Most Sacred Heart of Jesus:  Ez  34.11-16; Rom 5.5-11; Luke 15.3-7
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
DECAT Mass (St. Rita)
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
DECAT Mass (St. Rita)
Having grown up  Baptist in the deep south,  it took me a long time  to get used to this Catholic habit of venerating holy body parts:  the arm of Aloysius, the head of Agnes, the chipped up  bones of Martin, Dominic, Ignatius.  Pieces of  clothing or keepsakes like glasses or bookmarks seemed perfectly fine.  But taking a saint’s pinkie bone and locking it in a  gold trimmed, vacuumed sealed glass case for safe travel around the  world…well, that’s just creepy.  Spending time in Rome 
Let’s answer these  questions with this one:  what is the link between  Jesus’ sacred heart and this morning’s biblical image of Jesus as a  good shepherd?    To start an answer to this  question and the two previous questions, we need to know what the heart  is and does in our Catholic spirituality.  Historically,  the heart for our faith is a symbol of the whole person, the person  made whole by God, brought to the fullness of healing, and set right in  holiness.  All of the various images of the heart  bear this out:  the pierced heart of Mary, showing  us her grief; the crowned heart of Jesus, showing us his triumph over  death in heaven, and so on.  The heart is also a  mystical image of our covenant with God.  Think of  your heart as a tabernacle, a holy vault where you keep your promises  to God and He keeps His to you.  Your heart then  is that place in your soul where you are closest to God, most intimate  with the Holy Spirit; your heart is the center of our very being, the  source of your life.
Now, I have to tell you  what your heart isn’t, or better yet how the word “heart” gets used in  our popular media and why that use doesn’t apply to us here.  How many of you have heard Disney characters tell the  story’s hero:  “Just follow your heart! Feel your  way along!”  I heard Yoda say this to Obi Wan  Kenobi just yesterday afternoon.  I groaned out  loud and switched the channel back to Mythbusters. At least they were  blowing up raw chickens with nitro. The idea that the “heart” rules our  deliberations, governs our passions, and serves as an infallible guide  to our decision-making isn’t all that crazy if (IF!) we remember that  God governs the heart.  But Hollywood 
OK.  Back  to Jesus’ sacred heart and the Good Shepherd.  Here’s  what Christ wants for you and from you.  What he  wants for you is a life of holiness lived in service to others.  There is no holiness for the Christian without service  to others.  Let me say that again:   if you do not serve others—help other people when they need  your help—you cannot grow in holiness.  God loves  you and His love for you is perfected (made complete, whole) in you when  you use your talents and gifts for the benefit of others.   Your job is to become Christ for other people—doing what he  did, teaching what he taught, and preaching what he preached.  You can do this with your brains, your hands, your  back, with music, words, paints, numbers, motherly talents, fatherly  talents, with technology, without it, in an office or a church, with  song, dance, a poem or a novel, whatever gift God has given you to  improve on:  use it, use all of them, for others.  That’s what Jesus wants for you.
What does he want from  you?  Christ is the Good Shepherd, his heart is  holy, his relationship with His Father is perfect.  Everything  that Christ is as a person is wholly perfect in God the Father and the  Holy Spirit.  There is nothing we can give Christ  or do for Christ that will add to his perfection.  All  we can do is multiple his love in the Church.  So  what he wants from us is to be good shepherds ourselves.   To be men and women with strong hearts, clear vision, peaceful  souls, and welcoming arms.  Sometimes the shepherd  has to redirect the flock from danger.  Sometimes  a sheep wanders away and must be brought back.  Sometimes  the wolves chase the flock and the shepherd has to defend his sheep.  Each of us is responsible for the flock in his or her  own way.  Make sure your heart, that place in  your soul where you keep the covenant, is ready for the challenge, ready  to break free and get to work for God’s greater glory!
Paul writes to the  Romans:  “The love of God has been poured out into  your hearts through the Holy Spirit…God [has proven] his love for us in  that while we were still sinners Christ died for us.”  Notice  here:  Christ did not wait for us to stop sinning  before he died for us.  He died so that we might  be freed from sin.  The Good Shepherd came running  after us.  We don’t have to find him.  He has already found us.  Now,  we walk around with the tabernacle of God’s love, with hearts brightened  by the Spirit’s fire.
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