Homily
28th Sunday in Ordinary Time C2
9 October 2022
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center at the University of Kansas
AMDG
Do I need to give thanks?
I'll never forget the time my dad showed up his priest son. One Thanksgiving morning in Hoxie, Kansas, I confessed to my dad that I was in vacation mode, that I hadn't prepared for Mass. Ninety minutes before Mass, I hadn't even looked at the Gospel for the day. My dad told me on the spot without looking what the Gospel was - the 10 lepers being cleansed, with only the single Samaritan returning to give thanks to God. I guess my dad has been going to Thanksgiving Mass a lot longer than I have.
My dad isn't particularly articulate about his faith, but he doesn't need to be. He remembers more, and is affected by Mass more than I give him credit for. Best of all, he walks the walk. He never even considers missing Mass. For him it is right and just to give thanks for the gift and responsibility of life.
There are two needs that I have that could use more attention. There is the need to give thanks, and to give my life. Notice that perhaps my greatest need is not to get, but to give. The things I take for granted or hoard own me more than I own them. I have been stuck in selfish mode more than once in my life, obsessed with what I don't have rather than responding with gratitude and generosity for what I do have.
The Mass is the ultimate thanksgiving. It is the ultimate place to get more by giving thanks and giving our lives to God. Eucharist means thanksgiving. Is it any wonder that if my greatest need is to give thanks and my life, that the largest crowds in human history have been gathered by the Mass. I've been blessed to have been a part of those crowds.
Mind you, nothing of my worship adds anything to God. Yet, it brings me life by opening me to the truth that all is gift, all is grace, and my best freedom is to respond generously to said grace. Worship brings me into right relationship with the source of all grace, and to the part I'm invited to play in the great battle for life everlasting.
So let us give thanks to the Lord our God. It is right and just!
Do I need to give thanks? You bet I do, more and more!
Jesus calls out the nine who get what they need, take it for granted, and go back to their own way. That sounds about right. Ninety percent of the time I come not to truly worship, but to check a box before going back to my thing. The Samaritan leper, and Naaman the Syrian, shame me as foreigners who worship better than I do.
Worship is right and just. It's proper to our nature; it's what saves and heals more than anything. May I resist an atheistic world view that takes life as a given, as only what I make of it. The problem is that I didn't make the world. I certainly didn't make myself. Atheism by its incompleteness backfires where worship succeeds.
My dad still teaches me that life is about grace and responsibility.
For that, I want to give more thanks!
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