Homily for the Memorial of
St. John Paul II
Tuesday, 29th Week of Ordinary Time
Oct.
22, 2024
Collect
Eph
2: 12-22
Christian
Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.
“You were … without Christ, alienated from the community of Israel and strangers to the covenants of promise, without hope and without God in the world” (Eph 2: 12).
Paul’s addressing
Gentile Christians, former pagans, worshippers of Zeus, Athena, and other Greek
divinities, aliens to the covenant between God and Israel. They didn’t know the one God of the universe
and thus were “without hope and without God in the world.”
“But,” Paul goes
on, “now in Christ Jesus you who were once far off have become near by the
blood of Christ” (2:13). They were once
far away from both God, whom they didn’t know and whom perhaps they had offended
by their pagan lifestyles, and far away from a covenant relationship with
God. Now Christ’s offer of grace thru
his sacrificial death has brought Gentiles, too, into the covenant.
St. John Paul’s
entire ministry as priest, bishop, and Pope was one of reconciliation, of
inviting people into Christ’s embrace.
“Be not afraid! Open wide the
door to Christ!” Christ is “rich in
mercy” (cf. Collect) and as “the sole Redeemer of mankind” (Collect) offers
saving grace to young people and to couples sanctified by marriage; two of his
lasting legacies are World Youth Day and his theology of the body. He forged a new relationship with our elder
Jewish brothers and sisters, who remain people of the covenant. John Paul even addressed the alienation of
his would-be assassin.
We’ve been
“instructed by his teaching” (Collect).
His writings merit the title Doctor of the Church, which I expect will
be bestowed upon him eventually. His
entire sacrificial life, his travels, his energy, his labors for human
liberation (both spiritual and political), and his joy also were
instructive. All together induce many to
call him John Paul the Great.
He displayed boundless love for Christ and Christ’s people, notably the young, who felt a special kinship with him. Just recall mobs of youths at WYD shouting, “JP2, we love you,” and the crowd that stuffed via della Conciliazione on the evening of his death, chanting, “Santo subito!” (As a university student, Karol Wojtyla learned youth ministry from his Salesian pastors at St. Stanislaus Kostka Parish in Krakow.)
JPII with youngsters at Becchi, Don Bosco's birthplace |
John Paul taught
us that we don’t find true life or true freedom in capitalism or socialism but
in worshiping God and loving our neighbor.
“The Lord speaks of peace to his people” (Ps 85:9); Christ reconciles
and makes peace when we open our doors to him and focus fearlessly on him. We live joyfully because Christ loves us with
tender mercy and redeems us.
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