Homily for the Feast of St. Mark, April 25th, 2018:
Mark 16: 15-20.
Our gospel starts with Jesus’ parting
command to his disciples: AGo into the whole world and proclaim the gospel to every
creature.@ In the measure in which we try
faithfully to fulfill this command, Jesus continues today to do what he
promised to do when he gave the command: to confirm the gospel message by Asigns.@ In the pre-scientific world of the
first century, there were signs appropriate to that age. Mark mentions them:
the power to drive out demons, to speak new languages, immunity to deadly
snakes and poisons, the power to heal the sick.
Today=s signs are different: the worldwide
example and inspiration of a Mother Teresa, now St. Teresa of Calcutta, of Pope
St. John Paul II, who soldiered on to the end despite bodily weakness,
attracting at successive World Youth Days larger crowds than any rock star. The
century which closed eighteen years ago brought us the sign of some twelve
thousand Awitnesses for Christ@: women and men all over the world
who, in the bloodiest of all centuries in recorded history, gave their lives
for Jesus Christ. AThe age of the martyrs has returned,@ Pope John Paul II said as the
twentieth century drew to a close. And in a great ecumenical service fifteen years
ago in Rome=s Coliseum, where many martyrs shed
their blood for Christ in antiquity, the Pope joined other Christian leaders in
commemorating these twelve thousand witnesses to Christ.
Impressive as their witness is, and
the other signs I have mentioned, perhaps the greatest of all today=s signs, which confirm the gospel
message given to us by Jesus at his Acension, is simply this: that after so
much failure by Christians in history, and by the Church=s leaders and members in our own day;
after so many frustrations, after so many betrayals – yes, and so many scandals
-- and after so many defeats in the struggle to fulfill Christ=s missionary command C nevertheless, after twenty
centuries, so many, all over the world, are still trying to be faithful.
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