26 November 2012

Marana tha! or Dies Irae?


Thirty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time
            It’s clear that our readings today focus on the end times.  And perhaps this subject is already on our mind with the impending arrival of December 21, 2012 (though, we should pay close attention to our Lord’s words at the end of today’s Gospel: “‘But of that day or hour, no one knows, neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father’”).  But whether we have been thinking about it or not, the Word of God calls us to remember that this world is passing away, and a new world is coming where the Kingdom of God will be revealed in its fullness.
            Because the end of the world as we know it means the beginning of the world as God intends it, we should want the world to end.  In Sacred Scripture, the response of the Christians to the world ending is Marana tha!, an aramaic phrase that means, “Come, Lord Jesus!”  The Book that we associate with the Final Judgement, the Book of Revelation, is precisely a book of consolation.  St. John consoles the early Christians by assuring them that the persecutions and sufferings of this age will end, evil will be vanquished, and the reign of Christ, the Lamb who was slain but lives, will be ushered in.  It will be the time when “[Jesus’] enemies are made his footstool,” as our second reading from the Letter to the Hebrews stated.
            But there is another response besides Marana tha! which is also associated with the end times: Dies irae in Latin, or “Day of wrath,” in English.  This is the response of those who have put themselves at enmity with God, and for whom the coming judgement is feared because the establishment of the fullness of the Kingdom of God means the destruction of their own kingdom.  As Dies Irae states, “Tearful will be that day/ on which from the ash arises/ the guilty man who is to be judged.”
            What is our response to the second coming of Christ?  For those who are following the will of God in their lives, it is likely, Marana tha!  For those who are following their own will, it will likely be a Dies irae.  Even our first reading sets up the dichotomy of two responses to the end.  The Lord tells Daniel that when St. Michael comes, the great angel (that is, messenger) of the judgment of God, for some “‘it shall be a time unsurpassed in distress since nations began until that time.’”  And yet, the just “‘shall escape,’” and the wise, “‘shall shine brightly likely the splendor of the firmament, and those who lead the many to justice shall be like the stars forever.’”
            Some of you may be thinking right now, “Why so morbid?  What exactly happened on that pilgrimage to the Holy Land?”  But reflecting on the end times is a perennial call of the Church, to remind us of the eternal consequences of our actions.  Let’s be honest, sometimes we need a little fear in our life to do the right thing, because we still labor under the effects of original sin.  Some people like to speed while driving, so I’m told.  But when they see a police car on the side of the road, they are reminded to slow down.  Some students would much rather take the short cut of copying off a neighbor’s test, but the watchful eye of the teacher or professor can help us to avoid that temptation.  Being reminded of the end times reminds us that, while we may get away with just about anything here on earth, we will be called to account for our actions before the judgment seat of God who is Truth itself, and no amount of sweet-talking or rationalizing will change the truth of what we have done.
            That is why the Church recommends a regular examination of conscience and frequent confession, to call us back to the Lord, and to have our sins forgiven while they still can be.  Because once we have died, there is no more time for conversion: we have either said yes to God and will be welcomed by the saints into heaven (even if we need a little purifying from our attachment to sin in Purgatory), or we have said no to God and will be welcomed by Satan and the fallen angels into Hell.  We either receive the reward of eternal happiness as the consequence of our good choices, or we receive the punishment of eternal damnation as the consequence of our unrepented sin. 
            So we can ask ourselves: do I enjoy spending time with God?  Do I attend Mass each Sunday and Holyday?  Do I take time each day to pray?  If so, Marana tha!; Come, Lord Jesus.  Or do I go throughout my day without giving God a thought, and make excuses why Mass is inconvenient for me or just plain, old boring?  If so, Dies irae; Day of Wrath.  Have I made a god out of power, prestige, sports, influence, money, or any other created good?  Dies irae.  Or do I seek to serve and to put all things in their proper order, so that God is first, others are second, and I am last?  Marana tha!  Am I greedy?  Do I keep things from the poor and those in need, and therefore keep them from Christ, especially clothes or other goods that I will never use?  Dies irae.  Or am I generous with what I have, especially my time and the gifts that God has given me to share with others?  Marana tha! 
            May the coming judgment, which will find us individually at our death, and universally at the second coming, be for us not a day of wrath, but an invitation for the Lord Jesus to come.  And as even Dies Irae states, “O you, God of majesty, gracious splendor of the Trinity, join us with the blessed.  Amen.”

06 November 2012

What Question Do We Ask God?


Thirty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time
            This past Monday, Bishop Mengeling gave a wonderful talk on the Year of Faith and his time at the Second Vatican Council.  He had some amazing slides from both outside and inside St. Peter’s during some of the sessions.  Before the talk, a few members of the pastoral staff and members of the adult formation team had dinner with Bishop Mengeling and I.  At one point of the conversation, Bishop Mengeling mentioned the questions he would have for God when he died, and some of the others mentioned their own questions to God that they are saving up for when they meet their Maker.
            In today’s Gospel, a scribe asked Jesus a question.  Now, recall that the scribes and Jesus didn’t always get along.  The scribes, along with the Pharisees and Sadducees, were always trying to trap Jesus, to get Him to say something so they could write Jesus off as neither a prophet nor sent by God.  At the first hearing of the question, maybe we think it’s another trap being set: “‘Which is the first of all the commandments?’”  Maybe, we could think, this scribe was trying to trick Jesus into giving a wrong answer. 
            Jesus responds with the Shema, the text we heard from our first reading, which forms the heart of the Jewish faith, and was to be said by Jews each day: “Hear, O Israel!  The Lord our God is Lord alone!  You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength.”  He then adds a second commandment, from the Book of Leviticus: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”  The scribe then agrees with Jesus.  But rather than Jesus condemning the scribe for trying to trap Him, as Jesus did with so many others, Jesus says, “‘You are not far from the kingdom of God.’”  This is a different type of question; one asked not so much to trap, as to truly find out the truth.
            What question would we ask Jesus?  What question do we ask Jesus?  Maybe there’s lots of little trivia that we want to know: did Adam and Eve have belly buttons?  What does Jesus really look like in His human body?  How many angels can fit on the head of a pin?  But this scribe, who was basically congratulated for his question, asked about salvation.  The question of ‘what is the greatest commandment?’ is basically a question about what the most important thing is to know and do.  And Jesus answers that question.
            Especially in an academic community like East Lansing, we can have lots of questions for God.  Sometimes they are questions about trivia.  Sometimes they are weightier questions about life and death, why suffering exists.  Those are not bad questions.  But there’s a hierarchy of truths, and the first one on our mind should be ‘how do I get to spend eternity with God?’  If God made us for Himself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in Him, to paraphrase St. Augustine, then the first question on our minds should be how we come to rest in God?  To answer that, we turn back to the scribe’s question.
            Jesus answers that the first commandment is about knowing and doing.  We must know who God is.  Only in the measure that we know God can we love God.  If we know God well, we can love Him more.  If we know God poorly, we won’t love God as much as we need to or want to.  Jesus starts out with the unity of God; God is one.  And yet, God is love, and love is self-diffusive; it gives out.  So our one God is also a communion of Persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  And God sent His Son, Jesus, to reveal to us in a human body just how far that love goes.  That’s what we see on the cross: God’s love.  Then God sends the Holy Spirit to those who have gotten to know Jesus in order to continue the work of Jesus after He ascended into heaven.  That’s the Church.  The Holy Spirit continues the work of Jesus by continuing to teach the truth (the teaching office of the Church) and by sharing God’s love with those who want it and who have faith in God (that’s the sacramental life of the Church, where God’s love which is grace, is poured into our hearts by the 7 Sacraments and by our connecting to Jesus through prayer).  Just like in the New Testament, some continue to receive the truth and love that God reveals (especially those who recognize their need for God, that is, sinners), and there are some who continue to reject the truth and love that God reveals (especially those who think that they have all the answers themselves, and who don’t need anyone). 
            But besides just knowing who God is, Jesus also reminds us that we are called to love God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength; in other words, with all of who we are.  Jesus calls us not just to know, but to act and respond to that love.  And if we are called through Baptism to be members of Christ’s Body, the Church, then our mission is the same as Jesus’ mission: to reveal the truth and the love of God.  We are also called, in loving God with our entire self, to preach the truth to others by our words and to give them the love of God through our actions.  Some may reject the light of truth and choose to remain in the darkness of their own opinions.  Some may even reject God’s love because it makes demands on their life and calls for conversion.  But, as Jesus Himself said, “‘If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you.  If they kept my word, they will also keep yours.’”
            In this Year of Faith, let us continually seek to rest in God by taking practical ways to get to know God better—through prayer, study, and silence—and by taking practical ways to love God better—through prayer, giving of our time and talent, and supporting one another—so that, at the end of our lives, we can say when Jesus questions us, that we have tried our best to know the God who is One, and to love Him with all our heart, soul, mind and strength.