Holy Name of Jesus
But he also has another hit song entitled, “When I Call Your Name,” where the refrain sings: “Oh, the lonely sound of my voice calling / Is driving me insane. / And just like rain, the tears keep falling / But nobody answers when I call your name.” As we celebrate the Holy Name of Jesus, it struck me that we have a God who, when we call upon His Name, listens and responds. It’s almost the antithesis of Vince Gill’s sad, country song.
Indeed, the phrase “nobody answers” reminded me of the story of Elijah in 1 Kings, chapter 18, where Elijah, on Mount Carmel, had challenged the prophets of Baal, the pagan god, to consume the sacrifice they had created without lighting the fire. The prophets of Baal called out from morning to noon. They hopped around the altar, and even slashed themselves and caused their own blood to flow. But the sacred author notes, pithily, “but there was no sound, no one answering, no one listening.”
God listens to us every time we call upon Him, especially when we call out with the Holy Name of His Son, Jesus Christ. Our Lord promised in the Upper Room on the night of the Last Supper: “‘Whatever you ask in my name, I will do, so that the Father may be glorified in me.’” God responds to His Name, like a loving parent responds when a child calls out. We should not take this privilege lightly, and use God’s Holy Name in vain, but neither should we never call upon the Holy Name of God and miss out on opportunities where He wants to shower us with His love, grace, and gifts.
Does this mean that when I go to Meijer, and buy a PowerBall ticket, as long as I pray in God’s Name for the numbers that I will win the jackpot? Certainly not, not even if you plan to share a large chunk of money with St. Matthew parish (which you should, if you win the lottery, by the way). God’s Name is not a magic word that forces God to do whatever we wish. God always answers our prayers, but as another country song sings, “Sometimes the answer is no.”
Still, it can be tough when we have faith, when we call upon the name of the Lord, and we don’t get what we want. It can feel like the lyrics, “nobody answers when I call your name.” So what is going on? Is our Lord not living up to His Word from the Last Supper discourse?
If we are children of our loving Father, then we should only will what God wills. The Savior spoke these words to the Apostles, His closest friends. And while at that point, they weren’t all set on doing God’s will, and they would also struggle at times (St. Peter is a prime example of this), after they were filled with the Holy Spirit, they became more attentive to doing God’s will rather than their own.
It is childish, not childlike to cry when God does not give us what we want every time we want it. God calls us to childlike trust in Him, but not to childish temper tantrums if we do not get our way. Ours should be the attitude of Job: “‘The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord!’” When we put on that mindset, we can better accept and understand when God does not give us exactly what we want, even when what we want is something good, like the life of a child, or the cure of a parent, or even basic financial stability.
But we also need to accept that sometimes God answers our prayers when we call on His Name, but we are not ready to hear His affirmative answer. There is the parable about the drowning man who was on his roof, due to a flood. A rowboat comes by to pick him up, but the man says, “No, I’ve prayed to God; He will save me.” A few minutes later a motorboat comes by to pick him up, but the man says, “No, I’ve prayed to God; He will save me.” A few minutes later a helicopter comes and lowers a rope, and the troopers shout down that they can take the man to safety, but he says, “No, I’ve prayed to God; He will save me.” The helicopter leaves, and the man drowns. When the man appears before God, the man complains, “I had faith in you, and prayed to you for safety, but you let me drown!” God replies, “I sent you a rowboat, a motorboat, and a helicopter. What more could I have done?” If we don’t have a familiarity with the way God works, we can miss out on how God answers our prayers.
The Holy Name of Jesus is not only the name by which we are saved, it is the name that demonstrates the love of God. When we call on the Holy Name with faith, we can be assured that God will listen to us, and that He will answer us, even if the answer is not always the one we want, in the way we want, or in the time we want.
Life can sometimes seem like a sad country song, where the house is empty, our loved ones have left us, and nobody answers when we call their name. But for us, as disciples of Christ, “Our help is the name of the Lord, who made heaven and earth”: the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

