into his glory this Easter by turning away from our sins, our justifications, our human understanding and returning to serving God as a people of faith.   

We return to him when we keep holy the “sabbath”.  This day for the Christian is represented as the day of the resurrection Easter Sunday and every Sunday we come to celebrate his passion, death, and resurrection in the Mass.  It is the Mass that is the pinnacle of worship as we bring our brokenness, our confession of sin, our offering of our charity represented by all we have done during our week and God receives it in atonement for our sins to wash us clean by his body and blood in the Eucharist. 

In a time when churches still remain with limited attendance, we see that even with the limits enforced there remains empty sitting where many of the faithful once attended.  Have they simply “lost faith”, remain in fear, or live in a world of qualifiers and disqualifiers that represent human nature?  The time of re-evangelization is now.

We honor God when we honor our father and mother.  Father and mother are the visible sign of our parents representing our heavenly Father and Mother Mary.  If we cannot honor the visible signs of our parents through who we receive our earthly body how can we honor our heavenly Father through who we receive our soul or our heavenly Mother who gave birth to the redeemer? 

“Yes, but” there are parents who abandon their children, abuse them, and neglect them of their physical, emotional, and spiritual needs so do they fall into the “disqualified” or do they?  We continue to honor them with an act of charity by praying for them even when a relationship cannot be sustained.  This is what bring us the peace we seek when we honor God this way. 

Then there is the question “why Mary, when we can go directly to the source in Jesus Christ?”  When we get married, we not only give honor to our spouse with our love but also by honoring the in-laws we demonstrate our commitment to our spouse.  We married into an earthly family thus in loving God we accept all the family in communion with the Holy Family, Jesus, Joseph, and Mary, the Holy Spirit, and all the extended family in the communion of saints and angels.  No one can be left out of our heavenly family, not even the souls in purgatory who we honor when we pray for them, these too give honor to God. And by the way don’t forget your guardian angel so often neglected in our prayers.

In the magisterium of the Church there are many Fathers and the Church is also our mother to be honored.  Our Holy Father Pope Francis has called for this year to be the year to honor Saint Joseph.  Many have made a consecration to our Blessed Mother Mary so does that mean we cannot consecrate ourselves to Saint Joseph?  The answer by now should be clear, we can love them both and need to love them all.  The Church is seeking the intervention into our world through Saint Joseph as there is a great need to have his witness to faithfulness in obedience as Saint Joseph gave testimony as earthly father to Jesus and husband to Mary.  His testimony was simple yet profound, he was the guardian of the treasure of the lives of Jesus and Mary and today we need to recognize the treasure we have been given in our homes, our families, and church, and ourselves.  Saint Joseph pray for us.   

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