NB. I woke up this morning *much* later than I usually do, so I didn't have time to finish my homily for the 9am Mass at OLR. Had to reach into the archives for this one. . .
25th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
OLR, NOLA
Sounding
very much like Mary saying YES to the Lord’s angel at the
Annunciation, Paul proclaims without pride: “Christ will be
magnified in my body…” Christ will be made larger, brighter,
sharper, denser, louder, and more skilled in Paul’s body.
Fearlessly Paul adds, “…whether by life or by death.” Christ
will be magnified in his body, whether by life or by death. Like Mary
at the feet of the angel, Paul turns his life and his death over the
Lord – and the work of the Lord – and confesses to his brothers
and sisters that his life as a worker for the Lord will be larger,
brighter, sharper, and more skilled precisely b/c the work he does
will be done for the greater glory of God. And this is just the work
of his life!
Death is no obstacle for Paul b/c “life is Christ, and death is
gain.” So choose! Live in Christ and magnify His work on earth. Die
in Christ, be with Him eternally, and still magnify His work in His
presence. Now that’s commitment.
But
here’s what I want you to notice: Paul does not donate his time,
talent, and treasure out of his excess. He doesn’t give over to the
work of the Lord the overflow of his riches – the leftovers. Paul
does not say “Christ will be magnified in my checkbook.” “Christ
will be magnified in my volunteer hours.” “Christ will be
magnified in my talent.” He says that Christ will be magnified in
his BODY. His very flesh. And whether he lives or dies the work he
does for the Lord will bear abundant fruit for others. Paul does not
divide his life (or his death!) into neat packages addressed to
different and equally worthy recipients: his family, his career, his
friends, and, oh, one for the Lord too here on the bottom somewhere.
Paul’s whole life – the first fruits, the abundant works, the
failures and misgivings, and, finally, his last breath – all, his
whole life is given to Christ for the enlargement of Christ.
What
does it mean for Christ to be magnified in the body? The idea, I
think, is to pull us out of the very human habit of abstraction, the
very human temptation to lift our religious obligations to one
another into the heavens where we can keep them safe from our duty to
perform them on earth. So long as the obligation to clothe the naked,
feed the hungry, visit the imprisoned remain abstracted moral
imperatives far, far away, we are tempted to honor them in the
abstract, neglect to perform them, and remain confident that the work
of the Lord is getting done. Paul’s insistence that Christ will be
magnified in his body is the clearest indication we have that the
work of the Lord is to be DONE. Not just thought about. Not just
written about. Not just preached about. And certainly not abstracted
and lifted onto some kind of spiritualized “to do” list. The work
is to be done. And done first for God’s greater glory.
Now.
I know what you’re thinking! “Wow, Father is wound up this
morning. He must think we’re all lazy bums laying around thinking
about the good works of mercy, but watching
Saints football instead!” Not quite. I’ve seen the generosity of
this community, and I know what motivates you to be the Lord's
instruments in the world. There is a hunger here for others to see
and hear what the Lord has done in your lives. There is an eagerness
here, a tangible need to draw others to the Lord and to witness to
them the power of Christ’s mercy – to forgive, to heal, to bless.
I’m not wagging my finger at you, but merely reminding us all where
we came from, where we are, and where we are going. You came from
Christ. You are with Christ. And you will be with Christ.
But
there is a temptation waiting for us. An eager little devil waiting
to pounce on our witness to the Lord. It is an opportunity for us to
sin and delight the Liar. What is this temptation? It is the
temptation to believe that we work for the Lord out of our own
generosity, out of our own time, out of our own resources, and we are
therefore entitled to a greater reward when we outwork our neighbors.
This
is exactly the parable of the whiny workers from Matthew, a parable
about our salvation and our growth in holiness.
The
whiny workers begrudge the landowner’s generosity in paying full
wages to the latecomer laborers. Why? For some reason they feel that
their own labor and their own wages are diminished by the generosity
of the vineyard owner. Somehow their day’s labor is diminished.
Their dollar is devalued. They worked harder and longer under the
fiery sun, so they deserve more than those who sauntered in at the
last hour and barely broke a sweat!
These
guys are upset b/c they are working out of a very human notion of
justice, a temptation, I think, to believe that compensation is
earned; to get what is owed you, what you deserve. But remember, this
is a parable about salvation and holiness not a lesson on capitalist
economics. Is it a human notion of justice you want applied to your
eternal life? Do you want forever what you deserve? What you’ve
earned in this life? Do you want the Father to give you a just
compensation for your life’s work? The whole point of the Passion,
Death, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ is that we won’t be given
what we deserve; we won’t receive from the Father what is owed to
us. As I have said to you many times: we don’t want God’s
justice! We want His mercy! And Christ has bought that mercy for us.
Our
Final Wage was offered on the Altar of the Cross once for all.
Unearned. Free. Whether you came to your salvation sixty years ago,
or ten years ago, or three hours ago, your Final Wage comes from the
bottomless cache of the Father’s generosity. Salvation
is free. Holiness –
the living out of that salvation morning, afternoon, and night – is
work. But even that work is graced by a loving God Who would see us
with Him for eternity. That grace is sufficient to help us magnify
the Lord.
Make
Christ larger, brighter, louder, sharper, sweeter, stronger, kinder,
truer, better, more beautiful, more loving, more faithful, more
humble, more generous, and make Christ bigger, and bigger, and bigger
in your life. Magnify the Lord til your knees buckle. Magnify the
Lord til your back hurts. Magnify the Lord in your body til there is
no room for sin. And when the Lord asks, “Are you envious b/c I am
generous?” Say, “No, Lord! I am grateful in life and death, and I
live and die to magnify you so that everyone may see and hear you as
I do!”
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