Saturday, September 26, 2015

9/27/2015 – 26th Sunday of Ordinary Time – James 5:1-6, Mark 9: 38-43, 45, 47-48

      It has been an exciting week here in the United States with the first visit of Pope Francis to our country.  He is the first pope to ever address a joint session of Congress.  He has captured the hearts of so many, both Catholic and non-Catholic, both Christian and non-Christian.  I was listening to the report of his address to the United Nations in New York on National Public Radio; the reporter was so excited to share an interview she did with a Muslim lady who works for the United Nations.  The United Nations had a lottery to choose which of its employees would be able to attend his address in the assembly hall.  She said that she prayed again and again to Allah that she would be chosen, and she was so full of joy that she had been chosen and would be able to hear him in person.  The reporter found it so exciting that a believer in another faith tradition would pray to her own god in hopes of being able to see the Pope. We had quite a number of people from our parish travel up to Philadelphia and Washington to be there for the Pope’s visit.  I have loved seeing their photos that they’ve sent in texts and on the internet. We look forward to hearing their stories when they get back.  
      The message that we’ve heard from the letter of James these past five weeks is that we need to be doers of the Word not just hearers of the Word, that our faith is just not be something that remains in our hearts, but rather our faith is to bear fruit in the world – boy does that message coincide with what we have heard from the Pope this week on his visit to the United States, of how we are obligated to be good stewards of the environment, of how we are to treat the poor and the immigrant with dignity and respect.  Pope Francis showed this with his actions, not just his words – with his visit to a Catholic Charities Shelter in Washington, where he told the residents that he saw the face of St Joseph in them, a man who had no shelter and no home in which his child could be born, and to his visit to a poor Catholic School in East Harlem, New York.  Many people who heard the Pope’s address to Congress were impressed with the 4 Americans he mentioned as people of faith and doers of God’s Word: Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr, Dorothy Day, and Thomas Merton. Though we Catholics are very familiar with Day and Merton, many in the secular media did not know much about them, and were scrambling to find out who they were.  What is interesting is that both Dorothy Day and Thomas Merton were individuals who lived very secular lives as young adults, lives very much apart from God, but once they had conversions of heart, they devoted their lives to living out God’s call for them in their lives, very radical lives indeed.  Pope Francis praised Day, the founder of the Catholic Worker Movement, for her social activism, her passion for justice, and her love for the poor and the oppressed.   He singled out Merton’s work toward greater respect and dialogue between different cultures and religions, in the way he challenged the assumptions of his day.  And Merton did this while living as a Trappist monk in the Abbey of Gethsemene near Bardstown, Kentucky. 
       The Pope’s actions, and the examples he gave, are in contrast to those whom James points out in his letter, of the rich who store up their material wealth and possessions, but who do so on the backs of the poor whom they disrespect and oppress.  They have great material rewards here on earth, but will not find their reward in God’s Kingdom. We can use our influence and riches to help others, in works of kindness and mercy and goodness, we can earn a good living and still follow the values of the Gospel, or we can use our wealth and riches in ways that do not proclaim God’s Kingdom on earth.  We see many examples of this in our present day.  This past week, news broke that a company run by a former hedge fund manager bought the rights to an obscure drug that fights toxoplasmosis, a parasitic infection that can be severe in those patients with compromised immune systems such as those who have cancer and HIV.  This company promptly increased the prices of this 62-year old drug from $13.50 per pill to $750 per pill, a level that was seen as exploiting the poor and vulnerable just to make a profit. As James challenges us today, do we amass our riches on the backs of the poor, through oppression and injustice?
     Our human tendency is to fear those who are different from us.  Often, we want to exclude them from our group and marginalize them in our society.  We often are offended by individuals who rock the boat or who challenge what we think or what we believe, who challenge the norms and assumptions of society.  In the Gospel today, we see the disciples wanting to exclude those who do good works in Jesus’ name but who are not part of the group of disciples.  We see in Pope Francis a desire for us to dialogue and work together, to find common ground and to care for the well-being of all.  So many people in the world today see our reality as the insiders vs the outsiders, as the liberals vs the conservatives, as one country vs another, as us vs them. Pope Francis sees it differently.  Our Catholic faith sees it differently.  This is one quote from Pope Francis that I took away from his address to Congress: "Our efforts must aim at restoring hope, righting wrongs, maintaining commitments, and thus promoting the well-being of individuals and of peoples."  It is a message that brings us together, that does not conquer or divide.   Hopefully the message Pope Francis is bringing to our nation and the world this week through his visit to the United States will challenge us in the way we live out our faith as individuals and as a society. 

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