Homily for the
Memorial of
St. Gregory the
Great
Sept. 3, 2024
1 Cor 2: 10-16
Collect
Christian Brothers, St.
Joseph’s Residence, N.R.
“We
have not received the spirit of the world but the Spirit who is from God, so
that we may understand the things freely given us by God” (1 Cor 2: 12).
Statue of St. Gregory at St. Paul Outside the Walls, Rome |
Paul addresses this language of the Spirit to the Christian faithful of Corinth. On this memorial of St. Gregory the Great, we can note that he was a man who had turned from the world—even if he hadn’t been captured by “the spirit of the world” while he lived in the world—and had become a monk. He allowed the Spirit to capture him for God’s service, even into service he didn’t desire—first as a papal diplomat, then as bishop of Rome.
The
collect for his memorial invokes “a spirit of wisdom” upon those to whom God
has “given authority to govern.” You,
brothers, have the laudable practice of praying regularly for your
superiors—local, provincial, and general. All who are charged to govern God’s people
certainly need the help of divine wisdom.
Gregory
responded to the Spirit by caring for a very troubled flock with gentleness and
love, as the collect suggests, and the authority of service. His times
were troubled by floods, famine, and plague (that sounds like the 21s century!)
and by constant danger from the semi-barbarian Lombards and the tense relations
between those Lombards, the Byzantine emperor, and the general population of
Italy. Gregory worked as both a diplomat
and an evangelizer in that context, and as the equivalent of Catholic Relief
Services for the population. Thru his
preaching and his writings, he prompted God’s flock toward holiness and his
fellow bishops toward sound pastoral care.
That
our present leaders—Francis, now on a physically challenging pastoral visit to
the far reaches of the world; the bishops of our country; and our
congregational leaders—might be Spirit-filled, wise men of God who will help us
all to flourish is a worthy and necessary object of our prayer.
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