Friday, June 29, 2012

God plants us on a rock – 2 Tim 4:6-8, 17-18; Matt 16:13-19

Feast of St. Peter and St. Paul, St. Joe.


God plants us on a rock.  I find that a very realistic image for what it looks like to live out our lives in the Church.  We don’t live in a rose garden, yet, and we don’t experience perpetual banquet, yet.  As much as I hope we get glimmers of those realities now furtively, we live on a rock.  It’s big and it’s craggy and it’s home.



If you were at mass yesterday, think about the image we heard then of what it’s like to live on a rock.  It comes about nine chapters earlier in Matthew’s gospel, but when we hear Peter called a rock, I think we’re meant to think back to the end of the Sermon on the Mount and the parable of the house built on rock.  Buffeted by storms, it remains standing.  Sometimes God does still the stormy waters, but often He doesn’t.

Look to the rock from which we’re hewn.  Look to these two saints whose lives were rocked by an encounter with the divine.  God didn’t shield them from the storm.  A successful fisherman and a well-respected Pharisee became itinerant preachers, followers of one crucified.  They would endure arguments (even among each other), ridicule, persecution and eventually martyrs’ deaths.

With the confidence of Christ on the cross, we just heard Paul cite Psalm 22, the psalm of the confident sufferer which begins with the pain of “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me” and ends with the confidence that “God rescues me from the lion’s mouth.”

Our hope is not hope of evading the stormy blast.  Like an anchor, our hope does not evade the chaotic water but pierces through it confident of hitting secure resurrection rock.  Our hope rests on what we’re planted on; who we’re planted on.  St. Peter and St. Paul, pray for us.

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