Sunday, April 25, 2021

am I safe?

Homily
4th Sunday of Easter B
World Day of Prayer for Vocations and Good Shepherd Sunday
25 April 2021
AMDG +mj

Am I safe?  

There's been so much talk about safety.  Am I safe?  Are you safe?  Is anybody safe?  Who is safe in this dangerous world beset by violence, disease and disaster?  

Are we safe now that we have a COVID vaccine?  Maybe a bit, but plenty of danger remains.  You can't take the vulnerability out of being human, no matter how hard you try.  Try to avoid, hide or insulate yourself for a lifetime, and let me know if it works.

The Gospel presents generosity and courage as the path to safety.  Salvation is the word used.  Instead of offering safety which is mere protection from evil, Jesus offers salvation, which is the only real safety.

Jesus, are you safe?  He flips the question on his head.  Those who wish to save their lives will lose them, but those who lose their lives will save them.  Jesus, are you safe?  Of course I am, because no one can take my life from me.  I freely give it.

Am I safe?  The Gospel says this - only if you receive your life as a gift, and courageously give it away.





Sunday, April 11, 2021

where is my peace?

Homily
2nd Sunday of Easter - Divine Mercy
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
11 April 2021
AMDG +mj

Where is my peace?

My peace comes when I am free to be myself.  It comes when I can explore my fears and doubts, never having to pretend to know something I don't.

My peace comes from honesty.  My anxiety from pretense.  Where is your peace?

It's a word chosen by the Risen Christ in response to fears and doubts.  Jesus is not back from the dead for revenge, though He deserves it.  He is back to reveal wounds transformed by divine mercy.  Peace is His chosen word.

Jesus says that if my peace comes from being able to explore my fears and doubts honestly, it's game on!  Start digging, Thomas!  Let's engage my wounds, then yours.  Because Thomas is honest about his fears and doubts, his reward is getting to feel the Resurrection.

Last week I said that of everything I know or will ever know to be true, I know that Jesus is Risen! I know it for lots of good reasons, most of all that I have tried to be a real disciple of Jesus. When I die to sin, fear and myself, I begin to truly live!

Yet Jesus invites me and you not to stop there!  Keep digging!  For faith in the Resurrection is meant only to increase, insofar as I let more of my fears and doubts be healed by divine mercy!

John Paul II showed us how it's done.  He died in 2005, on the eve of this great feast that he gave the Church.  He died not in hiding, but showing us his open wounds until the end, letting them be filled with divine mercy.

That's peace.   I have peace because my doubts and fears are never something I have to put away.  I never have to pretend to be more or better than I am.  My faith in the Resurrection instead rises up precisely from the point of my wounds which I know to be redeemed by divine mercy.  Amen.





Saturday, April 3, 2021

what's your word?

Homily
Easter Sunday of the Lord's Resurrection
4 April 2021
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
AMDG +mj

What's your word?
If you had one word to proclaim to the world, what would it be?

Can you guess what mine is?  I bet you can! 

Risen!  Risen!  Risen!  He is Risen.  Jesus Christ is truly Risen.  He is Risen from the dead, just as He said!  Alleluia! Alleluia!

That's my word.  That will be my last word tonight and forever.  On this word - Risen - I bet all that I am and all that I will ever be.  

What's your word?  Tonight is a night set apart to have this conversation, so let's have it!  What is the one word that you were made to shout into the world?

Tonight I witness to you that this word - Risen - is the most mysterious, profound, dramatic, and TRUE word that has ever been spoken in human history or could ever be spoken.  Tonight I speak this word - Risen - in liturgical concert with the angels, the saints, and yes, the martyrs who died for this conviction even today, shout into the darkness that this word - Risen - is the one thing I know to be true out of everything I know to be true!

Tonight my prayer is that you too will speak a word.  Tonight my prayer is that each and everyone of us, led by our catechumens and candidates and the word of faith they speak tonight, gets off the couch tonight.  There is no virtual Easter!  To hell with that!  Tonight this is no sideline, no bench, and no room for bystanders.

You have my answer to the one word I want to speak to the world!  What is yours?

Why this word for me?  Because without it, even the most heartfelt words of love I ever say, words first spoken by Jesus - this is my body broken for you - lose their meaning.  Without the word Risen even the greatest sign of love I have every known, the cross to which I gave the most passionate kiss of my life last night, is powerless in the face of death.  St. Paul said it best.  Unless Jesus is Risen, nothing else matters.

But I don't profess this word tonight because I need it to be true.  My conviction about the empty tomb is not a vain wish that justifies my life.  It is the fruit of my being a disciple of Jesus.  Jesus invites His disciples not to a wishful faith.  He invites them to follow Him all the way to the cross to verify for ourselves whether there is a love stronger than death.  I pray my discipleship has been a courageous one, filtered through the cross of Jesus where I have learned how to fear nothing and avoid nothing.

My conviction comes from the times I actually dared being a real Christian, and I'll be darned if Jesus wasn't right.  Every time I die to sin and myself, I lay hold of a new, different and powerful life that does not fade.

Jesus Christ is Risen!  He is truly Risen!  Shame on me if this is ever something I have to pretend to be true, instead of something that because I am a disciple I have through the risk of real faith discovered to be true in my real life.

On this truth I am happy to bet everything that I am and every will be.  Not because I need to, or I'm afraid not to, but because I want to.

My word is Risen. What is yours?

You're invited to beat me or join me.  If you dare join, renew your baptismal promises.  If you join, please don't do anything cheap, easy or pitiable tonight.  On conviction night, let's decide with sharp minds, and pure hearts and courageous wills.

So, I propose to you now, a word that has rocked the history of the world, and changed the meaning of life and the destiny of man, to be the word of your life.  On this most holy night set apart precisely for this decision, I invite you to say the mysterious, dramatic, profound and true word that has ever been or could ever be spoken.

Jesus Christ is Risen!  He is Risen!  He is Risen from the dead just as He said.  He is Risen!  Alleluia!  Alleluia!


Friday, April 2, 2021

How will you use your last kiss?

Homily
Good Friday of the Lord's Passion
2 April 2021
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
AMDG +mj

What if you only had one kiss left for the rest of your life?
Would you use it tonight?  
How would you use it?

The celebration of Good Friday is marked with a liturgical kiss.  Why would I waste it?  How can it be anything less than the most passionate kiss of my life.

Just last night I betrayed Jesus with a kiss on his lips.  Tonight the consequences are splayed out before me.  Evil triumphs.   A new nothing results.  It's a nothing so much darker than before the creation of the world.  It's a new nothing so much more hopeless than the absence of that first abyss.  Back, then evil was just absent.  In this new nothing, evil reigns.  For what could be a deeper darkness than the death of God?  Wherever ground zero is, we are way south of there at Calvary.  God is dead, and I killed Him.

That's the end of God's love story, and of mine, unless there is another kiss that counts.  Good Friday is pure evil unless my kiss of betrayal gives way to a more passionate kiss.  This kiss must be precisely where God emptied all of Himself.  It must mean nothing less than my deepest embrace for that cross of mine that I least want, least understand, and that draws out a love that empties all of myself.

Only this kiss could turn the tree of death into the axis for the recreation of the world.  Anything less, and death wins forever.  Only a kiss that holds back nothing, can reverse the new nothing of the cross.

You're invited to kiss tonight only if that cross is never again the place where your story might end, and only and always and forever where you story begins.

What if you had one kiss for the rest of your life?
Would you use it tonight?
If so, how would you use it?




Thursday, April 1, 2021

got any no's left?

Homily
Holy Thursday of the Lord's Supper
1 April 2021 No Foolin'
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
AMDG +mj

No no no no no no no . . . never!  How many no's did you bring to Mass tonight?  What's your last no? What's your never?  That's our pivotal question for Holy Thursday.

Whatever your never is, know this.  You're up against a God who is the worst at taking no for an answer.  So hang onto your never tonight, if you can.  I dare you.

For whenever I say no, this guy moves, so that my every no that is initially a step away from him might eventually be a yes that takes me to Him.  And when He moves, He moves decisively, and dramatically!

Our first parents said no in the garden, and as their child so do I!  No I will not love.  No I will not obey.  No I will not serve.  In response, He moves!  From the no of the garden he can see the Fiat of the greatest member of our race.  So He moves, decisively and dramatically, from the abundant heart of His Father to the womb of a poor little girl.

What do I say to this baby?  I say no!  I will not hold you.  Away with Him.  Crucify Him.  Yet from this no of Calvary, from the denial of Peter who ran away scared, Jesus could see the meager courage of a man like Fr. Dan, and the pathetic yes of a priest like me.  So He moves.  He moves not only through the yes of the Immaculate Virgin, He moves even more dramatically, and decisively, through my sin-soaked words, to be born anew on this altar.  This is my body, broken for you.  This is my blood, poured out for you.

What do we say to the gift of the Eucharist?  We say no!  What will you give me to hand Him over to you?  Yes, one of you eating with me is the one who will betray me! Surely it is not me, Lord?  You have said so!  What does Jesus say to this no?  That's right, He moves.

From the no of those who rejected Him in the flesh to the no of those who reject His sacramental presence at table, He can see your yes.  He can see your little yes.  Lord, I am sorry for hurting you.  I do not deserve for you to come under my roof, but only say the word.  In response to all these no's, He moves tonight through your Amen from this altar into your body.

Still, the greatest distance remains.  Still, Jesus is only getting started.  For there are more no's to be overcome with love.  Unless I wash your feet, you have no part in me.  Unless He gets past your last no, your never, all of this is for naught.  All of this, His moving from the heart of His Father, to Mary's womb, to Calvary, to this altar, and into your body, doesn't work unless you also let Him wash your feet. You will never wash my feet. What is your last no?  What is your never?  Whatever it is, just know what you're up against.  You're up against the guy who's the absolute worst at taking no for an answer.

He has come all this way, in case just one of us might allow Him to travel past our never, and wash our feet.  The sign that our never has been conquered once and for all by His love, is that we will wash each other's feet.