NB. A 2011 homily using tomorrow's readings. I'm working a new homily! 
7th Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Joseph Church, Ponchatula
One thing we know for sure about
 God:  He ain't shy about demanding that we do great things.  He ain't 
shy about demanding that we become a great people.  But His demands for 
our greatness always come with an offer of help; He never simply demands
 perfection and then leaves us on our own.  Since His help has often 
come in the guise of an invading army or a series of plagues or the 
mysterious puzzles of prophecy, we might think it better that He 
withdraw His help and let us do the best we can all by ourselves.  But 
divine expectations are best met with divine assistance, especially if 
we are the ones who are expected to excel.  Given our limits, our 
tendencies to falter, we know that the higher the expectation, the 
greater the need for help.  If what God says to Moses in the Book of 
Leviticus is to be believed, then the only help for us is for God to 
make us gods:  “Be holy, for I, the Lord, your God, am holy.”  Jesus 
repeats this demand, “. . .be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is 
perfect.”  We are to be holy and perfect as God Himself is holy and 
perfect.  Can you imagine what sort of help we are going to need to meet
 this expectation?!  God will indeed have to make us into gods.  And 
this is exactly the help He offered us when He sent His only Son to live
 and die among us as one of us.  He's offered His help—once for all—on 
the cross.  Are you ready to receive it?
The question I'm asking sounds a
 bit strange, so let me make it perfectly clear:  you are ready to be 
made into God?  This really isn't such a strange question.  The idea 
that we “partake in the divine nature” is an ancient Catholic tradition;
 it's as old as Christianity itself.  The idea that the divine can dwell
 in the human is even older.  In the Word Made Flesh, Jesus Christ, we 
have one person with two natures—one human, one divine.  If we can 
believe that the Son of God was born of a virgin and lived and died 
among us, then it really isn't all that difficult to believe that we are
 saved from eternal darkness by becoming one with the Father through the
 His incarnated Son.  Writing to the Corinthians, Paul puts the question
 succinctly: “Do you not know that you are the temple of God, and that 
the Spirit of God dwells in you?”  What other work do we have as 
Christians than to allow the Spirit of God to be poured into us, 
overflowing into anything, anyone we touch?  Our wisdom becomes His 
wisdom; our love becomes His love; our hope becomes His hope.  We become
 holy and perfect in the only way we can:  we become God. . .with God's 
help.  Without His help, we fall into the same trap that fell Adam and 
Eve, that hapless couple who believed the serpent when he told them that
 they could become gods without God.  What did the serpent tell Adam and
 Eve that they needed?  Knowledge.  Not divine knowledge but worldly 
knowledge.  Having enough worldly knowledge would not only enlighten 
them but it would transform them into gods as well.
They fall for it.  And so do we.
  Paul writes to the Corinthians, “Let no one deceive himself. If any 
one among you considers himself wise in this age, let him become a fool,
 so as to become wise. For the wisdom of this world is foolishness in 
the eyes of God. . .”  Now, Paul uses “wisdom” rather than “knowledge” 
here.  Knowledge and wisdom are not the same thing.  Wisdom comes with 
the right use of knowledge.  Knowledge is a tool; wisdom is an attitude.
  When Adam and Eve disobeyed God in their pride, they came to know the 
difference between good and evil.  What they choose to do with this 
knowledge is what makes them wise or foolish.  Paul is exhorting the 
Corinthians to reject the kind of wisdom that comes from worldly 
knowledge alone, that is, wisdom based on knowledge that ignores God as 
the world's creator.  He is not telling them to reject knowledge about 
the world but rather to reject the idea that you can be wise all the 
while denying that God is the world's creator.  True wisdom—godly 
wisdom—starts with a spirit overawed by the presence of God in His 
creation.  Wisdom based on worldly knowledge demands that we start with 
the world and work only within our human limitations, leaving God aside.
  What God demands of us in our progress toward His holiness and 
perfection is that we see, hear, taste, feel, and think through our 
trust in Him. In other words, we start by acknowledging that we are His 
creatures, and then we see, hear, taste, feel, and think of everything 
we encounter as a revelation of God Himself.  This is how we start.  But
 it isn't how we finish.
The gospel set aside for today 
is a continuation of last Sunday's reading.  That reading ended with 
“Let your Yes mean yes and your No mean no.  Anything else is from the 
evil one.”  Jesus showed us then and he shows again today the difference
 between worldly wisdom and the wisdom of his Father.  He sets one side 
against the other:  “You have heard it said. . .but I say to you. . .”  
You have heard it said, “An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.”  
But I say to you, “Offer no resistance to one who is evil.”  You have 
heard it said, “You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.”  But I
 say to you, “love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.”  
Why?  Why would any sane person living in the real world offer no 
resistance to evil, love their enemies, and pray for those who persecute
 them?  Jesus answers, “[so] that you may be children of your heavenly 
Father. . .”  Worldly wisdom tells us that it is wise to fight evil, to 
hate our enemies, and to pray of their defeat.  In a world without God, a
 world where there is nothing beyond death, nothing higher than the law 
of Might Makes Right, we would be foolish indeed to forgive, to show 
mercy, and to pray for our enemies.  But we have vowed to pursue 
holiness and perfection with God's help.  And this we cannot do if we 
are mired in the foolishness of the world.  Think for a moment about the
 standard God has set for us.  Jesus says that we must do these 
ridiculous things in order to be the children of our heavenly Father b/c
 “he makes his sun rise on the bad and the good, and causes rain to fall
 on the just and the unjust.”  If can't choose who gets God's sunlight 
and who gets His rain, how could we possibly decide who it is that He 
should love and forgive?  And if we are saved by becoming God, then our 
love and forgiveness must fall on the bad and the good, on the just and 
the unjust alike.  That's quite a demand.  An extraordinarily high 
expectation.  Thanks be to God that we have His help!
The question remains:  are you 
ready to receive His help and become God?  To be holy as He is holy?  To
 be perfect as He is perfect? St. Thomas Aquinas, quoting St. Irenaeus, 
wrote, “God became Man so that Man might become God.”  Our only hope of 
achieving the holiness and perfection demanded of us is to surrender 
ourselves to the wisdom of God, and follow His Christ in all things.  At
 the end of the day, our surrender is sacrificial love, giving of 
ourselves wholly in love for the sake of another.  At the very least, 
this means restraining your pride—hourly, daily—and giving God thanks 
for every chance you have to be loving, forgiving, and merciful.   All 
of us belong to you, and you belong to Christ, and Christ himself 
belongs to God.  
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