Homily for the 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Ss. Peter and Paul Catholic Church
11 July 2021
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One thing you will learn about the time that I spent living at the Cathedral in Joliet is that living in the heart of Joliet results in so many funny and interesting stories. Thereâ€
At the end of May of this year, on the night of the Cathedralâ€
The next morning, the receptionist forwarded me a voicemail from a man in the neighborhood who, letâ€
“Yeah, uh, I know you guys are really busy right now running a corrupt organization under the guise of religion, and that you all believe youâ€
As any priest will tell you, we donâ€
“Sir, when you moved in did you fail to notice the 192 foot – 19 story – bell tower in the neighborhood? When you moved into a neighborhood with “CATHEDRAL AREA†written on a sign at the entrance…did you think it was joke?†Not nice, Fr. Ryan.
Then, another voicemail, from an hour later that night, which demonstrated some signs that perhaps our friend had been enjoying some apple juice as the evening progressed: “Yeahhhh uhhhhh….I called about the bells and I just wanted to apologize for what I said; I said some things I shouldnâ€
Wow – actually, a really decent thing to do. And a lesson that even in the nastiest nastygrams, thereâ€
But thatâ€
Itâ€
In the past, why was the priest put on a pedestal? Why were religious sisters so revered? From where does the Christian missionaryâ€
The perceived closeness with God. Those people are close to God, and I want to be close to God, so I better listen to them. Priest, religious brother or sister, and you – the Christian faithful whose role it is to sanctify, to Christify, the world – the expectation is that what we preach, what we espouse, has been allowed to take root in US and to change US before we go off and preach it to others. This conversion, and everything that entails, is a holy and beautiful thing.Â
Why did my neighbor in Joliet speak of such closeness with God in a mocking, even scornful tone?
I remember when my brother started working at McDonaldâ€
Christians are often very poor brand ambassadors. We donâ€
One of my favorite lines from the 20th century German priest Romano Guardini speaks to this when he says that Christians everywhere will eventually have to confront this embarrassing question: “whether the redeemed shouldnâ€
This morning weâ€
They were the ultimate brand ambassadors; they were often the only faithful people found in entire cities and regions; they were committed to prayer, unwavering in their commitment to what God had asked them to do. In a word, the prophets of the Old Testament are the models for us of what it means to live life as friends of God in a way that is really too good to be true.Â
A M O S
Letâ€
Amos was called by God to be a prophet at a time when there were still two kings and the kingdoms were divided; the Northern Kingdom of Israel and the Southern Kingdom of Judah, which included Jerusalem. Amos was a shepherd and a dresser of sycamore trees in the village of Tekoa, near Bethlehem, in the Kingdom of Judah and so was called out of his homeland and away from his family to preach in the North.Â
The king Jeroboam was on the throne in Israel and under his reign the Northern Kingdom “reached the summit of its material power and prosperity.†(Heschel, The Prophets, 27) During Amosâ€
When Amos began his preaching in the North, “there was pride (6:13), plenty, and splendor in the land, elegance in the cities, and might in the palaces. The rich had their summer and winter palaces adorned with costly ivory (3:15), gorgeous couches with damask pillows (3:12); they planted pleasant vineyards, anointed themselves with precious oils (6:4-6; 5:11); their women, compared by Amos to the fat cows of Bashan (LOL) were addicted to wine (4:1).
“At the same time, there was no justice in the land (3:10), the poor were afflicted, exploited, even sold into slavery (2:6-8; 5:11), and the judges were corrupt (5:12)†(Heschel, 27-28)Â
In the midst of this prosperity and plenty, there stands a little shepherd from Judah who cries out at the top of his voice:Â
The Lord roars from Zion,
and utters his voice from Jerusalem;
The pastures of the shepherds mourn,
and the top of Mount Carmel withers. (Amos 1:2)
Through Amos, God turns his wrath to a very unexpected place: not to the judges or leaders or merchants, but to the priests and to those who gather for worship. Amos calls out the religious people, to whom the world turns when looking for an example of friendship with God, who themselves had become complacent. They observed the sabbath laws with strict severity, and then as soon as the sabbath ended, they went back to ignoring the poor and dealing deceitfully in business. One author puts it this way: “Man is waiting for the day of sanctity to come to an end so that cheating and exploitation can be resumed.†(Heschel, 31)Â
Amos stands up and proclaims this word of God:Â
Even though you offer me your burnt offerings, I will not accept them,
And the peace offerings of your fatted beasts I will not look upon.
Take away from me the noise of your songs;
To the melody of your harps I will not listen.
But let justice well up as waters,
And righteousness as a mighty stream! (Amos 5:22-24)Â
And the response to this diatribe of the prophet is what we heard in the first reading: As Amos calls out pretty much every level of society, and goes as far as telling them that their worship to God is not only ineffective for themselves but also offensive and bothersome to God. The priest, Amaziah, has similarly strong words for Amos:Â
Off with you, visionary! Flee to the land of Judah!
Never again prophesy in Bethel.
Be quiet, prophet!
And Amos, our little shepherd from Judah, looks that priest in the eyes and with a heart full of courage proclaims:
I am no prophet, nor am I a prophetâ€
You say, Do not prophesy against Israel, and do not preach against the house of Isaac.
Therefore, thus says the Lord:
Your wife shall be a harlot in the city,
and your sons and your daughters shall fall by the sword,
and your land will be divided,
you yourself will die in an unclean land,
and surely shall Israel go away into exile.
Put in Fr. Ryan terms:
“Aww, you think Iâ€
The takeaway this morning is twofold.Â
- Next time someone mocks you because you are someone who is a friend of God, I pray you will have the courage to say: Yes, Iâ€
m a friend of God. And if these bells ringing at 7pm on a Thursday remind you of God, and they agitate you, then I have done exactly as I†ve been asked. - We as Christians in the world today must be too good to be true. We must be the witnesses of a new kind of life, a life in which it is possible to live without sin and without the fear of death. If your experience of Christianity is simply sin-confession-sin-confession-sin-confession, then something must change. Freedom from sin is not the goal of Christianity; freedom from sin is literally as low as the bar gets; everything else awaits you; the joy of the Gospel awaits you; the freedom of the children of God awaits you; a wholehearted and beautiful and joyful and new kind of living awaits you. The time is too ripe, the stakes are too high, for us to continue to be mediocre as the world pulls harder and faster away from God.Â
So today as we receive the Eucharist, we add our own reflection to the strange truth with which the prophets in the Old Testament, and those disciples sent out two by two in the Gospel, had to come to terms:
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