Twelfth Sunday in Ordinary Time/Fourth Sunday after Pentecost
[In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.]. Over the past few years people of all and no faiths have started to buy into this idea of karma. Whether what is shared is actually the Hindu view of karma or not, I’m not sure, but the basic statement is that if someone does good, then good things will happen to that person. More often than not, it’s invoked when someone does something bad to a person, and that person hopes something bad will happen back to the other.
Prophet Jeremiah |
Or take St. Paul. In Romans, chapter 8, [the pericope we heard today], St. Paul says that the sufferings of this time are as nothing compared to the glory that is to be revealed. St. Paul had done some bad stuff (he had persecuted Christians and consented to the martyrdom of St. Stephen). But by the time he’s writing this epistle, he’s been doing God’s work for a while, preaching the Gospel, working miracles, and encouraging young communities to follow the Lord. According to karma, everything should be enjoyable; there shouldn’t be sufferings. But, of course, there were. In fact, St. Paul continues that all creation is groaning as it awaits for the fullness of redemption in Christ.
Christ, of course, is the nail in the coffin when it comes to the idea of karma. Christ was sinless. He did no wrong. And yet He suffered immense pain and agony. So, hopefully we can put to rest this idea of karma, and that good things happen to those who do good, while bad things happen to those who do bad. Those who follow God’s will often have to suffer, and sometimes there is no immediate justice for those who do wrong. There are many who lie, cheat, sleep around, and have no real practice of religion, and they seem to get richer and richer, not have any problems, and continue to thrive while those who try their best to follow God’s law of freedom have to struggle daily to make ends meet, and have problems with sometimes even the basic realities of life.
So what do we do? We stay faithful, even when it’s hard. We follow the law of the Gospel and the teachings of the Church, even when they seem unpopular, and even when we are persecuted, because, as our Lord says in the Gospel according to St. Matthew [that we heard today], God cares even for the sparrows, and we are worth much more than many sparrows.
When Christ invites us to live a certain way or to follow Him somewhere, our best response is to follow His lead and do what He says. It may sometimes seem counterintuitive, like when Christ asked Peter to put out into the deep waters to make a catch of fish, even though Peter had been fishing the entire night before and had caught nothing. But when we respond with the obedience of faith, Christ can do things beyond our imagining. The miracle where St. Peter caught all those fish was not about the fish: it was about God not being outdone when we follow Him. Sometimes it happens immediately, like with St. Peter. Sometimes it takes longer. Sometimes we may not even see the results on this side of eternity. But God rewards faithfulness, and especially when it is tough.
And it’s tough for Catholics now, and probably will get tougher in the future. Last week the LA Dodgers honored a group of anti-Catholic cross-dressers who openly mock the beautiful lives and work of religious sisters. Those who remain faithful to the Church’s teaching that homosexual acts are gravely sinful and contrary to God’s plan for human sexuality are called bigots and homophobes. Our own Michigan Supreme Court wants to make a rule that says that a person is to be identified by whatever terminology that person decides, regardless of reality, and our governor openly brags about how easy it is to murder innocent children in the womb and says that people should move to Michigan because of that ease of access to infanticide. These aren’t so much political issues as they are moral. We now find ourselves in a culture that is more pagan than the height of the Roman Empire.
God calls us to be Jeremiahs, those who speak His word, no matter what those who called themselves friends do to us, no matter what privileges and popularity society grabs from us, no matter what names and epithets others give to us. We do this, not because of karma, not because bad people will get bad things in their lifetime, but because God’s word is life and truth, and living according to the truth brings happiness, while living according to lies, no matter how popular, brings sorrow. God gives us the Eucharist to strengthen us so that we have the courage and energy to remain faithful to Him.
That is why it is so important to go to Mass each Sunday and holyday: without the Eucharist, the devil can more easily persuade us with his lies to dive into the culture of death. The Eucharist is our lembas bread (Elvish bread from Lord of the Rings which sustained those who ate it much longer than it looked like it could) which fills our soul to press on, no matter how hard the journey. Whether we like it or not, bad things do not always happen to bad people; good things do not always happen to good people. Sometimes staying faithful to God means losing friends, power, and prestige. But, we cannot imagine the good things that God has in store for us if we remain faithful to Him: the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.