Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time
When Moses asked the rhetorical question to the Israelites, “what great nation is there that has gods so close to it as the Lord, our God is to us whenever we call upon him?”, the Chosen People certainly could think of the closeness of God. Ever since their departure from Egypt, God had accompanied them by a column of cloud by day, and a pillar of fire by night. He had stopped the flow of the Red Sea for them. He had appeared in trumpet blast and storms on Mount Sinai. He traveled with them in the Ark of the Covenant. There was no question that God sojourned with His People. But they didn’t appreciate how close God would get to us.
Centuries later, King Solomon built a temple to God to be a resting place for the Ark of the Covenant, which King David had previously moved to the new capital city of Jerusalem. In the great temple, with all of its gold and silver beyond value, all of the fine wood and decorations of the different courts for different groups of people, leading up to the Holy of Holies, the inner sanctuary where God dwelt, God could be approached. He had a physical footstool on earth, a place where the people could draw close to Him at any time they wanted. While the Chosen People had spread out over the Promised Land, they could come to God to give thanks or to ask for blessings. God no longer seemed itinerant, but had a home fit for the King of Kings. But still they couldn’t imagine how close God would get to us.
Centuries later, in a village called Nazareth, the Archangel Gabriel appeared to a young virgin named Mary. Gabriel asked Mary if she would become the Mother of God, and would carry the Son of God and Son of David in her womb for nine months. Mary said yes, and suddenly, God’s presence was again itinerant, but this time not in cloud or fire, but in the Incarnation, the union of God and man in the Person of Jesus Christ. Mary gave birth in Bethlehem, and suddenly people could not only see God from afar in the cloud and smoke; people could not only visit God in a particular place; the shepherds could now gaze loving on God, who looked like a little baby. The Magi could offer their gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh to the little Christ Child. And that child would grow, so that people could see the face of God, which before not even Moses could do, as God warned it would kill him. But not only could you see the face of God, you could touch God, hear His voice, and experience His love in a way previously thought impossible. But still, they couldn’t imagine how close God would get to us.
Because while Jesus Christ, God-made-man, walked this earth and helped people experience God in ways unthought of before, while He walked this earth He limited Himself to being in one place, at one time. The Lord of all creation who created time and space became subject to time and space. Until He gave us the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist, His Body and Blood, given to us under the appearance of bread and wine, which would prolong His presence with us, not through his limited Body, but through His glorified Body, which now reigns at the right hand of the Father in heaven. You don’t have to go to the Holy Land to see Jesus. He comes to you at each Mass, so that you only have to travel a short distance to see Him, not fly over oceans and seas and other continents. And God enters into us, into our very person, so that He is closer to us than any other person could ever be. We can say, in a way Moses probably never imagined while he was on earth, “what great nation is there that has gods so close to it as the Lord, our God is to us whenever we call upon him?”!
What a great gift God gives us! How could we ever repay God for His generosity, for His proximity to us? St. James tells us a way that we can repay, however humbly, the great gift God has given us: “Be doers of the word, and not hearers only.” The best thank you we can say to God is to worship Him, to open ourselves to His grace, and to do our best to conform our lives to the pattern God has given us, especially by loving our neighbors as we love ourselves.
I could never have imagined how fast time continues to pass in my own life. Moses could never have imagined how close God would come to us through the Eucharist. But it is true. God has come to dwell with us. Come, let us worship!