Homily for January 10th, 2015: 1 John 5:14-21.
“Children,
be on your guard against idols,” we heard at the end of the first reading. It’s
probably safe to say that idols hardly appear on the radar screens of most
Catholics. Catholics who live in the Bible-belt are aware that
fundamentalist Protestants charge us with idolatry because we have statues in
our churches, and because of the prayers we say in front of those statues. Such
charges don’t bother us because we know that we don’t worship the statues. Idolatry
may have been an issue in Bible times, we assume, but not today. That is dead
wrong. Idolatry means putting anything at all in the place that belongs only to
God. Here are four examples.
People
who live for thrills are worshipping the false god of pleasure. The American
novelist Ernest Hemingway is an example. He lived for thrills: the excitement
of battle in the Spanish Civil War, bullfighting in Spain ,
four marriages and goodness know how many affairs, big game hunting in Africa . The person who lives for thrills and pleasure will never be fully satisfied. He'll always need more, and more and more. Is it so surprising that Hemingway end by blowing his
brains out?
People who
center their lives on making money are worshipping the false god of
possessions. “How much is enough?” a millionaire was asked. “Always just a
little more,” he replied. Another very rich man said: “Anyone who thinks that
having a lot of money will make you happy has never had a lot of money.”
We’ve all
heard of control freaks. They are worshiping the false god of power. They too
are frustrated, because the power they manage to get is never enough. Finally there is the
false god of honor. An example: Jesus’ disciples arguing at the Last Supper
over “who should be greatest” (Luke 2:24). I’m sorry to tell you this, folks: but that
argument is still going on. Not long after he became Bishop of Rome Pope Francis tried to discourage it by
virtually eliminating the honorific title of Monsignor. Well, good luck, Holy Father!
Friends, we’re
not Puritans. Each of these things – pleasure, possessions, power, and honor –
is good. They become bad only when we center our lives on them. Then they
produce unhappiness and frustration. Because we can never get enough. There is
only One who can answer our prayers. “He hears us,” our first reading says. The
false gods cannot hear us: they are deaf, dumb, and blind. I leave you then
with two questions. Are you directing your prayers to the one true God? Are you
centering your life on Him?
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