Friday, February 28, 2014

3/2/2014 – 8th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Matthew 6:24-34

     Don’t worry.  Don’t worry about what you eat and drink.  Do not worry about the clothing you wear.  Do not worry about the future.  We get good advice from today’s Gospel, reminding us not to spend all our time worrying about those things that are not the most important things in life.   But sometimes, it seems like all we human beings do is worry.  The poet Mary Oliver had this to say in her poem “I worried”:

I worried a lot.  Will the garden grow, will the rivers
flow in the right direction, will the earth turn
as it was taught, and if not how shall
I correct it?
Was I right, was I wrong, will I be forgiven,
can I do better?

     Yes, there is so much we can worry about, isn’t there?  We worry about things that matter, about things that we can change, but unfortunately we also worry about those things we have no influence over at all, things that we can’t control.  Mary Oliver is able to conclude her poem this way:

Finally I saw that worrying had come to nothing.
And gave it up.  And took my old body
and went out into the morning,
and sang.


      Some of us might be worried about the changes we see around us: changes in the world, changes in our Church, and even changes in our parish.  Think about, that in the last year, we at St James have a new pastor, a new bishop, even a new pope.  One of the prisoners I write to on a regular basis sent me an article he found in a magazine, entitled: “Pope Francis: The Times They Are A-Changin’.”  I love that Bob Dylan song.  The title of that article is so apropos, because the times are definitely a changing’. 
         We celebrated the Year of Faith recently, which was called in part to commemorate the convening of the 2nd Vatican Council in the Catholic Church in 1962 by Pope John XXIII.  People usually remember that one of the goals of Vatican 2 was to update and modernize the Church, to have it speak to the modern world in a way that the world can understand, to read the “signs of the times.”   But many forget that Vatican 2 also called us to a return to the Early Church, to the apostolic traditions where we started. 
         If you look around us here at St James, we are trying to reach out to people in our modern world.  We live in a world where technology cannot only keep us better connected with others, but this technology can also isolate us as well.  As the pastor here, I want us to have the best liturgies possible, to see how we can be faithful both to the teachings of the Church and to the reality around us as well.  Pope Francis wants us to be a warm, welcoming Church, so we are reaching out and welcoming those around us at the beginning of mass with a greeting.  We are also trying to incorporate the traditions and devotions of our faith in our liturgies and in our Lenten observances in a very meaningful way.
       I’ll give you an example. We are now going to have 3 opportunities during Lent to journey with Jesus with the Stations of the Cross – after the 12:10 mass and at 6:00 pm in English, and at 7:00 pm in Spanish.  I think you’d be very hard pressed to find many parishes that offer 3 different chances to pray the Stations of the Cross every Friday during Lent, 2 of which will have Benediction aftwards.   
        Where are these changes coming from?   Some of them come from a desire to have mass here at St James as an engaging, faith-filled, joyful encounter with God.  We come not only as individuals practicing the Catholic faith, but we are here to be a faith community, a community where we not only live out our vocation as disciples of Christ, but a community that makes disciples as well. When I first came to St James, some of the priests told me that our parish here is one of the hidden gems of our diocese, and in many ways, I have found this to be true.  We do a lot of things very well here at St James, but we always want to find ways to energize and engage ourselves constantly as disciples of Christ. 
         We can worry about the changes that are going on in the Catholic Church, in our parish, about where we are going as a community of faith, but we trust in the Holy Spirit to lead us and guide us on our way.  And I use our parish’s patron saint as our inspiration as well.  James went to Spain to bring the Gospel to the people there, but when he came back to Israel, he thought that he had been a failure in his missionary efforts.  And we know from the Gospels that James was the first of the apostles martyred.  His body was brought back to Spain for burial after his death, where it was forgotten and then found by accident about 800 years later.  People from all over the world now travel as pilgrims to the place where James is buried – they come to James in this ancient pilgrimage tradition in the midst of the modern world in their search for God.  Last year alone, more than 215,000 people officially arrived as pilgrims to Santiago de Compostela – to the Cathedral of St James.
         As we get ready to begin our Lenten journey, we are called to set aside our worries, to trust in the Lord, to live out our Catholic faith to the fullest, to journey with Jesus during this holy time.  I know that many of us here have a great passion for our parish – of wanting it to be a place where we all can seek the Kingdom of God, and then proclaim that Kingdom to the community around us.  As we seek God’s Kingdom, we enter into the holy time of Lent this upcoming week as we come to mass on Ash Wednesday to receive that smudge of Ash on our foreheads, to turn away from sin and proclaim our belief in the Gospel.   We’re called to pray the Stations of the Cross each Friday and to come to our Lenten Reconciliation Service later in this month of March.  We are to pray, to fast, and reach out to others in works of charity.   No matter where we are in the our journey, we are to seek God in all things, even in the midst of the things that are worrying us. 

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