Saturday, June 27, 2020

The Thirteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time

IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS
 
The Thirteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time 
2Kings 4: 8-11, 14-16A; Romans 6: 3-4, 8-11; Matthew 10:37-42 

There is a story of a little girl, who much like other Catholic children her age, grew up in a Catholic home, learning from her parents her prayers and devotions. Remarkably, at a young age, she understood that a Catholic is called to be in a loving relationship with a God and that the goal of life is to become holy, to become a saint. 

In her religion classes, when she would hear the stories of the great saints in the history of the Church and heard of all the great deeds they accomplished, she would feel discouraged as she recognized her own simplicity and smallness in comparison to them. She wondered why God seemed to have preferences and why there were certain people that he would give tremendous graces to do great things and others he wouldn’t. She longed to become a saint, but when she looked within herself, she realized that she was not destined to do great deeds in the world. In fact, her desire, from a very early age, was not to be in the world, but to be apart from it. She longed to dedicate her life to God as a cloistered nun. 

One day a few years later, while praying in the garden of the convent she had joined, still trying to understand why God seemed to gift some with everything they would need to do great things for him and in his name, and others not, she suddenly realized that, in the garden, there were huge, tremendous, brilliant flowers like roses, like sunflowers, like lilies. But then she also noticed that the garden also had daisies, violets, and wildflowers. And that, for the garden to be beautiful, all of these were necessary. She then understood why God has these preferences - why he gives his graces to become saints in different ways to different people – that there are moments he desires the beauty of the rose or the lily in all its grandeur, and there are moments where he desires a simple daisy or violet with their wonderful fragrances. In that moment, she decided she was content to be the little flower in the garden of God’s creation. 

If she was to live her life living in the ordinary, then she would allow the ordinary to be the deeds she would perform to become a saint. And so, the small, ordinary, routine, seemingly insignificant, perhaps boring, perhaps even annoying activities in her life she would do willingly, enthusiastically and lovingly. They would become the deeds she would do for God and in his name. 

This young nun died at the age of twenty-four and it was only twenty-seven years later that she was canonized a saint. It is said that she is the only saint to ever stop traffic on Fifth Avenue in New York. Traffic came to a complete standstill in 1999 as devotees of this saint converged on St. Patrick’s Cathedral to view the relics of she who is often recognized as the greatest and most loved saint of our time. In case you haven’t realized it by now, I’ve been speaking of our patroness, St. Therese. 

I thought of St. Therese this week as I meditated on today’s gospel and as one line jumped out at me. It’s the last line of this very brief passage: “And whoever gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because the little one is a disciple, amen, I say to you, he will truly not lose his reward." 

What a little thing, don’t you think, to give a cup of cold water? Do Jesus words surprise you? They did me. Perhaps it’s a cultural thing. Here in the United States, we’re used to super-sizing everything – the “Big Mac,” the “Big Gulp,” the “Whopper.” Our mentality is “Bigger is better” - big houses, big cars, big salaries, big accomplishments. But if you look through the gospels, it seems that to Jesus, it’s the little things that mean a lot. 

In Scripture we read of the boy who gave Jesus his five loaves and two fish which were which were multiplied to feed five thousand . . . The widow who donated the two small coins to the Temple treasury, yet who, in d0ing something small, has encouraged others to give in sacrificial abundance for two millennia . . . The man who gave Jesus his donkey for his entry into Jerusalem . . . The two disciples who prepared the upper room for the Last Supper. . . Joseph of Arimathea who claimed Jesus’ crucified body and gave him his own burial tomb - the last act of kindness given to Jesus in his earthly life. . . The individual who brought the imprisoned Paul a pen and paper with which he wrote the letter to the Romans . . . Timothy, who brought Paul his cloak to keep him warm and books to keep him spiritually nourished. Little things mean a lot. 

We often imagine discipleship as requiring huge sacrifice or entailing great feats, and sometimes that is exactly what discipleship comes to. But discipleship doesn’t have to be heroic. God loves to bless the little things his people do. Sometimes they are small acts, and sometimes they only appear to be so. Jesus cares deeply about the little things that his people do to bless others. He takes note of them. He uses them to carry on his work in the world through his church. Our cups of cold water, hugs, helping hands, and listening ears, anything done in faith and love, has cosmic significance for the ones involved and, indeed, for the world God loves so much. 

What cups of water have you been offering lately? The phone call, face time, text or email to ask how a family member, neighbor or parishioner was doing during lockdown? . . . The knock on the front door of elderly neighbor to see if they needed anything from ShopRite? . . . The patience you showed as you struggled to be, not only be mom or dad 24/7, but also teacher and playmate? . . . The ear you used to listen to someone who just needed to talk? . . . The shoulder you offered for someone who needed to cry? . . . The words of comfort and reassurance you offered to calm someone’s worries or fears? . . . The rosary you said for someone afflicted with the coronavirus or for someone who had to deal with loneliness these months because they live alone? . . . The note of thanks you wrote to our priests or a priest in another parish who spiritually fed you through their livestreamed masses? . . . The donation you gave to help someone out who hasn’t received a paycheck for three months? . . . Cups of cold water. 

Jesus has promised to come in time to redeem all in love, to fix all damage, heal all hurts, and wipe the tears from every eye, but we can in the meantime devote ourselves to acts of mercy and deeds of compassion small and large, not trying to save the world - Jesus has promised to do that - but simply trying to care for the little corner of the world in which we have been placed. And so even a cup of cold water can make a huge and unexpected difference to those to whom we give it. And, according to Jesus, such acts have eternal and cosmic consequences. Each and every act of mercy rings through the eons and across the universe imbued with Christ’s love for the world, a love we can share anytime and anywhere with gestures that may seem small in the eyes of the world but loom large in the life of those who witness them. 

And if we follow the example of St. Therese, our patroness, then we will begin to see the endless opportunities to serve God in all that we do in the little things. And before long, those opportunities will become, not random acts of kindness, but our way of life . . . the life of a saint.

Video Version

Saturday, June 13, 2020

The Solemnity of the Body & Blood of Christ


SECOND FIRST HOLY COMMUNION 
The Solemnity of the Body & Blood of Christ 
Deuteronomy 8: 2-3, 14B-16A; 1 Corinthians 10: 16-17; John 6: 51-58 

Do you believe some things happen by coincidence? I don’t. I believe there are actually very few coincidences in life and that the things we chalk up to “coincidence” are actually the times when God acts but chooses to remain anonymous. Some people call coincidences God instances; others call them God winks. 

So . . . because of the COVID-19 pandemic - in the solitude of our locked down homes or behind masked faces and maintained safe social distances, we’ve been praying. We’ve prayed that the coronavirus be eradicated. We’ve prayed for each other’s health and wellbeing. We’ve prayed for our selfless frontliners. We’ve given thanks for the neighbors, friends and family members who have called, texted, emailed or knocked on our door to check up to make sure we were okay. AND . . . we’ve prayed to be able to return to our beloved church, to worship at mass and, most especially, to receive that which we’ve so hungered and thirsted for – to be fed with the Eucharist, our Lord’s Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity. 

Well here we are . . . on the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Our Lord – Corpus Christi Sunday. And TODAY, our prayer has been answered. TODAY we have the opportunity, the privilege, to once again feast on the great and wondrous gift that our Lord has left us – the Eucharist. TODAY - of all the Sundays of the year - TODAY! Coincidence? I don’t think so. God-instance. God wink. Proof that God has heard the longing of our hearts and has answered our prayers. 

So perhaps TODAY is a good day to recapture the mystery, the wonder, the awe, that we once had for the Eucharist, which perhaps over time, as somethings do, has become something we’ve taken for granted, lost an appreciation for and allowed to become ordinary and routine in our lives. Perhaps TODAY we need to go back . . . go back to the day of our First Holy Communion and allow TODAY to be just as special, just as memorable, just as meaningful, just as spiritual, just as transformational as that day was. Perhaps TODAY we should look upon and celebrate as the day of our SECOND First Holy Communion. 

And to do that, let’s take a few minutes to remind ourselves of what the Eucharist is all about: 

Beginning centuries before Jesus was born, his people, the Jews, celebrated Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, to atone for the sins they had committed in the previous year. On Yom Kippur, the blood of a sacrificed animal was sprinkled on the altar and on the people, sign that God was one with the people he had made his own and he was reconciled with them. The Jews still celebrate Yom Kippur, but without the spilling and the splashing of blood. Instead, they recount the story of the earlier sacrifice, to remember it, and they recite the prayers that accompanied that sacrifice. 

Centuries before Jesus was born, his people, the Hebrews, at God’s command, on the eve of their deliverance from slavery in Egypt, celebrated the first Passover supper, a ritual meal, which God charged them to celebrate every year to remember how the Lord had passed over the homes of the Jews which had been sprinkled with the blood of a sacrificed lamb, thus sparing those Jewish homes from the angel of death. 

Some 2,000 years ago - at Passover in Jerusalem, Jesus gathered his friends for that same supper on the night before he died. That night, Jesus took the bread of Passover, gave thanks, broke it and gave it to his friends saying, “Take and eat of this: This bread is my body, broken for you, given up for you.” And taking the Passover cup filled with wine he gave thanks again and gave it to his friends saying, "Take this, all of you, and drink from it. This is the cup of my blood, the blood of the new covenant, poured out for you, for the forgiveness of sins. When you do this: remember me.” And before a day had passed, Jesus, the Lamb of God, was crucified, broken, and his life poured out for us on the Cross. 

And now, and still, more than 20 centuries later, we gather around our altar, at the table of our Lord’s Last Supper and we do as Jesus instructed us. We remember his sacrifice on the Cross by blessing, breaking and sharing the Bread of his Life, by blessing and sharing the Cup of his Blood at our altar, in the sacrifice of the Eucharist and remembering the deliverance from sin and death that is ours, deliverance from sin and death, in the Passover of Jesus. 

But Jesus didn’t only tell us to remember him in the Eucharist. He promised to be our Eucharist. So when we bless, break and share the bread we offer in thanksgiving, we believe him when he tells us, This bread is my Body. And when we bless and share the cup we offer in thanksgiving, we take him at his word when he tells us, This is the cup of my Blood. 

In this sacrament we are not sprinkled, we drink the blood Christ spilled for us on the Cross. He is atonement for our sins and in his Blood we are washed clean not just once a year but every time we eat this bread and drink this cup and proclaim the death of the Lord until he comes. 

In him and in the sacrifice he offered once on the Cross and again now on our altar, we are delivered, forgiven and saved. In Communion with him we are all made one for we are all sharers in the one Bread broken for us, in the one Cup we share. 

So TODAY let us approach the Lord’s Table with thanksgiving for what he offers us there is more than we can imagine. 

Let us approach the Lord’s Table with humility for none of us deserves what we receive there. 

Let us approach the Lord’s Table with reverence for on our altar is laid the very Body and Blood of Christ. 

Let us approach the Lord’s Table with all our brokenness for we are about to receive the Lord who heals and mends us. 

Let us approach the Lord’s Table with a hunger for life and a thirst for mercy for that is the food the Lord sets before us. 

Let us approach the Lord’s Table at which Jesus invites us to intimacy with him, so real and so personal, he instructs us to consume him, to take his flesh and blood into ours, indeed, to digest his presence. 

Let us approach the Lord’s Table in a spirit of prayer, for here is food for our souls, here is the Bread of Angels and the Cup of Salvation, here is the Risen Lord, Christ Jesus, whose Body and Blood we take and consume with solemnity, with thanks, and with joy. 

Three months . . . It’s been a long time . . . Happy Solemnity of the Body and Blood of our Lord.  Happy Corpus Christi Sunday. Happy SECOND First Holy Communion Day!

Video Version

 

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Graduation 2020

THIS IS THE DAY THE LORD HAS MADE 
A Graduation Homily for the Class of 2020 
Proverbs 4: 1-7; 1 Corinthians 12: 4-11; Matthew 5: 14-16 

“This is the day the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it!” 

Graduates, that’s a line from Psalm 118 and it is very fitting for this day, the day of your graduation . . . a day on which you and we look back and celebrate the years you’ve spent here at St. Therese: your academic success - the knowledge you’ve gained: of the world around you through the study of science; of the grandeur of words to express ideas through literature; of the interrelationship of numbers and concepts and formulas through mathematics; of the successes and follies of humanity through history; of the commonality yet diversity of the human family through the study of cultures in social studies and foreign language; of the strength and capabilities of the human body through your participation in physical education; of the creativity of the human mind to capture beauty through art and music; of the mystery of God and his overwhelming love for us in religion. 

“This is the day the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it” as we celebrate YOU! – the outstanding young men and women that you’ve become . . . your talents, your values, your goodness, your kindness, your sensitivity, your personality, your sense of humor. 

And although we mark this day differently than we ever have before because of circumstances that we never could have imagined, it gives us even more to rejoice and be glad over because, despite all that life has thrown your way in the last two and a half months, despite how life has been different, despite the disappointments and sacrifices you have had to make in your Eighth Grade year, you have handled it with grace, you have surpassed its roadblocks, you have met and conquered its obstacles. Yes. “This is the day the Lord has made.” And we have much to celebrate on this day of your graduation. 

But today is more than just a day to look back and celebrate what has been. And it’s more than just a day to savor the present moment. For today is not just the day of your graduation . . . it’s the day of your commencement. It’s a day of beginning. Today you stand on the threshold of your tomorrows. Today, your future is inaugurated. What will that future look like? God, I wish I knew. All the pundits are saying that we’re about to embark upon what they’re calling “the New Normal.” What is the “new normal?” How will what we’ve been experiencing the past two and a half months effect how we learn, how we conduct business, how we interact socially, how we shop, how we recreate, how we worship in the future? 

Is hiding our faces behind masks and keeping safe social distances between each other the new normal? Is all the evil that’s been demonstrated this past week: the lack of respect for human life, racism, the glorification of violence, the destruction of property all part of the new normal? Are the values that are often demonstrated on Tik Tok and other forms of social media the new normal? 

Graduates, are you ready for the future that you commence today? Well, you are if you strive for two things that the readings you just heard talk about. 

First, become WISE. As Paige read to us in our First Reading from the Book of Proverbs: “The beginning of wisdom is: GET WISDOM! Forsake her not and she will preserve you; love her and she will safeguard you.” WISDOM! What is wisdom? Well, if you look online you’ll find this definition: “Wisdom is the quality of having experience, knowledge and good judgement.” And that’s a pretty good definition. But for a Christian, wisdom is so much more . . . so much richer. 

Wisdom is a Gift of the Holy Spirit. You received it the day of your baptism. And it will be strengthened within you the day of your Confirmation. Listen to what Pope Francis has said about wisdom: “Wisdom is the grace of being able to see everything with the eyes of God - to see the world, to see situations, circumstances, problems, everything through God’s eyes. The Holy Spirit makes the Christian “wise,” not in the sense that they have an answer for everything, that they know everything, but in the sense that they “know” about God, they know how God acts, they know when something is of God and when it is not of God.” 

Graduates, ask the Holy Spirit to grant you the gift of wisdom that teaches us to see with God’s eyes, to feel with God’s heart, to speak with God’s words, so that, with this wisdom, you will go forward to build our world, to build our Church, to build the “new normal” according to God’s vision, in God’s love, ever faithful to God’s Sacred Word. 

Second, be LIGHTS. In the Gospel that Deacon Murphy proclaimed, we heard the challenge from Jesus to be lights to the world: “A city set on a mountain cannot be hidden. Nor do they light a lamp and then put it under a bushel basket; it is set on a lampstand, where it gives light to all in the house. Just so, your light must shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your heavenly Father.” 

The light you will want to shine will not be your own light; you will be mirrors that reflect God who is that light. This light must be expressed in your words, by your service to those in need, and in the example of how you live your life. YOU must become a GOSPEL. Everything you are, everything you say, everything you do must be Good News that proclaims Jesus Christ, the way, the truth and the life! 

But I can hear what you’re saying: “Nice thought, Deacon Bruce, but how is that “the new normal?” Christianity has been around for almost two thousand years!” And in reality, in the real world, in the lived experience, in the mainstream of life, money, success, power, possessions, and prestige are the driving force in people’s lives, not Christian values. Christian values just don’t work” . . . BUT as British writer, philosopher and theologian GK Chesterton once wrote, it’s not that “The Christian ideal has been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult; and left untried.” 

And so my friends, when you are lights to the world - when you are daring enough to be different; when you are strong enough to break away from the strong undertow of society and refuse to go with the flow; when you are brave enough to stand up for what is good, decent, noble, moral, true and just; when you are faithful enough to the values your parents have instilled in you; when you are wise enough that the lessons you learned at St. Therese’s are more than mere lessons in a book, but lessons for life; when you are committed enough to live what you and I prayed at the end of every prayer and you allow Jesus to live in your heart forever - then, it will be YOU: Paige and Jared and Thomas and Jack and Amelia and Emma and Frank and John and Themelis and Kyle and Grayson, then it will be YOU who will be creating the “new normal.” 

Trappist monk, writer, theologian and mystic, Thomas Merton wrote this prayer. Let it be your prayer, O wise lights to the world: 

“My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going. I do not see the road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really know myself, and the fact that I think I am following your will does not mean that I am actually doing so. But I believe that the desire to please you does in fact please you. And I hope I have that desire in all that I am doing. I hope that I will never do anything apart from that desire. And I know that if I do this you will lead me by the right road, though I may know nothing about it. Therefore, I trust you always. I will not fear, for you are ever with me, and you will never leave me to face my perils alone.” 

My dear graduates, this IS the day the Lord has made, and we DO rejoice in it. We rejoice in it because of all you have accomplished. We rejoice in it because of who you are. And we rejoice in it for all you can be and the difference you can make in our world. May God bless you. We are so proud of you.