Resumed Sixth Sunday after Epiphany
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. This week our nation takes a break to celebrate Thanksgiving: a day of food, family, and football (and the Lions might even win this year!). So how fitting is it that St. Paul, in the epistle today, begins with thanksgiving for the people of Thessaloniki. According to one Scripture scholar, St. Paul gives thanks in all but four of his epistles: his second epistle to the Corinthians; his first epistle to St. Timothy; his epistle to St. Titus; and his epistle to the Galatians. In particular, in this first epistle to the Thessalonians, St. Paul gives thanks for their “work of faith and labor of love and endurance in hope.” In other words, St. Paul expresses gratitude for the three theological virtues active in their lives: faith, hope, and charity.
When it comes to faith, we can use the word ambivalently. We sometimes mean the articles in which we should believe and we sometimes mean our trust in God. In today’s epistle, St. Paul seems to highlight the former, as he talks about the people’s conversion away “from idols to serve the living and true God.” And that aspect of faith is important. Do we believe what God has revealed as true? Not too long ago we took the Disciple Maker Index, and I have to say that our answers from the questions on beliefs of the Church were quite high. So that’s good. But one of the areas that we discovered we need to work at is sharing that faith that we hold so strongly with others.
Because our beliefs, the revelation of truth and happiness from the God who made us, is not only for our own benefit, and then we hide it under a bushel basket (to use a Gospel metaphor). If we truly have charity, the love of God for others, then we want others to know the truth and happiness that we have found in following Christ and making His life our own. The Gospel is not our possession to be buried in a field until the master’s return (to use another Gospel metaphor). We are called to invest it and help it to multiply so that the Master receives a return on what He gave to us.
The other aspect of faith is harder to quantify, but is no less important. Do we trust in God? And do we trust, not only when things are going well, but when they do not go the way we want them to? Bl. Solanus Casey comes to mind in this regard. He would say, “Thank God ahead of time.” We can only do that if we trust in what God will give us to or allow us to experience.
Bl. Solanus Casey |
Very much connected to that trust is hope. St. Paul describes hope as the confidence in receiving that which is, as yet, not seen. Hope helps us to persevere towards the fulfillment of Christ’s promises to us, though we do not experience them in their fullness right now. Heaven and the fullness of new life in Christ is our ultimate hope. Hope helps us to keep going, even though it seems like heaven and the life Christ desires for us is so far away, or even when what Christ promises seems impossible. Living the virtue of hope especially helps us when somethings or everything seems to be working against what we desire.
Many bemoan the state of the Church these days. Many have wandered away from the Church to do what they consider worship on their couches in front of a screen; or to attend ecclesial communities whose music is more adapted to their secular tastes; or simply to stop living according to the teachings of Christ altogether because they seem so antiquated. We have had our own struggles with the Extraordinary Form restrictions, though, for the most part, we have not had to endure many restrictions outside of the sacrament of Confirmation. Even within those who profess to be Catholic, many are confused or sow confusion and try to change teachings that cannot be changed. So the Church seems attacked from without and even from within. But in the midst of all of this, we keep our eyes on Christ and his promises that the gates of hell will not prevail against the Church, nor will death and sin have the final say, because Christ has already conquered sin and death. Hope gives us the ability to cling to Christ throughout whatever storms arise, knowing that if we stay with Him and His Church, we will arrive in safe harbors at the appointed time.
Lastly, charity. When many hear the word charity, they think of going beyond the norm to give to someone in need. But the theological virtue of charity animates us to love with the love of God, at least as close as we can on this side of heaven. Charity, a specific form of love, helps us to give God our best out of devotion to Him, and to care for those for whom God cares, especially the poor, widows, and orphans. The love which is charity draws us out from ourselves and wills the good of the other. We love because God first loved us. And God’s love for us didn’t come because we deserved it, but as a generous gift to those who were totally unworthy of love.
And that love was sealed with the sacrifice of Christ, which is re-presented for us today in an unbloody manner in the Most Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Charity, the love of God, means sacrificing ourselves for the other, just as Christ sacrificed Himself for us. And the more we share in the fruit of that sacrificial love, the more we share in the result of that sacrificial love, which is the resurrection and pure joy with God in heaven. Love, especially sacrificial love, doesn’t always feel good, but it always brings about good, because when we love others we are sharing God, and God is Goodness itself, just as He is Love itself.
There are many ways that we can sacrifice for the other. This can be in our own families, and letting them get their way rather than our own (as long as it is not harmful for them). It can be in the work we do for the poor and the needy, especially as holidays approach. I think we’re all paying more for just about everything. For those who don’t have more to spend because of unemployment or underemployment, can we help them to still have a good Thanksgiving or a good Christmas by our generosity? I say generosity, but it’s really just good stewardship, because every good thing is a gift from God, and we’re merely passing on those gifts that God has shared with us.
Today I give thanks for you, my beloved children in Christ. I am truly blessed and humbled to be your pastor. Throughout my time here I have been inspired by your faith, by your hope, and by your love. We are not done in growing in these virtues, but we have a good foundation in Christ for our future. May God continue to inspire your “work of faith and labor of love and endurance in hope of our Lord Jesus Christ,” who with the Father and the Holy Spirit live and reign for ever and ever. Amen.