Sunday, August 14, 2016

Homily: 20th Sunday in OT 2016 - "great cloud of witnesses"

I remember exactly where I was the first time today’s Gospel reading really hit me in the gut. I was attending the Saturday evening vigil mass at St. Noel’s, after which I would meet with Father Tom Dragga for an interview before entering college seminary.

“I have not come to establish peace on the earth…but rather division”, in other words, following Jesus may not always be the popular thing, his truth might contradict popular opinion, you might lose friends because him, your family might not understand you, they might even come to hate you because of him.  Hopefully not! But to me, this Gospel always speaks of how counter-cultural being a disciple of Jesus Christ really is.

This past week was packed full of amazing, holy, courageous counter-cultural saints, a “great cloud of witnesses”-- who followed Jesus Christ even when it was the hard thing to do.

We began the week, on Monday, with the feast of Saint Dominic. Dominic became aware of two very serious problems in Europe. One, northern Europe had not been evangelized, it was largely Pagan. And two, a terribly heresy called Albigensianism had divided the Church in France. The activity of the heretical Albigensians was distancing people from the truth of the faith.

When Dominic brought these challenges to the pope’s attention, the pope personally asked Dominic to devote himself to preaching to the Albigensians.  He countered the error of heresy, by spreading devotion of the rosary and the truth of the Gospel. And judging by the lack of Albigensians running around these days, Dominic must have been successful…have you met any Albigensians lately?
There is a story that while his mother was pregnant with Dominic, she dreamt that a dog leapt from her womb and began to set the world on fire.  Jesus himself said in the Gospel today, “I have come to set the world on fire, how I wish it were already blazing.” The saints are the instruments God uses to set the world on fire.

Tuesday, we celebrated Theresa Benedicta of the Cross, also known as St. Edith Stein. Young Edith was born into a Jewish family, where the faith was not practiced. As an adolescent she became a devout atheist, but as a young woman with profound intellectual gifts, she studied philosophy under the renowned philosopher Edmund Husserl. Her search for the truth led her to the Catholic faith and she converted to Catholicism.

10 years after he conversion, Edith entered the Carmelite convent and took the name Sister Teresa Benedicta of the Cross in honor of Theresa of Avila, the great Carmelite mystic.  It was 1933, Adolf Hitler was Chancellor of Germany. Persecution of Jews and Catholics had already begun, Sister Theresa was both, a Catholic of Jewish blood. In 1942, Teresa was arrested by the Nazi’s.  She and her sister Rosa were transported to Auschwitz in Poland by boxcar.  One week later, Sister Teresa died in a gas chamber.

As a teenage atheist, she never would have imagined dying for Jesus Christ as a contemplative nun. But the Lord set her heart on fire, and being faithful to him despite the worldly pressures became her greatest joy. Her goodness stood contrary to the culture of death spread by the Nazis.

On Thursday we celebrated the patron saint of our parish, Saint Clare of Assisi. Talk about a woman who was counter-cultural. Clare was born into an aristocratic family. She lived in a castle, she had every luxury. She was destined to marry a prince and live happily ever after.

But, at the age of 15, she refused to give in to her parent’s wishes for her to get married. She had been attracted to Gospel poverty through the preaching of a homeless man named Francesco, who dressed in tattered brown robes. Her heart was set on fire with love for the Lord Jesus, and when her parents locked her in their castle, she escaped to the dilapidated chapel of San Damiano. At the altar of Our Lady, she traded her rich clothing for the rough brown woolen habit of the Franciscans, exchanged her jeweled belt for a common rope with three knots to symbolize her poverty, chastity, and obedience, and caught off her long golden hair to take the veil.  Thus she became espoused to Christ, she did marry a prince, the Prince of Peace!  Her sister Agnes, 14 years old, soon joined her, as did several other women, in the following weeks.

They lived a simple life of poverty, austerity, and seclusion from the world.  Clare and her sisters went barefoot, slept on the ground, fasted from meat, and observed almost complete silence. Yet their lives were full of burning joy.

Talk about counter-cultural. Our modern culture tells our young girls that they cannot be happy unless they, like a Disney princess, marry prince charming and lives in a castle filled with all the luxuries money can buy, or acquire the sort of job where she can buy her own castle and live life according to her own whims and fancies. Clare’s poverty and virginity is the antithesis and antidote to our culture’s promiscuity and materialism.

St. Clare, shows us, like Dominic and Theresa Benedicta of the Cross, that our greatest joy, our greatest fulfillment, our hearts deepest longing is for Jesus Christ. He wants to set our hearts on fire, he does not want mediocre lukewarm followers, but followers who are willing to stand against the tide, stand for truth even when the culture says there is no truth, stand for purity, when the culture grows perverse, stand for prayer, when the culture shoves iphones in front of our faces, stand for self-discipline, when the culture tells us just to give in to every impulse we have.

Many people become afraid of really surrendering to Christ because of fear—they fear his fire. Pope Benedict said “The fire of God, the fire of the Holy Spirit, is that of the bush that burned but was not consumed (from the exodus story). It is a flame that blazes but does not destroy, on the contrary, that, in burning, brings out the better and truer part of man.”

We see in the saints, men and women who have allowed the fire of God to bring out the best of them. As gold is refined from its impurities in the furnace, so too, the saints. And, they encourage us, in our simple lives, to draw near to that the fire of God through prayer and acts of charity. Every day should be filled with those two things, prayer and acts of charity. Without them, how can we be surprised when our faith grows lukewarm or mediocre.

Last night at the 4:30 Mass, we honored a young woman whose own heart no doubt has been set on fire with love of Christ and the desire to serve the Church. We gather in great thanksgiving today, to celebrate St. Bridget Heisler’s profession of her final vows as a Sister for Life.

Like St. Clare, Sr. Bridget’s religious community take the counter-cultural vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, with an additional fourth vow to protect and enhance the sacredness of human life.
In a culture where life is cheapened, commodified, objectified, what a beautiful witness to all of us, to remind us always to value the life which Christ gives us, both natural and supernatural.

This parish family of St. Clare was a place where Sr. Bridget’s vocation was able to flourish. To all who served as Catechists, liturgical ministers, sang with her in the choir, or simply walked with her as a friend on her journey, you should have a very healthy and holy pride, that the Lord used you to inspire her vocation.

I have known many young people who were too afraid to embrace the vocation to which God had called them. I have known many families who have pressured their children not to follow God’s call. But the Holy Spirit was at work here at St. Clare, and we celebrate, Sr. Bridget saying, “yes”, and hopefully she will not be alone in doing so.

Our Lord comes to us today in word and sacrament, in the Holy Eucharist, to kindle fire in our hearts, may we respond generously, wholeheartedly, to him, that he may give us the courage and strength to be his faithful followers as witness to his truth and instruments of his grace for the glory of God and salvation of souls.


No comments:

Post a Comment