Homily for March 28th, 2019:
Luke 11:14-23.
As our Lenten pilgrimage to Easter
continues, the gospel readings at Mass show the opposition to Jesus mounting.
Today, when Jesus heals a man previously unable to speak, some are amazed;
others are critical. And some of the critics charge that Jesus is able to do
such things only because he has entered into a pact with Satan. Still others
find the miracle of healing unpersuasive. They demand “a sign from heaven.” All
agree on one thing, however: Satan is a real person, of great power.
That is anything but modern. Most people
today, even many Christians, think of Satan as just one of the many legends
from the past which we enlightened moderns have discarded. We still pray,
however, in the words of the one prayer which Jesus gave us, “deliver us from
evil.” Here is what the Catechism says about that prayer.
“In this petition, evil is not an abstraction, but refers to a person,
Satan, the Evil One, the angel who opposes God.” In Greek, the language of the
New Testament, the name for the Devil is diabolos.
That gives us the English word which describes the Devil’s work: “diabolic.”
The first part of the Greek word, dia,
means “through” or “across.” Bolos is
from the Greek word for “throw.” The Catechism says, therefore, “The devil (diabolos) is the one who ‘throws himself
across’ God’s plan and his work of salvation accomplished in Christ.” (No.
2851) Satan is no long discarded legend. He is person of real power. Both
Scripture and the Catechism call him “a murderer from the beginning … a liar
and the father of lies, the deceiver of the whole world.” (No. 2852)
When we ask, in the final petition of the
Lord’s Prayer, to be delivered from the Evil One, “we pray as well [the
Catechism says] to be freed from all evils, present, past, and future, of which
the Evil one, Satan, is the author or instigator. In the final petition of the
one pray which Jesus has given us, the Church brings before the Father all the
distress of the world. Along with the evils that overwhelm humanity, the Church
implores the precious gift of peace and the grace of perseverance in
expectation of Christ’s return. By praying in this way, she anticipates in
humility of faith the gathering together of everyone and everything in him who
has ‘the keys of Death and Hades,’ who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.’”
(No. 2854)
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