The widow
of Nain has a certain fame among younger Holy Cross clergy, as anyone who’s
been through the preaching formation program at Notre Dame in the last ten
years or so will have preached on that passage as their first assignment in
second semester preaching. That means I
heard 12 homilies on it within three weeks two years ago, so, as beautiful a
passage as it is (the teacher chose it for good reason) I haven’t no intention
of adding another one today! I need a
little cooling off period from the widow of Nain, but a better reason to not
preach on that read is that our reading from first Timothy rather grabbed me,
especially as a new deacon. While I can
assure you that I have not contracted multiple marriages, the question of
whether I have held fast to the mystery of faith: that occasioned more
reflection on my part.
The
way we use the word ‘mystery’ in modern English can confuse or distract us from
what the ‘mystery of faith’ really is.
We normally use ‘mystery’ to describe something like a puzzle. We might think of mystery novels or tv
series, where a cunning sleuth, relying on their wits and powers of
observation, marshals the available data to determine ‘whodunnit.’ We do not put our faith in a puzzle. For a puzzle doesn’t really require faith,
just cleverness. Puzzles can be
mastered, if we’re mentally strong enough, and once solved we’ve exhausted the
fun of the puzzle. How often did
Sherlock Holmes hang around after the crook was uncovered?
When
the mystery of faith is uncovered, we linger, we kneel, we adore, we cry out: “My
Lord and God!” Faith cannot be mastered. Faith does not require cunning, does not
depend on human strength. If faith were
just a list of facts to be memorized and assented to, though, it could be. But no, faith, itself a gift from God, is our
response to a God who willingly, lovingly reveals not facts about Himself but
His very Self: in the beauty of creation, in the deposit of the scriptures,
most powerfully in the person of Christ, and in the continued ministry of the
Church. Faith is relationship. Relationship can be deepened, delved into,
explored, dwelled in, rested in, wrestled with; but never mastered, never
exhausted. It’s through God’s gracious
gift that we have something to ‘hold fast to’: that the utterly mysterious,
utterly ‘other’ God willingly self-reveals and invites us into relationship, a
relationship nurtured through sacrament and sacramental, through human
relationships, through scripture and doctrine, through things we can hold fast
to, and hand on.
We
read that a bishop should not be a new convert.
The Greek word is the root of our word ‘neophyte,’ new Christian. But here, it does not yet seem to be a technical
churchy word. It literally just means ‘newly
planted.’ God plants us into the soil in
which He self-reveals and beckons us grow deep roots, holding fast, in order that
we may flourish. We also read that a
bishop should be attractive to outsiders.
Like a flowering plant, may we all show forth the beauty of the soil we
cling to, that outsiders may see in our rooted-ness a joyful dependence on a
loving God and be led to embrace Him themselves.
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