Homily – August 7

August 8th, 2010

Recently I read an article by a priest who told of his long and troubled journey to the priesthood. As part of his journey he spent a month working with Mother Teresa in her ‘house of the dying’ in Calcutta. He writes: “On the first morning I met Mother Teresa after Mass. She asked, ‘And what can I do for you?’ I asked her to pray for me. ‘What do you want me to pray for?’ I voiced the request I had borne for thousands of miles: ‘Pray that I have clarity.’”

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Homily – August 1

August 1st, 2010

Maybe I’m dating myself but do you remember the movie Alfie and its theme song, ‘what’s it all about Alfie’? It’s a bit like the theme of our first reading, ‘what’s it all about, what do get for all our toil, for all our efforts, for all our blood sweat and tears, for all our sleepless nights? We leave it all to be enjoyed by another who did not toil for it. It doesn’t make sense. It’s just not fair but its life.’

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Homily – July 25

July 25th, 2010

Every religious tradition recognizes the importance of prayer, a time spent in the presence of the divine. Most people see themselves as poor prayers. They try to be still and bring their thanks and their troubles to God. Immediately they are bombarded with what we call ‘distractions’. They think of all the things they should be doing, the idea being that their time could be better well spent getting things done. Thoughts of their unworthiness trouble them, why would God be interested in me or care for me after all the things I’ve done? Memories of recent of past conflicts with family members or co workers come to mind and the feelings of anger and resentment resulting from such conflicts still bother them. The list could go on and on.

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Homily – July 11

July 11th, 2010

After the parable of the Prodigal Son, this parable of the Good Samaritan is one of best known and most challenging parables of Jesus.

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Homily – July 4

July 4th, 2010

In the Book of Exodus we read how Moses selected seventy elders to help guide and govern the people. Luke has Jesus as the new Moses sending out seventy disciples as advance men to prepare the people for his coming. He warned them their reception would be mixed. Villages would welcome them and villages would reject them. Jesus wanted them to know that they were to depend on nothing and nobody but only on the Spirit with which he sends them. The words most remembered from this gospel are ‘the harvest is great but the laborers are few.’ These words are constantly used to refer to the need of vocations to the priesthood or religious life but this is too narrow an understanding of them. Each one of us, no matter what our state in life is called to be a harvester. One of the things we are asked to do as followers of Christ is to help ‘take away the sins of the world.’

Someone described Jesus’ taking away the sins of the world in this way: “ Jesus took away the sins of the world by holding, carrying, purifying, and transforming tension, that is, by taking in the bitterness, anger, jealousy, hatred, slander, and every other kind of thing that is cancerous within our human community, and not giving it back in kind.

In essence, Jesus did this by acting like a purifier, a water filter of sorts: He took in hatred, held it, transformed it, and gave back love; he took in bitterness, held it, transformed it, and gave back graciousness; he took in curses, held them transformed them, and gave back blessing; and he took in murder, held it, transformed it, and gave back forgiveness. Jesus resisted the instinct to give back in kind, hatred for hatred, curses for curses, jealousy for jealousy, murder for murder. He held and transformed these things rather than simply re-transmit them.”

As followers of Christ we are invited to be the lamb of God, one who is willing to take the all too common tensions, conflicts, frictions and stresses we experience in our families, communities and workplaces and as Christ did, hold them and transform them and never re- transmit them, never giving back in kind. In the living of our own lives we are meant to be like a purifier, a water filter of sorts, transforming the hurts, misunderstandings, slights that are so often a part of our lives and never give them back in kind. It is not an easy thing to do, we automatically want to hit back, tit for tat and we know from experience that only makes matters worse.

Trying to live as a filter, a water purifier we are in our own small way doing what the disciples in today’s gospel were doing; proclaiming the kingdom of God is near, a kingdom of truth and life, a kingdom of holiness and grace, a kingdom of justice, love and peace. From what went on in Toronto last weekend God know we need these things in the life of our city these days.