One of the first words a toddler learns is "No!" As he gains more freedom of movement, he tests out newly available opportunities. On the other hand, his older, wiser, and loving parents want to keep him safe from harm. One theory suggests that "if they touch that hot burner once, they'll never touch it again." That's probably true, but for me, I have always hoped to head off that painful lesson with a firm "No!" Sure, I would eventually explain why this is not a good idea, why it would be harmful, but my priority was preventing certain pain.
Even as adults, we need these firm No's in our lives - things we just should not do. What if we all decided that red lights were just silly restrictions on our freedom to drive as we wished? Chaos would ensue. Most of our civil laws similarly are "No" laws, written to keep chaos and anarchy at bay. They keep us safe.
When God first revealed His law to the Hebrews, they were primarily "No" laws, or as we have them in our minds, "Thou shalt not" laws. They were good laws, for they set limits on actions and attitudes that destroy relationships - relationships between us and God, relationships between us and our neighbors.
They are still good laws, but they are just the beginning, the basics. We need more than laws that keep us from destroying relationships. We need tools to nurture, to enhance and to enrich our relationships with God and our relationships with each other.
Enter Jesus.
Throughout the Gospels, Jesus insists that we get beyond the No. We are not to ignore the No, but we must go far beyond it. Jesus' life and his teachings challenge us to follow him to that which lies far beyond the No and into the land of "Yes." For Jesus' "Yes" rules teach us what we should seek and what we should do. Jesus' "Yes" rules form us into who we should be.
Speaking to the disciples on the night before he was to die, knowing his time was short, Jesus summarizes all of his "Yes" rules into something new: "I give you a new commandment: love one another. As I have loved you, so you also should love one another." (Jn 13:34)
This is really hard. I've lived most of my life under the discipline of "No." It is a simple life, and I am really good at it. The objective nature of the law appeals to me. It is generally easy to tell if I've broken a "No" law. It helps that most of these "No" laws actually make sense. It is clear to me that their purpose is to avoid harm, destruction, or chaos, so I've trained myself to almost naturally conform to the "No."
But to love as Jesus loves, without condition and without limit, who can do such a thing? How would I even know if I was doing it enough? It seems I can never be good at this, for I am constantly falling far short. No matter how hard I try, I'm not feeling the love when I see someone who is not all like me, who doesn't appreciate me, or who may even hate me. Jesus' "Yes" even seems dangerous. How can I be safe if I love the one who tries to hurt me?
But despite the difficulty, despite the seeming lack of sense, despite the seeming danger, something in my heart tells me to follow. I sense that despite my success and apparent happiness in conforming the limits of No, there is something worthwhile beyond those limits. I sense that beyond my selfish wants, beyond my selfish fears, there must be more. I sense, as St. Augustine intuited so long ago, that my heart will always be restless until it rests in Jesus' land of Yes.
Step beyond the self-centered world of No and follow Jesus into the God-centered life of Yes. Step beyond the temporal world of No, and follow Jesus into the eternity of Yes. Step beyond the safety of No, and follow Jesus into the salvation of Yes.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
The bottom line
This morning’s gospel
passage (Jn 12:44-50) closes out "the Book of Signs" (Jn 1-12) in John's gospel. In this final speech before the
crowds, sensing that his great passion, death and resurrection looms before him,
Jesus urgently “cries out” to us. This
short passage echoes themes that pervade John’s gospel. See Jesus, see God. Remain in Jesus, remain in God. Have
faith in Jesus, have faith in God who sent Him out of his great love for us.
However, even if we reject
Jesus, and thus reject God, Jesus will not condemn us, just as he did not
condemn the woman caught in adultery.
Yet we will still be utterly lost.
Jesus won’t have to condemn us; we will have already condemned ourselves
to lives of darkness and fear, lives of angst and anger, lives of pain and
hatred. For when we reject Jesus, we reject
the love the God has for us. We reject
the salvation won for us by Jesus.
This seems simple, yet –
like the rule-following Pharisees, who, at the very moment of Jesus’ speech, are
plotting to kill him – I am often uncomfortable with this message. I always look for the cookbook, some list of
instructions – a rule book, if you will – to ensure that when I follow the recipe
precisely, I get what I want.
But there is no rule book,
for there is only one rule, and his name is Jesus. Pick up the cross and follow him. Be a slave to all. Don’t count the cost, for the cost is your
entire life. All that you deemed important
before; all that you held dear before; all that you considered fulfilling
before was a mere grain of wheat. Hold
tight to that grain, and that’s all you have, a bagatelle. Let that grain die, trusting that the new
life Jesus offers will be so much greater, so much richer, and so much fuller than
anything you could possibly make for yourself, and this new life will yield
great fruit.
Live this life of love,
generosity and kindness, sharing God’s unconditional love will all of children,
each created in His image and likeness.
Live this life of peace and
joy, free of anxiety and joyfully celebrating the great gift of salvation God
offers out of love through His gift of Jesus.
Be patient in suffering and
adversity, for Jesus suffered much for you.
Live gently and humbly, faithfully laying all of your needs in prayer at
the feet of Jesus – your Lord, your Savior, your sustenance, your way, your
rule, your life.
This is the message that Holy
Spirit directs Paul and Barnabas to proclaim to the Jews and to the
Gentiles. This is the message that will
change the world as all the nations come to believe in Jesus. This is the message we celebrated with great
joy just one month ago.
Out of God’s great love for
you and me and everyone from sea to sea, Jesus Christ, son of God, son of Man,
died on the cross and rose again to save us from sin, save us from evil, save
us from death.
Believe, and the kingdom of
heaven is yours.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Being a sheep
Okay,
who wants to be a sheep when they grow up? Certainly, this was never my ambition. When I was boy, if we played a
game as to which animal you could be, I’d go for the top – make me the lion,
king of the beasts. Growing up in the
fifties and sixties, our image of success was the “leader of the pack.” In the seventies and eighties, we really set
our sights high – we were going to be masters of the universe. Can’t go much higher than that, eh?
Well
you can. You can be a sheep. Not just any sheep, but Jesus’ sheep. In John 10, Jesus says that he is the Good
Shepherd. My first thought is of the parable of the lost sheep, where Jesus goes out and
finds the one sheep that has wandered away from the other 99. It’s a nice parable God seeking out every
last wandering soul, and, as a wandering soul myself, it is quite consoling. But it is not Jesus means in John 10.
When Jesus makes this claim, he says, “I am the Good
Shepherd. The Good Shepherd lays down
his life for his sheep.” (Jn 10:11) Jesus contrasts
his shepherding with that of hired shepherds who merely flee when danger approaches
and leave the sheep to the wolves, the bandits, or whoever. In contrast, Jesus lays down his
life for his sheep.
Jesus
offers the ultimate security – by laying down his life, he wins eternal life for his sheep. And nobody, not the lion,
not the leader of the pack, not even those who seek to master the universe can
take that eternal life away. For Jesus
knows his sheep and his sheep know him.
They hear his voice and follow him to where only he can lead.
In
Jesus’ day, the entire town’s sheep may have been kept in a common enclosure
during the night. They didn’t use
branding to tell the sheep apart, and, as you might imagine, one sheep tends to
look pretty much like any other. To
separate the sheep in the morning, each shepherd would simply call out to their
sheep. The sheep knew to follow that one
voice and no other.
Our
problem is that the world is filled with many voices and only one of
them is Jesus. Many try to sound like
Jesus so that we follow them. How do we tell
if we are following Jesus into the eternal life that he won for us?
Everyone
here in church today already knows one answer to this problem – we arrange our
lives to spend time with Jesus in prayer, to join with others at the wonderful
prayer of praise and thanksgiving called the Mass, to make Jesus a part of us
by participating in the Eucharist. To
keep the world’s voices from distracting us, we may devote some of our time to
reading the Bible, studying the lives of the saints, doing other spiritual
reading.
We
also see in today’s reading from Revelation that when Jesus laid down his life,
he was, in essence, the sacrificial lamb, dying that we might be saved. Ironically, he becomes the Good Shepherd by
dying as a lamb.
Following
Jesus’ call, as the sheep follow the call of their shepherd – literally
living our vocation – from the Latin, vocare,
to call – entails this same sacrificial love. For example, when we live our vocation as married persons, we lay down our single
lives to join with the other as one. As
we live our vocation as parents, we figuratively lay down our lives to
raise our children. And while we would
hope this never happens, what loving parent would not literally lay down their
own life, as Jesus did for us, if that would save their child.
Jesus
is calling each one of us to our own particular vocation. When we choose to ignore the call of the Good
Shepherd, preferring instead to follow our own voice and our own desires, to be
our own shepherd, we will certainly lose our way and fall prey to the wolves of
pride and the bandits of fear.
Following
his call, living the vocation he has called us to live, we rest easy and secure in the
knowledge that we live not because of who we are, but because of whose we are –
the Good Shepherd’s, the one who died that we might live, the one whose voice
we heed and follow.
His
sheep we are, His sheep we’ll be, forever and ever, Amen. Alleluia.
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Bread of Life
I like to think of myself
as a rational being, one who thinks logically and is not easily duped. Show me, as our friends in Missouri would
say, and I’ll believe. After all, seeing
is believing. In our modern, scientific
world, I am in good company.
Fed by the Bread of Life, leavened with God’s benevolent providence, our hunger for possessions is sated that we might be generous and compassionate.
But for Jesus, seeing may not
be enough. Oftentimes, I put on blinders
that hinder my sight. As a physical,
material being, my blinders limit what I see – and thus what I believe in – to those
things which are also physical and material.
And thus I see, but do not believe; at least I do not believe that which
is truly important.
The people Jesus addresses
in John 6 have just seen an amazing miracle – the feeding of the 5000. But like me, they only see with earth-bound
eyes. They see that Jesus, like the good
kings of old, might be the one that will provide for them, protect them from
their enemies, and bring back the same earthly glory that they enjoyed in the
times of David and Solomon.
Jesus tries to remove their
earth-bound blinders. In yesterday’s
passage, we heard him warn the crowd that this miracle, much as it satisfied
their bodily hunger, was simply pointing to something much greater – food that feeds
their souls, food that sustains eternal life.
Today, Jesus drives the
point home by identifying himself as the Bread of Life, a life which is more
than mere temporal existence, but true life that endures forever. And like the bread that is essential for our
survival here on earth, our belief in Jesus as the one who is sent by the
Father, who gives us everything that the Father gives him, and who will lead us
to the Father, is the essential nutrient for the new life that Jesus has won
for us.
When we believe in Jesus, the
Bread of Life; when we let ourselves be fed and nourished by Jesus, the Bread
of Life, we do not simply survive, we thrive.
We do not simply exist; we live truly and deeply. We are transformed.
Fed by the Bread of Life,
leavened with God’s mercy and justice, our hunger for revenge is sated that we
might seek reconciliation and peace.
Fed by the Bread of Life,
leavened with God’s almighty power, our hunger for power is sated that we might
be gentle and without fear.
Fed by the Bread of Life,
leavened with God’s infinite love, our hunger for prestige and respect is sated
that we might live with humility and kindness.
Fed by the Bread of Life, leavened with God’s benevolent providence, our hunger for possessions is sated that we might be generous and compassionate.
See and believe. Believe and eat. Eat and live – on earth as you will in
heaven.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
The verse
Many
years back, as a baby deacon, I was mindlessly driving home from work, heading
up I-684. I quickly came up on a truck
painted white. Not a semi, just a fairly
large white truck. On the back of the
truck, in bold black writing, was "John 3:16". As I passed the truck, I looked to see whose
truck it was, what other markings might be on the truck. There was nothing, just a white truck with
"John 3:16".
It
brought back for me the many times that I saw this same sign appear during
football games, or the World Series, or another major sporting broadcast. You remember the guy: colorful clothes,
equally colorful and outrageous hair, and a big placard, "John
3:16." I don't watch nearly as much
TV sports nearly as I used to, but I imagine that guy is still showing up at
big events, still attracting our eye, still waving his sign.
I
also remembered that many, many years ago, after seeing this guy countless
times, I finally picked up a Bible and looked up the citation. I always had a Bible, but rarely read
it. However, I was smart enough to know
that this was a citation from the Bible.
We heard it this morning: "For God so loved the world that he gave
his only-begotten son, that whoever believes in him might not perish, but might
have eternal life." And I
remembered one more thing...I just didn't get it. And, on passing the truck, I still wasn’t
sure I got it.
I
mean, it was a nice enough sentiment, but why this verse? How did this tell me – or anyone else – how to
get to heaven? For I thought I had
figured that one out already. I was the
dutiful son, the good Catholic boy who went to Mass every Sunday, contributed
my share to the collections, helped out when I was asked, obeyed the
rules. I didn't smoke, didn't drink, and
didn't swear – at least not much. And I
was a deacon! On top of all that, I
earned a great salary, with a promising career ahead of me. I was the very personification of
respectability.
Of
course, what the funny looking guy in the funny looking wig was trying to tell
me – and what I was too blinded by my proud respectability to see – was that I
was completely, utterly, and hopelessly lost.
I
thought that getting to heaven was something that I could earn just as I earned
the respect of others. In fact, I
believed that earning the respect of others, acting ethically and fairly,
following the rules, was exactly the same thing as earning heaven, as gaining
eternal life. To paraphrase an old commercial:
"I got saved the old fashioned way, I earned it!"
I
was certainly lost. As John tells us of
God's infinite, unimaginable love, we come to understand that there is nothing
to be proud of in our salvation, for it is something we cannot earn or deserve in
the least. St. Paul reminds us that our
only boast is in the cross of Christ (Gal 4:14), on which He died for us while we were
still sinners (Rom 5:8).
My
good works, if done in expectation of some heavenly reward, are utterly
worthless. My prayers, my fasting, my
religious observance, if done in expectation that God will somehow love me more
and more readily accept me into his kingdom, are counterproductive, for they deny
God’s very nature.
Unless
I accept that God's love for me is already infinite, cannot be made any greater no
matter what I do, is so intense that Jesus willingly suffered the cross just so
that I, a sinner, would be saved, I cannot possibly follow Christ. There would be no room in my heart for Christ, for it would be already full of myself.
Yet
there are still times when I just can't seem to get it. After all, I have spent what seems like my
entire life desperately, urgently, and sometimes pathetically, trying to earn
the respect of others, and only a relatively brief time trying to simply accept
the love of God.
Will
I ever really truly get it? I don't
know. What I do know is that God will
never stop trying to open my eyes, to open my heart, to open my soul, for even
if I am faithless, He will remain faithful (2 Tim 2:13).
He
has given me his holy word in the Scripture to read and to study. Through his Church, He has given me tangible
reminders of his love for us, like the crucifix, the Eucharist, and the
gathering at Mass here today. And every
once in a while, when, in the hardness
of my heart, I still don't get it, He sends me a funny looking guy with funny
looking hair, or a truck passing by on the road, with a simple sign: "John 3:16"
Saturday, April 6, 2013
Lucky Thomas
Happy Easter!
Does that sound odd to you? I know it would have sounded odd to me not so
long ago. Easter was last Sunday, so why
is this crazy person wishing me a happy Easter one week too late?
The calendar tells us that this is the first Sunday after Easter, but our missals insist that it is the second Sunday of Easter. This infers that Easter is not a single day,
but a season. In fact, it is a season
that lasts seven weeks, until Pentecost.
Moreover, our readings during these next seven weeks tell us that Easter
is even more than a season – it is a way of life. Those people who truly believe in the
Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ are forever changed – they are an Easter
people.
During the Easter season, our first
reading is not from the Old Testament, as it is during every other time of the
year. During Easter, we read from the
Acts of the Apostles, the story of how the Resurrection transformed the first disciples
into Easter people. In today’s passage,
we hear that Peter and some of the other disciples were acting much as Jesus
did during his ministry. Allowing the
grace of God to work through them, they were curing and healing many people, so many that
people clamored to just be near them so that they could be healed – much as a
woman in Mark’s gospel simply thought that touching Jesus’ garment would heal
her.
In today’s Gospel story, we gain another
insight into being Easter people. Now
poor Thomas has really taken a bum rap.
He not’s just “Thomas” to us, he is “doubting Thomas.” However, Thomas was really quite a fortunate
fellow. Of course, he was fortunate because
Christ eventually revealed himself to Thomas and assuaged his doubts. However, even before this revelation, Thomas
was one lucky guy.
Think of the situation at the beginning
of today's Gospel reading. The disciples
are a bit wired; nobody knows what is going to happen next, everyone sort of
scared to stick their heads out the door. Perhaps food is running low, so Thomas draws
the short straw and heads to the market.
On coming back, after he gives the presumably secret knock and gains
re-admittance, he hears an incredible story.
Jesus, who just a couple days earlier was dead and buried, had appeared
in that very room!
If we were Thomas, what would we think? I know what I’d be thinking: “Boy, these guys
are nuts! The pressure finally got to
them! I'm outta here.”
If we were the other disciples, what
would our reaction be to Thomas' disbelief?
Again, my initial reaction to Thomas’ doubts could easily have been
anger and indignation – “Are you calling us liars? We have seen the Lord! You are the fool! There’s the door, don’t let it hit you on the
way out!”
Yet, one week later, where do we find
Thomas – still in the company of his friends.
When Jesus breathed his peace on the disciples, when they received the
Holy Spirit, they became Easter people, they were able to live with Thomas’
doubts, and perhaps their change, their sense of peace impressed Thomas enough
that he was willing to cut them some slack, too. Easter people filled that upper room.
Today, Easter people fill this church of St.
Rose of Lima and all of Newtown. It’s as
clear to me as it was in that upper room.
Faced with the darkness of death, we choose to dwell of the light of the
resurrection. Faced with horrific evil,
we choose to pray to the one who is all good.
Faced with hatred, we choose love.
And as others flocked to the early
disciples that they might witness and perhaps benefit from the grace and mercy
so obviously present in those first Easter people, we’ve seen many come to
Newtown to witness the faith, grace and mercy that they may have simply seen or
read about.
And yet…is it enough? It’s nice that people care, but can’t we get
on with our lives? And none of this will
ever bring back what we’ve lost, will it?
If God is so good and we are his disciples, why did this even happen to
us? Can’t someone just wake us from this
nightmare? Doubts and more doubts. Perhaps we are much like Thomas who doubted
that first Easter night. But while we
may share Thomas’ doubts, we also share his good fortune.
The same cross and the same death that
redeemed Thomas, that redeemed the apostles, and that redeems all humankind for
all time, redeems each of us.
The same resurrection that filled Thomas
and the earliest apostles with hope and joy fills us with that same hope and
joy.
The same Spirit and grace that flowed
over the apostles in the upper room, the same Spirit that energized the
earliest disciples in their zeal to live and love as Jesus did, flows over each
one of us, gives us energy, unites our hearts and our minds in the forgiveness
of Jesus Christ, and empowers us to be Easter people.
Christ has risen. Alleluia!
Lucky Thomas; lucky us.
Happy Easter!
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Easter eyes
There are twelve days of Christmas,
but that’s nothing compared to the fifty days of Easter. We can be wishing each other happy Easter and
shouting out our alleluias until May 19th this year, when the Easter
season ends at Pentecost.
But even then, Easter doesn’t
really end, for we are Easter people, a people who have been transformed by the
resurrection of Jesus. So, how have we
been changed? How do we know we have
been changed, that we are, in fact, part of this “Easter people?” The readings this morning give us a clue.
Easter people are people
who see the world – past, present and future – with new eyes, Easter eyes. The two disciples on the way to Emmaus were
quite confused. They knew their history
and the prophets. They knew that God had
promised his people a Messiah, a king from David’s house who would conquer
Israel’s enemies and reign with justice for ever and ever. They had hoped Jesus would be this king, but
their hopes were dashed when Jesus was crucified. They couldn’t see where they could have gone
so wrong.
Then, after the stranger
explains the Scriptures to them, joins them for dinner, and breaks and blesses
the bread, their Easter eyes are opened to see in a new way. They see Jesus not as an earthly king, a
mighty general who conquers Israel’s enemies, but a divine savior who conquers humankind’s
enemy, death itself. They see those past
few, fateful days with eyes of faith.
Peter and John come to the
Temple to pray and see a man who had been crippled since birth. Both of them “look intently” at the man. What do they see? Do they see as they did when Jesus came upon
a man blind from birth in John 9? Do
they simply see this man as a victim of his parents’ sin? No, they see the man in a new way, with
Easter eyes. They see the man as a child
of God, as one for whom Jesus died. They
see him as Jesus saw each person he came across, with eyes of love.
Peter then says something
very odd. Peter asks the man to look at
John and him. The man does so, “expecting
to receive something from them.” The man
doesn’t know it yet, but he is about to become part of the Easter people. He has been primed by Peter to see as all
Easter people see, with eyes of hope.
Like Cleopas and his
companion, like all Easter people, we see our past with eyes of faith. We see the historical Jesus not simply as a
good man who lived, taught and died as all men do, but as the Christ of
faith. We see in the crucifix not an
instrument of torture and death, but a sign of God’s infinite and unconditional
love for each of us.
Like Peter and John, like
all Easter people, we see the world and the people around us with eyes of
love. We see times of great tragedy and
evil not as unmitigated darkness, but as opportunities to shine the light of
God’s love. We see those who hate and despise us not as enemies, but as fellow
sons and daughters of God, fellow creatures in the image and likeness of God, and
though they may not know what they are doing, we see them as fellow objects of
God’s love.
Like the man at the
Beautiful Gate, like all Easter people, we see our future with eyes of
hope. We look to the future not with anxiety over
what we are to eat or wear, but with confidence in God’s benevolent
providence. We see death not as an end,
but as a transition to an eternity with the source of all joy, peace and love.
We are an Easter people,
for we see the past with Easter eyes of faith, the present with Easter eyes of
love, and the future with Easter eyes of hope.
Happy Easter! Alleluia, alleluia,
alleluia!
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