NB.  The deacons are preaching this weekend, so here's a Roman homily from 2010 that I never got to preach. 
 
4th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
SS. Domenico e Sisto, Roma
Jesus, once again, riles people 
up!  He's good at that.  Like prophets before him, he tells people what 
they don't want to hear.  By proclaiming that Isaiah's prophecy of the 
coming of the Messiah has been fulfilled in their hearing, Jesus 
challenges those gathered in the temple to step up and believe that he 
embodies God's promise of salvation.  Instead, assuming that the 
authority of a majority is sufficient to determine truth, the crowd runs
 him out of town and tries to lynch him.  He walks unharmed through the 
riot and leaves town.  Why do the temple-goers reject Jesus' claim to be
 the fulfillment of God's promise to send a Messiah?  Two reasons:  1) 
Jesus is a local boy, and we all know that “no prophet is accepted in 
his native place;” and 2) Jesus' use of proverb, “Physician, cure 
yourself,” indicates his refusal to perform a showy miracle to confirm 
his identity.  What does he do instead?    He does exactly what pastors 
and preachers are taught in seminary not to do when parishioners get 
twitchy.  He throws down a challenge and a rebuke.  In essence, he says,
 “God's own people have always rejected His prophets, and look at the 
results.  He graces Gentiles before Jews and you people never learn.”  
Ouch.  If Jesus had had a bishop, His Excellency's phone would be 
ringing off the hook!  Remember how often we are told that Jesus is a 
uniter not a divider, a peace-bringer not a controversialist.  He's all 
about harmony and consensus and living within the tensions of 
difference.  Well, tell that to the screaming lynch mob.  They might 
disagree.  Obviously, Jesus lacked the cultured pastoral touch of a 
postmodern bishop.  So, should we look to him and his prophetic style as
 a model for preaching his gospel?
Confrontation has its place in 
preaching.  The prophets of the Old Testament were known and feared for 
their unwavering commitment to speaking God's message even in the face 
of torture and execution.  Kings dodged them when possible, summoning 
them to court to answer for their traitorous speech only when necessary.
  Prophets were notoriously stubborn, self-righteous, and usually 
disreputably attired.  Any one of these three characteristics was enough
 to warrant royal and public dismissal.  Add to the scene the fact that 
prophets tended to be well-known local boys and you have the makings of a
 courtly farce.  Is it any wonder then that the prophets of old resorted
 to confrontation when dealing with the cold-hearts and closed-minds of a
 nation's rulers?  Sometimes you have to smash through a wall when the 
door is barred.  Sometimes the shock of hearing the truth spoken aloud 
is enough to cure the deafness of the worst sinner.  And sometimes it 
isn't.  On these occasions, it's wise to get as far away from the 
condemned nation as possible.  Why?  Because quite possibly the scariest
 thing a prophet can say is:  “Behold, you will suffer the consequences 
of your hard heart!”  It's time to run.
Unfortunately, these days, it 
seems that every corner, every cable channel, every church/mosque/temple
 has its own prophet proclaiming the coming apocalypse.  Like a flock of
 squawking crows, these folks fly around the world squeaking and 
squealing warning us of imminent local destruction and the inevitability
 of global disaster if we don't change our ways.  They have adopted the 
confrontational rhetoric of the wildest biblical prophet.  Do we listen?
  Some certainly do.  Most don't.  Confrontation oft repeated quickly 
devolves into annoying harassment.  Those ominous crows start to look 
and sound like Chicken Little's.  What's missing from their squealy 
prophesying is Godly love, a sincere concern for the good of the whole 
beyond the immediate personal benefits of power and prestige.  What's 
missing is the divine authority that Jesus himself uses in the temple to
 announce his arrival as the Messiah.  His authority is the power and 
glory of the most excellent way, the way of sacrificial love.
This leads us to the big 
question of the day:  can sacrificial love be confrontational?  Anyone 
who has ever marched in a pro-life demonstration or prayed outside an 
abortion clinic will tell you that the counter-protesters and the 
escorts are demonically vicious.  For them this isn't just about freedom
 of choice and left/right politics.  They hate us.  Passionately hate 
us.  You can expect that groups on opposite ends of the political 
spectrum to get feisty, maybe even a little rowdy, in the midst of a 
march.  But the bile and venom spewed by pro-abortion activists at 
pro-life folks goes well beyond the kind of anger that normal politics 
generates.  Why?  The choice to have an abortion is intensely personal; 
it goes to the very core what most Americans think of us their 
untouchable autonomy in deciding what's best for them.  An unwanted 
pregnancy attaches unwanted responsibilities and necessarily limits a 
woman's choice of options.  But even more than this, pregnancy places a 
woman in the natural mode of motherhood and all that that implies.  At 
the very core of motherhood is sacrificial love, giving oneself wholly 
to another.  When pro-life marchers remind abortion advocates that the 
fetus is a person, a being deserving of love, those who would call the 
killing of this person a moral good react with unadulterated rage.   
They know the Church is right.  And they must cultivate a self-righteous
 wrath in order to drown out their guilt.  The gospel message of love 
used by the pro-life movement to stubbornly resist compromising with the
 culture of death shames them into hatred.  Denied a convenient salve 
for their seared consciences, the venom flows and they fall more 
securely into demonic hands.
It should be shockingly clear to
 the Church by now that our best witness to the culture of death is 
sacrificial love.  Paul writes, “Love is patient, love is kind. . .it 
does not rejoice over wrongdoing but rejoices with the truth. It bears 
all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.” 
  With some we can reason.  With others we can demonstrate.  But some we
 must simply love.  Bearing up under the burden of hatred, believing 
solely in the power of mercy, hoping in the promises of the Father, and 
enduring insult, persecution, and trial, the Church must not be 
satisfied with merely presenting the truth of the gospel, flashing cue 
cards and murmuring sound bites.   What will heal a seared conscience 
cannot be logically deduced and crammed onto a bumper sticker.  Slogans 
on placards are easily refuted by other slogans on placards.  What 
cannot be refuted is an act of love done in sacrifice, a willing act of 
surrender done so that another might be see the truth.  Paul reminds us 
what we know by faith, “Love never fails.”  Even as the prophet feels 
the sword cut into his flesh, he knows that he has succeeded in touching
 a conscience burned by hatred and malice.  His persistence in telling 
the truth is not ended by death but rather vindicated by it, shown to be
 the undeniably divine power it truly is.
When he proclaims to the people 
in the temple that Isaiah's messanic prophecy has been fulfilled in 
their hearing and subsequently chastises the crowd for their unbelief, 
Jesus causes a riot.  He holds up before the people their dishonesty, 
their faithlessness, their charred consciences.  He shows them that they
 know he is telling the truth and yet still refuse to hear it spoken.  
For them to believe such a proclamation changes everything-- uproots 
centuries of tradition and belief, revolutionizes everyday life, forces 
them to make a choice and live by it.  Rather than surrender, they riot 
and pour out the hatred and malice of those who have seen the corrupted 
state of their souls.  How does Jesus respond?  He dies on the cross for
 them.  If we will be his Church, we must be prepared to do nothing 
less.  The march for life is a march to the cross. . .not for ourselves 
but for those who will not see, will not hear.
______________
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