Homily
for the
19th
Sunday of Ordinary Time
Aug.
11, 2024
Collect
Eph
4: 30—5: 2
John
6: 41-51
Our
Lady of the Assumption, Bronx
St.
Francis Xavier, Bronx
“Taught by the Holy Spirit, we dare to call you our Father” (Collect).
The Holy Trinity by Hendrick van Balen, 1620
St. James Church, Antwerp
Jesus
taught his disciples to address God as Father, and at every Mass we’re reminded
of that before Holy Communion. Today’s
collect, tho, attributes this teaching and command to the Holy Spirit. It was, of course, Jesus who bestowed the
Spirit upon the Church after his resurrection and ascension. The Spirit, the bond of love uniting God the
Father and God the Son, comes to us from the Father and the Son to bind us to
them.
That
leads us to pray today that the Father “bring to perfection in our hearts the
spirit of adoption as [his] sons and daughters.” This prayer is related to the prayer we made
last week, that God restore what he created.
We were created in God’s image, and the redemptive work of Jesus Christ
is to restore that image in us. When he
bestows the Holy Spirit upon us, when he fills us with divine grace, we become
images of Christ himself; we become God’s adopted children—his sons and
daughters not by nature, like Christ, but by grace, by a magnificent gift from
God thru the Holy Spirit.
As God’s
children, we have an inheritance. Our
Father intends for us to share his kingdom with his Son Jesus. We can be encouraged by Jesus’ words to the
so-called Good Thief on the cross next to him:
“Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise” (Luke 23:43). That’s the destiny God wants for us. That’s why he makes us his children. Jesus accepted a convicted criminal dying
next to him, and he accepts us too without regard to our sins. In that, he’s doing what his Father sent him
among us to do: “This is the will of him
who sent me, that I should lose nothing of all that he has given me, but raise
it up on the last day” (John 6:39).
Oh, there
is a proviso. Jesus tells us about that
in today’s gospel: “Everyone who listens
to my Father and learns from him comes to me” (John 6:45). We have to believe in Jesus and let him lead
us to his Father so that the Father can take us into the divine family as his
children.
Then we
have to do our best to act like God’s children, to act like Jesus. We don’t want to be disinherited! St. Paul tells us today, “Don’t grieve the
Holy Spirit of God, with which you were sealed for the day of redemption” (Eph
4:30), i.e., marked down as belonging to Jesus Christ as surely as that thief
on the cross. St. Paul gets specific
about how Jesus’ family behaves: “All
bitterness, fury, anger, shouting, and reviling must be removed from you, along
with all malice” (4:31). Another
translation (NRSV) speaks of “wrath” instead of “fury” and of “slander” instead
of “reviling.” In other words, be
patient and gentle with other people, speak truthfully about others. Paul continues, “Be kind to one another,
compassionate, forgiving one another as God has forgiven you in Christ” (4:32).
In that way, Paul adds, you’ll be
“imitators of God, as beloved children, and live in love” (5:1-2).
And if we
live as God’s children, as brothers and sisters of our Lord Jesus, then Jesus,
who loves us tenderly, will raise us on the last day (John 6:44), and his
Father will give us an inheritance alongside Jesus.
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