Showing posts with label damien of molokai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label damien of molokai. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2022

May 10 2022 - St. Damien the leper - Our crosses open doors

 
For the first four weeks of the easter season, we’ve been reading from the book of Acts— how the Gospel was spread first in Jerusalem and then throughout Judea amongst the Jews.  But today, we hear of one of the great breakthroughs of human history.  

Last week, we heard how following the death of St. Stephen, Christians were scattered due to persecution. But the Christians took advantage of their scattering. They preached to the Jews, as we heard today, as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus, and Antioch.

As some of the new Christians were Greek-speakers, they began to share the good news with some of the Gentiles in Antioch.  This may seem very natural and inevitable to us now, but this really was a breakthrough—the first time the Church became truly faithful to the Lord’s command to make disciples of all nations…not just the Jews of the Holy Land—but all nations.

Each of us are called to work for converts by sharing the Good News. So, where do the breakthroughs need to occur in your own life for that to happen? What do you need from the Lord do be able to share the faith more confidently with strangers?

Jesus says in the Gospel today, “my sheep hears my voice”.  He wants to use us as his mouthpiece.  There are people who long to hear the voice of Jesus calling them into the flock of the Church. They are waiting for us to share what we know of Jesus, of Catholicism, but they have no one to talk to. The internet can’t do our job for us.

Today, the Church celebrates St. Damien of Molokai, the apostle to the lepers. He spent sixteen years tending the physical, spiritual, and emotional needs on the island leper colony of Molokai of Hawaii.  And when he contracted leprosy himself, he continued to preach the Gospel. 

We aren’t just to preach the Gospel from a top an ivory tower, we are to enter into the world of the forgotten and the outcast, in order to show them, that they are not forgotten by God. 

For the Christians in the book of Acts, the persecution led them to preach to an entirely new group of people. For St. Damian, his leprosy enabled him to draw closer to the other lepers, to preach even more effectively by entering their world.

Our own crosses are keys that open doors into the lives of others who suffer, who are longing to hear the voice of the Shepherd. May we embrace those crosses, and enter through those doors, for the glory of God and salvation of souls.

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That all Christians may be deeply committed to the spread of Christ’s Gospel, and for the success of the Church’s missionary activity. Let us pray to the Lord.


For those in public office: may they govern with wisdom and compassion for the most vulnerable among us—especially unborn children, the elderly, the indigent, and persons with disabilities.  Let us pray to the Lord.


That the isolated and abandoned may know the love of God through the labors of the Church. Let us pray to the Lord.


For the repose of the souls of our beloved dead, the deceased members of our families friends and parishes, for those who fought and died for our freedom, and for N. for whom this mass is offered.


Graciously grant our petitions, we beseech thee, O Lord; may your grace sustain us always in your service, through Christ Our Lord.



Monday, May 10, 2021

May 10 2021 - St. Damien of Molokai - Leper with Lepers


 The Belgian Priest, Fr. Damien of Molokai spent sixteen years caring for the physical, spiritual, and emotional needs of those of the leper colony on the island of Molokai of Hawaii.  He died in 1889 at the age of 49 after contracting leprosy himself.  

St. Damien wrote, “I make myself a leper with lepers to gain all to Jesus Christ.”

This sort of total abandonment to service is incomprehensible to the world.  Father Damien was even criticized by fellow Christians for what seemed like carelessness.  And yet, when he himself contracted the disease, he did not flee into misery and shame.  He became a suffering servant, “a leper with lepers”.  During the last four years of his life, after contracting leprosy, Fr. Damien continued to build hospitals and physical, spiritual, and emotional care for the lepers.

Damien also taught the lepers to farm, raise animals, play musical instruments, and sing. Although the lepers were used to being patronized or bullied, Damien spread among them a new cheer and sense of worth. 

In the Homily for St. Damien’s canonization in 2009, Pope Benedict XVI urged the faithful to learn from “the luminous example of” the saints, men and women who “did not put themselves at the center but chose to go against the current and live according to the Gospel.”

What does Pope Benedict mean that the saints do not put themselves at the center? For many people, there egos do not allow themselves to even consider humble hidden service. If they are not going to be seen, if they aren’t going to be recognized, if they aren’t going to be rewarded...they are not interested.

The saint rather enters into the world of the forgotten and the outcast, in order to show them, that they are not forgotten by God. The saints become effective instruments of the life and love and power of God because of their willingness to do so in humility, to go wherever they are sent, without excuses. And they do not let the weight of their own cross, in the case of St. Damien, his leprosy, keep them from continuing to serve with abandon. Notice, too, how his leprosy, his cross enable him to draw even closer. 

How might the Lord be calling you to embody this spirit of hidden, humble service to the outcast and forgotten, to become an ever effective instrument of God’s mercy and love for the glory of God and salvation of souls.

 - - - - - - - 

That all Christians may be deeply committed to the spread of Christ’s Gospel, and for the success of the Church’s missionary activity. Let us pray to the Lord.

For those in public office: may they govern with wisdom and compassion for the most vulnerable among us—especially unborn children, the elderly, the indigent, and persons with disabilities.  Let us pray to the Lord.

That the isolated and abandoned may know the love of God through the labors of the Church. Let us pray to the Lord.

For the repose of the souls of our beloved dead, the deceased members of our families friends and parishes, for those who fought and died for our freedom, and for N. for whom this mass is offered.

Graciously grant our petitions, we beseech thee, O Lord; may your grace sustain us always in your service, through Christ Our Lord.


Sunday, October 9, 2016

Homily: 28th Sunday in OT 2016 - Father Damien and the lepers

You may remember, a few years ago, Pope Benedict canonized Father Damien of Molokai. Father Damien was a priest from Belgium who went to work with the lepers on the Hawaiian island of Molokai.  He spent sixteen years caring for the lepers’ physical, spiritual, and emotional needs at the leper colony

Leprosy was considered so dreadful, people were so afraid of lepers, that they were outcast, sent to live estranged from the rest of society. This heroic priest, Father Damien, went to minister to them. He was immersed into their lives, he embraced them, anointed them, baptized them, he sat with them when they were dying, he really became their pastor and shepherd.

Molokai was not a pretty place—the rotting flesh of the lepers gave off a smell like that of an open grave. Father Damien was criticized for his work—they called him careless. Father Damien also had no priestly assistant and no other priest to hear his confession. Once he rowed out to a passing ship which had another priest on board. He asked the priest to come down to hear his confession, and when this request was denied, Father Damien shouted up his confession, where anyone could hear.
Father Damien built churches and houses for the lepers. He sought funds from both Catholics and Protestants, distributed food and clothing to all. He dressed the lepers’ wounds, tried out new treatments, and built orphanages for the boys and girls. When people died, Father Damien not only offered the funeral rites, but often built their coffins himself.

Father was praying his breviary one day, when a leper had brought him a hot pot of tea. The leper tripped, and the scalding water was poured all over Father’s legs and feet, but the priest didn’t flinch. It was then, too, that he realized he had contracted the disease. From that day, when he would preach, he would say, “my fellow lepers”…

And yet, when he himself contracted the disease, he did not flee into misery and shame.  He became a suffering servant, “a leper with lepers”.  And during the last four years of his life he continued to build hospitals and ministered to his fellow lepers.

We heard in the Gospel, one of the many stories of Jesus healing the lepers of his day. St. Damien patterned his life after Jesus, in a way, because Jesus did not hesitate to reach out to those society considered “unclean”.

In a sense, Jesus amidst the lepers shows us something quite powerful about God’s love for us, and helps us to understand the purpose of the incarnation. God in his love for humanity, took on the flesh, dwelt among us, we who had become unclean due to sin.  God the Son, immersed himself in sinful humanity and embraced us—in our waywardness, in our corruption, our tendencies to selfishness and lust, and coldness toward one another.

Think about that. God himself, who created us to be full of life and love, did not abandon us when we contracted the disease of sin, the leprosy which causes parts of our souls to become rotting. He lived among us, forgiving us, teaching us how to be human again. God is not distant, but has placed himself smack-dab in the middle of the messiness of our lives.

We do well to remember that whenever we feel like lepers, estranged, lonely, lost, outcast. God is not only present in the beautiful, warm, tender moments.  God is able to be present when life becomes ugly, diseased, contaminated. We have a God who enters in, embraces us in our leprosy.
Yes, God is present in the joy of a wedding, but He is also present when a spouse is lost after 60 years of marriage, or when a child dies by a tragic accident or a rare disease. In the funeral services I always like to remind the grieving that even though there is so much grief and sadness when a loved one dies, we can still know God’s peace, because he does come into the dark times of life to bring comfort and mercy and an increase in faith.

I think of our poor brothers and sisters in Haiti. Nearly 1000 people have died in the wake of Hurricane Matthew. And yet, in this natural disaster, God draws close to the afflicted through his Church. Catholic Relief Services because of the charitable contributions of Catholics like us, are able to offer emergency shelter, clean water, food, living supplies for the displaced, funds for the rebuilding of destroyed homes. We aren’t having a special collection or anything, but consider donating a few dollars to Catholic Relief Services by visiting their website.

For as Christ comes to the afflicted, we are often called upon to be his hands, his feet, his mouth speaking words of comfort. As Christ reached out to the outcast, we are to reach out to the lonely. Perhaps, there is a widow on your street who could use a visit, or a home cooked meal. As the seasons get colder, perhaps you might consider becoming a Eucharistic minister, to bring Holy Communion to the homebound this winter.

We all suffer from our own afflictions, and are all busier than ever. But like Father Damien, who even after he contracted leprosy continued to minister. Our faith, the example of the Lord Jesus, impels us into the lives of others. We are not meant to live isolated from the needy, more concerned about fall sports than the lonely, poor and afflicted. Nor must we allow our own afflictions to keep us from serving the needs of our neighbor.

Where did Father Damien get the strength for this heroic ministry? From the same God who comes to us in this Mass, under the humble appearance of bread and wine. He comes to us, poor sinners that we are, to perfect us in charity, to urge us to work always for the glory of God and salvation of souls.