Saturday, June 27, 2015

Homily: 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2015 - Baptized to be bothered



Exactly three years ago, Pope Benedict authorized the canonizations and beatifications of several holy souls.

One, you may never have heard of.  His name is Father Giuseppe Puglisi.  He was a Sicilian Priest who was killed by the Sicilian Mafia in 1993.  He was gunned down on the steps of his church for condemning organized crime and trying to rally his flock to take a stand against evil in his community. At his Beatification in Sicily, Pope Francis said that Blessed Father Giuseppe was ‘an exemplary priest and a martyr’ and joined the newly beatified martyr in condemning organized crime.

Three years ago, Pope Benedict also called for the beatification of 158 men and women who were martyred during the Spanish Civil War between the years 1936 and 1939 for opposing fascist and anti-Catholic dictatorship in their country.  Pope Francis Beatified 522 more Spanish Martyrs in Spain a few months later.  These holy souls are among the thousands of lay people, priests, and nuns were martyred for opposing the anti-Catholic fascism in their country.

Three years ago, Pope Benedict also decreed that an American be recognized as venerable.  Venerable is a title given to men and women of heroic virtue in their path towards becoming canonized saints.  Many of you have definitely heard of this holy archbishop, author, and radio and television evangelist, who is now known as Venerable Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen. 

Millions of people heard him on radio, watched him on television, and attended his many lectures on the Catholic faith.  He had a gift for distilling complicated Catholic teaching and presenting them to a broad audience with humor while still boldly challenging us to take our faith more seriously. 
He brought the Catholic message into the public sphere.  Not just Catholics watched his show, but Protestants and Jews.   Atheists were converted by hearing the Venerable Archbishops’s words of hope.

You can still see reruns of his television show “Life is Worth Living” on EWTN, read his autobiography, or any of his many wonderful books on topics theological and spiritual. 
I thought of Archbishop Sheen as I read today’s second reading: As you excel in every respect, in faith, discourse, knowledge, and all earnestness…may you excel also in the gracious act of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, for your sake he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich.”

Archbishop Sheen surely excelled in faith, discourse, knowledge, and earnestness.  He graduated from Theological School in Louvaine Belgium with the highest honors, and taught at Catholic University in Washington, and through his intellectual gifts made the faith intelligible to millions.
But that isn’t why he people are declaring him a saint.  He also had heroic dedication to the poor and suffering.  There is a story about his visit to a leper colony.  As he passed among the lepers, he saw a man whose hand had withered, and Sheen recoiled in disgust.  Sheen quickly realized what he had done and said, “I was a leper for turning away from you. “  So he took the man’s withered hand, placed a crucifix in it and said in all honesty, “I am honored and grateful to be in your presence.”  And Sheen then went to every leper in the colony, and gave each one a crucifix personally.
Sheen’s secretaries would tell stories about how he would take in the homeless of Rochester and feed them at his table and would often take off his jacket and give it them as he passed them on the streets. 

I also thought about Father Puglisi, the Spanish martyrs, and Venerable Fulton Sheen, after the sad news of the Supreme Court yesterday.  For the saints and martyrs and holy Bishops, remind us that the teachings of the Church are not antiquated or in error but rather provide a vibrant thriving message that is indispensable for civilization. 

We need like Archbishop Sheen to continue to explain with clarity and patience the Church’s teaching, not only on marriage of course, but in all of its aspects.  We need, like Father Puglisi, stand up for that faith, even when we might be persecuted for it.  God willing we never experience anything like the Anti-Catholic regime in Spain, but we must look to those thousands of martyrs, to find our own courage, in remaining faithful to the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Not all of us are called to be official catechists of the Church or to visit leper colonies like Fulton Sheen, but all of us are baptized in service of the kingdom of God—spreading the Gospel even when it is inconvenient, when it is not politically advantageous to do so, when we might be persecuted for it.

There was a priest was complaining to his spiritual director that every time that he sat down to pray, or do some theological reading, he would be bothered, by a call to visit the sick in the hospital, or attend to a squabble among his parishioners, or to an administrative task.  And his spiritual director said, Father, you were ordained to be bothered. 

Similarly, each of us are baptized to be bothered.  Is there a person starving who needs food? We were baptized to feed them.  Is there a person who is starving for the truth?  We were baptized to instruct them.

If we are to be saints, we each need to be open to be bothered: bothered out of our comfort, out of our routine, out of the coziness of carefree living.  We should be bothered by attempts of government leaders and special interest groups to violate our religious freedom.  We should be bothered by the starving around the world.  We should be bothered by the lonely widow, or the drunk, or the cohabitating unmarried couple, or the prevalence of pornography one click away on the internet.
Could that Sicilian Priest, Father Puglisi avoided martyrdom if we would not have been bothered to speak out against the theft, murder, prostitution, and drug trafficking of the local mafia. Sure, he might still be alive today.  He could have retired and moved to Tuscany.

Could those thousands of priests, nuns, lay men and women avoided martyrdom if they would have kept silent about the abuses in their government?  No doubt.

Could Archbishop Sheen have been a successful teacher had he never stepped into a leper colony?  Oh, definitely. 

But we are called by Jesus to be saints to t dedicated to charity towards our neighbor, in Africa, Asia, inner city Cleveland.

In the Gospel today, people rebuked Jairus for bothering Jesus about his dying daughter.  Jesus ignored their comments and went to Jairus’ daughter personally.  The saints, like Jesus, want to be troubled.  Jesus wants us to bring our needs to him.  He may not answer them in the way we want.  But God is not bothered by our prayers.  There are prayers he wishes to answer through our persistence in asking for them. When it seems like our prayers are not being answered, we must have faith that God is answering them in a way that is much better than we can imagine.


May this Eucharist today help us to be attentive to the work of God, that we too might become saints for the glory of God and salvation of souls.

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