At Mass, you are told to lift up your hearts. God wants your hearts uplifted; He wants them
on fire with the love in which and for which you were created. If this command is given at Mass, there must
be some means provided by which you may be formed (or, better, re-formed) into
creatures who have their hearts lifted to their Creator. He must be trying to lift your hearts. The aim of the Eucharistic homily is to
enable your hearts to be lifted.
The homily, then, is not something static:
it has direction, and that direction is up. We move to praise, to worship God
in spirit and truth and to continue to worship the God whom we experience in
the least of these. But, to have
direction one must also start somewhere, and where we start is with your
hearts, the hearts that are precious enough to God that He wants them lifted up
to Him. The homily starts with the
assembly and can be tailored to the precise here-and-now situation, to the joys
and hopes, the needs and concerns.
It does not seek to describe the world
neutrally, as a social scientist might try to.
As the Little Prince learnt, you can only see properly with your
heart. So, the preacher tries to look to
your hearts from the heart. There is no
such thing as neutral looking, so we look with eyes of faith. We preach as fellow believers. Like any intimate act, preaching can only make
sense given a shared commitment. In this
case, the commitment is to faith as a common way of interpreting the world.
We start with your hearts and move
towards God, but that does not involve moving away from your hearts, for, as
the Church taught in the Second Vatican Council, Christ is present in the
gathered assembly. The homily does not
bring you something you aren’t (as if we could move an omnipotent omnipresent
God around!): when preaching, we address the body of Christ that it might
become fully itself, that it might worship.
We direct you to what you are, even though that inextinguishable
presence might have been dimmed and defiled by the ravages of a fallen world:
by grief, by poverty, by illness; by our sin, by someone else’s sin, by the
structures of sin we inhabit. Preaching
seeks to reveal another layer of meaning to our lives which is deeper and
realer than sin and death. Preaching
confesses that the mundane can reveal God, that flesh can be divinized, that
death is conquered by life.
If we preach to raise the hearts of the
body Christ to worship of Christ, there are yet more ways Christ is present in
this act: we also preach from Christ.
Preaching is not a lecture on the scriptural texts assigned for that
day’s mass, but is from and through them. In these sacred and inspired texts, Christ is
present. Our trust in the power of these
texts is that they will have something to say to the concrete situations that
delight and afflict your hearts. The
texts are privileged expressions of that faith which can interpret life in such
a way that the hearers can lift their hearts to God, to be reconciled with each
other and approach the Table with love and devotion.
The homily should proclaim to you the
Good News that God acts in your life.
The response is “Amen.” The
response is praise. The response is
proclamation, normally not in liturgical preaching, but in your life the next
week. Be careful, your life might be the
only preaching some people hear.
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