NB. From 2009. Alas, never preached this one. . .I was looking for an example of a meditative homily to show my students. What do you think?
7th Sunday of Easter: Acts 1.17-17, 20-26; 1 John 4.11-16; John 7.11-19
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Convento SS. Domenico e Sisto, Roma
Walking the streets of Rome can teach you a lot about negotiation. Walk up the Via del Corso
on a Saturday afternoon. Sidewalks jammed with idly strolling
citizens. The street choked with wandering tourists lost in their maps.
Fashionistas linger in front
of the shop windows, damming up traffic, sending thousands into the
street to play catch with the taxis. For someone with a destination in
mind, a purpose and a goal, taking the del Corso
is an adventure in paying attention, dodging threats of bodily harm,
and negotiating the perils of polite society. Will that bus stop at the
crosswalk? Will the group of trendy ladies in front of me stop
suddenly to squeal over a pair of Ferragamo pumps? Do I need to say “excusa”
every time I bump into someone? What degree of impatience do I express
when zipping past the amorous couple clogging up the sidewalk with
their public display of sloppy affection? You have a goal, a purpose;
you have a destination and a mission. You don’t have the time or the
patience or even the inclination to suffer these social obstacles
lightly, to indulge these worldly distractions with anything less than
haughty contempt! How often do you sigh in angry exasperation and
imagine yourself screaming: “For the love of all that is holy: move!”
When you are a Christian and the world you live in is the Via del Corso
on a Saturday afternoon, how do you negotiate the traps, the potholes,
the slippery curbs? How do you weave through the foot traffic without
landing in the street dodging the buses? Do you surrender to the flow,
slow your pace, assume your place in the crowd, and hope your
destination comes to you? What happens to the urgency of your mission?
Your schedule? One vital point to keep in mind when thinking about
these questions: as Christians, we are set apart; we are not set above.
Knowing
that his time draws near, Jesus commends his people to the Father.
Lifting his eyes to heaven, he prays to God: “I speak this in the world
so that they may share my joy completely. I gave them your word, and
the world hated them, because they do not belong to the world any more
than I belong to the world.” What could Jesus mean? Of course, we
belong to the world! We need food, drink, clothing. We are as much
affected by gravity, the weather, and the passage of time as anyone
else. We have jobs, kids, taxes, and all sorts of worldly ties. We are
bound to all the physical necessities of living well in our skins. How
exactly do we not belong to this world? What sets us apart? In other
words, how are we consecrated in truth? And how does this complete our
joy in Christ?
Many of the great heresies in Church history are
deeply rooted in a distorted view of the relationship between heaven and
earth, body and soul, world and Church. Like most heresies, these
distortions exaggerate a distinction, mutate a vital difference, and
privilege one extreme over another. In the early Church, most heresies
exaggerated the spiritual over the material, leaving us with a
disembodied Christ and a purely mystical, intellectual faith that
proclaimed the evils of the flesh and demanded radical asceticism.
Today, we tend to the other extreme, privileging the material and
historical, leaving us with a Christ who is just some guy who said some
interesting stuff about the need for social change. Among those who saw
the world as a place of greed, lust, and gluttony, the only way to
combat murderous distraction was to withdraw into the desert to seek out
a spiritual purity in extreme practices of bodily mortification. Among
those today who see the spiritual, especially the moral, as a kind of
straight-jacket, a fuddy-duddy fussing about mythical codes of behavior,
the world is a place of license, freedom, unlimited choice. Even among
some Christians, the world is to be revered, imitated, and lauded, if
not worshiped. What both the desert-dwellers and the world-worshipers
fail to see is that the “world” Jesus implicitly condemns is not the
material world, the cosmos of stuff and physical law, but that time and
place where the powers of rebellion and strife hold sway, the material
and spiritual battlefield where obedience to God and the temptation to
disobey God compete for our allegiance. This is the world we are in and
yet the world we do not belong to.
To be consecrated in the
truth in this world is to be set aside by grace to achieve a divine
purpose wherever you find yourself. You will not fulfill your divinely
gifted purpose by hating the material world and living only for the
spiritual. You will not fulfill your divinely gifted purpose by hating
the transcendent world and living only in the flesh. We are body and
soul. Neither one nor the other wholly without the other. If you are
only your soul, then what you do materially is irrelevant to your
spiritual growth. Be spiritual! And be as you please. If you are only
your body, then what you believe about the spiritual is irrelevant to
your material growth. Just do it! And do anything you please.
Christians are saddled with a much more difficult task: as embodied
souls consecrated in the truth, we are bound materially to a world ruled
by sin and obligated to achieve spiritual purity in the midst of
physical temptation. What we do materially affects us spiritually.
What we believe about spiritual truths affects us materially.
If
this is true, and it is, what good does it do us to be consecrated in
the truth? We are set aside not above. “To consecrate” means “to aside
for a specific purpose.” We consecrate things, people, places. We
don’t use the altar as a card table. We don’t use a chalice to chug
beer. Priests and religious do not participate in government as elected
or appointed officials. As baptized priests, prophets, and kings of
the Father’s Kingdom, we are set aside to work toward and achieve a
specific goal, an end that perfects us in all His gifts. Notice that
Jesus does not say that he has removed us from the battleground of this
world. He does not elevate us above it or subject us to it. He does
not say that we do not belong in the world. He says that we do not
belong TO this world. We are not slaves, citizens, or subjects of the
dominion of the Enemy. Our purpose is not defined by the laws of nature
or the rules of engagement followed by the Enemy. We are free. We are
free from this world in order to be free for this world. Not above the
world. Not of this world. But in it and beside it, not belonging to
it, but free to show a better way, a divinely gifted Way.
Our joy
is completed not by worldly victory or political conquest. We are not
given a completed joy by winning elections or getting federal funding.
There is no joy in making ourselves slaves to a world we do not belong
to. There is no joy in raising ourselves above it all, or fleeing into
the desert to watch it all burn. Our consecrated work, our baptismal
duty is right in the middle of the mess, squarely centered in the heart
of the world, right where the Enemy is strongest. We are chosen to be
vessels and conduits of God’s love for the world and to the world not
because we are morally superior or spiritually invincible. We are
neither. We are chosen because we chose to answer His call to be
everything He made us to be in love. A choice anyone can make.
To
this world, we are dramatic, pathetic failures. Lost and hopeless
zombies driven by superstition and irrational religious mythology. In
this world, we can be tragic examples of hypocrisy, self-righteousness,
and religious zealotry. For this world, we are a comedic scandal that
brings salvation and peace. But for this to work, we must be set aside
in truth. Engaged but detached. Involved but distant. Who and what we
are most fundamentally is found in our end not in the means we use to
get there. But our means must always prophesy the truth of the gospel.
How else do we witness to our divinely gifted end if not through our
divinely gifted means?
We are consecrated in the truth so that
our joy may be complete. We are set aside in Christ by Christ so that
we may come to him in the end wholly joyful, perfected in love. John
writes: “Beloved, if God so loved us, we also must love one another. No
one has ever seen God. Yet, if we love one another, God remains in us,
and his love is brought to perfection in us.” Our nearly impossible
task is to love God and one another in a world ruled by the Enemy.
Tempted though we are by passions unruled by reason, we are set aside
for a purpose. That purpose and its pursuit is how we succeed—in our
witness, in our ministries, in our duties to Love Himself.
In and
beside this world, shining out the love and mercy we have received, we
bring our joy to its highest human perfection. Beyond this world,
having done as we promised to do, we become Joy, seeing Truth Himself
face-to-face.
_________________
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