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Scripture calls
Satan the "Father of Lies" for a reason. We need to get
it into our heads that the Gospel is the real world, but
again and again in daily life we hear that the Church is old-fashioned,
or irrelevant, or inflexible or unrealistic. These are all lies.
An interviewer once asked Mother Teresa, "Why are you so holy?"
She answered, "You sound as if holiness is abnormal. To be
holy is normal. To be anything else is abnormal."
C.S. Lewis
once wrote that "heaven is an acquired taste" but
only because we've addicted ourselves to sin and its delusions.
What some people call "the real world" is usually just
the configuration of all those forces which are organized against
God. This is not the real world but the devil wants
us to think it is. The devil wants us to believe that the Gospel
view is an idealistic dream. That's insidious, because it traps
us in the status quo of those "powers and principalities"
who have the world in a death grip. So we constantly need to ask
ourselves: Are we an accommodated Church? Have we assimilated too
well? Socrates warned that we should be wary when people praise
us. As Christians, we should be worried when nobody wants to persecute
us.
Gaudium
et Spes tells us that only through Jesus Christ can men and
women find eternal life (10). But where do we find Jesus Christ?
We find Him above all in the suffering and wounded.
In "The
Odyssey" (Book XIX), when Odysseus finally returns home to
Ithaca after years of wandering, he disguises himself as an old
man. Not even his wife or son recognizes him. That night, just before
bed, the aged nurse who cared for Odysseus in his youth bathes him
. . . and she recognizes a scar on his leg. She couldn't recognize
him until she saw his scar.
When you go
home tonight, read the Gospel of John, Chapter 20, verses 19-31.
The Risen Christ appears to His frightened disciples, and they recognize
Him in seeing His scars. The Risen Christ has scars. So if
you want to see the Risen Christ today, begin by looking for Him
in the people who have His scars the homeless person, the
AIDS patient, the mentally handicapped child. The First Letter of
Peter says, "By His wounds you have been healed" (2:24).
The suffering among us are not some kind of embarrassing mistake.
They're Christ's invitation to each of us to really live,
to really believe to find Him, by serving them.
Even the Apostle Thomas only really believed when he placed his
fingers in Jesus' wounds. We need to do the same.
In the early
centuries of the Church, one of the great heresies was called Docetism.
Docetism was the belief that since Christ was divine, He couldn't
really suffer. He only appeared to suffer. Like most great
heresies, it seems to make some sense on the surface. But it leads
to "over-spiritualizing" Jesus and turning Him into a
kind of "idea" disconnected from physical reality. That's
false teaching, and the Church rejected it. The body and physical
suffering are intimately connected to Christ's mission of redemption.
So Christians must really be involved in the suffering world,
or we're spiritual Docetists.
And our commitment
to the suffering world reminds us of one other important thing.
Justice needs to be at the heart of all our evangelization efforts.
Chief Dan George once said that, "When the white man came,
we had the land and they had the Bibles. Now they have the land,
and we have the Bibles." There is no Gospel life without a
foundation in justice.
The theme
of [Pentecost 2000] is "Go, make disciples of all nations."
That's the last command Jesus gave to us before returning to His
Father. And it's a big one. How can a few simple people like us
convert the world? But that brings us back to Mary, and to the Apostles
at Pentecost. They changed the world by letting God change and work
through them. We don't need to be afraid. We need to be confident
in the promise made by Christ Himself: "I am with you always,
to the close of the age."
Don't be afraid
of the world. The poet Percy Bysshe Shelley once sneered that "I
could believe in Christ if He did not drag along behind Him that
leprous bride of His, the Church." But Shelley's long gone,
isn't he . . . and the Church is still here, still bringing life
to the world.
Don't be afraid
of the world. Charles Spurgeon once said, "The way you defend
the Bible is the same way you defend a lion. You just let it loose."
So much of the world is already dead without knowing it and
that's exactly why people respond to the truth when they
hear it. Robert Farrar Capon wrote that, "Jesus came to raise
the dead. The only qualification for the gift of the Gospel is to
be dead. You don't have to be smart. You don't have to be good.
You don't have to be wise. You don't have to be wonderful. You just
have to be dead. That's it."
Understand
the purpose of your life. You're going out into a struggle for the
soul of the world. That's how the Holy Father describes it. That's
your vocation. Nothing is more important than that work.
C.S. Lewis once said that "Christianity, if false, is of no
importance; and if true, of infinite importance. The one thing it
cannot be is moderately important."
At the end
of every day, we need to ask ourselves this question: I have paid
one day of my life to do what I did today. Was it worth it?
For Jesus,
you and I were worth it on Good Friday. So how will we answer the
question today?
Thank you
and God bless you.
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