Homily for Sept. 26th, 2018: Luke 9:1-6.
“Take nothing
for the journey,” Jesus tells the Twelve as he sends them out “to proclaim the Kingdom of God and to heal the sick.” He wants
those whom he commissions as his messengers to travel light. They are to depend
not on material resources, but on the Lord alone.
Jesus’ words
are especially relevant today. All over the world, the forces hostile to the
Church are rising. In our own country the government is trying to impose on
Catholic organizations, such as Catholic hospitals and universities,
requirements which we cannot, in conscience, accept. We are being asked, for
instance, to pay for sterilization and abortion. In Ireland ,
unlike the United States
a historically Catholic country, there is even an attempt to pass a law which
would compel priests, in certain instances, to violate the seal of the
confessional. TV entertainers air gross jokes about Catholic priests which they
would not dare make about Muslim imams or Jewish rabbis. And the media show
little interest in reporting studies which show that Christians are the Number
One target of religious persecution in the world today.
We rightly
lament this tide of anti-Christian and anti-Catholic sentiment. But it has a
good side as well. Whenever in its two thousand year history, the Church has
been favored by the powers that be, whether financially or in other ways, it
has grown spiritually flabby and weak. The Church is always at her best in
times of persecution. When persecution is raging it is difficult, mostly
impossible, to see this. Things become clear only when we look back. So let’s
look back.
In recent centuries the most violent
attack on the Church came in the French Revolution, which started in 1789 and
lasted more than a decade. Thousand of priests were murdered under the
guillotine. Most of the French bishops fled the country. Those who remained had
to accept restrictions on their ministry which they justified on the plea that
there was to other way to continue offering the sacraments to God’s people.
As the Church moved into the
nineteenth century, however, there was an explosion of religious vocations in France ,
and the foundation of an unprecedented number of new religious orders, for both
men and women.
When we grow
discouraged at the hostile forces confronting us, we need to remember: God can
bring good out of evil – and he does, time after time!
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