bg-image

The Deacon

Third Sunday of Ordinary Time 2017

Is. 8: 23-9; 1 Cor. 1:10-13, 17; Mt. 4:12-23

To the universal church, wherever you go God is there.  Have you received a warm embrace from heaven today?  Perhaps it came through the hug of a spouse, a child, a parent or perhaps in a word that reaches into the heart.  Perhaps it is simply an act of kindness when it reaches into the interior as a gift of grace from the Holy Spirit. 

Having attended the Deacon’s retreat for deacons and their wives at the Basilica of Our Lady of San Juan del Valle in San Juan, Texas this past weekend, our retreat master was Fa. Greg Labus.  Fa. Greg focused on the kerygma, which is the apostolic “proclamation” of salvation through Jesus Christ, coming into our lives.  It is founded as the simple but profound message, “Do I have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ?”  This is a common calling from our separated brothers and sisters from other denominations but somewhere between the call and the summit, Jesus Christ in the Eucharistic celebration of the Mass we have not dispelled the darkness that hovers over the “land west of the Jordan” our land in a culture of death.  Is “The Lord my light and my salvation”? 

The Catholic call for a “New Evangelization” began with (Saint) Pope John Paul II, continued with Benedict XVI (Emeritus), and now Pope Francis challenges us to be witnesses to the light.  The challenge is not anything new but a return to a process of evangelization that begins with that embrace from heaven in the knowledge of Jesus Christ.  

We also reflect in today’s readings from 1 Corinthians that what is current among Christianity is not new.  We could place ourselves back in time and say, “I belong to Paul the Evangelicals;” or “I belong to Apollos the Baptists” or “I belong the Cephas the rock of the Catholic church” or simply “I belong to Christ in the Mega churches, no sacraments just Christ and me.  Yes what is new is not new.  It remains a struggle for unity of faith when we separate Christ into pieces and claim to have Him for ourselves.  We want to hold onto Him when it is He who holds us in his embrace. 

Paul’s writing to the Corinthians does not resolve the potential division when he says, “Christ did not send me to baptize but to preach the gospel”.  Is Paul minimizing the sacrament of baptism and potentially all the other sacraments in favor of the Kerygma?  Is he the founder of proclaiming the Word as “scripture only” authority?  A definite “No”!  Paul is understood in the historical contextual meaning of the Word in place and time.  Corinthians was known for its sea side “C’est la vie” such is life filled with sin and corruption as a major hub of commerce.  Baptism was the opening of the heart to Christ to allow the gift of the Holy Spirit after repentance of our sins.  Thus the soul was then receptive to the kerygma through the gifts of the Holy Spirit, those infused virtues to grow in faith, hope, and love.  Paul understood the baptized as a “child” of faith in need of catechesis in order to grow in the word or division would prevail among the community.  

What was then is now as more and more people claim to be atheist according to gallop polls and as a culture of death rises in genocide of the unborn, and as science races to be the first in man’s search to clone himself as his own God.  Meanwhile, the essential core of human goodness, truth, beauty, and love is shattered and replaced by a core value in separation of church and state. The new evangelization is a need to go forth into the world with the kerygma, the “proclamation of the word” to the unbaptized and the baptized to grow in their faith, hope, and love through a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. 

The kerygma is a call to conversion in which we evangelize before the mind is prepared to be catechized to live a life sacramentalized least we become scandalized when faith and reason don’t meet with truth, goodness, beauty, and love.  The process of conversion, the kerygma is to be a voice in our times for truth, goodness, beauty and love comes in the person of Jesus Christ.  The witness of the “sacramentalized” is beyond any preaching as pastors, parents, or friends.  It is being the light of Jesus to others, to know Him and to bring others into an encounter with Him.  Then our sacraments in how we “deal” with Him become how we allow Him to deal with us. 

As fishers of souls we must begin anew with our evangelization, not in the practice of “catch and release” but in the call to “come home”.  If we catch and baptize only to release to a culture of death our institutions will continue to decrease in faith in souls who do not hunger for Him.  Christ himself in the church, the sacraments, and the faithful is always present.  Wherever you go He is there.  Catch and release becomes baptized paganism for souls who appear for baptisms, weddings, and funerals, but whose lifestyle and values appear more secular than a testimony of faith and life in Jesus Christ. 

It has become a tradition to attribute to St. Francis of Assisi the expression, “Preach always, and speak when necessary” but there appears to be no official record to verify this.  Still in the spirit of St. Francis of Assisi I would say, “Preach always by your witness and proclaim the kerygma”, that is the whole life and ministry of Jesus Christ by your faith in action. 

As we reached the second day of our retreat we were “sent forth” with a message from our bishop, Daniel Flores.  He reminded us of the three pillars of the church, preach, worship, and charity.  We preach the Word that leads to the summit of worship in the Mass with our acts of charity.  Today as yesterday we have many poor in our churches, homes, and among the homeless.  Yes that includes those without the means of food, clothing, and shelter but we also face the greatest poverty in our community, that of spiritual poverty who have not accepted the embrace of heaven. 

That today we hear his voice and feel his embrace.  Come home to holiness in Jesus Christ.  Come home to the fullness of truth, goodness, beauty, and love.  Come home to the universal church in his body, his sacrifice, his love, always present.  Come home to Jesus Christ.  Wherever you are, He is there.     

Shared this
Views

299 views