Faith-Suffering-Paschal Mystery

HOMILY SUNDAY 33 – C

Beginning Well Leads to Ending Well 

(Malachi 4:1-2; Psalm 98; 2 Thes 3:7-12; Lk 21:5-19)

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Rhonda was quite sure that by studying the Book of Revelation, she had figured out when the end of the world was going to happen. No amount of listening, dissuading and caution could dampen her fervor. She had a cause and she was going to tell the world.

There is a curious desire on the part of many to know and predict the events of the future. That seems to take the edge off the unknown and give them an illusion of control to life. It is easy for that focus to become part of what we traditionally know in the Church as the Last Things – death, purgatory, hell and heaven or eternal life, especially as we near the end of the liturgical year.

The gospel today is about letting go of that preoccupation and focusing instead on the intermediate steps along the way, helping the new way of life Jesus brought break into the present – the way of forgiveness, not “fight or flight.”

In fact, one spiritual writer, Richard Rohr, would take us beyond the intermediate steps to the first steps. He claims we have it backwards. Our focus should be on the correct beginning of the spiritual journey, not on the end of it. Here is what he has to say about the matter of living well and dying well, taken from his book, Adams Return.

“Some kind of baptism (read: “initiation”) is needed to start the path to spiritual maturity. Fire, water, blood, failure or holy desire may all be precipitating events, but without a fall or a major dunking into the central mystery, a person has no chance of swimming in the right ocean. It is the necessary journey from the false self to the True Self. Without such a great defeat, we will misinterpret almost all religious words and rituals from our small ego position. We will use God instead of love God. Religion does not work at all unless there has been an encounter, especially a ‘close encounter of the first kind.’ We fall into an unnamable love and a new freedom that many call God.”

He continues thus, “Primal cultures did not generically focus on the end of life or on last things. Fear of death, judgment, later reward and punishment play very little part in their ways of thinking (unlike Christianity). Initiated and initiating cultures focused on getting the beginning right (thus the word initiation), and then they trusted the end would take care of itself. First things instead of last things were their concern, and this focus makes all the difference in the world because it allows us to live in the present. It connected ordinary time to eternal time, uniting heaven and earth, rather than casting them as opposites, enemies, or one as a mere obstacle course for the other. I am afraid that moderns are utterly schizophrenic about the two worlds most of the time, except when we really love, really pray or really stand naked in nature.”

There is deep wisdom here begging for our deeper attention. Living well leads to ending well. Loving deeply leads to freedom from fear, as stated in 1 John. Or as St. Augustine put it, “love and do what you will.” All these statements resonate with what Rohr is claiming – it is all in how we begin the spiritual journey.

All ancient rites of initiation involved some suffering and some shedding of blood. That is not far from the teaching of Jesus that anyone who would be a disciple of his must take up his or her cross and follow him. We follow him to the Cross, uniquely tailored to fit our life situation. That was the meaning of Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan, where he took on our sinful humanity, after fully taking on our humanity in the Incarnation. That is also the deep meaning of our own baptism – the acceptance of suffering and even shedding of blood for the sake of the Gospel.

This will entail suffering, as Jesus challenged all the existing laws and structures except that of love. The system that killed Jesus will also attack the disciples of Jesus who will share in his suffering. The suffering of the person who chooses to forgive instead of hold resentments is a prime example of the fate of the truly initiated person, a true disciple of Jesus.

Giving meaning to suffering will enable the disciple to go through the difficult time of transition from one way of thinking and acting to the new way of thinking and acting that Jesus brought about. Here is an insight taken from Jean Vanier’s book, Man and Woman God Made Them: “People in pain are often totally unaware that their distress can bear fruit. Perhaps the community, in living with them and their cries, can offer this pain on their behalf to the Father in the belief that their cries are heard; that the Father makes them fruitful in union with the Passion of his Son.”

In 2007, as a member of the Catholic board on the Residential School Settlement agreement, I was invited by then AFN chief Phil Fontaine to speak in Calgary at a Truth and Reconciliation preparatory conference. I happened to include the word forgiveness in my comments. Immediately after I finished speaking, an angry psychologist confronted me and upbraided me for using the word forgiveness. She categorically told me “that word did not belong in this process; I should never had used that word, and I only used it because I was a Christian!”

When I responded that according to my experience unless people at least move towards forgiveness, they would be angry for the rest of their lives, she retorted it was okay to be angry as long as it did not control a person! Sadly, I realized that she, a professional psychologist, did not believe in forgiveness at all. She may be an example of where much of the modern world is at and the challenge we face in helping that world understand the Paschal Mystery where suffering and forgiveness lead to new and eternal life.

The Eucharist is not just a foretaste of the heavenly banquet awaiting us in eternity. It takes us back to the beginnings of the Church; to the baptism of Jesus in the Jordan; to the Last Supper; to the Passion of Christ; to his death on the Cross – all leading to his resurrection and the giving of the Spirit.

May our celebration today help us to renew our baptismal commitment as an initiation into the mystery of the Son of God among us, giving us eternal life even now and empowering us to suffer and love selflessly as we look forward to the fullness of eternal life.

So, let us have faith, follow Jesus with all our might and live in the kingdom here and now.

 

 

Updated: November 17, 2019 — 12:57 pm

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  1. Since the liturgical year is coming to an end this all comes to us that we should live out Paschal mystery when Jesus is the body and blood of Christ ; who ever eats this banquet is to follow his teachings. He taught us to accept redemptive sufferings if we want to experience forgiveness and healing. So, in the end we can enjoy all love, peace and joy in the kingdom of God or eternal life. We are free from all sins , wrong doings and evil spirits. It is God who can perform these acts and transform us into a different person if want to change. Let us have faith by following Jesus with all our full strrength and live in the kingdom here and now. We are to renew our baptismal commitment as part of the Paschal mystery and review Jesus’ life from the beginning to the end. Remember what he did for us for us so we can be alive on this earth . We are to praise and worship the Lord as one. Amen. Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ

    1. Well thanks again Bishop Sylvain Lavoie for the beautiful homilies and teachings. It is a delight reading your reflections everyday. It is well written. 😊😊😇😇🙏🏻🙏🏻❤️💞❤️❤️ May God Bless you.

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