Sunday, August 21, 2016

Get Out There! (Anyway)




We ate and drank in your company and you taught in our streets.
When you think about it,
That's a pretty pathetic attempt at claiming a real relationship.
Hey, remember we met that time at that dinner party.
Yeah, I used to see you teaching, even heard some of what you said.

Jesus says he's not too impressed with that kind of relationship.
If that's all we've got, he'll say:
I do not know where you are from … depart from me.
He's expecting more from us than just a vague awareness of him.
More than just recognizing him as someone we once saw across a room
Or passing on the street.

So what does he expect from us?
Of course he expects us to love God and love our neighbor.
And to demonstrate that through our life, through our actions.
He expects that of everyone.

But all of us here have been specially blessed.
Fortunately for us, we are those to whom much has been given.
Much in both spiritual and worldly gifts.
When we compare the world around us
We see that we Americans
Have been given great freedom and security and wealth.
We see that we Catholic Christians
Have been given great knowledge of the Truth.

And from whom much is given, much is expected.
We're expected to share the gifts we've been given.
The spiritual gifts and the worldly gifts.

All of today's Scripture readings call us to evangelization.
Many others have not yet heard the Good News.
The news that there is a God, and that He is kind and merciful.
That He loves us as His children.

In our first reading from Isaiah, God says
I come to gather the nations of every language.
I will send [messengers].
They shall bring all your brothers and sisters from all the nations
As an offering to the Lord.
Who might those messengers be?

Our Psalm response repeats
Go out to all the world and tell the Good News.

In the Letter to the Hebrews we read that
The Lord disciplines those he loves.
He treats us as his children.
And, like a good father, he teaches and disciplines us.
We should view the trials of life as part of his discipline.
Accept our trials, learn from them, don't seek comfort above duty.

In the Gospel Acclamation we heard
I am the way, the truth and the life, says the Lord,
No one comes to the Father except through me.
That's not to say that only Catholics or only Christians can be saved.
But that, only because of Jesus can anyone be saved.
Without his intervention in mankind's estrangement, 
No one could be saved.

We’ve been specially blessed.
Look at the foundation we've received from our early years.
Most of us were trained in the faith as children.
Our faith was nurtured and shaped by our families and community.
We built strong beliefs from that training.

Strong foundations were also handed down to Jews.
Who still have their covenant with God.
And to the Muslims who do have some knowledge our one God.
And to Buddhists and Hindus and people of every religion.
And even to atheists.
Still others have no foundations or weak, neglected foundations.
It can be very difficult, maybe impossible,
For some to overcome and reject their existing beliefs or disbeliefs.
But others are open, even searching, for any Good News.
So it's our duty to evangelize—to put the Truth out there.
To help it spread so that can see it,
And maybe choose to embrace it in this life.

Then God—in His infinite mercy—will decide
Who gets to share in eternal life.

Regarding that eternal life, Jesus is asked in our Gospel,
Will only a few people be saved?
He doesn't answer directly.
But he does tell us to Strive to enter through the narrow gate.
That Many will attempt to enter but will not be strong enough.
Yet, at the same time, he also implies that many will be saved.
People will come from the east and the west
And from the north and the south
And will recline at table in the kingdom of God.

Throughout the Gospels, Jesus has given us many warnings:
Many are called but few are chosen.
The wheat will be separated from the chaff.
The goats from the lambs,
The weeds from the wheat.

But he's also given us many assurances:
Salvation is impossible for man, but nothing is impossible for God.
The rejoicing over finding the lost sheep and the lost coin.
The rejoicing over the return of the prodigal son.
God does not want even one of us to be lost.
God favors mercy over justice.

How do we balance all this?
We have the Truth, we have the Good News.
But we still have imperfect, incomplete understanding.
So we trust in God, we put our hope in God.
And we strive to do what Jesus tells us to do.

So we push beyond our comfort zone 
And go out to spread the Good News.
Out to share our gifts with our brothers and sisters.
Out to preach in the streets or to go knocking door-to-door.
Or to simply live a visible life of good acts and quiet example.

But where can we find our brothers and sisters?
Last Sunday we were visited by Fr Sebastian, 
A missionary from Tanzania.
He told us of the  struggles and needs of his congregation.
He and his people are our brothers and sisters.
This week we saw a haunting photo of a dazed child,
Rescued from the rubble in Aleppo, Syria.
He and his people are our brothers and sisters.
And we have plenty of brothers and sisters right here in our own country.
Our own city, our own families.
All people, even our own children, are our brothers and sisters in Christ.

Before we find ourselves knockin on Heaven's door,
Let's build up our relationship with Jesus.
Let's get to that sharing and that messenger work he's called us to.
Let's give ourselves a lot more to say than:
We ate and drank in your company and you taught in our streets.


21st Sunday of Ordinary Time

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