St. Catherine of Siena

HOMILY EASTER SEASON WEEK 05 01 – Year I

Experiencing God Through Intimacy:

Memorial of St. Catherine of Siena

(Acts 14.5-18; Ps 115; Jn 14.21-26)

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When someone is on their deathbed, and sharing their last thoughts and words with us – we pay attention.

The gospel today asks us to pay attention to the words of Jesus before the Passover, because his hour had come and he knew he was to die the next day. His message at that poignant time is simple: keep his commandment to love one another.

Actually, if we pay close attention to his words, we are taken into a journey deep into the mystery of love, of relationship, of intimacy: “They who have my commandments and keep them are those who love me; and those who love me will be loved by my Father, and I will love them and reveal myself to them.”

What does this all mean – “I will love them and reveal myself to them?”

A hint at an answer comes from a woman who was answering the question, “How do I feel when I achieve intimacy with my spouse?” at a Worldwide Marriage Encounter Deeper Training weekend in Toronto that I attended with a fellow priest.

She answered that question by saying it felt like there were no barriers, no separation, no walls between her and her husband. It struck me that she was experiencing salvation. She was experiencing God as Trinity – Father, Son and Spirit in her relationship of intimacy with her husband. The reason for that is because God is relationship, intimacy, communion, oneness. They were experiencing, through their own intimacy, these words of Jesus, “Those who love me will keep my word, and my Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them.”

When two people, especially a husband and wife in a committed marriage relationship, trust each other totally, have no secrets between them, forgive each other everything – they achieve intimacy and experience God in their relationship, because that is what God is – intimate relationship. In this way, Jesus reveals himself to them, as intimacy.

Some years ago, elders A. J. and Patricia Felix of Sturgeon Lake First Nations worked with Harry Lafond and me to conduct a session on Indigenous spirituality, issues and ministry as part of the then Spiritual Direction Formation program at Queen’s House in Saskatoon. He spoke forcefully and with great conviction about the traditional law of love, and challenged us to forgive those who hurt us, to apologize to those we have hurt, and to show affection and hug much more freely.

A.J. surprised us by sharing how their marriage at one point was on the verge of breaking up due to his hurtful behavior flowing from his addictions and anger stemming from his years in a residential school. Then he broke our hearts open by sharing how at one point he sat his wife down, out of desperation and knowing he could not continue that way, and told her who the man she married really was – confessing everything to her and holding nothing back. Her reaction was to get physically sick, throw up and not talk to him for over a week.

Instead of throwing him out as he dreaded and expected, however, after that silent week, she sat him down and told him who the woman he had married really was, and confessed everything to him, holding nothing back. Now it was his turn to become angry, and withdraw for a week.

Then, quietly, tentatively, they started to relate again and do things together. Significantly, they built a sweat lodge and had a sweat together. Their relationship was healed and they never had to talk about any of that painful history again. Now they work together putting on powerful workshops as they did with us.

It struck me that they had experienced what Fr. Armand Nigro SJ taught me about the Vietnam War veterans. A spiritual wall goes up between a couple when they are separated, and unless they take down that wall through a process of communication and reconciliation, trust and forgiveness, their relationship will fail, as happened to the veterans who tried to pretend nothing had happened and pick up where they left off. Only the couples that took the time and effort to communicate with love, to share their stories no matter how painful, to trust and forgive each other, survived according to Fr Nigro.

As I listened to A. J. share their experience, I realized they had gone through exactly that same process of moving from union, to separation, to reunion, through communicating with love, to an even deeper communion because of all the love as trust and forgiveness they experienced in their humble, gut-wrenching rigorous honesty with each other.

St. Catherine of Siena, whom we honour today, was someone who truly balanced prayer and action, contemplation and ministry in her life. One of four women doctors of the Church, she was born in Sienna, Italy in 1347, the youngest of 25 children. In 1368 after receiving a vision of Christ accepting her as his bride, she felt called to carry this love to others, and so became more active, caring for the poor, tending to the sick, and corresponding with people from all walks of life, including princes and popes. In the process she became renowned as a peacemaker. She was also a great mystic. She died in Rome in 1380, was canonized in 1461, became patron of Italy in 1939, and was declared a doctor of the Church in 1970. She is co-patron of Europe with St. Bridget of Sweden and St Teresa Benedicta of the Cross. What an example she is for us.

The Eucharist is our intimate meal with Jesus. He listens to our confession of sin and failing during the penitential rite, forgives us through his word, and then heals us by sharing his very Body and Blood with us, making his home within us.

May our celebration empower us to truly love one another as Jesus has loved us, so that we also can experience God as Trinitarian relationship in our own intimate relationships with trusted others in our lives, and live out the good news proclaimed by the apostles in the first reading.

 

Updated: April 28, 2024 — 11:52 pm

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