Saturday, September 14, 2024

Homily for 24th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Homily for the
24th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Sept. 15, 2024
Mark 8: 27-35
Villa Maria, Bronx


“He summoned the crowd with his disciples and said to them, ‘Whoever wishes to come after me must … take up her cross, and follow me” (Mark 8: 34).

In the last years of the last century, a bishop emeritus resided with us at the provincial house.  He left me, at least, a few memorable quotations.  (I’m the only one who lived with him still at the house.)  One of his sayings was, “In the Middle Ages they practiced fasting and the discipline.  Now we have meetings.”

Few are the rank-and-file religious who relish meetings.  For most of us, meetings are a penance, a cross, thru which we take a few paces in the Lord’s footsteps. Perhaps that’s a cross you’re largely spared these days.

But the cross will find you anyway.  You don’t have to go looking for a cross to carry alongside or behind Jesus.  Even Jesus preached, “Sufficient for a day is its own evil” (Matt 6:34).  Every day brings its troubles.  When those evils, those troubles, those crosses come, blessed are we if we recognize them and—if we don’t exactly embrace them lovingly—accept them and do our best to bear them.

There are 2 crosses that we all have to bear almost daily.  One is physical suffering, pain, or discomfort—from the weather, from something that breaks down in the house (the a/c or the elevator), from our frail bodies, from having to get up in the morning earlier than we’d like.

The other is written of by a certain Fr. Jean du Coeur de Jesus d’Elbée, recorded in Magnificat a few years ago.  “We have a tendency,” he writes, “to become obsessed by the faults of those around us. . . .  Their faults make us suffer, and this suffering in turn reminds us of them continually.”[1]  Unless you’re quite different from me, unless your community’s a lot different from mine, you’re all irritated by this or that mannerism of a sister or by some thoughtless word or by some perceived privilege she gets, etc.  Such is human nature.  It wasn’t for nothing that St. John Berchmans exclaimed, “Mea maxima poenitentia vita communis” [My greatest penance is community life.]

When we were young, the sisters at school encouraged us to offer up our sufferings—physical or interrelational—to and with Jesus.  Fr. d’Elbée goes a step further and encourages us to look for the virtues of those we live with rather than at their faults.  “As much as you can, ascribe good intentions to your neighbor.”[2]  The Little Flower urged the same advice:  “When the devil ties to put before the eyes of my soul the faults of this or that sister who is less appealing to me, I hasten to seek out her virtues, her good desires.  I tell myself that if I have seen her fall one time, she may well have undergone a great many victories that she hides thru humility….”[3]

If the cross is hard to bear, we must remember that Jesus walks ahead of us.  We’ve chosen to follow him, and we know where he’s going; we know where he wants to lead us.



[1] October 2020.

[2] Ibid.

[3] Ibid.

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