Faith-Worship-Shadrach-Meshach-Abednego

LENT HOMILY WEEK 05 03

Glory and Praise; Worship and Blessing

(Dan 3:13-95; Dn 3; Jn 8:31-42)

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Many parishes are familiar with the hymnbook Glory and Praise that came out many years ago.

That title, the psalm response and readings today combine to provide us with a clear message centered on faith: believe in Jesus; listen to his Word then bless, praise and glorify him.

The readings present two opposing struggles to believe. In the first reading from the book of Daniel, the three young men Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego refuse to serve or worship the golden calf as they are ordered to do by King Nebuchadnezzar. Their steadfast faith is so pure (they refuse even though God might not deliver them) that an angel of God comes and protects them from the flames. It is significant that what they do with the angel in the fiery furnace is sing hymns to God and bless the Lord.

Their fidelity to the covenant is in stark contrast to the Israelites in the desert who so quickly worshipped a golden calf when Moses was up the mountain.

The false gods in our lives won’t be golden calves. They are more personal and deceptive – the basic temptations of possessions, prestige and power. The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous names them as money, fame and power, and as “self-will run riot.” I develop them a bit further as possessions/pleasure, prestige/fame, and power/control. These are the things in our lives, the false gods, we are tempted to worship and serve.

Spiritual writer Thomas Keating describes them as basic biological needs of safety and security, affection and attention, power and control. He claims when these are not met in our childhood, they become false programs for happiness that we turn into obsessions (again, false gods) and try to satisfy at all costs.

These temptations and unmet needs when run to the extreme then become addictions, and that is when they become false gods that we worship. We start breaking the first commandment – “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.” The addict is totally focused on satisfying his or her addiction at all cost, and the other family members become totally focused on trying to cope with the addict.

We see a contrasting picture in the gospel – not of believing in a false god, but rather refusing to believe in Jesus as the true Son of God. If the Jewish religious leaders are addicted, it is to a self-serving religion that is rigid, exclusive, judgmental and based on their lust after possession, prestige, power and control. Their sin is unbelief, hypocrisy and stubborn self-righteousness. They resist the truth of who Jesus is, and are really slaves to their own false gods, without even realizing it. In that sense, their sin is greater than that of King Nebuchadnezzar, who ends up blessing the God of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, and believing in the one true God of Israel.

The best way we can avoid both kinds of sin – worshipping a false god and stubborn self-righteousness – is to place our faith in Jesus; to as he says, make a place for his Word within us, and follow the advice of Daniel to bless, worship and give glory to God.

Faith in the one God has always been a struggle. As we approach Easter, the issue becomes whether Jesus really rose from the dead, or was it just a spiritual event that had religious significance for the followers of Jesus? Ron Rolheiser OMI, in an article on the empty tomb, points out not to believe in a physical resurrection would rob the incarnation of its meaning. Jesus was born in the flesh, lived in the flesh, died in the flesh, and rose in the flesh. And that eon-changing, dead-raising, cosmic-wide event opens up a whole new creation that is truly Good News indeed.

Closing ritual Our Lady of the Seas Parish, Murtle Beach, SC

The participants in the Lenten Missions I conducted in many parishes during this time of Lent can attest to that. They believe firmly in Jesus; they are making a place for his Word in their hearts, and they are expressing their faith as did the three young men in the furnace by singing hymns of praise and worship to bless God and give God glory as Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

The Eucharist is itself a great act of faith, a listening to God’s Word, and a great prayer of praise, thanksgiving and worship that both blesses God and gives God glory.

So let us take these readings to heart, place our faith totally in Jesus, listen to his Word, and then bless, praise and glorify him not just through song but also with our lives.

 

Updated: April 10, 2019 — 1:24 am

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  1. We should keep on praise and worshipping this one true God ; who is the father, son and Holy Spirit which is the Trinitarian God. He is the one who has mercy, forgiveness and unconditional love that forgives people all the time rather condemning people for their sins. We should take his word or teachings and practice it in our daily lives. He is the one who can forgive us for any sins and heal us so we can experience his glory and love. But, for false gods you will only gain power, fame, money and possessions that contains all negative thoughts that would lead us no where. It will only destroy us tempting us to do more evil deeds to hurt one another and end up hurting ourselves. If we believe in God and trust him ; he will save us and lead us to his new kingdom. So, we should praise and glorify him while celebrating his life, death and resurrection by hearing his words. We are to Put Jesus the Centre of our lives like he is more valuable than anything else. We should praise him in the morning, thanks him for the food during grace and saying evening prayers. Amen . Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ.

    1. It is wonderful and heart warming messages and homilies to praise and worship in our unique way , not just singing or praying . Our actions or reading the bible is also being devoted to the Lord. Thanks again Bishop Sylvain Lavoie . Gracias! Bravo! Keep it up!

  2. I miss attending your retreats especially during Lent . At least I understand what is Lent and what to do during Lent right now. I was clueless last couple of years. Amen.

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