21st Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell OP
St. Albert the Great,
Irving
Peter
confesses that Jesus is the Christ. But does he know what this means? Do
we? It took the Church about 400 years after the resurrection to
settle on the answer and even then we struggled over the details over
centuries. And we're still struggling. Why it took us so long and why
we're still perfecting our answer would take a couple of years of
daily classes to explain. The Cliff Notes version is this: who and
what Christ is for us is a revelation. Who and what he is for us
cannot be discovered by argument, experiment, or a proclamation from
Rome. I mean, we can write the sentence – “Jesus is the Christ”
– w/o divine intervention. We can say the sentence out loud. We can
compose songs, poems, stage plays, and novels with that sentence as
our thesis. We can even say we believe it's true and live our lives
accordingly. But we cannot KNOW that Jesus is the Christ and know him
as a person w/o meeting him in the flesh. 2,000 years after his
bodily ascension into heaven – that takes a lot of divine
assistance! So, how do we – poor limited creatures that we are –
meet our Savior in the flesh? How do we even start?
Here's
an analogy. I'm a young man in my mid-20's. I'm ready to get married.
My parents say they know the perfect woman for me. They show me
pictures. I google her and discover reams of info about her
education, work history, hobbies, and favorite foods. I read her
autobiography and talk to her on the phone. We have several Zoom
meetings. We exchange letters. (Her grammar, spelling, and
punctuation are perfect, btw!) I know just about everything there is
to know about her. I propose a wedding date and a venue for the
honeymoon. In my head, we're already married and living happily ever
after. My parents, however, say we need one more little thing to seal
the deal. We need to meet in person. In my zeal to just get on with
it, I say, “Naw. I'm in love! I know everything I need to know!”
Being a seasoned married couple, they insist, saying, “You know
about her. You don't know her.” I agree and ask her on a
date. She says yes. But. . .on the fateful day and hour, she's a
no-show. I never hear from her again. Turns out – “she” was an
A.I. chat bot, a computer program designed to make me think she was
real. Moral of the analogy: you can know everything about
a person and never know the person.
To
know a person you must meet him/her person face-to-face. Even and
especially if that person is Christ. How do we – poor limited
creatures that we are – meet our Savior in the flesh? Jesus knew he
would be with us always. He says so several times. He also knew that
he would ascend to the Father. He says that too. So, how can he be
with us always and with the Father at the same time? Thanks be to
God, he made some arrangements before he left. He left us the
apostles. Personal witnesses to his life. He left us a Church, his
body, his hands and feet here on earth. He sent us his Holy Spirit,
the soul of his body, the Church. He left us a vicar, a steward with
the keys to the Kingdom. Even with all of these essential elements
left for us so that we might know about him. . .how do we meet him?
He left us two additional elements that bring him as close to us as
our own souls – one another and the Eucharist. If you will meet
Christ face-to-face, meet him in your neighbor; your spouse and
children; your co-workers; even your enemies. The Christ you meet
there will be imperfect. On the way to perfection. But the Christ
they meet in you will be imperfect too. In a different way but
nonetheless on the way to perfection. Your imperfections and theirs
will bring you both closer to his perfection.
Granted,
meeting Christ in another isn't perfect. But it is a meeting. It is a
face-to-face encounter that brings us closer to him. In the
Eucharist, we meet him body, blood, soul, and divinity. We meet him
as he is and know him as sacrificial love. By taking in his body and
blood, we become more and more like him, taking on his mission and
ministry, taking on everything he is for us. And becoming Christs for
others. The Eucharist is a revelation. It's rational, but it cannot
be understood through reason alone. It's a personal experience, but
it cannot be understood through personal experience alone. We can
know the theology, the philosophy, the psychology, and history of the
Eucharist and still not know him who is the Eucharist. Who the
Eucharist is for us must be revealed, unveiled and shown. Jesus says
to Peter, “...flesh
and blood has not revealed this to you, but my heavenly Father.” If
you will know Christ, meet him face-to-face, sit still and ask the
Father to give you Peter's revelation. Ask Him to show you Christ. He
is always here to be revealed. To be met in person. Ask and you will
receive.
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