Living in the Kingdom through Faith and Love:
Memorial – Saint André Bessette
(1 Jn 3:22-4:6; Ps 2; Mt 4:12-25)
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According to The Word Among Us,researchers interviewed American Christian youth, both Catholic and non-Catholic, for a recent study. The data indicated although they called themselves Christians, many of the young people didn’t really grasp the essential truths of Christianity. They believed God exists, mainly to help them become “better people,” but is far off and removed from their daily lives. In short, their answers revealed great confusion about their faith – almost like a cloud over their minds, leaving them more like deists than Christians.
Today’s readings as we wrap up the Christmas season and enter into the New Year, provide us with a concise, clear catechesis addressing that confusion. As Christians, we are to believe in Jesus Christ, love one another, and live in the freedom of God’s kingdom.
Regarding faith in Jesus Christ, the gospel completes the historical time-line of Jesus’ early life: he was born in Bethlehem, grew up in Nazareth, and after his cousin John the Baptist was arrested, moved to Capernaum where he began his public ministry.
The gospel accounts invite us to believe in him as the long-awaited Messiah, the Word made flesh conceived in Mary’s womb by the power of the Holy Spirit, the fully divine Son of God who is also the totally human Son of Man, Emmanuel who is God among us, the Savior of the World and the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.
As the Messiah, Jesus came with a two-fold mission – to redeem and to sanctify, to forgive our sins, and to heal us of our sinfulness (that which makes us sin). His preaching about repentance is a call to do metanoia, to put on our highest mind, to open ourselves to change and transformation by receiving his forgiveness and experiencing his healing of our painful emotions and negative attitudes, leading us to an inner freedom only he can give.
According to St. John, our response is to be like him, to love one another as he has loved us. We love others by trusting them, blessing them, affirming them, believing in their goodness, listening to them, caring for them, doing good to them, sharing life with them. We are especially called to be like Christ by loving our enemies, those who do us harm. We do that especially by forgiving them from the heart, as Jesus himself taught us to do in Matthew 18:15. Instead of fighting back, fleeing into addictions or freezing our emotions, we are go to them alone, share our feelings with them about their actions without any expectation, attempt at revenge or trying to get even, let them know we are trying to forgive them, and let it go.
What happens when we do that is we are just like Jesus on the cross – “Father, forgive them, they know not what they do” – and when we act like God, we get to feel like God. Our dignity, innocence, self-esteem and self-confidence come back to us, because we are just like Jesus, and it doesn’t get any better than that. In the words of St. Julian of Norwich, “All will be well, and all will be well, and in the end, all manner of being will be well.”
More, we are actually already living within the kingdom of God. It is no coincidence that Jesus, in his first message of his public ministry in Galilee, linked the kingdom of God with his call to believe and repent. In fact, in Luke 17:21, he goes even further to say the kingdom of God is not just near or at hand – it is among us. So, we don’t have to worry about getting to heaven – we are invited to live within the reign of God here on earth Jesus came to inaugurate. In the words of St. Catherine of Sienna “All the way to heaven, is heaven.” We are truly living in the freedom of God’s kingdom as children of God and brothers and sisters of Jesus.
For St. Paul, the kingdom of heaven is all about the peace, joy and justice of the Holy Spirit (Romans 14:17). Peace is not just a passing feeling – it is a lasting gift of the Holy Spirit we can claim as followers of Jesus Christ. Joy is also not just a passing feeling – it too is a gift of the Holy Spirit we can claim as followers of Jesus, regardless of any chaos that might be in our lives at the moment.
According to Megan McKenna, in her book on Advent, Christmas and Epiphany, “Joy is one of the surest signs of this presence of God among us. It is not an emotion or feeling, but an abiding belief, a practice that endures, a reliance on the Word of God that is true and reliable. It is, in a word, belief in the person of Jesus Christ, risen from the dead and present among us in the scriptures, the Eucharist and bread shared, in community, in the Body of Christ that is the church and the poor” (p. 172).
Justice, for me, is a right relationship with God (I have received God’s forgiveness and healing through Jesus), a right relationship with all others in my life (I have forgiven from the heart all who have hurt me, and been forgiven by all those whom I have hurt), a right relationship with myself (I have forgiven myself my mistakes, have accepted myself as I am, can accept compliments and am filled with gratitude) and a right relationship with all of God’s creation (I am doing what I can to care for our mother earth and all its creatures).
Ed Mihalicz, a former parishioner from Beauval, Saskatchewan, has written a memoir entitled “This is My Story and I’m Sticking to it” in which he describes our team ministry for three and a half years as the Keewatin Renewal Team. That ministry, consisting mostly of Parish Renewal sessions, Christopher Leadership courses and Search weekends for youth, was focused on precisely the message of today – strengthening participants’ knowledge of and faith in Jesus Christ, leading them into a greater love for others and themselves, and empowering them to live within the kingdom of God with profound peace, greater joy and deeper freedom of spirit.
Today the church honors someone who in his own simple way lived out the message of today’s liturgy, Saint André Bessette. Known to millions simply as Brother André, Alfred Bessette was born in St.-Grégoire, Quebec, in 1845. Orphaned by the age of 12, he was unschooled, small and sickly. In 1870 he joined the Congregation of the Holy Cross. For the next 40 years, he was porter at Collège Notre-Dame on Queen Mary Road in Montreal, where he excelled at hospitality. In the course of his duties, he welcomed the sick and afflicted, and it was his habit to pray with them through the intercession of Saint Joseph. He gained a reputation throughout the city and, as he was credited with extraordinary favours and with healings, more and more people came to the college to seek out the ‘Miracle Man of Montreal’.
Possessed of a deep love for Saint Joseph, Brother André erected a statue of the saint on the mountain across form the college. Then, assisted by lay friends in 1904, he built a wooden chapel on the mountain. Ove the years, the chapel grew into a basilica. Today, Saint Joseph’s Oratory welcomes more than two million visitors each year. Its founder lived to be 91, was declared blessed in 1982, and canonized on October 17, 2010. Saint André Bessette is the patron of family caregivers in Canada (Living With Christ, January issue).
Part of believing in Jesus is to respond by loving him back, by praising and glorifying him as did the angels and shepherds, and especially worshipping him with other believers especially through the celebration of the Eucharist, our greatest prayer which offers back to God the greatest gift he gave us, his only Son.
May our celebration this day after the Feast of the Epiphany empowers us to believe more deeply who Jesus is for us, love one another as he has loved us, and live in the kingdom of God with great peace, joy and freedom, as did Saint André Bessette.
We should be much more closer to Jesus Christ after the Epiphany since He was presented to the whole world that he will be King someday. We should understand and know who Is Jesus Christ and where he came from. So, we are to praise and worship him like he is Holy and the highest which means he is King of the universe. This is part of the Commandment that God created; I am the Lord your God. You shall not have strange Gods before me. You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain. You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with your soul and with your mind. These commandments are the most important according to God and Jesus himself. Jesus taught us to love each other as he loved us . We should love your neighbours as yourself; as well as loving our enemies because we forgave them already. We should be able to forgive people who have hurt us and forgive people that we hurt by doing repentance . We should ask God for forgiveness; on the other hand he is healing us spiritually. This is living in the kingdom of faith and love with Jesus Christ. Amen . Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ.
Thanks for the beautiful words and teachings about the readings today. It is a delight homily that should be part of our daily living. It is a bright light shining upon us with the messages expressed today. May God Bless you Bishop Sylvain Lavoie.