Sunday, May 15, 2016

Homily: Pentecost 2016 - The Flame of Faith



In the dark of night, at the beginning of the Easter Vigil seven weeks ago, the new Easter Candle was blessed, and for the past seven weeks of the Easter season we have kept the Easter Candle here in the sanctuary, lighting it every time we have celebrated Mass.

The work of bees and of human hands, the living flame of the Easter Candle reminds us through the Easter season that Christ is alive, that he rose from the dead. 

The Easter Vigil begins with the Easter Candle coming into the Church, the Church singing “Lumen Christi- light of Christ”.   The light of Christ burns even in the darkest of nights. Then, if you’ve attended the easter vigil you know that smaller candles are lit from that one light, and held by every baptized member of the Church: a symbol of how the light and life of Christ has been spread to each of us. This is my favorite part of the entire Church year. From the light of those smaller candles, the Church is filled with this holy glow—there is nothing quite like it. 

The tall, white candle reminds us of God’s faithfulness and love throughout human history.  Like the pillar of fire that led the Israelites through the desert to the promised land, the easter candle symbolizes the Christian faith that is to guide us out of our slavery of sin and selfishness, through this world of trials and temptations, into the promised land of heaven.

But today, at the end of the Easter season, we’ll remove the Easter candle from the sanctuary.  Why? Does the removal of the Easter Candle mean that Christ is no longer among us?  Of course not.  In fact, another candle, the sanctuary lamp beside the tabernacle reminds us that Christ is truly and really present with us in the Eucharist.

But, on this feast of Pentecost, when we hear of the holy spirit coming upon the apostles like tongues of fire, we celebrate a new season of the Church, when we ourselves are to be the Easter Candles, burning flames of wisdom, pillars of the Christian faith, beacons of the light of love, light houses of Christian hope.

The Easter Candle is our birthday Candle.  And we blow it out today, only that we can become candles, not burning with physical flame, but burning with the fire of the Holy Spirit.
Every year, when I wished my grandfather a Happy Birthday, he would say, today is not my birthday, it is the anniversary of my birth.  Well, today, this Pentecost Sunday, is when we celebrate the anniversary of our birth into Christ by the power of the holy spirit, when we became living flames that glow for the honor of God. 

At our Baptism, a smaller candle was lit from the easter candle and given to us, as the priest said “receive the light of Christ.  You have been enlightened by Christ.  Walk always as a child of the light and keep the flame of faith alive in your heart.”  Many of you may still have that candle you received at baptism, but more importantly, you have the flame of faith.

What we do with that flame of faith will determine our eternal destiny.  Do we hide it under a bushel, pretending at times that we are not Christian?  Do we allow the winds of sin to extinguish the flame of?  Or do we feed the fire? Do we help the fire grow, do we nurture it, and protect it from being blown out?

Jesus said, I have come to set the world on fire; how I wish it were already blazing.  Do we feed the fire?

I’ve told this story before, but it’s a good one.  A grandfather and a grandson are walking down a forest path.  And the grandson turns to the grandfather and asks, “grandfather, why do we cause suffering to each other”  And the grandfather says to the grandson, “because in each of us there is a battle between two wolves.  The first wolf is all that is good in us, joy, patience, faithfulness, gentleness, selflessness; the second is all that is evil in us, envy, pride, impurity, gluttony, resentment, selfishness.”  “Which wolf wins,” asked the grandson.  “It depends on the one you feed,” said the grandfather.  “It depends on the one you feed.”

Why is our world so full of violence, hatred, and suffering? There are consequences when we fail to feed our faith.  Garbage in, garbage out—as the saying goes.

Similarly, our easter candle is fed by oxygen.  If you take away oxygen, the flame will sputter out and die.  What oxygen is for physical fire, prayer is for our Christian identity.   If we don’t pray, every day, we will become joyless, mediocre Christians.  Here at St. Clare we have a beautiful Eucharistic Adoration chapel.  Vocations flourish, marriages are strengthened, sinners are converted, where a parish is devoted to the Eucharist.   You want peace you’ve never known, you want joy you’ve never experienced?  Visit the chapel for an hour every week. Come to the Lord in the Eucharist. 

One of her novices came to Mother Theresa complaining that spending an hour in the Eucharist was a waste of time, that she could spend that hour out in the streets taking care of the poor.  To that, Mother Theresa replied, dear sister, you need two hours.  If you don’t think you need to spend time with the Lord in prayer, you need to spend more time with the Lord in prayer! So often, with all of the responsibilities, and stresses of life, prayer is the first thing to go. Yet, during these times of stress, we need more prayer, not less.

Another lesson from our easter candle is that when a candle is lit for a long time, wax can begin to accumulate and start to stifle the flame.  The wax needs to be cut away so the flame can thrive again.  If we are not constantly vigilant, little acts of selfishness, like wax can really start to build up.  How do we clean away the stifling wax of selfishness? In the Sacrament of Confession.

I like to go to confession once a month.  Pope John Paul II went every week.  Not because he nor I are committing mortal sins, but as you spend time in prayer, the Lord starts to illuminate your selfishness.  He wants to perfect us; he wants that flame to burn as bright as possible.  If you haven’t been to confession in over a year.  It’s time!  Make a good examination of conscience in light of the Lord’s 10 commandments; compare yourself, not to your neighbor, but to the Lord, to His Blessed Mother, to His Saints. 

When we ourselves make frequent use of confession, we become a more authentic witness of the Gospel

Prayer, Penance, and Service. Service, works of charity, works of mercy, really is like the gasoline thrown on the fire. During this Year of Mercy, Pope Francis has called each of us to engage seriously in the works of mercy. Can you name the works of mercy? The corporal works and the spiritual works? Engage in them in a deeper, more committed way, and watch the flame of faith become emblazoned in your heart!


Pope Benedict wrote, the love of God is the light—and in the end, the only light—that can always illuminate a world grown dim and give us the courage needed to keep living and working.  May this celebration of Pentecost cause the flame of love to grow ever more brightly for the glory of God and salvation of souls.

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