Sunday, January 28, 2024

What word has authority over you?

Homily
4th Sunday of Ordinary Time B2
28 January 2024
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
AMDG

What word has authority over you?  Unfortunately, it's not always the word Jesus wishes to speak to you.  Too often the lie that evil speaks to us has an authority over us it was never meant to have.  You know the voice of the enemy well.  It is the voice of the accuser and the divider.  It is the word of shame, that you're not good enough.  I have four demons, four words, that constantly threaten authority over me - selfish, coward, loser, quitter.

I need the authority of Jesus to speak a word that will cast out these demons.  I need to hear I'm worth dying for, that I'm enough, that I'm beloved and forgiven.  I can never hear these words enough, and I pray that one day I can trust them completely, and always.

Paul's word of authority in today's second reading is celibacy!  Nice word choice, St. Paul!  Our reading gives voice to the Church's 2000 year history of being obedient to the path of marriage and celibacy written in our nature, the way to authentic love and self-gift our Lord has marked out for us.

The Catholic moral teaching on sexuality is astoundingly simple.  Sex finds its fulfilment when shared between a man and woman promised to each other in marriage and open to a family.  Those who are unmarried are asked to witness to the sacred dignity of sex by loving and serving each other in non-sexual ways in the celibate vocation.  Celibates love and give life and bear fruit through witness, service and prayer.  The Church's teaching on sexuality is really as simple as that. It's never changed, for its written into our nature and confirmed by the teaching of our Lord Jesus.

Pope Francis is trying to speak an authoritative word of compassion in relation to the Church's clear moral teaching on sexuality.  A lot of people have asked me why Pope Francis is changing the Church's teaching.  He is not. He never has, nor do I think he will or can.  Yet his word of authority received from Jesus and spoken into the modern human experience is one of compassion.  Pope Francis reaches out.  He stays in touch.  He admits that many do not see an authentic path of love for themselves in marriage or celibacy.  Many others do not experience their human nature as an intrinsic and simultaneous unity of body and soul.  Still others feel rejected by the Church.  

Whenever someone feels rejected, Pope Francis considers it our problem, not theirs.  For everyone has dignity as a child of God.  Everyone belongs to the Church if we dare to believe our Lord has begged us to be the shepherd and mother of all of humanity. Therefore, everyone is to be blessed who asks for the Lord's help to live and love well.  Blessings are for sinners who are trying.  That's me, and that's you, and that's everyone.

The Pope can speak this authoritative word of compassion from Jesus without confusing or changing the Church's life-giving and compelling teaching on sex.  He can bless individuals without endorsing unchaste relationships or behavior.  He can do so without changing the intrinsic meaning of our sexuality, and without bending to gender ideologies that confuse human nature.  He can do so while rejecting intervention that harm the unity of body and soul, and destroy lives.

If only the Church stays the course, and shares her true teaching in both compelling and compassionate ways, most people will arrive at a mature sexual integration that frees them to live the marital or celibate vocation with conviction, joy and fruitfulness.  But if we betray our teaching, or discard our neighbor, things will only get worse.  The Pope has faith that together, we can fulfill our capacity to love authentically in accord with our nature, and so lay hold of the fullness of life and love we were made for.

I pray that I can live this spiritual and sexual maturity with conviction and compassion. I pray the same for you, that this word of authority spoken to us by our Lord will case out the evils that threaten to divide us.

+mj






Saturday, January 20, 2024

What is most urgent?

Homily
3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time B
21 January 2024
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
AMDG

What has my attention?

Jesus is trying to get it.  His message at the beginning of his public ministry in the Gospel of Mark couldn't be any more straightforward.  Now.  Here.  Repent. Believe.  Does He have your attention?

I'm sure you're no stranger to things vying for your attention.  Because of the nonstop distraction and noise, we can find ourselves living virtually, far apart from reality.  I can get so off track, so out of touch with myself.   We can get stuck regretting the past, or obsessed about worrying about the future, that we miss being present to the reality right in front of us.  

A remedy is the word of God.  The word of God desperately wants your attention, to invite you into a sensitive and responsive mode of being, of engaging with reality.  That's where holiness and new life always is, for those who live in the here and now, with a desire to constantly change my mind and to discover new ways of doing things.

Pope Francis has given the 3rd Sunday of Ordinary Time to be forever known as Word of God Sunday. It's when we start meditating on a synoptic Gospel for the 30 weeks of Ordinary Time.  What's supposed to happen during ordinary time?  Well, if I dare to let the word of God have my attention above all things, whether that be the internal word of my conscience or meditating on the word Jesus is speaking to me through the Gospel, then a new ability to reorder my way of doing things can emerge!  This is what makes life exciting, a desire and ability to change in response to what I am hearing.

It's perhaps always the best new year's resolution, to let the word of God have my attention.  The Ninevites respond immediately to the preaching of Jonah.  St. Paul urges us to flee from attachments to the way things are now.  The apostles are radical and immediate in their response to the word Jesus speaks to them.  All who hear and respond gain a new and greater capacity to live.

So what has my attention in this new year?  For me, work and sports and my phone will try to dominate, and keep me stuck with the way things have always been.  Yet Jesus is speaking a word to me, inviting me not to be afraid to be an affectively mature spiritual father, one who can truly delight in fishing for Jayhawks, even though Jayhawks aren't fish, and in seeing my children grow spiritually into the fullness of life they are made for.

Jesus desires to speak a word of life to you too.  Can He have your attention?


Monday, January 1, 2024

What's my resolution?

Homily
Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God
1 January 2024
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
AMDG

What's my resolution?

It's actually a bad question, because life in the new year is not all about me.  But I'll stick with it anyway.

I have a couple friends who like to toss around ideas for a 'word of the year.'  It's not a terrible exercise.  It can be a reflective and prayerful and fruitful one, to receive from God a word that He wishes you to live into during the new calendar year.

Yet I wonder if Mary ever conjured up a word of the year for herself.  I doubt it. She was too attuned to what God is doing to seek a word just for herself.  In today's Gospel, the mother of God is collecting information from the shepherds, noticing how the ancient promises of God are being brought to fulfillment.  

I can spend way too much time thinking about myself, wondering how to make this my best year ever, and to emerge from 2024 as the best version of myself.  But this isn't prayer the way Mary did it. It's just thinking about myself.  Mary never made herself the star of the show. She simply reflected with great sensitivity. Her desire was only to notice what God is about.

On this 8th day of Christmas, when Jesus receives His Holy Name, may my resolution for 2024 simply be to echo the great Magnificat of Mary.  The Almighty has done great things FOR me, and holy is HIS name.