21st Sunday of Ordinary Time
Aug. 27, 2017
Matt 16: 13-20
Is 22: 19-23
I’d already
drafted this homily for my 1st Sunday celebration in a D.C.-area parish when I
was informed at 12:30 p.m. on Saturday that there would be a visiting
missionary preaching at all the Masses.
I wasn’t amused at such late notice, but at least I have something fresh
to offer my couple of dozen readers.
“Jesus said to him in reply, ‘I will give you the
keys to the kingdom of heaven’” (Matt 16: 17-18).
We’re all familiar with keys: house keys, office keys, car keys, keys to
briefcases and bicycle locks, etc. Keys
give us access and security. We use keys
to enter places where we find privacy, protect secrecy, secure important papers
or possessions. We use keys—or locks—to
keep out others who don’t belong.
The sacred Scriptures this morning use keys as
symbols of power and authority. In the
OT reading, the prophet Isaiah informs 2 royal officials that one will be
removed from office and the other given his key, his authority. This is God’s word.
In the gospel reading, Jesus speaks figuratively
of giving Simon son of Jonah—Simon Peter—“the keys to the kingdom of
heaven.” That’s why so many jokes speak
of St. Peter as the porter who greets the deceased at the pearly gates.
But the language is figurative. Jesus is giving Peter authority, authority
that he is to use to upbuild Christ’s Church, to secure the Church against the
darkness of the netherworld—the underworld, the world of death, the world of
evil and sin; the Greek word in Matthew’s text is hades; and to bind and loose.
“Bind and loose,” or open and close, what? To bind and loose sins; to open or close the
doors of the Church. Peter receives the
authority to admit sinners to Baptism and Reconciliation, to open up the doors
of God’s mercy thru the Church, to set people free; or not to admit them or
grant forgiveness because some condition is lacking, such as genuine repentance
or a firm purpose of amendment.
So the Church is having a big debate these days
over access to Holy Communion. No one is
worthy of the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus, as we proclaim in the Communion
rite at every Mass: “Lord, I am not
worthy that you should enter under my roof.”
But God in his mercy, thru the Church, grants access to the most sacred
mystery of our faith to those who confess their sins and seek to live as
disciples of Jesus, and refuses access to the unrepentant or unconverted.
If the gates of the netherworld—or of hell, as hades is sometimes translated—are not to
prevail over Christ’s Church, then Peter’s authority must continue in
time. We believe that it passes to his
successors, the bishops of Rome, the Popes.
We may also give some thought to other
authorities. When we read today’s
Scriptures, we hear that Eliakim is given authority that he might “be a father
to the inhabitants of Jerusalem” (Is 22:21), and Peter is given the keys to the
kingdom of heaven to secure salvation for God’s people. Authority is meant for the service,
protection, and assistance of others.
That is true for public authorities—Shebna and Eliakim were public
authorities—and for Church authorities like Popes, bishops, priests, and
deacons.
So we expect our civil leaders to provide for our
national security, e.g., against nuclear war or terrorism; to assist the
victims of natural disasters like hurricanes and wildfires; to work for social
justice for all our people regardless of race, national origin, age, state of
health, economic status, etc.
We expect our religious leaders to work hard to
bring us the life of Jesus in the sacraments, to preach the Word of God, to
comfort the sick and the anguished, to set examples of discipleship.
But most of us are authorities of some sort. Parents have authority in their household,
employers and managers in their businesses, teachers and catechists in their
classrooms, doctors and nurses in their offices and wards, Scout leaders in
their packs and troops, and so on. All
of these forms of authority are opportunities to defend the kingdom of God
against the darkness and the evils of the netherworld, to be fathers (or
mothers) to people (regardless of age); to bring the Gospel to life in our
world, at least silently and sometimes explicitly, by our imitation of Jesus
“the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Matt 16:16), whom we claim as our
master and our model.
I think it’s apropos to quote from the editorial
in the June issue of Columbia, the
magazine of the Knights of Columbus.
After noting that parents are responsible for the spiritual formation of
their children and a reference to preserving the faith even in the face of
religious persecution, the editorial says:
In the Western world, the duty of
Christian parents to practice their faith and witness to their children is no
less serious. As faith is undermined by
dominant ideologies and met with increasing indifference or scorn, Christianity
in the West is threatened by an extinction of a different kind—related in no
small part to the collapse of the domestic church, the family.
The love of a mother is
unquestionably important and irreplaceable in the lives of her children, but
fathers also play an indispensable role, especially when it comes to passing on
the faith. According to a major study …,
the strongest predictor of a child’s future church attendance is the religious
observance of the father. The study
found that between 66 and 75 percent of children whose fathers regularly attend
church go on to become at least irregular churchgoers as adults, even if the
mother does not practice. If the father
does not practice, however, at least 60 percent will stay away from church
altogether, even if the mother is devout.
So, parents, and dads in particular, to you is
given the key to the kingdom of heaven.
Exercise your authority with faithfulness, love, and constant good
example.
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