My Homily
My Homily
My Homily
If so, then look no farther than the words of St. Paul to the
Romans in our second reading. “Through one man, sin entered
the world,” notes St. Paul and as a result “…death reigned from
Adam to Moses….”
Our conventional wisdom tells us that sin is the result of a personal
choice. Do we do the right thing? Do we do the wrong thing? Our
conventional wisdom focuses on us. Our conventional wisdom focuses
on what we do. But in this very rich and deep message to the Romans,
St. Paul flips the telescope around. He focuses on the condition around
us. While not knocking the edges off of personal responsibility, St. Paul
stresses that the conditions for choosing the good, the wise and the
beautiful are premised first and foremost on a redemptive act of God.
This means that if we are under the spell of an addiction, it is impossible
for us not to drink, not to take drugs, not to escape in compulsive
behaviors without some outside help. We cannot choose wisely or well
left to our own devices alone. We need help. We need a Savior. We need
Jesus Christ. We need redemption. The famous writer C.S. Lewis in a
graphic lecture during the Second World War on BBC likens redemption
to a military rescue. He writes: “Enemy-occupied territory – that is what
this world is. Christianity is the story of how the rightful king has landed
in disguise and is calling us all to take part in a great campaign of
sabotage.
God created every inch of creation as good. But things went wrong. Sin
entered. Rebellion occurred. We find ourselves in rebel territory. Our
words are those of St. Paul, who a little later in his message to the
Romans notes, “I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do
what I want but I do the very thing I hate.” As the Catechism of the
Catholic Church notes: “Sin creates a proclivity to sin.” In other words,
while sin is always a personal act in a fallen world, inside the rebel
territory our own time and place, our consciences are clouded and our
judgment marred.
Only in and through Jesus Christ, through our encounter with Jesus – a
Jesus whom we meet in Word and Sacrament –can we unite our
suffering to His and perhaps find meaning. By our desire to draw close
to Jesus with whom we can speak in prayer and worship we can perhaps
sense that we are not alone. By our contact with the Jesus whom we
touch and see in our spiritual and corporal works of mercy we can
experience His compassion growing in us. We cannot undo our losses.
We cannot take back our failings. We cannot avoid regrets. But we
can unite ourselves to the mind and heart of Jesus Christ.
“…In the world you will face persecution, but take courage, I
have conquered the world” (John 16:33). So many good people
face all kinds of persecution today. Today, there is a wave of
religious persecution.
Siroki Brijeg (Bosnia)
On February 7th 1945 the Communist soldiers arrived and said,
“God is dead, there is no God, there is no Pope, there is no
Church, there is no need of you, you also go out in the world and
work.” The communists forgot that the Franciscans were
working, most of the Franciscans were teaching in the adjoining
school. Some of the Franciscans were famous professors and
had written books. The communists asked them to remove their
habits. The Franciscans refused. One angry soldier took the
Crucifix and threw it on the floor. He said, “you can now choose
either life or death.” Each of the Franciscans knelt down,
embraced the Crucifix and said, “You are my God and my All.”
The thirty Franciscans were taken out and slaughtered and their
bodies burned in a nearby cave where their remains lay for many
years. Today they are buried inside the Franciscan church
In our Gospel today Jesus said, “if anyone declares himself for
me in the presence of men, I will declare myself for him in the
presence of my Father in heaven.”