Passion Sunday
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. This is the time of year that new assignments start coming out. Just last Monday we received the notice of the movement of a number of pastors and parochial vicars to new assignments. I was subsequently speaking with a brother priest and telling him how I received an email a couple of months ago from a parishioner at Immaculate Conception parish in Milan, Michigan (not to be confused with Milan, Italy) who asked me to apply for that parish because I am a young priest with lots of energy. I joked with my classmate that I am not as young as I used to be. And, besides that, I really feel that St. Matthew is the perfect fit for me (and I hope you feel that way, too, at least most of the time). That’s not to say that we don’t have any challenges here and ways that we can continue to grow, not only in population but in our relationship with Christ. But I really feel like I belong here, that we compliment each other well, and that we challenge each other to grow as a parish family. As many of you live outside of the territorial boundaries of this parish, I know that you, too, feel like St. Matthew is a perfect place, and you witness to that by driving past other parishes that are geographically closer to you.
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My installation as pastor of St. Matthew
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But while St. Matthew seems like the most perfect assignment I’ve had so far as a priest, and hopefully the most perfect parish for you, our epistle today is a good reminder that this is not all there is. Christ is the High Priest, the Supreme Pontiff, of a greater and more perfect temple, not made with hands, in heaven. As St. Paul says, we have here no lasting city. We are made for heaven, and that is the temple into which we should all strive to enter.
It is so easy to focus on what is here below. Our church building can rightly be called beautiful as it reflects the truth of what this place proposes to be: a house of God, who is utterly transcendent and awesome. The precious materials like marble and gold leaf offer to God the best of what we have for His glory. The images of the saints throughout this church, like in our stained-glass windows, the medallions near the ceiling, and the statues (which are now covered) remind us that what we participate in is not just an earthly affair, but is the meeting point between heaven and earth, where saints and angels worship God together with us. In this place we not only remember but participate in the offering of Christ in the Holy of Holies, no longer with the blood of a dumb animal, but with the precious blood of the Son of God, the blood which speaks more eloquently than that of Abel. We join ourselves to the one Mediator between God and men, the God-Man Jesus Christ, who invites us into a covenant not carved on stone by the hand of God, but carved into our hearts; a covenant not marked by the cutting away of flesh in circumcision, but the cutting away of that which separates us from God, original sin; a covenant which brought not temporary purification, but opened up for us the possibility of eternal life in heaven if we keep our wedding garments clean in the Blood of the true Unblemished Lamb in which they were washed.
But God reminds us today through the readings that His covenant surpasses anything that came before, and, in fact, fulfills them all. Even that great covenant with Abraham, wherein God made Abraham and his descendants the People of God, looked forward to the covenant with Christ, as Christ Himself noted in the Gospel that Abraham looked forward to the day when God would take union with man and redeem man once and for all. The Jews picked up stones to kill our Lord because they recognized that Christ was not claiming to be another prophet or religious leader like so many that had come before Him. The Savior claimed that Abraham rejoiced in Him, which made Himself equal to God. He also used in some way, that sacred name of God that God Himself revealed to Moses: I AM. Christ is a prophet, but also greater than the prophets, and the God who inspired the prophets.
For us, then, the Lord invites us not only to keep in mind His Divinity, but that, while we exercise good stewardship of this earth and all that lives in it, we also keep our minds fixed on what is above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of the Father. As good as this earth is, our time on it will end, either by death or by Christ’s return in glory at the
parousia. At the end of time, what is good will be perfected and what is bad will be cast away. Even the sacraments will end in heaven, because we will no longer need material reality to mediate God’s presence. We will be able to behold God face to face, no longer dimly, as in a mirror. The indelible marks of the sacraments will still remain–baptism and confirmation, and for those in holy order, the mark of ordination–but no longer will we baptize, confirm, or ordain, because Christ will be all in all.
So while we remain on this earth, we also do what so many advise against: keep our heads in the clouds. Not in the sense that we are absent minded or distracted, but that our attention is ever-split between earth and heaven, keeping before us always the destination for which God created us. As good as life can be here, something even greater awaits those who remain faithful to the covenant sealed in the Precious Blood of Christ our God.
So yes, let’s continue to build up St. Matthew parish. Let’s draw others to this beautiful House of God. It truly feels like where I belong, and I hope you feel like it’s where you belong as well. But, even so, may we also remember the tabernacle not built with hands, greater and more perfect than our tabernacle here, where Christ, our High Priest, eternally intercedes for us, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit is God, for ever and ever. Amen.