Homily for the
19th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Aug. 13, 2017
Collect
Residence, Silver Spring, Md.
I was
originally scheduled to go to a parish for Mass on the 13th, but due to my
having to leave for retreat, I was relieved of that. But with a little tweaking I used the homily I’d already mostly
drafted at home, instead. This is the "parish" text.
“Bring
to perfection in our hearts the spirit of adoption as your sons and daughters”
(Collect).
The Collect
of today’s Mass uses the word spirit
twice. The 1st use notes that we have
been taught by the Holy Spirit to call God our Father—we “dare” to do that
under the prompting of the Spirit. The
2d use asks our Father to perfect in us “the spirit of adoption” as his
children.
How has the
Holy Spirit taught us? We’ve listened to
the teachings of Jesus, who taught us how we ought to pray. Now, many people have read the Gospels or
heard the Lord’s Prayer. But not all
have believed the Gospels or taken them to heart. If we have done so, it’s because the Holy
Spirit has moved our hearts, convinced our minds, urged us to listen to Jesus
and become his disciples. This is a great
grace, given to us not out of our merits but purely out of God’s goodness.
Jesus is
truly the Son of God—by origin, by his divine nature: “God from God, Light from Light, true God
from true God, consubstantial with the Father,” as we say weekly in the Creed.
We are not
sons and daughters of God by nature. We
can become so by grace, by adoption as children of the One whom we dare to
address as “Father” because Jesus has taught us to do so. He’s done more than teach us that we’re God’s children.
He makes us God’s children by
adoption; makes us his own sisters and brothers.
How so? 1st, in his preaching he says that anyone who
does the will of his Father is his brother or sister, even his mother (Mark
3:34-35). Being related to God is not a
matter of nature but of super-nature.
Thru Christ we can receive the gift of a union of our wills with his
Father’s will that draws us into a family relationship with his Father, into
adoption.
2d, the
Spirit led us to the saving water of Baptism, where we were born anew of water
and Spirit (cf. John 3:5) and were anointed with sacred chrism; and by being
chrismated (I’m not sure that’s a real word) were made christs, made brothers and sisters of the Christ, God’s Anointed One, Jesus of Nazareth. As the Spirit anointed him at his baptism in
the Jordan and brought a declaration from heaven, “You are my beloved Son”
(Mark 1:11), so the Spirit anointed us at sacramental Baptism and made us God’s
adopted children.
Post-baptismal chrismation at the Easter Vigil
Holy Cross, Champaign, Ill., April 15, 2017
Photo by Dave Devall
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The Collect
prayed that the Father “bring to perfection in our hearts [this] spirit of
adoption.” To be brothers and sisters of
Jesus Christ, to do the will of his heavenly Father, requires that our hearts
become like the heart of Jesus, that they be more and more perfectly aligned
with his way of thinking, willing, and acting.
Our hearts need constantly to be converted from their innate selfishness
and brought to the perfection that we see in Jesus. So we pray that the Father bestow an
abundance of his Holy Spirit upon us to work over our hearts, to shape them, to
conform them to the heart of his beloved Son, our Lord Jesus Christ.
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