Friday, November 8, 2013

God makes his home with us – Rev 21:1-4, Lk 19:1-10, St. John Lateran

School Mass homily at Holy Cross School.

You know what all stories have… an end, a beginning and a middle?  Is that right?  [Get them to give usual order for a story]  Well, today, that’s how our readings go.  They go together to tell a story, but first we heard [lector] tell us the end, then I just read the beginning, and now it’s up to us to do the middle.  If that sounds complicated, I’ll explain it all again slowly, but then I’ll need your help to do the middle, OK?

The reading that [lector] read: that’s the end of our story.  It tells of the very last thing that will ever happen.  It tells us that God will build us a new heaven and new earth and a new city, and that God invites us to live in God’s house, live with God.  We heard that God will wipe away every tear.  The God who built this whole new earth, heaven, city and house, will crouch down, will gather us in his arms and tenderly wipe the tears from our eyes.  That’s the end of the story!  That’s what will happen.  Future.

Now, I’m going to remind you of the beginning.  The beginning is what I read from the ambo [point], and it’s about what happened when Jesus walked the earth.  That story tells us about a man named Zacchaeus, who wasn’t popular, in fact he had no friends, and the story doesn’t tell us if he was good or bad (he was probably a little of each), but it does tell us he wanted to see Jesus so much he climbed a tree to see him over the crowd!  To want to see Jesus… that is the best wish you can ever make.  And Jesus sought him out.  He was lost, he was all alone in the world, and Jesus sought him out and said, “Zacchaeus, I want to stay in your house.”  And then he makes it clearer: salvation has come to stay in this house.  Jesus is our Savior, Jesus is God.  The beginning of the story is Jesus coming to us, coming to stay in the houses of the people who desired him.  That happened.  The end of the story is God taking all his friends to live in his house forever.  That will happen.


And here we are: We’re in the middle.  We’re in the age of the Church.  And this is where I need your help.  Whose house is this?  [God’s]  Today, we celebrate the dedication of a very special Church called St. John Lateran and all Catholics should celebrate this Church, because it’s the Pope’s own church, and he’s the Pope of all us, so it’s all of our church.  But, it’s kind of far away (it’s in Rome), so it’s also a day to celebrate this church and all churches.  Now, there are lots of things in this church that are very important, but I’m thinking of one in particular.  I wonder if anyone can guess it.  […Doors]  That’s right, today, I’m celebrating our doors.  Because it’s through the doors that you come in.  As you walk through that door, especially if you touch it and help hold it for someone, you’re saying “yes,” you’re saying that you want to see Jesus, you’re saying you want to live forever in God’s house.  A church with no doors, or with doors that were always locked wouldn’t be much of a church!  But what I think is even more important than that: you go out through the doors.  You’re sent out, having received Jesus, having been changed just as the bread and wine and changed into the Body and Blood of Christ.  You’re sent out so that wherever you go, you are bringing Jesus with you.  Go out to all the world and tell the Good News!  Through you, Jesus can enter every house, salvation can come to every house, so that everyone can live with God forever.  Come in, become what you receive, and go out bringing Christ to the world.  That’s the church we celebrate, the church with open doors!

No comments:

Post a Comment