May 19th, 2019: Sixth
Sunday of Easter, Year C. Revelation 21:10-14, 22-23.
AIM: To show the
Church=s spiritual beauty and power, hidden beneath surface
shabbiness and weakness.
Shortly after he became Pope in
November 1958 John XXIII was asked: AHow many people are working in the Vatican
now?@ With the humor that made him beloved
all over the world, the Holy Father replied: AAbout half.@
AAbout half@ is a more than generous estimate of
the number of baptized Catholics who will attend Mass today. All of us know one
of more of these inactive Catholics. If there is someone in your family who
seems to feel no need to practice the faith, don=t argue, and certainly don=t nag. Show that loved one a little
of the patience the Lord has shown you in your own life. The decision to forego
churchgoing is never final as long as life continues. The example of our lives
will always have greater converting power than any words we can speak.
Many inactive Catholics say they
continue to worship God B just not in the Catholic Church. Some are Anature worshipers.@ They say they feel closer to God on
the golf course, or on a drive or walk through the country, than at Mass. Others have joined
the Electronic Church . They watch one of the television
preachers B almost all of them fundamentalist
Protestants. Estimates of the Catholics in their large audience range up to 30%
of the total. Finally, there are the Catholics who still go to church, but not
to a Catholic church, and thus not to Mass. All of these Catholics who are no
longer with us share one thing in common: dissatisfaction with Mass in their
own Church. They find our ordinary Sunday worship cold, impersonal, boring, and
irrelevant to their needs.
How different the picture in our
second reading today. Like the second reading last Sunday, it is part of the
author=s vision of the worship of God in
heaven. Describing the heavenly church, he
says: AIt gleamed with the splendor of God. Its
radiance was like that of a precious stone, like jasper, clear as crystal.@ If we were to try to persuade the
huge number of inactive Catholics that our Sunday worship was anything like
that, they=d think we=d lost our marbles. They find
the Church and its worship not radiant like a precious stone, but shabby. At
bottom it is this shabbiness, in one form or another, which has caused them to
drop out. What has turned them off is something called the scandal of the
Church=s particularity.
That is a long name for something
very simple. The Church=s particularity means our belief that God is present in
particular ways, in particular places, at particular times. Catholics believe,
for instance, that when, with a priest, we obey Jesus= parting command to Ado this in my memory,@ the bread and wine on the altar are
no longer ordinary bread and wine but truly the body and blood of our risen and
glorified Lord. At that particular time, and in that particular place, God is
present in a special way.
That is a tremendous claim. It upsets
a lot of people. Especially upset are the nature worshipers. God is everywhere,
they say. That=s true. God is everywhere.
Since we are not angels, however, but bodily creatures of time and space, we
are unlikely to experience God=s presence everywhere unless we
experience him somewhere in particular. Hence God gives us certain times and
places where he is present with a special intensity: in the Eucharist, for
instance, or in a building set apart for worship. God=s presence in such particular places
does not diminish his presence elsewhere, however, any more than the sun=s light is diminished when we use a
magnifying glass to focus sunlight onto a leaf or piece of paper until it
burns.
It is not only the Church=s particularity which turns many
people off, but also its shabbiness. And let=s face it: often the Church is
shabby. The Mass may be badly celebrated and the homily unprepared, rambling,
and boring. The people round us are often strangers, some of them perhaps not Aour kind.@
No wonder that many people find the Electronic Church , or Protestant worship, more
attractive. On TV the preacher is always well prepared; the singing is lively
and on key; the congregation is squeaky clean. Moreover, much Protestant
worship has a genuine warmth and fervor too often lacking in our Catholic
parishes. Some years ago an ecumenical service with Lutherans drew a large
congregation which filled our enormous Cathedral in St. Louis . You could tell it was Protestant
because of the volume of singing. You could tell it was Catholic because there
was a baby crying. That says it all. Face it: often what goes on in Catholic
churches is unattractive, cold, irrelevant B in a word, shabby.
Yet it is precisely amid this shabbiness that
we encounter God. He seems to like shabby surroundings. When God came to us in
human form, he chose to be born not in the glamour and sophistication of Athens or Rome ,
but in a backward village on the fringe of the civilized world. The stable and
manger at Bethlehem
were not romantic like our Christmas cribs. They were smelly and dirty. Today
Mary would shelter her son not in a stable but in a garage.
The Catholic Church calls itself Athe one true Church@ B another example of that particularity
which offends people. In claiming to be the one true Church we are not saying that
other churches are false. The Catechism says: AThe sole Church of Christ
... subsists in the Catholic Church, which is governed by the successor of
Peter and by the bishops in communion with him. Nevertheless, many elements of
sanctification and of truth are found outside its visible confines@ (No. 870). The phrase Aone true Church@ means simply that the Catholic
Church is, in the fullest sense, the representative today of the body founded
by Jesus Christ. In the poetic imagery of our second reading, it means that
beneath the Church=s outward shabbiness there is Aradiance like that of a precious
stone, like jasper, clear as crystal.@
The Catechism says that this radiance
is visible, however, Aonly [through] faith@ (No. 812). It is not the worldly
radiance of wealth, impressive church buildings, or power. Today those outward
trappings are being taken from us. The Church=s true radiance is inward and
spiritual. We have the precious jewels of Holy Scripture, of the sacraments, of
the heroisms large and small of innumerable Christians of all ages and both
sexes B some of them here in our own parish.
Most of these people are known only to God.
Between the Church on earth and the
heavenly church described in our second reading there is, however, an important
difference. The author of that reading says: AI saw no temple in the city.@ Of course not! There will be no
church buildings in heaven, no sacraments, no priests. None of these will be
necessary, for in heaven we shall see God face to face.
Here and now, however, we do need these particular times and
places where God has promised to be with us in special ways. People who claim
to worship God everywhere in general but nowhere in particular are starry-eyed
romantics, acting as if they were already in heaven while they are still on
earth. The same is true of people who look for a Apure@ church with no shabbiness. A pure
church would be wonderful, wouldn=t it? Can we be confident, however,
that a really pure church would have room for sinners as shabby as ourselves?
For those with eyes to see and ears
to hear; for those humble enough to accept God=s ways instead of insisting on their
own; for people willing to respond to the Lord=s invitation instead of pursuing
their own romantic dreams B for all such people here is all the power of God and all his
love. Here is all the radiance of his glory. Here, as we Ado this@ with the bread and wine, as Jesus
commanded and in his memory, we find medicine for sick sinners: nourishing,
strengthening food for us, God=s weary and often shabby pilgrims, as we trudge onward to
that heavenly city which is our true and eternal home: the heavenly Jerusalem
described in our second reading with no darkness and Ano need of sun or moon to shine on
it, for the glory of God gives it light, and its lamp is the Lamb.@
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