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Christ the King, “B” – November 18, 2018

Jesus proclaimed His kingdom on the Mount of Beatitudes overlooking the Sea of Galilee. It is a place of great beauty and calm peace. In this place He spoke of those who would inherit the kingdom of God: the poor in spirit, the humble, the meek, people who work for justice, the peacemakers, those who suffer for their faith and do good. They seem an unlikely group of people who will triumph over time and become a strong and powerful kingdom in contrast to those whose power is violent and harsh. In today’s Gospel Jesus tells Pontius Pilate that His kingdom is not of this world but it is a kingdom that bears witness to the truthfulness of who people are, the goodness of relationships, and is a place where people show mercy to those in need. In this kingdom people look after one another and care for one another. Jesus speaks of bearing witness to the truth that each person is created good by God, given the gift of human freedom, and called to love others in rich and strong relationships. He continues this in forgiving those who have sinned. He washes the feet of His friends to show them the example of love. His kingdom is of service in which the power of love shines out.

On this feast of Christ the King, we are called to examine our hearts in the light of the attitudes and action of Christ. When we examine our emotions, we may find, some deeply hidden negative, even violent, attitudes towards others. We are called to discover the truth about ourselves and offer this to the healing grace of God. When we find these attitudes, then we can ask the Lord to show us His mercy and to heal us. Advent, which begins next week, is a time of preparation for Christmas when we can become better followers of Jesus Christ to serve in His kingdom.

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XXXIII Sunday in Ordinary Time, “B” – November 18, 2018

As we come to the end of another year in the cycle of life, the Church turns our attention to the end of the world, to the time when the Son of God will come again on the clouds with great power and glory. Jesus describes a time of true resolution, at the very end, when all evil will be wiped away and true justice will be seen on earth. The language used is eloquent. Angels will gather the chosen from the four winds. In earlier prophecy, as we heard in today’s first reading, Daniel uses words of great inspiration. Michael will stand up to guard us. God’s people will be spared. All those names are written in the Book will arise. We will rise to everlasting life. We will shine like bright stars. These powerful words and visions are proclaimed to inspire us now to keep faithful in all we do, to practice true hope in the Lord who goes before us and makes a place for us in His Father’s kingdom.

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XXXI Sunday in Ordinary Time, “B” – November 4, 2018

“Listen, Israel: the Lord our God is the one Lord…” Today’s reading instruct us to let these words be written on our hearts.

This short prayer was part of the daily prayer of Jesus, a faithful Jew, and so it immediately comes to His lips when He is asked which is the first of all commandments of the Law. The genius of Jesus is to link it straight away with the command from Leviticus, “You must love your neighbor as yourself.” Jesus understood that to love God with all our heart and soul, mind and strength, it is not sufficiently merely be able to recite the formula from the scriptures, even less to touch or even to wear the box containing the words. Love for God has to be expressed in action towards those among whom we live. As Jesus himself is the living sign of God’s love for us, so we are called to be living signs revealing love for God in the mercy and compassion we have towards our neighbors. The scribe who questioned Jesus comments that this understanding of the Law is far more important than any holocaust or sacrifice. This links nicely with today’s 2nd reading from the letter to the Hebrews, where we are told that one perfect sacrifice of Jesus does what all the sacrifices of the old Law could do; that is to save us from our sins.

The sacrifice of Jesus is made effective for us through our sharing in the life of the Church and through our participation in the sacraments, which are our most precious souvenirs, our way to heaven. The first commandment of the Law is to love God with all our heart and soul, mind and strength, and the second is to share in the life of the Church, especially in the Eucharist.

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XXX Sunday in Ordinary Time, “B” – October 28, 2018

Jesus has much on His mind as He is facing confrontation with religious and Roman authorities. The He hears one blind beggar, Bartimaeus, crying out. He recognizes Jesus as no ordinary prophet. Bartimaeus will not be silenced and he asks Jesus to let him see again. He knows that a major change is about to happen in his life and he anticipates it with enthusiasm, joy and hope. He is healed of his blindness. Bartimaeus is a special figure in Mark’s Gospel. Despite his blindness, he sees the royal and divine dimensions of Jesus’ identity, and he discerns that Jesus is compassionate and able to show mercy and to heal. When the crowd rebukes Bartimaeus for calling out, demanding that a blind beggar with no social status must be silent, Bartimaeus yells “all the louder” until Jesus hears him. He clearly expects to regain his sight. The story of Bartimaeus is like a blueprint for the ideal disciple: he believes that Jesus is the Messiah, he is called by Jesus, he has faith in Jesus and he experiences Jesus’ healing power. The story describes 2 energies coming together: the energy of Jesus and the energy of the believer. A blind humanity is searching for God and God is also looking for us.

The story prompts us to re-evaluate our own faith. Jesus stopped to talk to somebody who was regarded as a ”nobody”. Who are nobodies today? In todays narrative, we see how indifferent followers of Jesus were to the cry of a person in distress, but Jesus acknowledged the presence of the blind beggar and healed him. We need do name what blinds us. We are called by God to radical transformation. We need to say “yes” to the divine invitation to see, to live more vibrant and meaningful lives to reach out to people in need. Among other things, this story invites us to consider how faith is manifested, nurtured or stunted within communities.

Mark’s narrative compels us to consider the various roles characters play in this scene, and also the various situations in and around our community life: Bartimaeus with his needs and prophetic insights, Jesus with His compassion and grace, the crowd with its determination to keep Bartimaeus both blind and invisible, and others with the opportunity to guide him to Jesus with the hopeful words, Courage… get up; he is calling you. God wants to save us and we are yearning to be saved.

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XXVII Sunday in Ordinary Time, “B” – October 7, 2018

Our modern ears can easily interpret the Genesis story as regarding women as subservient. From the perspective of the writer, over 2,500 years ago, the intention was precisely the opposite. Today’s Gospel faces us with a similar issue. We hear it through the prism of our particular questions about church teaching on marriage as a lifelong sacrament, the pain of marriage breakdown and the position of children in society. But to understand what Jesus was saying, we also need to appreciate his context and the questions he was addressing. In Jesus’ time, there were 2 main schools of thought that a man could divorce his wife only for a serious reason, such as adultery. The other school thought that it was a man’s right to divorce his wife for any reason whatsoever – even if she burnt the dinner. The Pharisees’ question was a test. They wanted Jesus to take sides, perhaps even to contradict the Law of God. Jesus refuses to buy into their assumption that a man has any right at all to exercise such power over his wife. By ruling out divorce completely, Jesus is saying: a man can’t treat a woman as an object; he can’t get rid of her for any reason, serious or trivial. Woman is a person with equal dignity and should be respected as such. Jesus’ outright ban on divorce is a rejection of male domination of women – He affirms marriage as a covenant of equal partners. When St. Mark recorded this teaching some years later, his Christian community lived in a very different context – Gentile rather than Jewish, in a culture that gave some women the right to divorce their husbands. So Mark applies Jesus’ teaching to his own community’s situation, balancing Jesus’ prohibition on men divorcing their wives with a equal ban on women divorcing their husbands. Jesus rejects the idea that people can be treated as disposable objects. In welcoming and blessing children, Jesus shows His respect for every human being made in the image of God – even those regarded as the least and most powerless.

Jesus’ teaching on marriage – and indeed His whole attitude and behavior towards women and children – only makes sense when seen in the context of His time and culture. It is a teaching about the essential dignity of every human being and about what that means for all relationships, especially marriage. His teaching is simply that we should treat people as human beings, not as objects for our personal gratification or comfort. It means respecting and upholding the dignity of every person. Domination and control have no place in marriage, in the home or in any relationship. Whether we are married or not, Jesus’ words challenge us to examine the quality of our relationships. Do I treat others as means to my ends, or do I respect their dignity and worth as human beings.

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XXV Sunday in Ordinary Time, “B” – September 23, 2018

Today’s Gospel has at its heart issues of power. It begins with Jesus speaking about His impending passion, death and resurrection. The problem is that the disciples do not understand what He is saying. Today we are told plainly that they are too afraid to ask for an explanation. Instead of trying to get inside the meaning of Jesus’ words, the disciples argue about who is the greatest among them. They focus on themselves. Being around Jesus, witnessing His power and sharing in that authority themselves has turned their heads. They are followers of a miracle worker. Power flows from and through Him. So how human it is for them to start discussing who is closest to Jesus; who is most effective as a follower; who is most powerful. Hierarchy would have been important to people in the time of Jesus, just as it is today in many areas of our society. Jesus wants to make it clear that greatness or power or hierarchy are not to be focus for His followers. These are things that can turn His disciples in on themselves and make them an exclusive group. Belonging to the group and finding a rank within it is not what matters, but finding Jesus in the least likely places is what counts. Jesus takes a child, someone who is not respected because children had no status in the society of that day, someone who has no rights. Jesus says that true power comes in the ability to open one’s arms and receive a child as if he or she were Christ himself.

In church circles, there can be temptation to think that we are important when we are involved in various ministries, or are given impressive titles. Listening to St. James in second reading, we would do well to be reminded that the disordered desires fighting in ourselves can often be the source of a desire for power and glory. Prayer is surely the antidote. Closeness to Christ through regular prayer will help us to be shaped according to His will and to grow in the humility He so desires for all His followers. Prayer is our weapon of choice. True power comes when we allow ourselves to be filled by the Holy Spirit to be leaven in this world and a member of the body of Christ, clinging to Him in prayer.

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XXI Sunday in Ordinary Time, “B” – August 26, 2018

In the 1st reading we meet Joshua, one of Israel’s outstanding military commanders. In victories he established his people in the promised land of Canaan. By now he is old and knows that his end is near. He calls the people together at Shehem in the heart of their new homeland and delivers a moving speech. He says nothing of his victories, but only tells the people of critical choice that they have to make: Joshua calls them to “choose today whom you wish to serve;” is it to be the Lord who brought them out of slavery in Egypt or the pagan Canaanite gods? Joshua says that he and his family are setting an example: “As for me and my House, we will serve the Lord.” The people reply: “We too will serve the Lord, for He is our God.” They choose God, they choose life.

The Gospel centers on a choice. Last week He spoke plainly about the Eucharist. It is all too much for some hearers. Jesus agrees: it isn’t easy to accept such a claim. But He doesn’t go back on what He’s said, not even when – and this is one of the saddest sentences in the Gospels – “many of His disciples left Him.” He takes back nothing. He goes further; He turns to the 12 and asks, “What about you, do you want to go away too?” Peter has a wonderful response: “Lord, who shall we go to? You have message of eternal life, and we believe.” They trust Him: they choose God; they choose eternal life.

There is a sense in which that Gospel story becomes a reality at Mass. THE BODY of CHRIST. All we see is a wafer of bread; that’s what it will taste and feel like. As we look at the host, we say AMEN. A tiny word, and full of meaning. It comes from a Hebrew root that suggests solidity and strength. We believe this is the body of Christ: the same Christ who once walked the roads of Palestine; the Christ who healed the sick and comforted rejected. The Eucharist is above all the sacrament of faith, and faith is more than simply saying, “I believe” it is total commitment to Jesus. Our AMEN is like Peter’s declaration: “Lord, who shall we go to? You have the message of eternal life.” We are making a decisive choice…

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