21st Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
MCA, NOLA
Jesus
loses some of his disciples b/c he tells them the truth. He tells
that they must eat his flesh and drink his blood to have eternal
life. This truth confuses some of them. Some were probably outraged
or disgusted or even horrified at the thought. But the truth is the
truth. . .and it will set you free. . .even when it works to make you
sick. . .at first.
Had those disgusted disciples hung around for just a little longer
they might've attended the Last Supper and come to see the fullness
of the truth Jesus
came to preach. But b/c they chose to hear the truth only in part
rather than in its entirety, they missed out. They missed out on the
mystery of the Great Thanksgiving that we know as the Eucharist. When
Jesus sees some of his disciples walking away, he turns to the Twelve
and asks, “Do you also want to leave?” Perhaps sensing that there
was More to Come, or believing that their Master wasn't done with
them yet, they answer, “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the
words of eternal life.” And for those who stayed true, eternal life
was their reward. Looking at the mess the Church is in. . .again. .
.Jesus' questions to his disciples become his questions to us: 1).
Who can accept it? 2). Does this shock you? And 3). Do you also want
to leave?
Obviously,
these questions are asked in a very different context, so our answers
will be different as well. No one should accept the corruption we've
been made aware of. And anyone with a conscience is going to be
shocked by it. But that last question – do you also want to leave?
– this question remains the same regardless of context. I've been
asked by otherwise faithful Catholics, “Father, why should I stay
in the Church?” I answer, “Where else will you receive the bread
of life and the chalice of salvation? Stay and fight! Don't surrender
to the Enemy just b/c a few of your teammates have thrown the game.”
I'd like to think that my fervent response is enough to help them
hang in there, but I suspect that they will leave anyway. Maybe not
formally withdraw from their parishes or renounce their baptism but
leave nonetheless. While the disgusted disciples merely walked away
from the truth Jesus taught, there are thousands of ways to leave the
Body. And some of those ways brought us to our current crisis.
I
don't want to indulge the temptation to find fault and place blame.
There are enough Talking Heads out there with more than a few
explanations for how the current corruption worked itself into the
Church. It's celibacy's fault. It's a homosexual problem. No, it's
clericalism. Wrong! It's feminism! My answer is simpler and
non-ideological and therefore deeply unpopular. The Twelve say to
Jesus when he asks if they too want to leave him, “Master, to whom
shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.” Corruption enters
the Church every time one of us – a member of the Body – believes
that he or she has found another Master, someone else to whom we can
go; whenever one of us believes that someone other than Christ has
the words of eternal life, and we drag that someone else into the
Church as an alternative to the Real Deal. Whether that someone else
is another religion's teachings, or a political ideology, or a New
Age philosophy, or an old heresy warmed over for the digital age, the
whole Body is corrupted when one of us makes his or her sin the
foundation of the Body's salvation.
Sisters,
I don't need to tell you this, but maybe you need to hear it. I don't
know. Christ alone has the words of eternal life. Christ alone brings
us God's mercy for our sins. Christ alone teaches us how to grow in
holiness. And only the Body and Blood of Christ can feed us with what
we need to see the Father face-to-face. Thank God there is nowhere
else for us to go. Because we are right where we need to be.
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