St. Philip Neri
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
When
we hear God's Word and listen to Him speaking to us, our hearts are
opened, and we are filled with the joy of His Holy Spirit. Lydia, a
dealer in purple cloth, is our witness to this truth. Hearing Paul
preach in Philippi, she attends to the Word. She turns herself toward
the Word, reaching out toward the Word, “and the Lord opened her
heart to pay attention to what Paul was saying.” What does Lydia
hear? She hears the truth revealed – the truth about her sin and
the surety of God's mercy to sinners. Lydia and her household are
baptized, and she offers Paul and his companions the hospitality of
her home. Her invitation is an expression of joy, an act of charity
born out of a new found freedom from slavery to sin. We can't miss
the progression of events here: Lydia hears the Word; the Lord opens
her heart to listen; she listens to the Word; she is convicted and
convinced in the truth of the Spirit; and then she is baptized. Her
baptism immediately leads her to express her joy, an act of charity.
When we hear God's Word and listen to Him speaking to us, our hearts
are opened, and we are filled with the joy of His Holy Spirit.
On
this feast day of St. Philip Neri, the Apostle of Joy, we cannot miss
the intimate connection btw listening to the Word and the presence of
joy. When we turn ourselves toward God's Word and our hearts are
opened to listen – to attend to His Word – we recognize the
abiding presence of the Holy Spirit. Here's a weak analogy to give
you an image. Think of a laptop. It's on, but the screen is blank.
When you “attend to” the laptop, when you press a key or click
the mouse, the laptop “wakes up,” it doesn't turn on b/c it's
already on – it animates, it comes alive. Here's another analogy.
You crank your car. It's running but not moving. When you “attend
to” the car by putting it in gear, the car moves. In a similar way,
the Holy Spirit abides – He sleeps, idles – in the baptized. When
we “attend to” the Spirit by listening to God's Word, by
celebrating the sacraments, by praying, the Spirits wakes; He comes
alive and blooms into joy. And joy, St. Thomas tells us, is an effect
of charity. Joy is an act of love, a fruit of the Holy Spirit
(ST.II-II.28.4).
You
may have noticed that in my analogies the laptop had be turned on and
the car cranked. IOW, before they are able to “come alive” by our
attention, they have to be “on.” Before the Holy Spirit can “come
alive” in us, we too must be “on.” How does this happen? In his
exhortation, The Joy
of the Gospel, Pope
Francis teaches us that God always takes the initiative. He loves us
first. Francis writes, “God asks everything of us, yet at the same
time he offers everything to us” (12). The first gift we receive
from God is His love, Himself. This is what “turns us on.” This
is what makes it possible for Lydia to hear Paul's preaching. Our
relationship with God is always voluntary, always a willed act on
your part. We must will to turn toward Him. He makes that willing
possible but not compulsory. Jesus tells the disciples that they will
be expelled from the synagogues and even killed. Those who commit
these evil acts “will do this because they have not known either
the Father or me.” They have not heard the Word nor have they
turned themselves toward the Lord. Their hearts are closed to the
truth of the Spirit. Our task – as enjoyers of the Spirit's abiding
presence – is to testify to Christ, to bear witness to the freely
offered mercy of the Father to sinners. Our example is Philip Neri.
He lived in constant joy, a martyr to the power of the Spirit to open
wide the most closely guarded heart.
_______________
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This homily elicited many a smile, and as I listened a chuckle or two arose. Thank you. Happy Feast Day ... And happy birthday.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ms Shelly. How's that bacon grease cookbook coming along?
DeleteWell, let's see - cooked the omelets in bacon grease...added some bacon grease to the grits...oiled a hinge or two...and gave the dogs the smidgen that was left over. So far, so good!! And the house smells like BACON!!!
DeleteGood start!
DeleteHappy Feast day Father!
ReplyDeletemaryclare :-)
Is your birthday today, Fr...?
ReplyDeleteHappy birthday!
Yup. Big 5-0. Thanks.
DeleteQuite young for your wisdom... :)
Delete:-) I've lived an. . .um. . .interesting life, MFT!
DeleteI like the analogy of the laptop, what a wonderful way to put it in this day and age. Much better IMHO than the chocolate milk mix analogy.
ReplyDeleteHappy Birthday for yesterday!