Homily for the 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time
23 September 2018
Cathedral of St. Raymond Nonnatus
—
One of the blessings of being at the Cathedral has been the chance to live with Fr. Benedict Zele. For those who donâ€
The other night after dinner, he and I took a walk around the neighborhood. As we were walking, Fr. Benedict said, “you know, if we were in my home village, there would be children in the streets and they would all be running out to join us.â€
“wow,†I said, “because weâ€
“No, no,†said Benedict. “Because you are a mzungu! And this will be rare for them!â€
“A what?â€
“A white man.â€
Fr. Benedict explained that it will have been perhaps five years or more since the people of his village have seen a white person. He also told me that the word for white person, “mzungu†(which is the Chichewa word for “gringoâ€) is also used to represent someone of learning, high culture, and class. For those in his Malawian village, high culture and class and almost synonymous with white people.
He told me that when he goes back to Malawi, he too will be referred to as a mzungu because of how much time he has spent in America studying.
On our walk, we started talking about differences between Malawian and American culture. Fr. Benedict observed that many in Malawi would be quick to note our emphasis on freedom: land of the free, home of the brave; the self-made man; the American dream; donâ€
I often wonder whether our understanding of freedom isnâ€
More than this, and more relevant for us, people have begun inventing their own versions of Jesus. Maybe this was a possibility in a world of pagan gods, when nobody really knew who they were or when their will and preferences seemed to change depending on circumstances. But we have seen Jesus! In Jesus, God has visited his people! The divine has taken on flesh and lived among us!
Further, he came to preach one message, one mission. He didnâ€
We have come to understand freedom to mean the “absence of bonds.†“I can do whatever I want!†“I donâ€
But without some arbiter of the way our lives are lived, the only thing that guides what we do is our whims, our own desires. And soon, and weâ€
The Church has a very clear understanding of her doctrine, and why she believes what she believes. And five minutes of simple study will reveal that the doctrine of the Church does not exist to oppress, suppress, or repress the people of God. It exists to set people free!
It does not mean that we can do whatever we want. Baptism in Christ, reception of the sacraments does not give us the supernatural power to invent the truth, but to live the truth well.
The intentional corruption of the doctrine of the Church, on matters related to any category: sacraments (baptism is only a symbol of the cleansing God has already done), sexuality (thereâ€
The essential element to living a morally upright life is the firm belief that Godâ€
Think of it this way: weâ€
The bumpers have names: orthodox doctrine, the sacraments (especially confession and the Eucharist), the virtues, community, regular and fervent personal prayer.
“Where jealousy and selfish ambition exist, there is disorder and every foul practice. But the wisdom from above is first of all pure, then peaceable, gentle, compliant, full of mercy and good fruits, without inconstancy or insincerity.â€
The doctrine of the Church is a gift to us, a great helper to us. One of the points Fr. Benedict made on our walk was that the people of Malawi, and other pretty much every culture besides ours, would say that freedom in the truest sense means being radically available to pursue noble things. Jesus is the one who teaches us what is noble: “The Son of Man is to be handed over to men and they will kill him, and three days after his death the Son of Man will rise.â€
That is the vocation of every Christian person. We arenâ€
We are Christians. And our God, who took on flesh in the person of Jesus Christ, died. He died because thatâ€
There is not more than one true Truth. This is impossible.
There is not more than one version of the Churchâ€
There are many ways to live out the Christian life, but none of them include making up our own version of the Truth so that we might not have to die, or so that the process of becoming a saint wonâ€
We are Christians. And we do love everyone, but not because theyâ€
“The wicked say, let us beset the just one because he is obnoxious to us.â€
Who cares if people think you are obnoxious because of Christ? If they think youâ€
They call us obnoxious because we prick something in them, we poke something in them. What we stoke in the world is the pilot light of Truth that lives in every single person we meet, because we all are made in the image of God. The pilot light of Truth burns faithfully in every single person, and when it convicts them in their wickedness, when it convicts US in our wickedness, this is a good thing.
But if we sell out, if we try to change the will of God, the teaching of Jesus, or if we try to go against the influence of the Spirit, is it any wonder there is tension in our pews? Discord in the world? Jesus came to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
May the Eucharist we receive today be the strength we need to stand firm, stand fast, stand forever in defense of all that is good and beautiful and true. May we take Fr. Benedictâ€
May we each become holy and free according to the will of God. May we then go out to make others holy and free. When others become holy and free, then the culture will become holy and free, and when the culture is holy and free then society becomes holy and free. When society becomes holy and free, then, and only then, will we really see what the Kingdom of God is all about.
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