NB. Not many chances to preach these days, so here's one from 2011. . .
5th Sunday of Lent 2011 Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Joseph, Ponchatula, LA
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5th Sunday of Lent 2011 Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Joseph, Ponchatula, LA
Brothers and sisters, I bring you some dramatic news this morning! 
Reports have come in from all over the world that the dead walk among 
us. They've been sighted in all the world's major cities, shambling 
around dressed like the living, doing the ordinary things that the 
living do. They are difficult to spot since their demeanor is easily 
confused with those who still cling to life. They go to work, eat their 
family meals; go to school, church, the grocery store. The media have 
given these deceased mimics a group name. They are called simply, “The 
Dead.”  But since that label is rather boring, I've decided to refer to 
them as Zombies. So, yes, Zombies walk among us, and more specifically, 
Catholic Zombies walk among us and pray among us and go to communion 
with us. In fact, there are probably several right here this morning! 
Otherwise normal looking, normal sounding Catholics who shamble around 
in their living bodies without a living spirit. What animates them, what
 gives them the appearance of being alive is uncertain. What is certain 
is that they are truly dead, and that their bodies are a walking grave. 
What can be done for these poor spiritless creatures? They must be freed
 from what binds them to the grave; freed from the walking death of 
sin. 
In the story of Lazarus' resurrection, we have an abridged version of 
the Dummies Guide to Catholic Zombies. This handy guide helps us to 
identify, diagnose, and treat those who appear to be alive in Christ but
 are actually long dead to his spirit. A warning page 23 of the Guide 
calls our attention to an uncomfortable truth: “The Catholic Zombie 
virus is virulent and unpredictable. It can infect anyone at anytime. It
 attacks the Catholic's sin-immunity response system, replicating its 
viral disobedience-DNA and leaves the Spirit of Christ Defense Network 
incapable of properly responding to temptation. No one is immune. Even 
the holiest Catholic is susceptible to infection and re-infection.” As a
 start to the recovery process, the Guide refers both the infected and 
their care-givers to the story of Lazarus' resurrection and to Paul's 
short treatise on the relationship between the spiritually dead and 
Christ. These two passages make it clear that the truly living—those who
 live in Christ, body and soul—live b/c they dwell in the Lord's 
righteousness, believing wholeheartedly in the Lord when He says to 
them, “O my people, I will open your graves and have you rise from them.
 . .Then you shall know that I am the LORD, when I open your graves and 
have you rise from them, O my people!” Working backwards from cure to 
disease, the Guide reports that those most susceptible to infection by 
the Catholic Zombie virus are those who allow their Christ Defense 
Network to become weakened through inattention to personal prayer, the 
sacraments, good works, and holy reading. Working from disease to cure, 
we can see that the best treatment for the Zombie Catholic is personal 
prayer, the sacraments, good works, and holy reading. In other words, 
the best treatment is prevention. 
To get a better grip on how we can prevent the spread of the Catholic 
Zombie virus more effectively, let's look at Lazarus' resurrection story
 and tease out exactly how prevention works. Probably the most obvious 
tact to take in preventing the spread of the virus is to ensure that 
everyone around you knows the basics of good spiritual hygiene. For 
example, when Lazarus' sister, Martha, asserts to her brother's 
physician, Jesus, that Lazarus would rise again on the last day, Dr. 
Jesus says, “I am the resurrection and the life; whoever believes in me,
 even if he dies, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me 
will never die.” After this brief revelation, Jesus asks Martha, “Do you
 believe this?” She responds, “Yes, Lord. I have come to believe that 
you are the Christ, the Son of God, the one who is coming into the 
world.” So, the first step to prevention is a profession of faith in the
 Christ, the Son of God. By believing in the Christ, who is the 
resurrection and the life, we can bolster our resistance to the Catholic
 Zombie virus and ward off the onslaught of temptations that comes from 
doubt.  
Another step in good spiritual hygiene is obedience to the Christ. The 
Guide points out that obedience is not a matter of mindless compliance 
with rules and regulations. Obedience starts by trusting Christ's wisdom
 and believing in the promises of his Father. Listen first, then act. 
Lazarus emerges from his tomb after having been dead for four days. 
Martha, Mary, and the disciples all play essential roles in his 
resurrection by obeying Christ. Jesus says to the disciples, “Let us go 
to back to Judea.” And they do. He asks to see Mary. And she runs to 
him. He asks to see Lazarus. And they take him to the tomb. He orders 
the tombstone removed. They obey. He cries out, “Lazarus, come out!” And
 he does. Finally, with the newly resurrected Lazarus standing before 
him, Jesus says, “Untie him and let him go.” We know that Jesus' 
intervention here works as prevention b/c John reports, “Now many of the
 Jews who had come to Mary and seen what he had done began to believe in
 him.” Belief in the Christ is the first step in preventing the spread 
of the zombie virus! With belief comes repentance and with repentance 
comes the overwhelming mercy of God. Once we have come to depend 
absolutely on God's mercy, obedience to His Word is not only no longer a
 burden, it is a privilege—a privilege that inoculates believers against
 the weaknesses of doubt, anxiety, and pride.  
The final step in good spiritual hygiene is hope in the resurrection. 
The Lazarus story contains a very odd scene. Jesus is informed that 
Lazarus is sick and on the verge of death, John reports, “. . .when 
[Jesus] heard that [Lazarus] was ill, he remained for two days in the 
place where he was.” His friend is deathly ill and Jesus decides to hang
 around Bethany for two days. Hardly the reaction we would expect. Later
 on, Mary chastises Jesus for the delay, saying, “Lord, if you had been 
here, my brother would not have died.” The Jews who went with Mary to 
visit Jesus, upon seeing Jesus weep for the grief of the sisters, say, 
“Could not the one who opened the eyes of the blind man have done 
something so that this man would not have died?” Why did Jesus delay 
visiting his dying friend? To instill in his disciples the virtue of 
hope, to bolster in them an immunity to the despair that death often 
brings. When he first heard that Lazarus was dying, Jesus says, “This 
illness is not to end in death, but is for the glory of God, that the 
Son of God may be glorified through it.” Lazarus' resurrection from the 
tomb serves to show the disciples (and us) that death is not an end for 
the believing soul. The hope of life after death renders the Catholic 
Zombie virus inert. With a deeply held hope in Christ, we too will hear 
him order us out of the tomb and tell our family and friends, “Untie him
 and let him go.” 
The Catholic Zombie virus is deadly. It can kill the spirit of Christ in
 us and leave us to walk among the living and the dead. The best 
treatment is prevention. Personal prayer, the sacraments, good works, 
and holy reading. But none of these is effective without a firm belief 
in the Christ, a willingness to obey his commands, and the good habit of
 hoping upon the resurrection. If you are dead inside, take heart, b/c 
the Lord has promised, “O my people, I will open your graves and have 
you rise from them. . . I will put my spirit in you that you may live. .
 .thus you shall know that I am the LORD. I have promised, and I will do
 it, says the LORD.” 
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