Many great
actors say that they relish playing villains.
Some stories create much of their delight and intrigue by making us root
against someone. If you come out of the
movie theater feeling sorry for Scar, or thinking that Darth Vader wasn’t such
a bad egg after all, you’ve kind of missed the point of those movies. But that way of engaging narrative, seeking
out the baddies… that can lead us dangerously astray when we apply it to the
gospels, or to our day-to-day lives for that matter. Because if you look at this gospel trying to
find the hero, that’s clear and right; we find Jesus. But if we look for the villains, we’d be
tempted to find the Pharisees and scribes.
We’d start to read this thinking that Jesus is out to vanquish them, and
miss his will to save them. And we’d
start to think that we need to distance ourselves from them, because they might
defile us… too much contact with them might make us impure. And then the gospel turns its head on us, on
the judgments that rise up within us, and Jesus would sadly smile at us and tell
us, “No, nothing that comes from outside can defile.”
Sunday, August 30, 2015
God gives us goodness – Mark 7:1-23, James 1:17-27
22nd Sunday in OT, Yr B; Walsh Hall, University of Notre Dame.
Sunday, August 23, 2015
God enlivens our relationships with love – Eph 5:2a, 25-32
Ordinary Time, Yr B, Wk 21. Notre Dame, Badin Hall.
I seem to have
an odd track record of readings about marriage coming up at Masses I celebrate
in very different contexts. We’re here,
about to begin a new school year at Notre Dame, and one comes up. Just a few months ago, on June 6th,
I presided at 8th grade graduation Mass at the parish where I was
serving before I came here, and the first reading was another marriage
reading. It was from the book of Tobit,
a depiction of parental pride at children growing up and marrying. And it worked pretty well for 8th
grade graduation. Certainly, there was a
lot of parental pride, even though none of these kids had gotten married. But, praying as I prepared myself to preach
at that occasion, I started thinking about what marriage really is. Marriage is a totally human relationship that
is blessed to show the world something of what God’s love for us looks
like. And the kids we were graduating
had entered into relationships like that; they’d entered into authentic,
maturing friendships. I’d marveled often
as I saw their love, their mutual challenge, and their forgiveness when things
went wrong, and genuinely seen God’s love.
And, at their graduation, I felt some pride, marveled in gratitude,
thanked them, and encouraged them to keep on loving like that.
Sunday, August 9, 2015
God feeds us for the journey – 1 Kings 19:4-8
19th Sunday in Ordinary Time; Mission Appeals at All Saints, Logansport, IN. (Bilingual)
Elijah was
hungry. He wasn’t just hungry for food:
he was hungry for relief from persecution; he was hungry for meaning and
purpose in his life; he was hungry for success as a prophet, not for his own
sake, but for God’s; he was hungry for the intimacy and acceptance of God that
had launched him on this path. He was
hungry. And so God fed him. Elijah had fled into the desert, running from
the Queen who was out to kill him. He
was fleeing from his call to be a prophet, because it seemed almost
hopeless. He was hungry. And so God fed him. God fed him, and God led him. God have him food for the journey, and leads
him to walk His walk to the summit of Mount Horeb, where, in that famous
passage, Elijah would encounter God in the still
small voice. A still small voice
that re-commissioned him, sent him anew, to return to his people and prophesy,
a task that would get no easier, but to which he would return fed, nourished by
encounter with God.
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