Saturday, August 19, 2023

Even the dogs eat the scraps from the table of their master: Jesus came to save all people - Homily 20th Sunday Cycle A

 

One of the activities that my wife and I really enjoy doing together is watching shows about cooking. Some of our favorite shows are Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, Chopped, and Parts Unknown. We enjoy watching the shows because they involve some of the favorite things we like to do: eating, cooking, and travel. It’s very interesting to learn about all the different cultures, nationalities, and the unique types of food they eat and ways they cook. It’s opened us up to have a better understanding of people who are different from us.  Food is a common element among all peoples of the world, because we all need it to live, and it brings people together of all diverse cultures and nations. Today’s Gospel has a focus on food that may seem a divisive, but eventually leads to a better understanding of God’s salvation for all people. 

Jesus’ encounter with the Gentile Canaanite woman sure doesn’t sound like the Jesus

Artist: Jean Germain Drouais, 1784.

we’re used to. The woman is very respectful to Jesus, calling him Lord, Son of David, but Jesus ignores her. When Jesus says, “I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel”, it is not at all what we’d expect him say. The woman’s second request for help is met with an insult, “It is not right to take the food of children and throw it to the dogs.” Jews of the day would call Gentiles dogs as a demeaning reference to them. Gentiles were considered a class below the Jews, and they had nothing to do with them.  So, to the disciples, Jesus’ response would be what a Jew was expected say to a Gentile.

Undaunted by the insult the woman gives Jesus spirited comeback: “Please Lord, for even the dogs eat the scraps that fall from the table of their masters.”  The woman speaks boldly because of her faith in Jesus’ healing power. He was so impressed by her great faith, that he healed her daughter. This probably stunned the disciples, because Gentiles, were not worthy from a Jewish perspective.  In healing the woman Jesus was teaching them that he was not just a Jewish man, but the Messiah of God, who came not only for the people of Israel, but for all people. Jesus goes along with the cultural norm, ignoring and insulting the Gentiles, in order to change the norm of the culture, that God’s kingdom is for everyone who has faith in Him, regardless of their ethnicity or class in the culture.

This parable is a reminder for us of the universal role of the Church to carry out the Lord’s missionary mandate: Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you (Mt 28:18-19). All persons are created in God’s image and likeness and deserve the opportunity to learn about Jesus so they can freely choose to have faith in him as their savior.

How can we help the Church to carry out this mission to make Jesus known to all people?  It’s not just the clergy and religious that carry out this mission.  They play a big part in leading this mission, but it takes all of us in our own unique way in, planting the tiny seeds of faith that grow over time. There are many people we encounter every day at home, work, school, and where we play or serve that still don’t know Jesus. They may not look, speak, or act like us and we can be apprehensive in getting to know them. We can be like disciples thinking they are not worth paying attention to.  But if we take some time to personally get to know them, learning about their interests, family, and challenges, it can be a first step in showing them God’s love through our friendship.

We might start with some common ground of a favorite food we both like and sharing a meal with them. Henry Nouwen said, “A desire to eat together is an expression of the deeper desire to be food for one another, by being Christ for one another”. There are many people in the world today who don’t experience any love at all, because they are lonely or isolated. By sharing our love with them, they are experiencing God, because God is love.        That could be the first step in carrying out the Church’s mission.

I recently read a story about a ministry reaching out to the people who beg for help at stop lights or exit ramps. We’ve all seen them, and quite often it seems to be the same person day after day.  We can be skeptical and cynical of why they are there, but we can give the benefit of the doubt that they really do need help. It can be so easy to be like the Jews who ignored the Gentiles thinking of them as not worthy of our attention. One of the recommendations to minister to these people was to ask them their names and to give them some socks, a bottle of water, soft snacks along with a prayer card.   Many of these people are alone, homeless, have a mental illness and no family. One person who responded to a ministry volunteer said it was the first time in over two weeks that someone had spoken his name. A few weeks later the volunteer saw the same person again and greeted him by his name and asked how he was doing.  The person recognized the volunteer and responded, “I’m much better now hearing you say my name again and asking how I am doing.  Thanks so much.” This simple action was a sign of God’s love to the person down on their luck.

Simple acts of love and kindness in friendship can open the opportunity for us to share our faith in Jesus with others.  It may be offering to say a prayer with them when they share a struggle with us.   It could be an invitation for them to join us at Mass or to share a book with them. By sharing our friendship with them it shows us we care, and they’ll be receptive to listening to us and our faith in Jesus. May the Eucharist we soon receive strengthen our faith in Jesus and give us the courage to share in friendship our love and faith with all the People of God.

 

Connecting with the lonely and isolated to proclaim God's Kingdom - Homily 11th Sunday Cycle A

 

The Gospel that we heard today comes right after Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount and his travels to towns and villages proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and curing many of their illnesses and diseases.  

Many of those whom he cured were thought to have been enduring punishment from God because of their illness.  

As a result of their conditions, they not only suffered physically or mentally but were also excluded from worship in their faith communities.  

The synagogue was the center of worship for the Jews and was also the hub of social interaction for the people. 

This exclusion resulted in isolation and loneliness.

For many this isolation was much worse than the effects of their illness. 

Jesus knew their conditions were not due to punishment, and he cured them to restore their relationship with their faith community to make them whole again.  

These people needed to be treated with love, not isolation and exclusion.

Jesus is moved with compassion, and he takes the initiative to do something about it.


As I was traveling this past week, I heard the news on the radio of a US Surgeon General health advisory that was occurring in the United States, an epidemic of loneliness and isolation. 

It was said that this epidemic was occurring prior to the COVID-19 pandemic where over half of U.S. adults were experiencing significant levels of loneliness. 

The COVID-19 pandemic made it even worse.

The effects of loneliness on physical health can increase risk for premature death comparable to smoking daily.   

The impact of loneliness on mental health can double the risk in developing depression.   

The US Surgeon General stated: While the epidemic of loneliness and isolation is widespread and has profound consequences for our individual and collective health and well-being, there is a medicine hiding in plain sight: social connection.


A Harvard Study, Loneliness in America, indicated that the pandemic has deepened an epidemic of loneliness.  

It reported young adults are some of the most significantly affected by loneliness. 

Over half of the lonely young adults in the study reported that in the past few weeks that no one “had taken more than just a few minutes” to ask how they were doing to make them feel like the person “genuinely cared”.  

A recommendation of the study to alleviate loneliness was “Working to restore our commitment to each other and the common good.”

It stated: Loneliness is a bellwether not only of our country’s emotional and physical but moral health.

In this age of hyper-individualism, the degree to which Americans have prioritized self-concerns and self-advancement and demoted concern for others in many communities has left many Americans stranded and disconnected.

We need to return to an idea that was central to our founding and is at the heart of many great religious traditions: We have commitments to ourselves, but we also have vital commitments to each other, including to those who are vulnerable.  


To carry out His mission to care for the people Jesus appoints the twelve disciples and gave them authority over unclean spirits to drive them out and to cure every disease and illness.   


They are then sent out with the instruction, not go to pagan territory or Samaritan town, but to go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel to proclaim the “Kingdom of heaven is at hand” and to cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, and drive out demons. 

These twelve disciples, except for Judas Iscariot, are the apostles who would become the first bishops to go out to establish the Church after Jesus' Ascension.  

Their mission was to not only cure the people of their diseases but to restore their relationship with the community.

Jesus in his great love for us gave his life in sacrifice to reconcile us with God and save us, even though we were sinners. 

This is the good news of the Kingdom of Heaven that Jesus sent his apostles to proclaim. 

He continues to care for us today through His Church, the Body of Christ, made up of bishops, priests, deacons, religious, and lay people who gather in worship through the Eucharist to remember and participate in His saving action of love. 

When we come together as a Church community each week do so because of our need for God and each other.


There are so many people today in isolation and loneliness in our culture who are like the people Jesus had pity for who were troubled and abandoned.  

How can we proclaim the Kingdom of God to them and cure their illnesses and diseases and drive out demons?  

We can start by following Jesus' instructions to go to the lost people of Israel, which for us is our own family, friends, and neighbors. 

If there is someone we have not seen or heard from in a long time we can send a card or a letter to let them know we are thinking about them.  

Or we can make a phone call to see how they are doing and really take time to listen to them. 

That may be followed up with an invitation to meet them for a meal, an activity they enjoy doing, or even to join you at Mass. 

Connecting with people on a human level and letting them know you care for them may be just what they need to break out of their loneliness and isolation.  

And through this human connection, we can share with them the good news of the God who takes the initiative to save us because of his great love for us and to make his Kingdom present in our world.

 

 

Homily for the Solemnity of the Ascension: Don't just stand there looking at the sky, call on the Holy Spirit

 

We heard in the first reading today of the two men saying to the disciples after Jesus was taken up into the clouds, “Men of Galilee, why are you standing there looking at the sky?”     

 


The disciples must have been dumbfounded thinking what in the world just happened here?  

 

Jesus had miraculously risen from the dead 40 days earlier, and now he has vanished into the clouds. 

 

This must have been a shock and they were probably in fear of what is going to happen now that Jesus is gone.

 

They are given some reassurance by the two men that Jesus would return just as he was seen going away to the heavens.

 

He would also continue to be with them always in Sacraments which would only be possible by the coming of the Holy Spirit.

 

Today we celebrate the Feast of the Ascension.  

 

This is the belief of our faith that we proclaim each time we recite the Creed, “He Ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.”  

 

What did the Ascension mean to the disciples and what does it mean to us today?

 

Jesus had ministered public for three years, suffered and died on the cross, rose from the dead, and appeared to the disciples in his Glorified body for forty days.  

 

He had appeared many times over this period and spoke to them about establishing God’s Kingdom.  

 

But the disciple still didn’t get it. 

 

They were focused on the issue of the day: Restoring the kingdom of Israel.  

 

But Jesus had greater plans in mind for them: They were going to witness the Gospel of Jesus to the whole world, not just in Jerusalem.

 

How was this going to happen?

 

The disciples had been following Jesus for the past three years, but they now had a new mission to spread the Gospel throughout the world.   

 

If Jesus were still physically present with them, they’d be limited to where he was physically located in spreading the Gospel.

 

By ascending to heaven, Christ gave them the divine power to accomplish their mission in another way where Christ’s presence is without limits.

 

The Holy Spirit would empower them to proclaim Jesus through the eyes of faith in Jesus' and his real presence in the Sacraments.

 

St. Leo the Great, said this very well:

 

And so our Redeemer’s visible presence has passed in the sacraments. 

 

Our faith is noble and stronger because sight has been replaced by a doctrine whose authority is accepted by believing hearts, enlightened from on high. 

 

This faith was increased by the Lord’s ascension and strengthened by the gift of the Spirit.


 

Jesus’ Ascension also accomplished something else: It opened the doorway to heaven for the rest of humanity.  

 

Jesus is now a powerful intercessor in heaven to reconcile us with Father.

 

Jesus' ascension bridges the gap between heaven and earth.  

 

Where do we find that bridge in the world?

 

In the Church through the Sacraments!

 


 

The Holy Spirit is sent to the disciples so they could spread the good news throughout the world.

 

This brought about the birth of the Church. 

 

In the book of Acts, we hear about the disciple's witness to Jesus' resurrection in their travels far and wide.  

 

They face many trials and tribulations in their travels and flee from one town to another to escape from being injured or killed.  

 

But this is just part of the plan to spread the Gospel and for the Church to grow. 

 

How will they do all this?  

 

Through the Holy Spirit, which is mentioned over 80 times in the Book of Acts. 

 

In Acts, we hear the disciples doing incredible works, healing the sick and raising the dead.

 

Many of the miracles are the same done by Jesus and are made possible through the Holy Spirit to bring people to believe and have faith in Jesus.

 

The Holy Spirit enabled the growth of the Church and gave the disciple power to do great things.

 

They followed Jesus' commission, to make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

 

The Holy Spirit is what makes it possible for Jesus to be with us always until the end of the age through the Sacraments of the Church, especially in the Eucharist.

 


 

The Church is Christ’s Body and where heaven meets the earth. 

 

What and who is the Church? 

 

It’s each one of us, as the Body of Christ, in doing our part in witnessing to the Gospel. 

 

And how do we do this? 

 

By our words and deeds to announce the good news and be Christ-like to others.

 

A famous quote of St. Teresa of Avila sums up our role in spreading the Gospel quite well:

 

Christ has no body on earth but yours.

 

Yours are the eyes with which he looks compassionately on this world.

 

Yours are the feet with which he walks to do good.

 

Yours are the hands with which he blesses all the world.

 

Christ has no body now on earth but yours!"   

 

To strengthen us in this mission we come to Mass each week to receive the graces of the Eucharist to be Christ’s body, hands, and feet in the world.

 

We can also pray daily and listen with our hearts as to where God is calling us to make a difference.

 

The Our Father is a great reminder of this mission when we pray, “Thy kingdom come, they will be done, on earth as it is in heaven”.   

 

 

The world today certainly needs God’s kingdom to come.

 

It’s very much like the first century during Roman rule.

 

There is a lack of respect for the life and dignity of the human person, threats to our religious liberty, and a secular culture that has little concern for God. 

 

At the end of each Mass, we hear the dismissal: Go and announce the Gospel of the Lord, where are sent to make a difference in the world.

 

By each of us living this out, empowered by the Holy Spirit, we can do our part in spreading the good news and making God's kingdom present.

 

Jesus commanded his disciples to witness in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.

 

We can do the same with the people in Greenwood, Bargersville, and Indianapolis in our daily lives.

 

Throughout the day, we can invoke the power of the Holy Spirit to inspire us to spread God’s Kingdom, by praying a short prayer: “Come Holy Spirit”.

 

It can be very simple things we do, that can make a big difference in bringing others to Christ.

 

We can say a kind word to the person who rubs us the wrong way at home or work.

 

We can invite a classmate to play a game who is normally included in our activities.  

 

We can volunteer or donate to a local food pantry or homeless shelter to help people with their basic needs.

 

We can visit someone who is shut-in or at a care facility who doesn’t have any family or friends to visit.

 

So don’t just stand there looking up at the sky.  

 

Call on the Holy Spirit to help make God’s Kingdom present here in the world so people can come to know and have faith in the Lord Jesus by our witness in being Christ’s disciples.

 

 

 

 


Wednesday, April 19, 2023

The most unlikely recipient of mercy in the world's view, but not God's - Second Sunday of Easter, Divine Mercy Sunday, Cycle A

           One of the most infamous people during World War II was Rudolf Hoss. Rudolf was born in 1900 into a Catholic family in Germany and his parents desired their son would become a priest.  Upon his father’s death, Rudolf decided to join the German Military.  He renounced his Catholic faith and joined the Nazi party soon after hearing Adolph Hitler speak He was assigned to run the Auschwitz concentration camp which was the largest death camp in the world where millions of people lost their lives. During his command, Rudolf had an encounter with a Catholic priest that would later have a profound impact on him.

Fr. Wladyslaw Lohn was a member of a Jesuit community who lived in Warsaw, Poland.  While he was away from his community one day the German military police arrested all the other Jesuit priests living with him taking them to Auschwitz. When Fr. Lohn returned to the community and found it empty, he feared the worst: that all his friends had been taken to Auschwitz.  In solidarity with his community, he went to Auschwitz and snuck into the concentration camp. The guards found Fr. Lohn and took him to Rudolf to decide his fate. Rudolf was impressed by his bravery but refused to allow Fr. Lohn to stay in the camp and sent him away unharmed.  When the war ended Rudolf was imprisoned and sentenced to death for the merciless crimes committed under his command. In the eyes of the world, Rudolf is certainly someone who did not deserve to receive mercy from anyone.

Today we end the Eight-day celebration of Easter with Divine Mercy Sunday.  In the Gospel we hear of the disciples’ first encounter with Jesus after the resurrection. They were hiding in fear for their own lives after what happened to Jesus.   When Jesus appears to them, they were probably quite afraid of seeing Him risen from the dead. All of them except John had abandoned Jesus and they must have felt guilty for his death. They probably expected Jesus to be angry, but he greets them with: “Peace be with you”, offering his forgiveness with love.  They really needed to hear this. Then Jesus breathes on them saying:  “Who sins you forgive are forgiven them, and whose sins you retain are retained”.   Jesus gives them the power to breathe new life into those who are deadened by sin.

Jesus comes to us as well extending His mercy through the Sacrament of Reconciliation.  If we come to Jesus with contrite hearts and confess our sins to the priest, we can receive forgiveness too. The priest in the person of Christ extends His Mercy to us by saying, “I absolve you from your sins, in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Go in Peace.” We receive peace just like the disciples, the kind of peace which only Jesus can give by forgiving our sins. 

It’s fitting that on Divine Mercy Sunday we hear about Jesus giving his disciples the


power to extend His mercy.   Saint John Paul II decreed in May of 2000 that the Second Sunday of Easter be known as Divine Mercy Sunday.  He lived during the early 1920’s when the evils of Nazism, communism, and a deep disrespect for the dignity of life were occurring in Poland and throughout Europe.  During this time, Jesus chose a humble Polish nun, St. Faustina, to receive private revelations about Divine Mercy. In these private revelations, Jesus requested that Divine Mercy Sunday be observed.  As recorded in St. Faustina’s Diary Jesus tell her: “The soul that will go to Confession and receive Holy Communion shall obtain complete forgiveness of sins and punishment. … Let no soul fear to draw near to Me. … It is My desire that it be solemnly celebrated on the first Sunday after Easter. Mankind will not have peace until it turns to the Fount of My Mercy. (Diary, no. 699)

Jesus also revealed the Divine Mercy image to St. Faustina which is located in front of the altar.  In the image, Jesus’ right hand is raised in a blessing and his left touching his garment above his heart where red and white rays emanate, with the words “Jesus, I trust in You”, inscribed below.

This image symbolizes the blood and water that was poured out for our salvation.   Jesus requested that this image be venerated around the world with the promise, “that the soul that will venerate this image will not perish” (Diary, no. 48).  The prayer of the Divine Mercy Chaplet was also given to St. Faustina with this promise:  “Whoever will recite it will receive great mercy at the hour of death. … Even if there was a sinner most hardened if he were to recite this chaplet only once,  he would receive grace from My infinite mercy. I desire that the whole world know My infinite mercy” (Diary, no. 687).

During Rudolf Hoss’s time in prison awaiting execution, he experienced what human kindness was, which he would have never expected after all he had done.   He was deeply ashamed of what he had done and finally repented stating:  “I have inflicted terrible wounds on humanity. I have caused unspeakable suffering for the Polish people in particular. I am to pay for this with my life. May the Lord God forgive one day what I have done.” On Good Friday Rudolf asked to see a Catholic priest, although there were none available who spoke German. Rudolf recalled the name of Fr. Lohn and asked the authorities to search for him.  They found him praying at the Shrine of Divine Mercy where St. Faustina was laid to rest. He heard Rudolf’s confession and then offered him Holy Communion the next day. Rudolf then returned to his cell and wept. Those who witnessed his death a few days later said that he appeared completely calm right up to the very end.

We may know someone who feels they have committed a sin that is unforgivable and is afraid to ask for Jesus’ mercy.   This is a lie of what the devil wants us to think.  Jesus died for each of us taking on all our sins and rose from the dead to show us that sin has no power over us if we just ask for his mercy.  Invite them to receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation, as any sin can be forgiven.  If they haven’t received this Sacrament, Jesus offers great hope by what he said to St. Faustina about the prayer of Divine Mercy, “Call upon My mercy on behalf of sinners; I desire their salvation.  When you say this prayer, with a contrite heart and with faith on behalf of some sinner, I will give him the grace of conversion.”  This prayer is:  O Blood and Water, which gushed forth from the Heart of Jesus as a fount of mercy for us, I Trust in You.  The Divine Mercy prayer can be offered for those who need of Jesus’ infinite mercy to forgive their sins, especially those who are dying.  Please share this message of Divine Mercy, and pray the Divine Mercy chaplet often, for all who are in need to receive the Mercy of Christ. 

If you would like to explore more about Divine Mercy, I’d recommend looking into the Marians of the Immaculate Conception Divine Mercy web site, http://thedivinemercy.org/.  If you want to pray the Divine Mercy devotion, take it with you on the go and download an app to you Smartphone. http://thedivinemercy.org/apps/

Sunday, March 19, 2023

Seeing with our hearts through the light of Christ - Homily for 4th Sunday of Lent, Cycle A

        Today is the Fourth Sunday of Lent, known as Laetare Sunday.   We are halfway through Lent. Fr. Dan and I are wearing Rose vestments to reflect the joy as we look to the coming of Easter.

We have been on a journey of faith practicing prayer, fasting, and almsgiving to grow closer to our relationship with Jesus as our Savior. Those preparing to enter the Church, the Catechumens, and Candidates, have been on a journey learning about the Catholic Faith and their belief in Jesus as Lord on their way to becoming Catholic at the Easter Vigil. Where are we at on our Lenten Journey?   Have our eyes of our faith been opened to how Jesus calls us to live as his disciples?  Not as man sees, but as God sees?  Have we become blinded by the ways of our culture?

In today’s Gospel, we hear the story of the healing of the Man born blind.  The story has many characters: the disciples, the blind man, his parents, and the Pharisees.  The disciples ask: Whose sin cause the man’s blindness, his or the parents?  Their cultural understanding


was that God’s punishment for sin was the cause of blindness, but this is not so.  Jesus tells them man’s blindness was so the works of God could be visible through him. Jesus places a mix of clay and saliva on the blind man’s eyes and sends him to the pool of Siloam to wash– kind of like a baptism of faith in Jesus

The man was questioned about how he was cured and grew in his faith as he gave his answers. His responses were “A man called Jesus”, “A prophet”, “If he were not from God he could not do anything” and finally He calls him Lord, and worshipped him.   He grew in Spiritual sight, finally seeing Jesus as the light of Salvation.  He did so initially stating the facts: he put clay on my eyes and now I can see.  He then grew in courage challenging the Pharisees and asking if they wanted to be his disciples.

The Pharisees questioned him about how the cure came about and there was a division among them. Some thought that Jesus could not be from God since he was cured on the Sabbath, but others doubted that a sinful man perform such a sign.  The majority then concluded he must be a sinner.  And finally, they threw out the man because, “He was totally born in sin, and was trying to teach them.  They started out partially blind and increased to total Spiritual blindness.  They were unwilling to accept Jesus as the curing of a blind man.  

We heard in the first reading that “man does not see as God sees, because man sees the appearance, but the Lord looks into the heart”. Samuel was directed by God to choose the least in the eyes of the world, the youngest of Jesse’s sons to be Israel’s king, because David had the heart of a servant king. The Pharisees could only see through their cultural lens: Jesus was violating a law by “working on the Sabbath”.    But they could not see with their hearts that Jesus was doing something more than restoring sight: He was restoring the man to his community of worship.   They thought illness and disability were due to sinfulness, so the blind man was excluded from the community.   Even though he was healed of his blindness, the Pharisees still thought he was a sinner and expelled him from the community.  Their hearts were blind to the ways of God.

During the last few weeks of Lent, we have an opportunity to work on seeing with the eyes of God rather than as Man sees through our prayer, fasting, and almsgiving.  Most of us have been washed in the waters of Baptism, and have received the grace to help us see by the Light of Christ. At our baptism, we were given a baptismal candle, lit with the Easter candle, and told to “receive the light of Christ.” The Catechumens will soon experience this at the Easter Vigil.  When we see injustices in the world, think of the light of Christ, to move your heart to see with His eyes.

One of our Lenten practices, almsgiving, is a way to help us see with the eyes of God.  This year our parish Lenten almsgiving to help with homelessness in our community through No Place to Call Home.  We may be blind to homelessness in our community because we're not like downtown Indianapolis where you see people begging out on the streets or in homeless camps under bridges. Many of the homeless are couch surfing, which is staying with friends or relatives, till their welcome is worn out.  Others are sleeping in cars, parks, or abandoned buildings. There are many reasons why people are homeless, but one of the main ones is domestic violence, as well as mental and physical illness, and changes in the family due to dynamics such as death and divorce. Only a small amount is due to substance abuse.  Our culture portrays persons who are homeless as those who don’t want to work.  Most people affected by homelessness have jobs or income from retirement or disability. They just don’t make enough to money to afford stable housing.        

No Place to Call Home helps people to get out of homelessness by agreeing to receive case management for 3 months.  They help to identify partner agencies with case managers in the county to help based on the specific situation of the homeless families.  This helps the people identify the causes of their homelessness and then sets goals to find stable affordable housing.   One of the stories shared at the presentation last week was told by a man named Sam.  He and his wife were in stable housing living off their combined social security retirement income.  When she died, he lost her income and was not able to afford the rent and wound up living in his car.   A local police officer, found him sleeping in his car and was able to find help through No Place to Call home.   This is not the typical case we think of when it comes to homelessness in our community, and there are many others like it.

When our hearts eyes are illuminated by the light of Christ, rather than the culture, we can be moved with compassion to be generous in our Lenten almsgiving. May our Lenten practices of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving help each of our hearts grow to see as Christ does.


To listen to this homily search for "Deacon Ron's Ramblings" on your favorite podcast site. 

 

Sunday, February 12, 2023

Homily for the Sixth Sunday of Ordinary Time, Cycle A - Making you heart a home for God to dwell in

         Our opening prayer today called for us to become dwellings that are pleasing to God by His abiding in our heart. A dwelling is a place to live-in, a house. We can see houses going up everywhere in our community. There are many new houses that are shiny and look good from the outside. But what makes a house a home is not what’s on the outside, but what’s inside. It’s the environment within, the heart of the home, that makes it inviting and pleasant to be there. If we are to become a dwelling that pleases God, how do we make it ready to welcome God and others to dwell in? Our readings today point to ways we our hearts a home to welcome God to dwell in. 

The first reading from Sirach reminds us that we can choose to keep the commandments. Through God’s wisdom he provides the commandments that are life giving. They provide boundaries to give us the fullness of life so we can be in good relationship with God and our neighbor.   God gives us the freedom to choose life or death, good or evil.  He does not make us follow the commandments nor cause us to break them.   If we choose not to follow the commandments, sin enters our lives, which damages the relationship with God and others.  Our choice to sin may bring about some temporary satisfaction, but in the long term it results in feelings of emptiness, loneliness, and despair. It’s not what God wants for us, but he gives us the freedom to choose for ourselves.

In today’s Gospel Jesus continues his Sermon on the Mount discourse that we’ve heard the past couple of weeks.  His preaching is bold and with authority proclaiming


he has not come to abolish the law or the prophets, but to fulfill it. Jesus tells the crowds that their righteousness must surpass that of the Scribes and Pharisees. They were viewed as models in the community in keeping the law, but were only concerned with keeping the externals of the law and not embracing an internal change in their hearts.  How could those listening possibly surpass the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees?  By having a heart transplant.  Not a physical heart but a wholehearted change in the way they lived.   

Jesus goes on to teach on the commandants to not kill, commit adultery, and bear false witness, but he takes is a step further. Jesus with authority he states, “Amen, I say to you”, or “but I say” and teaches them how to change their hearts so they won’t break the commandments.  He gives them a new way they living with authority because HE IS GOD. Jesus wants them to understand that anger, lust, and deceit results in sin that damage the relationships with God and their neighbor.  Broken relationships cause pain, sorrow, and resentment which disturbs their peace.  Jesus is teaching his disciples to make a wholehearted transformation so they maintain loving relationships with each other and God to bring about the Kingdom of Heaven.    

This sounds like a tall task to accomplish on our own, but St. Paul tells us how it’s through help of the Spirit.   The Holy Spirit we receive in Baptism and Confirmation provides the grace for us to become dwellings pleasing to God.   The grace of the sacraments reveals God’s wisdom and makes it possible to change our hearts to be life giving to others.  

How can we become and continue to be a dwelling that is pleasing to God?  By asking ourselves if we are welcoming place for Jesus to dwell when we receive him in the Eucharist.   We can do this by making it a habit to examine ourselves to make sure the hearts of our home are in order to welcome him.   The Holy Spirit is our guide to examine our own dwelling to make sure it’s is ready for Jesus to enter. We may say we have not killed someone, but is there a broken relationship with a family or friend that needs mending?   We may not have committed adultery, but do we view others with pure hearts rather than for our own pleasure?  We can say we haven’t be deceitful, but have we been fully honest with others and treated them as we would like?  

If we find rooms in our homes that need cleaning, we can ask for God’s mercy in the Sacrament of Confession to restore our dwelling to make it pleasing to God.  As we proceed to receive the Eucharist, the Holy Spirit will come down to change the bread and wine into Christ’s Body and Blood to provide us the graces we need to change our hearts. Let’s invite that same Spirit to guide our hearts so we can become dwellings that are pleasing to God. 

Monday, January 30, 2023

Living out the beatitudes by giving yourself in love to bring happiness to others - Homily Fourth Sunday Ordinary Time, Cycle A

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, we are now in the last weekend in January. ‌This is the time of year when many of us have made resolutions in the new year for positive changes in our lives. Some of the most popular resolutions are to get in better physical shape or to lose weight.  The gyms are usually packed the first few weeks, but usually about this time the crowds start to thin out as the fervor in keeping those resolutions starts to wane.
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Why do we make these resolutions?  We do so to feel better about ourselves by making positive changes in our lives. We may do things to improve our overall health, like exercising or eating healthier food. We might want to find better job to make more income, to have less stress, or to have more personal time for ourselves and family. We might desire to improve relationships with our spouse, friends, or children. The overall goal is to improve our sense of well-being to make us happy.  While our own happiness is good, if we really want to be happy, we can do so by giving of ourselves with love.  In the Beatitudes Jesus shows us a way of living that not only brings us happiness, but also to others through the love we share with them which can bring lasting joy.

Over the past few weeks, we have hearing about Jesus public ministry.  Two weeks ago, Jesus was Baptized by John the Baptist, who testified that Jesus is Lamb of God and the Son of God.  Last week we heard about Jesus’ preaching to “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand” and Andrew, James, and John being call by Jesus to follow to become fishers of men. This week Jesus teaches his disciples of how they are to live as his disciples through the beatitudes.

The word beatitude means being happy, not in the sense of an emotional state, but that of

good fortune.  In living the beatitudes, the disciples learn they will have the good fortune of being comforted, receive mercy, inherit lands, and being satisfied. The blessings get even better as they will see God, be called God’s children, and the God’s kingdom will be theirs. This was incredible news for the disciples as they had been anticipating the Messiah’s coming.  The Messiah they thought would come would be one of power to overthrow the Roman occupiers.  But Jesus’ teaching announced that God’s kingdom would be come to those who were considered least in the world through mercy and love.

God’s ways are much different than that the world the disciples lived in.  Their occupying Romans of their world valued those who are strong, powerful, and self-sufficient. The blessed in God’s Kingdom are those who were poor in spirit placing their total trust in God and are humble, meek, and mournful. The clean of heart, peacemakers, and righteous are the ones who would also receive his blessing. He was teaching them what God values most, which was very different from world powers of domination, and brute force.
 
In Jesus’ teaching on the beatitudes, he speaks of the blessings in both the present and future. Some of the blessings will be realized in this world through love and mercy his disciples bring to others living out the beatitudes. But others will come to those later in eternal life with God. In living out the beatitudes we are striving to bring about the blessings of God’s Kingdom in this world as his disciples and hoping to receive them as well in eternal life.
 
Our world of today is not much different from the time of Jesus. We can make a difference in our world that is so much in need of love and mercy by living out the beatitudes, How are we to live out the beatitudes in our own lives? We can be poor in spirit by placing our total trust in God each day through a relationship in prayer thanking God for our good fortune and asking for his help in our trials.  We can mourn for the sins we have committed against God and others each day by coming to God in prayer asking for forgiveness. We can be meek by restraining from anger when someone cuts us off on the drive to work, and instead just letting it go and praying for the person who cut us off. We can hunger and thirst for righteousness by refusing to gossip and asking others not to do so. We can be merciful by praying for the strength to forgive someone who has hurt us in the past and being open to the possibility of reconciliation. We can be clean of heart by asking God for the help to rid us of garbage in our heart and mind that separates us from God.  We can be peacemakers by deciding to let go of always being the one who is right to foster peace and harmony in our family, work, or at school.
 
So, if your new year’s resolutions are not working out as planned, consider making the Beatitudes one your new resolutions for the year. This may be the perfect time to do so with Lent coming up. Pick out one of the beatitudes each week and work on trying to practice it throughout the week. Keep in mind that you are practicing and not being perfect. If you fail, take it to God in prayer, asking for help to do better in the coming week.  In doing so you’ll also be practicing the first beatitude, being poor in spirit.  And remember, Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs in the kingdom of God.