Sunday, November 22, 2020

Jesus hungers for us – Matt 25:31-46, Ezek 34:11-17

 Christ the King, Year A; St. Adalbert's.

We feel so scattered right now. Isolated, divided. That could be physically, in terms of what we need to do for our safety and that of others in this pandemic, and the social losses that come with that. It could be grief for loved ones. It could be political divisions that seem to be becoming more and more entrenched. Or it could be a feeling of distance from God. Where is God in all of this?

 

Our scriptures today give us two answers. And they’re not easy answers. They’re not answers that make the pain go away as soon as you know them. But they’re answers that can give us hope. Answers that can sustain us while we wait.

 

In our reading from the prophet Ezekiel, we hear God promise to gather us together. We’re described as scattered sheep, and there’s something really reassuring about that. That we’re sheep. We can’t solve all our problems on our own, because sheep aren’t really known as the great problem solvers of the animal kingdom. But God will gather us together, and God will tend to our wounds. And God won’t let there be any threat, any danger for us.

 

But these words are challenging too, in at least two ways. First, there’s that talk of judging at the end. When I say that God won’t let there be any danger for us, I really mean, for His sheep. But what if we’re part of the danger? Now, of course we’re all sinners. We all wander away from the true path. But there’s a kind of sin that’s more than just wandering away. There’s a kind of sin by which some establish themselves as a danger to others, and this talk of God’s protecting linked with God’s judging should make us ask searching questions about our moral lives.

 

Second, even the more comforting talk about being gathered, being healed, all of that is in the future. These words can give us hope, and hope can equip us to endure, but they don’t on their own tell us anything of what God is doing now. We want to believe God is consistent, that the way God will act is the way God is acting. But these words on their own from the prophet don’t help us see that.

 

Well, the Gospel will give us something to help a little with that concern. Our gospel reading is also about the future and it’s also about gathering. This is the end of time and all the nations and all the angels are gathered together around Christ, who is seated on a glorious throne. But in this vision of the future, we learn something about the present. We learn that our glorious Lord and King, judge of the universe, is truly present in the hungry, in the thirsty, the prisoner, the migrant, the refugee, the sick, physically, mentally and spiritually, and in the homeless.  Christ hungers for us. Christ knew hunger in his earthly life, really, bodily, physical hunger that gnawed at him, just like more than one in ten American households today that scrape by in food insecurity.  And he did that for our sake, for love of us.  And while he is risen and ascended, praying for us forever at the right hand of the father, he remains God-with-us, Emmanuel.  He remains in the hungry.  Christ hungers for our sake, and at the same time, Christ hungers for us.  Christ thirsts for us, Christ is imprisoned for us, Christ is cast out for us, Christ loses his clothing and shelter for us, Christ is sick for us.  The greatest glory of Christ is his willingness to suffer for us.

 

Where is God in all this? With us, present in the sick and suffering. Blessed Frederick Ozanam as a child and a young man had a really tough relationship with God. As a teenager, he’d developed scruples, had found God really absent. When went to university in Paris, moving out of his small very Catholic village, he struggled to come to terms with the hostility to religion all around him. He reached out for help to various people who didn’t have words that could help him, but eventually he found a religious sister, who is also now a Blessed, Blessed Rosalie Rendu, who didn’t even try to offer him words but told him just to come along with her as she brought food and medical supplies to the poor. Frederick later wrote that it was while trying to cool down a boy dying of a fever that he first truly encountered Christ. Frederick went on to found the St. Vincent de Paul Society, very active in our county, to not just serve the poor but also to help others encounter Christ in the poor served.

 


Christ hungers for us and in the bodies of those who go without that hunger cries out to us.  Christ is present to us. There is still judgment in the gospel, just as in the prophets. We can choose not to be present to Christ. And God respects our choice. What we can’t do is claim to be following Christ and then constantly turn our back on him in the poor.

 

God will gather us. Christ is present to us now. As hungry people, fed by him in this eucharist, let us find ways, maybe different right now, maybe more remote, to still reach out and be present to him.


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