Sunday, October 27, 2024

Homily for 30th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Homily for the
30th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Oct. 27, 2024
Creed
St. Francis Xavier, Bronx
Our Lady of the Assumption, Bronx

This is the 5th, final homily in a series on the Nicene Creed, preached in alternating weeks in the 2 parishes.

“I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life” (Nicene Creed).

Bernini's Holy Spirit
2 weeks ago we began to consider the 3d Person of the Holy Trinity.  I quoted a writer who calls the Holy Spirit is “the effective presence and power of God among humans.”[1]  His presence and power are spelled out in the last paragraph of the Creed.

This final section is the 4th that begins “I believe,” after the sections on “one God,” “one Lord Jesus Christ,” and “the Holy Spirit.”

“I believe in one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church.”  The Church is one, bound in a unity by the Holy Spirit even tho she’s also diverse—not only among the hundreds of nations and peoples of the world, but also in 24 different rites with their particular laws, customs, languages, and liturgies.  We belong to the Latin Rite, by far the largest in numbers.  There are also Byzantine, Maronite, Melkite, Syro-Malabar, Coptic and 18 other “Eastern Rites,” all united by the Catholic faith and the authority of the Pope, all united by the Holy Spirit.[2]  Many of our prayers to God the Father, you’ve noticed, end with the phrase “through our Lord Jesus, your Son, who lives and reigns in the unity of the Holy Spirit.”  As we noted 2 weeks ago, the Spirit is the bond of unity between the Father and the Son; he’s also the bond of unity between the Church and the Trinity and between all the members of the Church.  We are the unity of the Holy Spirit.

Further, it’s the Holy Spirit who guides our prayer, as St. Paul teaches in his Letter to the Romans:  “The Spirit helps us in our weakness; for we don’t know how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes with sighs too deep for words.  And the one who searches hearts knows what’s the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the holy ones according to God’s will” (8:26-27).  The Spirit unites us with the Father and the Son in our prayer.

Unfortunately, Christians aren’t completely united.  That’s been a problem since earliest Christianity.  Some reject a truth of the faith like the divinity of Christ or Christ’s working thru the sacraments; others reject the unifying office of the Holy Father.  St. John XXIII called the 2d Vatican Council, which met in 4 sessions between 1962 and 1965, in part to seek ways to reunite all Christ’s followers.  We’re still working on that.

The Spirit makes the Church holy because the Spirit conveys the grace of God to us.  We’re not professing that there are no sinners in the Church.  Lord knows there are, starting with you and me.  But when the Spirit pours God’s sacramental grace upon us, he renders us holy and eligible for eternal life.  More on that momentarily.

The Church is catholic, with a small c.  That’s from the Greek word for universal.  Jesus, Mary, the apostles, and the 1st believers were all Jewish.  But the Church isn’t just for the Jews.  It’s for every race and nation, like the Gospel itself—“from the rising of the sun to its setting,” in the words of the prophet Malachi (1:11) and the 3d Eucharistic Prayer.

And the Church is apostolic.  As St. Paul writes to the Ephesians, she’s “founded upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the cornerstone” (2:20).  She continues to be guided by the apostles’ successors, the bishops, and by the work of the Holy Spirit infallibly preserves the apostolic faith—which the Holy Father, successor of St. Peter, guarantees.

Next, we “confess one Baptism for the forgiveness of sins.”  This brings us back to the sanctifying work of the Spirit.  Jesus teaches that to enter the kingdom of God we must be “born of water and Spirit” (John 3:5), i.e., washed in Baptism, which confers the Holy Spirit upon us, makes us children of God by our relationship to Christ, and unites us to Christ’s saving death and resurrection.  Baptism and the other 6 sacraments convey God’s grace to us; the Eucharist and others renew the forgiveness that began when we were 1st washed clean.  In the Eucharistic Prayer, listen to how the Spirit is invoked as we pray that our bread and wine be changed into the body and blood of Christ and we be firmly united to God thru Christ. 

The forgiveness of the sins we commit after Baptism is particularly renewed in the sacrament of Reconciliation, which we sinners need on a regular basis.  How good Jesus is; he came to call not the just but sinners (Matt 9:13), and he makes himself available to us so easily thru his priestly ministers.[3]

In truth, there’s only one Christian priest, Jesus Christ, whom the Letter to the Hebrews speaks of in today’s 2d reading (5:5-6).  All others whom we call priests and bishops only exercise Christ’s ministry; they act “in the person of Christ” by the great gift and call of the Holy Spirit, conferred by the laying on of a bishop’s hands, anointing with sacred chrism, and prayer.

Finally, we “look forward to the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come.”  We’ll all die, as Christ died.  But by the power of his resurrection, he’ll restore to life all who are united to him by the Holy Spirit, “the Lord, the giver of life.”  Not only our souls but our whole persons, body and soul, are meant for eternal life, for heaven, for unending happiness.  St. Paul writes to the Romans, “If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead has made his home in you, then he who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will give life to your own mortal bodies thru his Spirit living in you” (8:11).

I used to joke when I was a lot younger that heaven would be an eternity of ice cream and baseball.  (That might not be good news for Yankees fans right now.[4])  Now I think it’ll be far, far better than that!  It’ll be a homecoming among all who love us most tenderly, starting with the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.

“This is our faith.  This is the faith of the Church.  We are proud to profess it in Christ Jesus our Lord.”



[1] Luke Timothy Johnson, The Creed: What Christians Believe and Why It Matters (New York: Doubleday, 2003), p. 158.

[2] We might also consider the Anglican Ordinariate of Catholics who have converted from the Anglican or Episcopal Churches a distinct rite.

[3] Jesus says there’s only one unforgiveable sin:  “Whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never have forgiveness, but is guilty of an everlasting sin” (Mark 3:29).  If the Spirit is the giver of forgiveness and one curses the Spirit, rejects him, or calls his work evil—then how can that person be forgiven?  If the Spirit guides our prayer to God and we reject the Spirit, how can we come to God?  Unless one repents, of course.  As long as we’re in this life, we can turn back to God, who will never reject a prayer that the Holy Spirit come to us.

[4] They lost to the Dodgers last nite to go down 2-0 in the World Series.

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