Friday, January 16, 2015

SINNERS AND TAX COLLECTORS


Homily for January 17th, 2015: Mark 2:13-17.

          “As [Jesus] passed by, he saw Levi, son of Alphaeus, sitting at the customs post. Jesus said to him, ‘Follow me.’ And he got up and followed Jesus.” There is no Levi in the gospel lists of Jesus’ apostles. Scholars assume, therefore, that this Levi was identical with Matthew, whose call is described in the ninth chapter of Matthew’s gospel.

There, and here as well, he is identified as a tax collector. He was not the kind of tax collector we know today, a civil servant. In the Palestine of Jesus’ day the Roman government of occupation entrusted the collection of taxes to tax farmers, as they are sometimes called, who bid for the right to collect taxes. In doing so, they enriched themselves by extorting more than was required. They were hated, therefore, for two reasons: for preying on people financially; and for serving the despised Roman rulers of the land. 

          Jesus speaks just two words to Levi: “Follow me.” Without hesitation, Levi gets up and follows Jesus. Other disciples of Jesus have already done the same, when, at Jesus’ command, they abandoned the tools of their trade as fishermen, their boats and nets, to follow Jesus. What motivated this immediate obedience? I think that if we could have questioned any of them, Levi or Matthew included, they would have replied: “There was something about this man, Jesus, which made it impossible to say no.” 

          As a parting gesture Levi invites his friends to dinner at his house, with Jesus as the honored guest. As we would expect, many of those friends were Levi’s fellow tax collectors. Others were simply “sinners,” as the gospel reading calls them: Jews, like Levi, who did not keep God’s law.

Observing these disreputable guests, the Pharisees, proud of their exact observance of God’s law, ask Jesus’ other disciples how their Master can associate with such social outcasts. Jesus overhears the question and answers himself: “Those who are well do not need a physician, but the sick do. I did not come to call the righteous [by which Jesus means ‘people like you Pharisees’]. ‘I came to call sinners.’

What is the message for us? If we want Jesus’ loving care, we need first to recognize and confess our need. And the first thing every one of us needs from Jesus is forgiveness.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

"WE HAVE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS."


Homily for Jan. 16th, 2015: Mark 2:1-12.
          “Child, your sins are forgiven,” Jesus says as he looks with tender love at the paralyzed man lying before him in today’s gospel reading. Jesus is not saying that anyone who is ill is being punished for sin. But his words suggest that Jesus saw in this particular man a spiritual burden that needed to be loosed before the man could be healed physically. 
          “We have never seen anything like this,” the onlookers exclaim in astonishment as they see the formerly paralyzed man pick up his mat and walk. For Mark, the gospel writer, the true miracle, however, is not the man’s physical cure, but the spiritual healing of forgiveness. 
          Perhaps you’re thinking: “What is so miraculous about forgiveness? Don’t we forgive others every day?” Thank God, we do. Between our forgiveness and God’s, however, there is this great difference. When we forgive, there is always a memory of the injury done, a “skeleton in the closet.” The wrong needs only to be repeated, or one like it, for the memory to be revived.
          God doesn’t have any closets. And even if he did, there wouldn’t be any skeletons there. God’s forgiveness is total. “Your sins I remember no more,” God tells us through the prophet. (43:25) Here’s a story about that.
A pious woman, given to visions, went to her bishop to tell him that God had asked her to tell the bishop to build a shrine to Jesus’ mother Mary. The bishop was understandably skeptical. “Go back to God,” he told his visitor, and ask him to tell you my worst sin as a young man. If the Lord gives you the correct answer, we’ll see about building the shrine.” When the woman returned, the bishop asked her: “What did God say was my worst sin as a young man?” The woman replied: “He said he couldn’t remember.”
          It’s only a story. But it is based in reality – a reality that is the real miracle in this story of the paralyzed man: that there can be, that there is, a forgiveness so complete that not even the memory of the sin remains. Jesus brings us this total forgiveness. The one who brings us this forgiveness is the Son of the God who tells his people, through Isaiah: “Your sins I remember no more.” (Is. 43:25)

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

"WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR?"

Homily for the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B. John 1:35-42.

AIM: To challenge the hearers to deeper conversion. 

          “What are you looking for?” Jesus asks the two disciples of John in the gospel reading we have just heard. This question is Jesus’ first recorded utterance in John’s gospel. Andrew and his friend are not really certain what they are looking for. They may have followed Jesus out of mere curiosity. Asked who they are looking for, they answer with a question of their own: “Where do you stay?”  Jesus’ response is hardly less challenging than his original question: “Come and see.”

          Though Andrew and his friend do not realize it, in accepting Jesus’ invitation they pass from curiosity to discipleship. “Disciple” means a follower or a learner. The gospel writer tells us that the two “stayed with [Jesus] that day.” The added information, that it was “about four in the afternoon,” is significant. In Jewish time reckoning the day begins not at midnight or at dawn, but in the late afternoon. The Church reckons time in the same way – one of the many ways in which we remain linked to Jesus’ people, the Jews, our elder brothers in faith.  That is why we can have the first Sunday Mass late Saturday afternoon. For the Church that is when Sunday begins.

          Many scripture scholars believe that when John tells us, “It was about four in the afternoon,” he is telling us it was a Friday. Four o’clock on Friday afternoon was the beginning of the Sabbath, when all unnecessary work and travel were forbidden. This would mean that, when they accepted Jesus’ invitation to “come and see” where he stayed, Andrew and his friend would have had to stay with Jesus overnight, and all the next day as well, since that was the Sabbath.

          What they said on that Sabbath, and what they did, we do not know. It is clear, however, that those twenty-four hours in Jesus’ company changed the lives of Andrew and his friend. For as soon as the Sabbath restrictions are past, Andrew hurries to find his brother Simon and give him momentous, almost unbelievable news: “We have found the Messiah!”

          To encounter the Messiah, the anointed servant of the Lord, foretold by all the prophets, was the hope of every devout Jew. Few really expected the fulfillment of this hope, however. That seemed about as likely as our chances of winning the lottery.

          We have already noted that in accepting Jesus’ invitation to “come and see,”  Andrew and his friend passed from curiosity to discipleship. In carrying the unbelievable news of his new Master’s true identity to his brother Simon, Andrew moves from disciple to apostle. For “apostle” means “one who is sent”: a messenger, even an ambassador.

          It is not difficult to imagine the excitement with which Andrew imparted his momentous message to his brother Simon. I have compared it with the excitement one of us would feel at winning the lottery. Jesus would use a similar comparison.  The kingdom of heaven, he said once, was like a man finding buried treasure in a field; or like a merchant discovering a pearl so perfect that he was glad to sell all he had to possess it.  (See Mt. 13:44-46.)

          Into this deceptively simple incident the gospel writer has compressed a process which, for most people, takes far longer than the twenty-four hours recorded here. It is the process of moving from curiosity about Jesus Christ to discipleship; to becoming his apostle, or messenger, to others.

          The process began, for Andrew and his friend, with Jesus’ challenging question, “What are you looking for?” Jesus is asking each of us this question, right now. What are you looking for? Why have you come here today? Is it simply to fulfill a legal obligation? to get your card punched? What are you looking for in your life? Is it “the good life” advertised in glorious technicolor on our TV screens and in the magazines? Have you found the pursuit of that life satisfying, and fulfilling? Or is it your experience that the good life, as defined by our contemporary hucksters, is not really all that good? Is there still an emptiness inside you that you cannot fill, and longings that remain unsatisfied, try as you may?

          So what are you looking for? You may not know it, but at bottom you are looking for love. You want a love that will not let you go, that will not let you down. You yearn for a love that will not cheat or deceive or frustrate you; a love that will fulfill the deepest longings of your heart, your mind, your soul. That is what you are looking for. That is what I am looking for – and what every one of us is looking for.

          Perhaps you have grown weary with looking and think the search is hopeless. You are wrong. There is someone who can satisfy your deepest longings.   His name is Jesus Christ. Now, in this hour, he is challenging you with the same question he put to Andrew and his friend: “What are you looking for?” He is inviting you to come and stay with him. Accepting that invitation is the first step in becoming Jesus’ disciple – his follower and his friend.   

          That is wonderful – and beautiful. But it is only the beginning. Jesus Christ wants you to become his friend, his disciple, his follower, so that he can make you his apostle: his messenger to carry the all-consuming love which he offers you here to those to whom he sends you: his sisters and brothers – yes, and yours too.

"YOU CAN MAKE ME CLEAN."


Homily for January 15th, 2015: Mark 1:40-45.

          Lepers, in Jesus’ day, suffered not only from their disease, but also from exclusion from normal society. They were banned from public places. And since they were considered spiritually unclean they could not participate in Temple worship. Anyone who touched a leper also became spiritually unclean.

          This helps us understand why the man we have just heard about in the gospel reading is so desperate. He kneels down before Jesus, Mark tells us, and pleads with Jesus, “If you wish, you can make me clean.”  The man’s faith in Jesus’ power to heal is crucial. Faith opens the door for God’s action in our lives.

          Out of compassion with this social outcast Jesus responds at once. Reaching out across the boundary between clean and unclean, Jesus touches the man, saying: “I do will it. Be made clean.” The leprosy “left him immediately,” Mark tells us.Jesus has restored him to the community of God’s people. Jesus then orders the man not to publicize his healing. He did not wish to be known as a sensational wonder-worker. Instead he orders the man to fulfill the provisions of the Jewish law by going to a Temple priest and offering sacrifice. Jewish priests were then also quarantine officials.

          The man disobeys Jesus’ first command. He is so thrilled by his healing that he immediately starts telling everybody about it. Whether he reported his healing to the Temple priest, Mark does not tell us. What Mark does report is that the notoriety caused by news of this healing made it “impossible for Jesus to enter a town openly. He remained outside in desert places, and people kept coming to him from everywhere.”             

          People are still coming to Jesus from everywhere. They sense in him someone who can change their lives for the better. In that they are right. Jesus is the one, and the only one, who can give us healing from our self-centeredness, our addictions and bad habits. He alone can give us, beyond healing, what our hearts most deeply desire: happiness, joy, and peace so deep that it passes human understanding.

          First, however, we must come, as the leper came, with the prayer: “If you wish, Lord, you can make me clean.”

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

"HE WENT TO A LONELY PLACE IN THE DESERT."


Homily for January 14th, 2015. Mark 1:29-39.

          In Jesus’ world there were no blood tests, X-rays, or microscopes. People thought that illness of various kinds was due to possession by demons. Today’s gospel portrays Jesus as one who has power over these supernatural forces of evil. Jesus too comes from the supernatural world. As God’s Son, however, Jesus has power over the evil forces in that supernatural world. That is why Mark, the gospel writer, tells us that Jesus would not permit these supernatural forces of evil to speak, “because they knew him.“ Jesus did not want to acquire the reputation of a sensational wonder-worker. He was that, yes; but he was so much more.

  He banishes the life-threatening fever which has laid Peter’s mother-in-law low. And he drives out the demons in the many people who are brought to him for healing. Mark’s language shows that he is describing what we today call “exorcisms.” Freed from demonic possession, these people are healed at once. There is no period of convalescence. Peter’s mother-in-law, we heard, “got up immediately and waited on them.”

          Especially significant is the information that at daybreak, “Jesus went off to a lonely place in the desert.” Why? He needed to be alone with his heavenly Father. It was in such times of silence and solitude that Jesus acquired the spiritual power to heal; and to say to rough working men, “Follow me,” – and have them obey him on the spot. And if Jesus, whose inner resources were incomparably greater than ours, needed those times alone with the Lord, we are fools, and guilty fools, if we think we can make it in reliance on our own resources alone. That’s why we are here. To receive all the goodness, love, purity, and power of Jesus – our elder brother, our lover, and our best friend; but also our divine savior and redeemer.

And friends, when we have him, Jesus, we have everything. 

Monday, January 12, 2015

'ALL WERE AMAZED."


Homily for January 13th, 2015: Mark 1:21-28.

          In today’s gospel Mark describes a typical day in Jesus’ public ministry. It is a Sabbath, so Jesus goes to the synagogue in Capernaum. The service consisted of readings from Scripture, psalms, prayers, and teaching. For this any Jewish man with sufficient scriptural knowledge was qualified. Ordination as a rabbi was not necessary. Jesus’ teaching was different, however, from that of the other teachers of his day. This is clear from his hearers’ reaction. “The people were astonished at his teaching,” Mark tells us, “for he taught them as one having authority and not as the scribes.”

          What was this “authority” that Jesus had, and other teachers did not? We see it most clearly in the fifth chapter of Matthew’s gospel, which begins Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. There we hear Jesus citing a number of the Ten Commandments which God had given to Moses. He introduces each with the phrase: “You have heard the Commandment.” Then, each time, Jesus says: “But I say unto you.” Jesus is not interpreting God’s law, like all the other teachers. He is speaking as himself the law giver. It was this authoritative way of speaking which astonished Jesus’ hearers.  

          Jesus’ deeds manifest the same authority, in particular his healings. People in that day attributed illness to possession by “demons”, invisible but powerful spiritual forces. In today’s gospel reading, as often in the gospels, Jesus’ very presence causes demons to cry out in protest. The presence of the One who is without sin alarms these evil spirits. “What have you to do with us?” a demon cries out in today’s gospel. “I know who you are – the Holy One of God.” Jesus uses his spiritual power as Son of the all-holy God to rebuke and banish the demon. “Quiet! Come out of him!” Jesus says. And Mark tells us: “The unclean spirit convulsed him and with a loud cry came out of him.”   

          Less dramatically, but no less authoritatively, Jesus continues to cast out demons today: addiction to alcohol, drugs, or sex; the relentless quest for more, and more, and more – whether it is money, honor, or power over others – a quest which never succeeds but produces only frustration and disappointment. If you see any of those things in your life, then come to Jesus. He still has power to heal. As the old evangelical hymn has it: “Cast your eyes upon Jesus / Look full in his wonderful grace. / And the things of earth will grow strangely dim / In the light of his glory and grace.

Sunday, January 11, 2015

"COME AFTER ME."


Homily for January 12th, 2015: Mark 1:14-20.

“Come after me,” Jesus says to the two brothers, Simon and Andrew, busy with cleaning their nets after a night of fishing on the lake, “and I will make you fishers of men.” He says the same shortly thereafter to a second pair of brothers, also fishermen: James and John. “They left their nets and followed him,” Mark tells us. They were burning their bridges behind them. Why? If we could have asked them, I think they might have said something like this: AYou would have to have known this man Jesus. There was something about him that made it impossible to say No.@

Jesus is still calling. He calls each one of us, as he called those four rough fishermen in today=s gospel. He calls us to walk with him, to be so full of his love that others will see the joy on our faces and want what we have. Christianity, it has been said, cannot be taught. It must be caught.

Maybe you’re thinking: AI could never do that.@ You=re wrong. Here is a list of some of the great people in the Bible. Someone, I no longer know who, sent it to me by e-mail, ages ago. Every one of them had a reason for thinking God could not use them. So the next time you feel like God can=t use you, remember:

Noah was a drunk. Abraham was too old. Isaac was a daydreamer. Jacob was a liar. Joseph was abused by his brothers. Moses had a stuttering problem. Gideon was afraid. Sampson had long hair and was a womanizer. Rahab was a prostitute. Jeremiah and Timothy both thought they were too young. David had an affair and was a murderer. Elijah was suicidal. Isaiah thought himself unworthy. Jonah ran away from God=s call. Job went bankrupt. Martha was a perpetual worrier. The Samaritan woman at the well was five times divorced. Zaccheus was too small. Peter denied Christ. The disciples fell asleep while praying. At Jesus= arrest, they all forsook him and fled. Paul was too religious. Timothy had an ulcer. And Lazarus was dead! 

So what=s your excuse? Whatever it may be, God can still use you to your full potential. Besides, you aren=t the message. You=re only the messenger. As St. Francis of Assisi said: “Preach always. When necessary, use words.”