25th Week OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
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Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Notre Dame Seminary, NOLA
Kings
fear prophets b/c prophets have nothing to lose when the kings
decides that the prophet's truth-telling threatens kingly power. With
nothing and no one to hold hostage, nothing short of death can
silence a noisy prophet. And thus are we tested in faith: are you
prepared to die for telling the Truth and doing the Good? More
specifically, are you prepared to die for preaching Christ and for
living out his unbreakable Word? If not, Christ says, “Take nothing
for the journey. . .” Take nothing along with you but Christ. Take
nothing but his Word – his promises, his mighty deeds. Anything not
of Christ and everyone but Christ can be taken from you. Mother,
father, brothers and sisters, friends, car, house, job, reputation –
all of these can be/will be destroyed when the powers of this world
tire of your truth-telling and do-gooding. If nothing and no one
comes before Christ, if nothing and no one counts more than Christ in
your work, then the king cannot silence you. He cannot kill Christ.
Not again. Christ has defeated the kings of this world. So, whatever
treasure they may have to tempt you into silence – it all belongs
to Christ. . .and to us as his adopted brothers and sisters. Our
prayer as prophets on the Way: “Give me neither poverty nor
riches; provide me only [what] I need.”
In the summer of 2013, Pope
Francis preached to a group of seminarians and religious novices in
Rome. He exhorted them, “Herein
lies the secret of the fruitfulness of a disciple of the Lord! Jesus
sends his followers out with no 'purse, no bag, no sandals'. The
spread of the Gospel is not guaranteed either by the number of
persons, or by the prestige of the institution, or by the quantity of
available resources. What counts is to be permeated by the love of
Christ, to let oneself be led by the Holy Spirit and to graft one’s
own life onto the tree of life, which is the Lord’s Cross.” Graft
your life onto the Cross.
Is it possible to graft your life onto the Cross if you come to the
Cross weighted down with Necessary Things, with Important
Relationships, and Serious Responsibilities? If we love these more
than Christ? No. No, we cannot be grafted onto the Cross weighed down
by these burdens. However, if we love Christ first, that is, if we
love all other things, people, and relationships through
our love for Christ – placing Christ first in the order of
understanding – then we are already grafted onto to the trunk of
the Cross. And our lives are lives of praise and thanksgiving for the
chance to die with him on the altar of his cross.
In
21st
century America, it is more than just a little difficult to imagine
the depth of surrender that Jesus is urging on us. Yes, he means
material poverty when he says “take nothing on the journey.” Yes,
by “[take] neither walking stick, nor sack, nor food, nor
money, [nor] a second tunic” he means to say that the things we
own too often come to own us. And yes, he means that virtuous
detachment from stuff is essential to the preaching of the Good News.
But the depth of our surrender can only begin with material poverty
and virtuous detachment. If we become poor and wholly detached and
yet remain uncommitted to Christ's ministry of freely given mercy and
sacrificial love, then we are nothing more than just detached and
poor. Can poverty and detachment alone tell the Truth and do the
Good? No. Kings do not fear the poor and the detached. The powers of
this world fear the prophet's trust in God alone. They fear humility,
mercy, and the sort of love that dies for another. The depth of our
surrender then is measured not by our material poverty or detachment,
but how freely and eagerly our poverty and detachment bring Christ to
those caught in the traps of sin and death.
So.
. .who or what owns you, holding you back from diving to the
deepest depths of surrender in Christ?
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