Homily for December 28th, 2017: Matthew 2:13-18.
Which of us
does not remember the brutal killing of 20 young schoolchildren, first and
second graders, in Newtown/CT six years ago? It happened the Friday before the
third Sunday in Advent, which is called “Rejoice Sunday” because the readings
are about joy and rejoicing. I was away from St. Louis ,
visiting friends in northern Virginia ,
just outside of Washington/DC, and staying in the rectory of a large parish. I
had prepared a homily for Rejoice Sunday, on the theme of joy.
As soon as the
terrible news came from Connecticut ,
I knew I could not preach about joy, when our hearts were breaking at the
slaughter these innocent children. Away from home, and without access to the
books I normally use for homily preparation, plus the mass of material already
on my computer, I was unable to produce the full text which I would have
prepared had I been at home. I reflected long and hard about what I could say
which would help people grieving over this tragedy. And I prayed that the Holy
Spirit would give me the words I needed.
At 11 o’clock on that Sunday morning
I stood before a congregation of at least 300 people to speak about grief and
how God can bring good out of evil. My own voice was breaking as I did so. When
I finished, I knew that God had answered my prayers for inspiration and
guidance. The whole congregation erupted in applause. And I remember saying to
myself: “It’s not about you, Jay, it is about the Lord.”
Today’s gospel
tells us about a tragedy every bit as terrible as that one six years ago. In a
frantic attempt to kill the baby king whom the Wise Men from the East had told
him about when they passed through Jerusalem two
years before, the cruel Gentile tyrant Herod ordered the slaughter of all the
boys in and near Bethlehem
two years old and younger.
We cannot
observe the feast of the Holy Innocents in America today without thinking of
the mass killing of unborn children, a quarter of all babies conceived, which
goes on day after day and year after year, leaving their mothers, most of them
acting under pressure from others, burdened for life with regrets, shame, and
guilt – a burden no woman should have to bear. This modern slaughter of the
innocents will end only when hearts and minds are changed and people become as ashamed
of abortion as we now are about slavery. For that we pray at Mass today.
No comments:
Post a Comment