Nineteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Faith is not imagination. Faith is not making something up that will never happen. I am not Captain America (well, maybe I’m Captain America before he was strong). I don’t have a super hero car (though I do love my Chevy Malibu). But faith does allow us to see things that are not there.
We hear about faith in all three readings, but especially in our first and second readings. The sacred author of the Book of Wisdom talks about how the Jews had faith that God would deliver them from their bondage in Egypt, and would even the score against Israel’s oppressors. And the sacred author of the Letter to the Hebrews speaks especially about the faith that Abraham, our father in faith, had when he left Ur for Palestine, when he trusted that Sarah would conceive Isaac, and when God asked Abraham to offer up that same son, Isaac, though God had promised descendants through Isaac. Abraham had faith and saw a future for himself with God, though it was not the one he originally had planned for, or even seemed contrary to the future that God had promised.
Faith allows us to see, not only with the eyes in our head, but also with the eyes of our soul. Faith invites us to change a part of our life that we think we need, trusting that God will supply for whatever we think we will lack. Faith allows us to know things that are not apparent to our senses. In some older holy cards that depict the Mass, it shows the priest, elevating the host and the chalice, with the angels and saints coming down from heaven in adoration. That is not simply a pious image; that happens at every Mass, as we participate in a halfway point between heaven and earth. Faith in God led the Sisters of Loretto in Santa Fe, New Mexico, to ask God to send the someone to complete their chapel, which lacked a staircase to the choir loft. Sadly, there was little room for a regular staircase, and they had very little money. After praying a novena to St. Joseph for nine days, a man came who promised to build the staircase for the sisters, but they had to give him total privacy. He locked himself inside for three months, and only had primitive tools. He disappeared as soon as the staircase was finished, without accolades or payment. Experts still don’t know how it was done. The sisters knew it was St. Joseph himself who had built it for them.
Faith leads us to do what we think is impossible, because we are not the main agents of the impossible, but God is. We are so often limited by our vision, that we fail to see things with the vision of God. After all, the Jews were looking for an earthly king like King David to be their Messiah. God sent them Jesus, who was not whom the Jews expected, but freed them in a more powerful way than an earthly ruler ever could have–He saved them from sin and death.
What do we think is impossible? What are those things that our eyes in our head tell us can never happen? Jesus tells us in the Gospel not to grow complacent. He reminds us that He will return, but it will be on His time. If we lose our vision with the eyes of our souls, and only live with the eyes in our head, then we will forget about the Master who will return and will reward or punish us according to our service. But, if we keep watch with the eyes of our souls, trusting that God can accomplish what is impossible–even the salvation and restoration of this fallen world–then God will reward us, making Himself our servant.
We don’t simply have to imagine a world that is better than the one we have now: a world without violence, without hatred, without racism, without drugs, without war, without greed, without the fallen realities that continue to plague us. God can make that world a reality. Do we have faith to see how God wants to use us to help make the world that the eyes of the soul see the world that the eyes in our head see?