Homily for Thursday
29th Week of Ordinary Time
Oct. 24, 2024
Luke 12: 49-53
Missionaries of Charity,
Bronx
In this morning’s gospel,
Jesus makes 2 points. 1st, he wants to
set the world on fire, and he’ll do that thru his baptism. 2d, he’ll cause division in families.
St. Patrick lights the Paschal fire
for the 1st time in Ireland
Jesus’ baptism is his
passion. He spoke of that just last
Sunday in his dialog with James and John (Mark 10:35-40). God’s love so evidenced fires human hearts to
love God and to extend God’s love to others—which is what Mother Teresa, and
indeed all the saints, did so well.
Jesus’ purpose, of course,
isn’t division. But when hearts are
fired with his love, that stirs up opposition, as in his own case, which Isaiah
foretold in the prophecies of the Suffering Servant, and Simeon when Jesus was
presented in the Temple: “This child is
destined for the falling and the rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign
that will be opposed” (Luke 2:34). It
continues to happen in history, especially in the lives of the saints. The early virgin martyrs like Agnes aroused
family opposition by their dedication to Christ. Elizabeth Seton was disowned by most of her
family and her deceased husband’s family when she converted to
Catholicism. Thomas Aquinas’s family
locked him up to try to block his vocation to the Dominicans (obviously, he
escaped). John of the Cross’s confreres
imprisoned him because he was reforming the Carmelites (some brothers!). Today’s saint, Anthony Claret, dodged an
assassination and was compelled to resign as archbishop of Santiago, Cuba,
because of his attempts to reform the archdiocese.
Committing ourselves to
Christ warms our hearts and empowers us to worship God our Father and do good
for others. It doesn’t forestall
misunderstandings, opposition, and division, even within the Church, even
within religious houses, even among people of good will.
But God will triumph thru
Christ, for he “is able to accomplish far more than all we ask or imagine” (Eph
3:20).
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