Thursday 14 March 2024

4th Sunday of Lent (B) 10 March 2024 Sermon

4th Sunday of Lent 10 March 2024 Turning the tide

For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life (Jn 3,16). Words from today’s Gospel.

We are approaching Easter, when each year we are reminded of the fickleness of human nature as when the crowd turned against Jesus (not to mention Judas’ treachery or that of the Pharisees).  How did we get it so wrong?

Sometimes footballers miss a goal from very close range, and we wonder how they can do it. Well, humanity has been missing shots for goal for thousands of years.

But unlike in football, we still get another shot, even if we have missed a lot of times already.

The reminders of human frailty are not meant to depress us, but to encourage us to do better, as we know we can.

God makes it easier for us by Himself taking on human nature, and showing us how it is done. He does not miss from close range.

If we lived before the Incarnation and we were told that God would become Man, we would probably disbelieve that.

If we were convinced He would come we would probably think it was next to impossible that anyone would reject Him. But lots of people did reject Him.

And if they did reject Him then they would repent later. Not necessarily.

And they would kill Him again if they could. And they certainly still reject, by ignoring or insulting or preventing the Gospel from getting out.

Fortunately, at every point there are those who do believe and go against the tide. We hope we are among that number, and grow stronger in our reliability as disciples.

God has not given up on us. He could have turned the power off a long time ago!

Let us turn towards Him: Father forgive them they know not what they do.(Lk 23,34)

Many of them repented in the sober light of day. We could say the same for our own sins.

When people neglect to pray they will make bad decisions, driven by passions. If we maintain our own prayer life we will not add our sins to His burden.

Now we stand with those faithful disciples around the Cross, and are ready to be identified with Him

We do not mock, or laugh at Him; we do not wish Him dead but very much alive.

We want to grasp the full extent of what He has done for us; so that at some point either past or future we will come to the motivation to go further in His service.

Once forgiven we move on to the next stage like a St Paul who transferred his zeal to the right side of the argument.

The tide can be turned. We want to help others to have that Pentecost experience: Therefore let all Israel be assured of this: God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Messiah.”  When the people heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and the other apostles, “Brothers, what shall we do?” (Ac 2,36-37).

What can I do to atone for such a sin, but give him equal and better affirmation.

Be good, do good, according to one’s life station. It does not have to be a dramatic change on the surface, but simply take the Gospel more seriously and make it centralto your life.

The story is still happening - we have not reached the last page yet. We can make it a happy ending.

On the last page? The people did turn around most of them, all of them, some of them, What will it be?

Laetare Sunday? What is there to be joyful about? That we get more than one chance, and this is one of them.

Thursday 7 March 2024

3rd Sunday of Lent (B) 3 March 2024 Sermon

 

3rd Sunday of Lent 3 March  2024 Commandments

Nothing is too much trouble for one we love. A desire to please is paramount.

We would do anything for some figure we admire or venerate such as Mother Teresa, or many others.

We should see God in that light, but it does not always happen.

Think of obedience to God as ‘nothing is too much trouble’, and we will see things more clearly.

Some will take a defiant attitude as questioning what right God has to intervene? He made the whole universe and keeps it in being.

They say we should be able to run the world ourselves without divine interference.

A quick look at the news will remind us of what happens when we leave it to people to run things!

Instead we can regard God's laws as a way of discovering more about God Himself. If we humble ourselves before Him we will learn why it is a good idea to obey Him, and seek Him out as much as possible.

God helps us to love Him as he sets us free from sin, and we come to value what he values and to deplore sin.

Our antipathy to rules is a throwback to original sin, where Adam and Eve try to blame others for their sin, and so it has been ever since. (Gen 3,12-13).

Sometimes the light of realization would break through. The Israelites would go as far as saying that they loved the laws of God (Ps 119, 97) because those laws showed how much God cared for them. Other gods did not do that. (See also Ps 18).

God's laws, we might say, are an acquired taste; they become more appealing as we see their inner wisdom and how everything leads back to God, who is the source of all that is good.

I am the Lord your God, and therefore come the following commands, the Ten Commandments.

These commands flow out of the nature of God, telling us what He is like, what He regards as important.

God wants us to know Him, so He comes in ways that we can digest, such as the sacraments, sacred places, and giving us commandments so we can live with wisdom and harmony.

The ten commandments begin with our response to God. If we love Him all else follows naturally. Any sort of false god means we do not love the real God.

The Commandments are brief in title there are many levels within each one. All the clauses and sub-clauses direct us back to I Am the Lord Every obedience is giving honour to God; every sin an insult to His majesty.

Keep the laws and we will mature in understanding, and the whole society will be better for that.

An initial sacrifice may be required to keep the laws, but great glory will result if we go God's way.

Does a loving God punish? Yes, when He sees it as necessary to call His people back to the right path. Thus today’s episode in the Temple when Jesus takes a whip to the moneychangers. Somebody was doing wrong and worse still, it was in the Lord’s house.

The house of the Lord - firstly the Temple, now churches - require special reverence, such as keeping silence, dressing appropriately, generally keeping a reverential demeanour.

God will not punish us,  however, if we make our own way to Him, to honour Him as He is, in His laws, His word, in whatever way He chooses to reach us.

We take the right path voluntarily, trusting ourselves to His ongoing providence to lead us safely home. Allow yourself to be a stray sheep and let Him collect you (Lk 15,4-7).

Thursday 29 February 2024

2nd Sunday of Lent 25 Feb 2024 Sermon

2nd  Sunday of Lent 25 February 2024 The Transfiguration

The Transfiguration was meant to strengthen the apostles for the sufferings they would endure on Good Friday. If they could recall the glory of Christ, which they had seen for themselves, they would not have panicked on seeing the Crucifixion. That was the logical reasoning.

The apostles, however, did not remain constant under pressure, though they did become strong enough at Pentecost a few weeks later.

With the same idea the Transfiguration is offered to us and the whole Church.

We do not always react by the laws of logic. We believe in God, and we believe He can work miracles to rescue us from trouble, but when we are in the heat of battle we can lose that belief.

We have so many miracles we could call upon, yet somehow they lose their power over us.

We need a reference point to which we can always return, and that is Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today and forever (Heb 13,8).   We need not just the miracles but the One who can work the miracles!

How can we be strong enough that we will never lose what we have gained? Overall victory is assured but we want to win the battles too.

We keep records, at least in our heads; we remember what we have seen, and then we bring it out when needed. This is one reason why we have liturgy, the constant re-enactment of a whole host of miracles, centred on Jesus Christ, what He can do and is doing for us.

Under Josehp the Patriarch the Egyptians had enough to withstand the famine (Gen 41,49). So we put away in storage all our reasons for believing, and we bring them out when our world appears to be falling apart.

We face many ordeals, and we can buckle under the pressure, but we have these reserves to call upon. We not only survive, but flourish.

People in general are not outstanding in faith, so it is easy to operate at that level, and accept that as normal.

But that is not how it is meant by God. He wants us to have a lively active trust in Him, as a matter of course.  And He wants to see the whole Church, buzzing with faith and other virtues.

We can always correct past lapses and grow in strength. If we ran away on Good Friday we will not run away next time, or the one after that.

The Transfiguration could be seen as a kind of pivotal miracle, around which all others place themselves. It is a certain reference point which never diminishes.

Think of a time of your life when your faith was at its strongest. Such times are rare and can be a long time apart; but they don’t get any less true with the passing of time.

We might allow the passing of time to erode our beliefs. Memories can fade.

We face some sad experiences along the way. Loved ones die; we have other misfortunes and setbacks. And then there is the world and all its tragedies and troubles.

Who can believe under such pressure, but then again who can fail to believe, given the miracles we have?

In our faith we get used to seeing beyond appearances. We learn to see the complexities of situations and are not easily swayed, especially not to sin.

The main temptation we face is to give up our faith as just too hard, and try to make our own way through life, with maybe some reference to God, but mostly not.

So many do this and it brings all sorts of disorder, and still plenty of fear, which is what they were trying to avoid.

In Christ we have order, peace, certainty – we have all we need to see off various problems and to make progress to eternity.

Thursday 22 February 2024

1st Sunday of Lent (B) 18 February 2024 Sermon

 1st Sunday of Lent 18 Feb 2024 Temptations

Lent is a time of waging war on Sin. Jesus was tempted by the devil to settle for a lesser goal, to be distracted from higher and better things.

This is how the devil tempts us, to take lesser gods and expend all our desires on them.

It helps if we have a clear concept of life’s having a start and a finish. We say life is short but then live like it goes forever, ignoring what happens after death.

Many have a vague idea about life after death, but do not see the urgency of getting this life into order. They become absorbed in this life, but do not know what it is for!

We live in a world which is ordered by God. He hears our prayers and He interacts    strongly, without taking away our free will.

People think God is remote. No, indeed. He is aware of everything. He knows if a sparrow falls from the sky (Mt 10,29). He knows what we need, but often awaits our asking for it.

He wants us to have a lively and continuous conversation with Him, learning as we go, growing in love and trust towards Him.

In the coming of Christ to the world, God reconciles humanity with divinity, and this gives humanity the best exposure it has ever had to true goodness, with all its flow-on effects. Such as peace, happy families, fulfilling lives etc.

He give us many blessings from which we can learn, and then become grateful.

We learn to obey God and to see why that is necessary, and the best thing to do.

Choosing our own course may seem the obvious way forward but, as we see, it leads to more and more trouble.

We live as disciples of Christ with the knowledge that He is nearby, and never forgetting there will be a day of reckoning.

Instead we read the signs and repent. Like Nineveh, like the Prodigal Son, like Mary Magdalene, and thousands  since, who have come to the Saviour and found new life.

Reading the signs we have direction and the way to complete the path.

God knows our human frailty so He does not ask more of us than we can bear.

However, we will find that our capacity to make sacrifices will increase, and then we will be loaded with more responsibility (cf Mt 25,28, give the one who has ten talents even more). He will also give us many consolations on the way.

We must not be too attached to the temporary blessings of this life. They are like refreshment points along the way, but not themselves the end of the journey.

We give up things in Lent to acknowledge that we want the heavenly food instead. We do not live on bread along but on every word that comes from the mouth of God (Mt 4,4).

We learn to live in two worlds at once, this world and the heavenly world. We live by the laws of the heavenly world, at the same time being responsible citizens here on earth; doing all we have to do, but inwardly longing for our true home in Heaven (Ph 3,20).

Whenever we came to faith and baptism, that was getting on course. Everything after that is staying on course – to Heaven.

We make it hard for ourselves whenever we choose to sin. Sin is like being on a journey and then suddenly going sideways or backwards. It does not make any sense, but the temptations are strong, because previous sin clouds our minds and weakens our wills.

A strong dose of clarity from Heaven will enable us to resume the straight path!

Thursday 15 February 2024

6th Sunday Ordinary Time (B) 11 Feb 2024 Sermon

6th Sunday Ordinary Time (B) 11 February 2024 Inclusion

It is not a nice thing to be excluded from communities where we would like to be included; to be victims of prejudice or bullying. Somehow, just not one of the gang.

Jesus can heal that sense of exclusion as well as He can heal our physical complaints. The ‘leper’ is restored to his community. Physical healing symbolises the spiritual healing which restores our relationship with God. Sin moves us away from God, and sometimes a long way. Repentance will bring us back.

God does not want anyone to be excluded; He came to save sinners (1 Tim 1,15). He came that they might have life, and have it to the full (Jn 10,10).

For Him and for us, the Church is the ultimate society to which we need to belong. The Church is God's family, and where all of us become one family. We are made one in Christ, brothers and sisters with each other, whatever other relationships we may have.

Salvation amounts to this: that we are saved if part of God's family (the Church), and unsaved if not – always with the door open for any person to enter, or re-enter.

We may not be able to heal physical illness, but it is always possible to heal the spiritual illness of being separate from God.

On this World Day of the Sick, as we pray for all forms of sickness, we give special priority to the spiritual ‘leprosy’, whereby whatever separates a person from God and the Church can be rectified.

We all belong in God's family, even if rejected from other places. Family is one place where they have to take you back! So is the Church, insofar as we must be prepared to welcome sinners. I have come for the sick not the healthy (Mk 2,17).

Many would say that they do not need God or the Church; they have enough human support already. No matter how happy we might be with human love and friendship we still need the divine connection. Our hearts are made to rest in God (cf St Augustine)

Others might say that the Church as they have experienced it, is not welcoming. We must be charitable to all and at all times. Charity means that any differences can be handled in concern for each other’s soul - and under the umbrella of Church teaching, which connects us with Our Lord.

We go to Jesus as the leper did and submitting to whatever He wants us to do. Jesus wants to save us to the point of complete unity with His will.

This is what makes Heaven heaven; everyone agrees with Christ, and therefore with each other.

Does the Church reject anyone? No, we want to help everyone get to where they need to be with God. For some a measure of repentance or instruction may be required, but they are not being excluded. We rejoice with all heaven (Lk15,7) when a sinner repents or when a prodigal son returns. (Lk 15, 11-32).

Unity with each other will emerge as we each draw closer to God. Then we find what is likeable about each person, even people whom we would have found it hard to like.

We welcome all who want to find life, just as the Lord let all come to Him; and they were so numerous the doors and windows were blocked. Cf when they had to lower the man through the roof (Mk 2,3-11).

Jesus is the leper Himself insofar as He is rejected. In which case we need to let Him back in – to His own family, He came to His own but His own did not receive Him (Jn 1,11). We must reverse that rejection.

Thursday 8 February 2024

5th Sunday Ordinary Time (B) 4 Feb 2024 Sermon

5th Sunday (B) 4 Feb 2024 Reward

What is my reward, says St Paul, for preaching the Gospel. It is this – to be able to do it for free; because he does not need a reward, possessing the ‘reward’ already insofar as he could not be any happier, already knowing Christ Jesus.

Well, the only thing he could have better than he has it now is that others would take up what he is offering them – that they too will discover the joy of the Gospel.

We know there is a pleasure in doing good to those in need, relieving suffering of others, we enjoy giving in itself.

It touches a chord within us and this is understandable if we reflect that we are created by God in His image, and He certainly likes to give; He is doing it all the time; it is His nature.

Some giving has a cost. If I give you my last piece of bread then I am foregoing the benefit which that bread would have done me. But is that not the noblest expression of humanity, sacrificing oneself for another.

We put up statues for people who do that. We do not put up a statue for someone who spent his whole life looking after himself!

But there is another way we can give, whereby it costs us nothing. That is, if we have so much of what we are giving it can never run out. This is what happens in the spiritual world. We can do good for each other, pray, encourage, evangelize, catechise – all things which can benefit both the giver and the receiver.

This is how heavenly grace works. God can give all day and still have more to give.

This is what St Paul had discovered. He could never run out of heavenly joy, and the more he gave it to others the more joy he felt.

Apart from making us feel good there will be a deeper effect on us, as we become more generous by nature; and with that will come other good qualities like cheerfulness, patience, charity etc,

God is generous, and He will make us so as well. We can note that in Jesus’s case He could have helped people all day long without costing Himself anything. But to take away the sin of the world He did suffer a huge cost, in His passion and death.

Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together, and running over will be poured into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured back to you.” (Lk 6,38).

One snag we find when people don’t want to receive the free gift. Free beer they would stop for that but not for Free eternal life!

They know there is a catch with the latter, that it does require some personal commitment. But even then the fine print is joyful. The joy of giving outweighs the sacrifice.

We possess the treasure in the field (Mt 13,44), and at least the beginnings of eternal life. Learning from St Paul’s example, we cannot be otherwise than happy if we possess a share in the infinite graces of Heaven.

There will be hard times and bad days, but the overall direction is Up.

With practice we develop the virtues we need to go through adversity, when joy is hard to find. As we see in the first reading from Job.

He was in a very low point but he did manage to come through; so by the end he had his material fortunes restored, and a much deeper understanding of God's ways.

We hope to come out happy in the end, always happy and never otherwise. It is not a fairy story; it is just what would have been in place a long time ago, if enough people had believed it. And a glorious future is achievable by the same logic.

May His Kingdom come.

Thursday 1 February 2024

4th Sunday Ordinary Time (B) 28 January 2024 Sermon

 4th Sunday Ordinary Time 28 January 2024 Authority

Unlike the Scribes He taught them with authority. (Gospel Mk 1,22)

Authority comes from the same word as Author.

The author of a book has authority over whatever goes in that book. He can make characters live or die, be old or young, and he controls the outcome of the story.

God has written a book, we might say, and we are the characters in it, though in our case we are not fictitious; we actually exist.

The characters on the page have taken on a life of their own.

And we do not always obey the Author. In fact we question Him and argue with Him, and for many people there is a long-term alienation from God.

For His part, He persists with the work He has begun. He will not be deflected from His purpose. He came to save, and save He will.

I have come that they may have life and have it to the full (Jn 10,10).

He created us to love Him and so that He could love us. He wants to share what He has.

God has created many types of creatures. Of them all only humans and angels have the power to address God directly, with full comprehension

We do not understand all the mysteries of God, but we can at least grasp His existence and its significance for us.

It is always going to be better for us if we accept His authority and work with it, rather than against it. This is because He knows so much better than we do the best way forward.

The whole story of salvation is of people going this way and that, some coming, some going.

If I go my own way I am putting my script over God’s; but I do not have His authority, only wishing I had.

It is a great privilege to relate to Him regarding His plans. We are not just pawns on the board; we have a voice.

We cannot use our voices to overrule God but we can become more familiar with His ways of working, and facilitate the flow of His grace and mercy in all directions.

The Jews of Our Lord’s time did not believe in His divinity thinking him just another human, subject to God. Admittedly it must have taken a while to sink in, as the idea of God living among us was so strange at the time.

He can do it if He wants. Some will say it is impossible that God could become Man, but not if He decides to do it. If He is God then of course He can change things, or intervene, in any way He likes.

He did not make arbitary changes, acting on a whim. He always knew exactly what He was doing, and what each situation required. He was working to the Master plan, which was mainly about salvation – winning souls, turning the hearts and minds of people to worship and obedience to the one true God.

Does God's book have a happy ending? We have some say in that. If we let Him work His wonders upon us and through us we will experience great happiness in this life and more again in eternity.

It just needs enough humility that we will remember our created status. We are not gods ourselves, only people looking for God.

He will help us to find Him and then to work in a creative partnership whereby we are both part of the story and also helping to write that story.

We participate in our own salvation and can help others find their place in the same narrative.

This is a strange teaching, perhaps, but it has authority behind it. Its Author is Truth itself.