Homily for the
14th Sunday of Ordinary
Time
July 7, 2024
2 Cor 12: 7-10
Villa Maria, Bronx
Our Lady of the Assumption,
Bronx
St. Francis Xavier,
Bronx
“My grace is sufficient for you, for power is
made perfect in weakness” (2 Cor 12: 9).
It may be hard for us to think that the saints
were weak men and women, men and women who had faults, sometimes exercised poor
judgment, struggled with temptation, even sinned. For instance, many people were astounded to
learn from her letters that Mother Teresa lived for years in darkness, without
experiencing the warm closeness of Jesus.
It was a form of human weakness which, however, didn’t shake her faith
that God did indeed love her and that she was doing his work when she cared for
the most abandoned people of Calcutta and founded a congregation of sisters to
do that ministry around the world—even on East 145th Street in the Bronx.
(source unknown)
St. Paul experienced God’s grace most
dramatically when he was knocked off his feet and encountered the living Jesus
on the road to Damascus; none of the 3 accounts of his conversion in the Acts
of the Apostles mention a horse. That
grace turned him from a fiery persecutor of Christians into a bold preacher of
the Gospel, the apostle to the Gentiles.
Yet not without weakness. He writes to his friends in Corinth of “a
thorn in the flesh, an angel of Satan, to beat me, to keep from being too
elated” (12:7). Many commentators have
speculated on what that thorn was—some physical disease or weariness from his journeys
(always on foot), some constant temptation, remorse over his anti-Christian past,
grief that his ardent temperament alienated some people, an inner fear of the
hatred and persecution he met in so many places.
We don’t have to know, only to know that it
bothered him a lot but that the Lord assured him of grace, that altho the thorn
couldn’t be removed, the power of Christ would overcome it. Christ’s power is greater than anyone’s
weakness. Christ’s power is greater than
all our sins. So Paul could say he was
“content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and constraints,
for the sake of Christ; for when I am weak, then I am strong” (12:10). Someone who knows he or she is too weak to
deal with life, too weak to resist temptation, too afraid to stand faithfully
with Christ, too much of a sinner—that someone can turn to Christ for the power
to face life, temptation, and fear and ask forgiveness.
In the years leading up to my ordination (a
long time ago), I was quite aware of my sins, failings, and weaknesses, and I
hesitated to go forward. The DRE of the
parish where I taught catechism had given me a poster with an Alpine image and
a psalm verse on it: “And they [Israel] remembered
that God was their strength” (78:35). I referred
to that constantly and eventually put it on my ordination memorial card. Acknowledging my weakness, as St. Paul did,
makes room for God to bring his grace into my life and, thru me, into the lives
of others.
All of us have thorns in our flesh,
temptations and challenges that discourage us.
If the saints did, should we be surprised? Like the saints, we can turn to our Lord
Jesus, who had not only one thorn but a crown of thorns; whose power overcame
death and promises to overcome all our weaknesses and even our sins. As we prayed in the collect, God’s Son was
made low by taking on our human flesh and being made to suffer; thus he raised
up our fallen world and rescues us from slavery to sin and offers us eternal
gladness, everlasting life at his side (Collect).
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