If
you recall, last week we heard from the 1st chapter of the letter of
James. That reading challenged us to be
doers of God’s word, not just hearers. That reading challenged us to not just
passively receive our faith, but to put it into action. Our
reading last week ended by saying that a pure, undefiled religion is one that
cares for the least in society, for the widow and the orphan. We
will continue to hear from James in our 2nd readings throughout the
month of September. From
today’s reading from James, we get the sense that the Early Church struggled
with some of the same issues we face in our modern world. It sounds
like the prominent, well-to-do members of the Early Church could be judgmental
and wanted to exclude the poor and the marginalized from their Christian
communities. As
most of you know, as a missionary I got into the practice of traveling on the
Greyhound bus when I needed to travel a long distance. When
I was a seminarian at Sacred Heart Seminary in Milwaukee, I would travel during
the Christmas holiday and spring break to Winnipeg, Canada to visit friends up
there; it was a trip that would take about a day and a half. I
remember one year, I arrived back in downtown Milwaukee at about 4:30 am after
my Christmas break in Winnipeg; I had just arrived at the downtown bus station
and was going to take one of the early morning transit buses out to the
seminary in the suburbs. Here
I was, standing downtown at the bus stop with my backpack with my big winter
coat on. I guess I looked a bit grubby. The next thing I knew, a van pulled up offering
me a paper bag with a couple of sandwiches in it, wanting to escort me to a
homeless shelter where I could get warm and get off the streets. They assumed that I was a homeless person standing
around downtown in the early morning hours with nowhere to go. At
least they wanted to help me rather than arrest me for being a
vagrant. If we
believe that this is God’s Church and not our own personal Church, if we
believe in God’s love and mercy and salvation for all, we have to really live
out that ideal rather than just saying that we believe it. We
here at St James have emphasized that we want to be a welcoming parish to all,
and we really have tried to implement steps to show that, from greeters and an
information table that we’ve started putting into place, to joyful music that
we invite everyone to sing with us.
Again and again in his writing and his public speeches, Pope Francis has
challenged us to be a Church that is welcoming and inviting to all, a Church
that reaches out to the poor and the oppressed and the marginalized in an intentional
way.
This is a blog of homilies, reflections, and photos from a Roman Catholic priest serving in the Diocese of Jackson in the state of Mississippi. Currently, I am the pastor of Holy Savior in Clinton and Immaculate Conception in Raymond. I also serve as Vicar General of the Diocese.
Saturday, September 5, 2015
9/6/2015 – Homily for the 23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time – Isaiah 35:4-7A, James 2:1-5, Mark 7:31-37
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