Sunday, August 26, 2012

As for me and my household.... well, what will you do?


+ J. M. J. +

 Homily Outline for the 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B

            Today we come to the climax of Jesus’ teaching on the great mystery of the Eucharist. People grumbled at this hard teaching, and He responded by re-emphasizing His point: we are to gnaw His flesh and gulp His blood, they are true food, and without them we have no life within us.  EVEN Jesus’ own disciples struggled with this teaching, “This saying is hard, who can accept it?”  If Jesus was going to step back and render symbolic His statements, here was His chance. Many times He had pulled the disciples aside to explain the significance of a parable, but not today: “Does this shock you?” He said, and turning to the Twelve, his closest collaborators, these men He has called by name and formed with love and patience, turning to them He said, “Do you also want to leave?”

            Let that sink in for a moment: Jesus is not only ready to see the crowds turn away; He is not only willing to see the disciples turn away.  Jesus is willing to have the Twelve turn aside if they will not accept this strange and unsettling teaching: unless we eat His Body and drink His Blood, we have no life within us.  Jesus is Himself the Truth, and He can only speak the Truth, and so He must teach those He loves the Truth, even when it is difficult, even when it is surprising, even when it is likely to be rejected.

            Jesus teaches us with such courage and fortitude, with such love, because He is preparing us to enter into the New Covenant in His Blood. A Covenant is not merely a contract, an exchange of services; rather it is a permanent co-mingling of lives, a bond even unto death.  A Covenant draws us into commitments that are beyond our unaided power, to a love that is stronger than death.  God sealed a covenant with Abraham, and with Moses on Mount Sinai. God called the People of Israel to Himself and told them that He would be their God, and they would be His people.  When Joshua gathered the tribes at Shechem after they had entered into the Land, he once more placed a decision before them: God has chosen them, would they choose the Lord?  Joshua had made his choice, “As for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.” 

God called them to be a Light to ALL nations, and in the fullness of time, God came Himself into their midst.  In Jesus Christ a New Covenant was sealed between God and His people in the Blood of the Cross.  Jesus offered no animal, no grain offering, no tithe—He offered Himself, Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity on the Cross for us, thus bridging forever the chasm opened up by our sins.  By His stripes, by His passion, we have been healed.  God has united Himself to us definitively, once for all, and what God has united, no man can divide.

This is the awe-inspiring context for St. Paul’s words to the Ephesians. Some claim this passage has been abused as an excuse for men to mistreat their wives, while in our own time many have used it as an excuse to ignore the Church’s teaching on marriage.  Neither abuse of this passage has anything to do with what St. Paul is teaching, and his first words make that clear: “Be subordinate to one another out of reverence for Christ.  In the Greek and Roman worlds, a woman was the property of her husband, and could be readily dismissed at his prerogative.  St. Paul rejects this inhuman cultural situation and tells husbands and wives that they are to surrender themselves to each other out of reverence for the Lord who surrendered Himself to us.  If anything, it is men who are called to task, “Husbands, love your wives even as Christ loved the church and handed himself over for her to sanctify her.”  

How did Christ love the Church?  On the Cross, He offered Himself unto the last breath, unto the last drop of sweat on His lacerated brow, unto the blood and water that poured forth from His pierced side. Jesus offered Himself unto the carrying of the Cross, unto His dying on the Cross, unto the cold and silent tomb, and even unto Gehenna itself, where He shattered asunder the gates of Hell.  My brothers in Christ, whether you are a husband, or a boyfriend, or a single man, or a boy, this is what our faith calls us to, and Jesus walked before us on this path.  Sisters in Christ, how would you respond to a man who laid down his life completely, unto the last breath for you?  Could a man who emptied himself completely for his wife ever lord it over her?  Could he ever mistreat his wife and claim to be following Christ?  He could not.

This, then, is the covenant God has made with us. He has wedded Himself for all eternity to His Bride, the Church, and sealed this covenant by His own blood on the Cross.  He submitted Himself to all things, to all suffering on our behalf, and at every Mass this sacrifice and banquet feast is re-presented.  We are drawn into the sacrifice of Calvary, and we are drawn into the Wedding Feast of the Lamb.  Marriage is the metaphor, and for most of us, it is the path God has called us to.  Marriage is in great trouble in our land, perhaps your own marriage is in trouble, but the path to healing and truth passes through this altar from which we receive the Lamb of God, He who takes away the sins of the World.  This Lamb’s teaching is mysterious, at times it is hard, at times it is not apparent how it fits into our deeply wounded world.  And, yet, we are called to make a decision: the same decision Joshua put before the Chosen People… the same choice Jesus put before the crowds, before His disciples, and finally before the Twelve.  Will we leave Him?  Will we follow idols, or will we follow the One True God?

As he did so often, out of his own weakness, St. Peter models for us the way forward, “Master, to whom shall we go?  You have the words of eternal life.  We have come to believe and are convinced that you are the Holy One of God.”  Peter does not say, “Lord, it all makes sense to me, so I’ll follow you.” He could not have understood in any full way how they were going to eat the Lord’s Body and drink His Blood, but he made the choice, he cast his lot with the Lord, he made the same choice that Joshua did.  May we make that choice today, either for the first time, or once again. May Joshua’s words be our own, “As for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.” 


+ A. M. D. G. +

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