Independence
Day
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St Dominic, NOLA
Jesus says to John's disciples, “No one patches an old cloak with a piece of unshrunken cloth...People do not put new wine into old wineskins.” What does this bit of homespun wisdom have to do with weddings, fasting, the Pharisees, mourning the death of a bridegroom, and the price of camels in Jerusalem? Better yet: what do any of these have to do with the American Revolution and this country's declaration of independence from the tyranny of Old King George? Is Jesus teaching us to party while we can b/c we won't be around forever? Is he arguing that we ought to be better stewards of our antiques—human and otherwise? Or maybe he's saying that the time will come when the older ways can no longer be patched up and something fundamentally new must replace what we have always had, always known. When “the way we have always done it” no longer takes us where we ought to go; when the wineskin, the camel, the cloak no longer holds its wine, hauls its load, or keep us warm, it's time to start thinking about a trip to the market to haggle for something new.
We
celebrate two revolutions today: one temporal and one eternal, one
local and the other cosmic. The political revolution freed a group of
colonies in the New World from the corruption of an old and dying
Empire. The spiritual revolution freed all of creation from the
chains of sin and death. Today, we give God thanks and praise for the
birth of the United States of America by celebrating our 4th of July
freedoms. And we give God thanks and praise for the birth, death, and
resurrection of Christ by celebrating this Eucharist, the daily
revolution that overthrows the regime of sin and spiritual decay.
The
revolution of 1776 not only toppled the imperial rule of George III
in the American colonies, but it also founded a way of life that
celebrates God-gifted, self-evident, and unalienable human rights as
the foundation of all civil government and social progress. The
revolution that Christ led and leads against the wiles and
temptations of the world fulfills the promise of our Father to bring
us once again into His Kingdom—not a civil kingdom ruled by laws
and fallible hearts, but a heavenly kingdom where we will do His will
perfectly and thereby live more freely than we ever could here on
earth. In no way do we understand this kingdom as simply some sort of
future reward for good behavior. This is no pie in the sky by and by.
Though God's kingdom has come with the coming of Christ, we must live
as bodies and souls here and now, perfecting that imperfect portion
of the kingdom we know and love. No revolution succeeds immediately.
No revolution fulfills every promise at the moment of its birth. The
women and slaves of the newly minted United States can witness to
this hard fact. That we continue to sin, continue to fail, continue
to rebel against God's will for us is evidence enough that we do not
yet live in fullest days of the Kingdom. But like any ideal, any
program for perfecting the human heart and mind, we can live to the
limits of our imperfect natures, falling and trying again, knowing
that we are loved by Love Himself. With diligence. With trust. With
hope. With one another in the bonds of Christ's love, we can do more
than live lackluster lives of just getting along. We can work out our
salvation in the tough love of repentance and forgiveness, the hard
truths of mercy and holiness.
Christ
is with us. The Bridegroom has not abandoned us. His revolution
continues so long as one of us is eager to preach his Word, teach his
truth, do his good works. Today and everyday, we are free. And even
as we celebrate our civil independence from tyranny, we must bow our
heads to the Father and give Him thanks for creating us as creatures
capable of living freely, wholly in the possibility of His
perfection.
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