Twenty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time
As I get ready to turn 40, it’s incredible to think of the technological advances just in those four decades. Thinking simply about how we listen to music, we went from records, to 8-tracks, to cassette tapes, to CDs, to Napster, to iTunes, Pandora, and Spotify.
The human mind is an amazing organ, and we continue to unlock different ways to utilize the created world. But, while the brain comes up with ever-new ideas, it is not perfect. Our intellect, which helps us to understand the world, both natural and supernatural, is fallen like the rest of creation. Our minds do not always grasp truth.
We see that in the Gospel today. When asked who people say Jesus is, the first few apostles echoed the human wisdom, perhaps the best human wisdom, of the day. “They replied, ‘Some say John the Baptist, others Elijah, still others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.’” These Apostles, as good as their hypotheses were, erred. Even if they were simply echoing what others said, they did not grasp the truth of Jesus’ identity.
Statue of St. Peter from Galilee |
Those who have responsibility for teaching the faith, as well as we who receive that faith, do well to remember that our human intellect alone does not suffice for passing on the truths of the faith. From all appearances and human judgments, Jesus was simply another great prophet. But His miracles demonstrated that He was more than that; He showed by His actions that He was the “Son of the living God.” But only intellects guided by grace could apprehend that truth.
When we stick to our own understanding of truth, it is all too easy for our minds, darkened by sin, to assert things which are false. We may even have reasons and some kind of logic to back up what we say. But if our intellect is not guided by the Light of God, then we can, all too easily, get things wrong and either not fully grasp what God wants us to know, or even go against what God has revealed.
Take, for example, a popular idiom: love is love. Our intellect, left to itself, might say, “Yeah, that sounds right.” Dissecting the sentence, it actually doesn’t say much. Grammatically speaking, it would be as profound as saying “one equals one” or “red is red.” But it’s all too often used as a way of saying that a person should be able to love romantically or marry whomever he or she wants.
Some even use the Scriptures to try to back this up. They see that St. John says in his first epistle that God is love. And so, God would seemingly approve of romantic love of another, no matter who that other is. They might also point to the fact that Jesus upended many of the cultural norms in His day, so we should be willing to do so as well.
They might point to human history, and point out that there were, in our country, not that long ago, laws which prohibited interracial marriages. They might say that we are more enlightened now to realize that those laws were wrong (as they were), because every human being has dignity and is worthy of love. This move to allowing same-sex marriage, they might advocate, is the natural progression of enlightenment and development of human society, so that, as long as two people love each other, they can do whatever they want, and are entitled to the same protections that we have given to marriage between a man and a woman in marriage. It all sounds quite logical.
But it fails to take into account the guidance of our loving God in Sacred Scripture. God, both in the Old and the New Testament, condemns homosexual activity as contrary to His will for human sexuality, and affirms that marriage is between a man and a woman. And if one retorted that the Scriptures are conditioned by their culture, then why believe any of it as true? If Scripture is simply one example of the human intellect, unguided by the grace of God, then we’re back to the fact that Jesus is John the Baptist, Elijah, Jeremiah, or a prophet. He’s just another teacher. But, as Jesus tells Peter, He’s not simply another teacher or prophet. If we can’t rely upon the Word of God, then Judaism and Catholicism might as well be tossed aside.
Statue of St. Paul from Rome |
Does this mean that God wants us to hate those with same-sex attractions and persecute them? No. God calls us to will the good of all others, whether they are like us or different from us. God calls us, as He says myriad times in the Scriptures, to pay special attention to those who struggle in life and find themselves on the margins of society, as those with same-sex attractions often do. Telling someone that they cannot get married and enjoy the physical expressions that are proper to marriage does not mean that we hate that person. Telling someone “no” does not equal hate, otherwise every parent hates their children…sometimes multiple times…each day.
When we rely simply on human reason, as good as it sometimes is, we can get things wrong. This is especially when it comes to God and what He teaches, because our minds are darkened by sin. In order to get the “God-stuff” right, we also need the guidance of the Holy Spirit, who helped Peter proclaim Jesus’ true identity, and who still guides the Church to teach us infallibly on matters of faith and morals.