Homily for June 25th, 2014: Matthew
7:15-20.
Catholics now
in their late sixties came of age in a day when the Catholic Church was proud
to be “the Church that never changes.” That boast was actually only half true –
as such then young Catholics started to discover with the close of the Second
Vatican Council in December 1965. The Church’s faith never changes. There has been development, of course. But we
believe that this development has been guided by the Holy Spirit, so that what
we believe today about the Pope, to take one example, is an entirely legitimate development of what the
apostles believed. Just about everything else except our beliefs has changed
and will change: styles of worship, of preaching, and methods of handing on the
faith to others. No one has stated the need for such change better than the
great 19th century English convert, at the end of his life a
cardinal, Blessed John Henry Newman. “To live is to change,” Newman said, “and
to be perfect is to have changed often.” Catholics less than 65 today have
grown up in a Church which is rapidly changing.
Are all the
changes we have seen over the last half-century good? Clearly not. How can we
judge such changes? Jesus tells us in today’s gospel: “By their fruits you will
know them.” The most obvious change over the last half-century is in worship.
Catholics who came to Church in 1960 experienced a Mass which was almost
entirely silent; the few parts spoken aloud could seldom be understood: not
just because they were in Latin, but because most priests took them at
breakneck speed. Fifteen and even twelve minute celebrations of a rite
considerably longer than today’s Mass were common. Praying the prayers aloud,
and in the language of the people, has enhanced popular participation in the
Mass, at least where priests have learned to celebrate with reverence.
The
charismatic renewal is another change. It did not exist before Vatican II.
Speaking recently to some 50,000 charismatics in Rome, Pope Francis confessed that he was
initially mistrustful of their movement. Now he endorses it enthusiastically because of its good
fruits. It has made prayer real for
millions for whom prayer was once just reciting words out of a book.
The renewal of
religious life for women has produced both good and bad fruits. The Sisters’
orders which have modernized, while retaining such things as community life, an
updated uniform or habit, and enthusiastic faithfulness to Church teaching are
growing rapidly. Those which are have erased all signs that they are different
have no recruits at all and, though visibly dying, still insist that they are
the wave of the future. Once again we see: “By their fruits you will know
them.”
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