May
13, 2018
CollectNativity, Washington, D.C.
“The ascension of Christ your Son is our
exaltation, and where the Head has gone before in glory, the Body is called to
follow in hope” (Collect).
You could call this Trifecta Sunday. Were I to ask you what today is, most of you
would respond, “Mother’s Day.” And we’re
glad to honor, celebrate, and pray for our mothers.
Christ's Ascension
National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, upper church sacristy
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Many of you would add, “It’s Ascension
Day.” You might still tend to say
“Ascension Thursday,” but the vast majority of American dioceses now celebrate
this feast on Sunday.
I’d bet no one would tell me, “It’s World
Communications Sunday.” This is the 52d
annual observance of this WCD, the only
new Church observance called for by the 2d Vatican Council. Every year since 1967, the Pope has issued a
message for the observance, choosing a timely theme.
This year Pope Francis chose the theme,
“The truth will set you free: Fake news
and journalism for peace.” That sounds
timely, all right. “Fake news” has
become a mantra, but the phenomenon is nothing new, whether we’re talking about
commercial advertising—the Romans advised us caveat emptor, “let the buyer beware”; or talking about world
politics, e.g., the Communist Party in the Soviet Union called its official
newspaper Pravda, “Truth,” and North
Korea calls itself the People’s Democratic Republic of Korea while it’s neither
a democracy nor a republic nor at the service of the people; or talking about
domestic politics, for which every politician learns to “spin” the news, giving
at best an incomplete picture of an issue if not a deliberate distortion or
outright lie.
“Fake news” even affects the Church. To speak only of the Holy See, in recent
weeks there have been stories about a doctored photograph and misleading
presentation of a letter from Benedict XVI, which led to the reassignment of a
high-ranking Vatican official; about Pope Francis’s denial of the reality of
hell, which he has not denied but in
fact repeatedly affirmed; and about the Vatican and Saudi Arabia striking a
deal for the Saudis to build churches where Christians who live there can worship,
such as foreign workers from India, the Philippines, and the U.S.—a report that
was a complete fabrication.
The Holy Father writes at some length about
the damage that “fake news” does. He
affirms the importance of truth because, he says, God made us to know and to
share all that is true, good, and beautiful.
Truth orients us toward God, and here I affirm that it does this whether
it’s the truth of science, the truth of history, the truth of philosophy, the
truth of the Gospel, or the truth of a mother’s love. Falsehood—including “fake news”—comes from
Satan, whom Jesus calls “the father of lies” (John 8:44) and who aims not at
our happiness and fulfillment but at our misery.
Today’s feast celebrates one of the truths of
our faith, a truth about our happiness and fulfillment: Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus Christ, has in his
human body been exalted to the glory of heaven, and in the glorification of his
humanity, we too are involved. “Where
the Head—Christ—has gone, the body—us, the Church—“is called to follow.” Christ is incomplete until his people join
him in risen splendor, eternal gladness.
This is the heart of the Good News, and there’s nothing fake about it. The Son of God became human to join himself
inseparably to us, and he aims to pull us after himself into heaven so that we
may live with him as sons and daughters of God.
He will do that if we let him, if we make an
effort to follow him.
And that’s the truth!
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