Showing posts with label First Communion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First Communion. Show all posts

05 May 2015

Staying on the Vine

Fifth Sunday of Easter
While I know that we have two families who grows grapes in our parish, I’m not sure that we have many more.  So when Jesus says that He is the vine and we are the branches, it might not strike us as much as it struck the apostles who were listening to Him in the upper room.  They were, undoubtedly, familiar with how we go from grapes in the field to the wine at their table.  We, like with much of our food, are more often than not removed from the process, and just go to Meijer, Country Market, or Wal-Mart to get the finished product, whatever it is.
But even though we’re not as familiar with grapes and grape vines, we are probably familiar with Maple trees.  Now that it’s Spring it’s beautiful to see the Maple trees starting to have leaves once again.  And in the Fall I was in awe at the beauty of the yellows, oranges, and reds of the leaves.  Of course, I didn’t have to rake them up after they fell.  But we know what happens if you cut a branch off a Maple tree: the branch dies (just like the branch from the grape vine).  Sometimes you can see even when a branch has died but remains on the tree: there are no more leaves, no more beauty, and you have to be careful for when the rotting wood finally collapses under its own weight and falls to the ground.
We need Jesus to live.  That’s true not only in the absolute sense (without Jesus willing us to exist at every moment, we would simply cease to be and would disappear), but also in the sense that Jesus makes our daily life better.  Being in a relationship with Jesus is meant to change who we are and give us more life, more vitality, more beauty.  When we are cut off from Jesus, we start to die spiritually, and if the rot continues for too long, we are good for nothing else than the fire (and we know what place is associated with eternal fire!).
We probably have heard this Gospel and this message hundreds, if not thousands of times, but many Catholics don’t live as if this was true.  This weekend we’re celebrating first communions for our second grade children.  I am so proud of them and their catechists and rejoice with them at this special privilege of receiving Jesus into themselves in the Eucharist.  Our parish policy is that they have to be involved in Faith First before second grade, that it’s not just showing up for a year to get the sacrament.  The same goes for those who wish to receive the Sacrament of Confirmation.  And yet, how often do families feel that, once they have passed this milestone, they can check out of church until the next sacrament comes around?!?  I’m sure that’s not true of our families here, but it’s true in so many parishes all around the world.  Pope Francis even decried this sad situation when he said that, for all effects and purposes, the Sacrament of Confirmation is called more accurately the Sacrament of Farewell based upon the lived reality.  Pope Francis must’ve heard the joke that if you have a bat problem in your church, just confirm them and you’ll never see them again.  
The sacraments, like the Eucharist and Confirmation, are meant to be the beginning of a stronger, deeper friendship with God, not the end of the road.  It’s like reaching a new section of Candy Crush: it’s not the end of the game, it’s the beginning of a new set of levels.  
But this problem is true not only of those who have received sacraments, but also of Catholics of all ages.  Today Adrian College and Siena Heights are celebrating their graduation ceremonies.  We so often take as the norm that college students will not go to church and will not live their faith.  Why do we accept that as the norm?  Why does this not cause us great sadness?  Or, as the warm weather comes, and we come closer to the end of school, families start to travel on the weekends and take vacations.  Vacations are great.  Pure Michigan has so much to offer.  But, as it turns out, there are Catholic churches all throughout Michigan.  Yes, it may take a little effort to figure out when Mass times are, and work our schedules around that, but too often our vacation from work and school becomes a vacation from God.  We, in effect, feel it’s no big deal to cut ourselves off from the vine or the trunk, as if we can have divine life without Jesus.  
Of course, people have free will.  That is a gift from God, and we can’t force people to go to church.  But do we make that choice for ourselves to keep up our relationship with God, to stay connected to our source of life?  Or do we figure it’s no big deal?  So many people I speak with who have fallen away from the church say that for a while they just skipped once a month; then twice a month; then they just started going a few times per year; then they didn’t really go at all.  Cutting ourselves off from God is a slippery slope which can snowball more quickly than we imagine, in the same way that a branch starts to lose life the moment it begins to be separated from the vine or the trunk.

Of course, it’s not only about going to Mass; it’s also about daily prayer.  Do we talk and listen to God daily?  Do we work to keep ourselves connected to God?  St. John tells us in our second reading to love “not in word or speech but in deed and truth.”  Do we only say, “Yes, of course I love God!” without our actions proving that?  By the way we live our life can others tell that we are in a relationship with God?  Put another way, if God gave us the same amount of time that we give Him, how would our life look?  The Good News is that God has already done everything to try and keep us connected to the vine, to give us new life, and to have the fulness of life.  All we have to do is respond to that love.  Will we work at staying connected to Jesus, the grapevine?

28 April 2015

A Great Gift from God

Fourth Sunday of Easter
Today the Universal Church, the Diocese of Lansing, and St. Joseph parish receive a great gift: the gift of new members.  This is not a great gift because of two more people who are Catholic, as if we’re in a bean counting operation.  It’s not like the joke about the Northern Irishman who was a member of the Church of England, but who became Catholic in the last weeks of his life.  When asked by his family, who also were members of the Church of England, why he would do such a thing and repudiate a lifetime of devotion to his family church, he said he loved the Church of England so much that he would rather have a Catholic lose a member through death than a member of the Church of England.  It’s not like that.
Today is not a great gift because it proves an ideological point about differences in theology.  Theology is important, and there are important truth claims made by the Catholic Church which are contested by other Christian communities.  Even while we share our faith in Jesus Christ and with most Christian communities recognize the one Sacrament of Baptism, there are very significant differences about how each church and community believe Jesus has revealed His will about faith, morality, and ecclesial governance.  But today’s reception into the Catholic Church is not a bragging occasion for one group over and against the other.  
Today is a great gift because Josh and Lindsey are receiving a new outpouring of the Holy Spirit, and new experience of God’s grace, which is His very life, in the Sacrament of Confirmation.  Today is a great gift because Josh and Lindsey are receiving our very Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, into themselves in the Most Blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist, and will have, for the first time, the most intimate union with Jesus that they can have on this side of eternity.  These two candidates will profess the Nicene Creed with us and will both say that they believe and profess everything the Catholic Church teaches us as revealed by God through Scripture and the teachings of the Apostles and their successors.  That is a great gift because, by that profession, their union with us, already established in a way through baptism, will be strengthened and solidified, and the promise of Jesus that there will be one flock is closer to being true.
Their witness today reminds us that Jesus is the only means of salvation.  They claimed that salvation when they were baptized.  They died with Christ in the waters of baptism and rose with Him to new life, with the pledge that if they follow the voice of the Good Shepherd, they will receive that promised inheritance of eternal life with God.  Their witness reminds us today that Jesus is the Good Shepherd who looks for His sheep even in other folds, and leads them closer to Him, so that there is only one flock under the leadership of one Shepherd.  
Their witness today as children of God, becoming more like God through reception of these two new Sacraments, is a reminder to us that we are called to be like Jesus, and that He Himself changes us, divinizes us, makes us like God, so that, at the end of our lives, we are prepared to see God as He is.  
There are many wolves who try to attack the fold and divide it, as wolves have in the past.  How many times in the history of the Catholic Church have misunderstandings led to division when a greater love could have kept Christians united in love?  How many times has Satan tried to lead the sheep astray so that they did not follow the Good Shepherd’s voice, but followed the voice of pride, hatred, division, and partisanship?  In the midst of these sad divisions, Jesus today gathers more sheep into His fold, sheep that belonged to Him by baptism, but who today receive the fullness of the graces of initiation in His flock.
Today is also a great day because it should impel us and reinvigorate in us the desire to bring others into this fold and receive those same graces.  The voice of the Good Shepherd does not go silent as we pass out of the doors of this church building.  The voice of the Good Shepherd is meant to lead us in all moments of our life.  And because we are the sheep of Jesus’ fold, our bleats as sheep should draw other sheep to this fold.  Our voices should encourage those who are Catholic but who have not practiced their faith back to an active life in the fold.  Our voices should encourage those who are already baptized but who are not fully one with us in our Catholic faith to learn more about the Catholic Church and listen to hear if the voice of the Good Shepherd is calling them to union with us.  Our voices should encourage those who are not baptized to recognize Jesus, the Good Shepherd, as the only means of salvation, so that they can share in Jesus’ death and resurrection in the Sacrament of Baptism, be strengthened to proclaim Jesus through the gift of the Holy Spirit in the Sacrament of Confirmation, and find the most perfect union on earth with Jesus in the Most Blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist.  

Josh and Lindsey: you are a great gift to us and a reminder of the call of Jesus, the Good Shepherd, that we all have heard at one point in our life.  Thank you for responding to that call.  As fellow Catholics with us in just a few moments, we ask you to encourage us to listen to the voice of the Good Shepherd as you did, and to help others to hear the voice of the Good Shepherd by the witness of our lives and our words.  Welcome to the flock!

03 June 2013

Putting Yourself in the Mass


Solemnity of Corpus Christi
            It was not uncommon, in medieval art, for the painter to put himself into his work of art.  From what I have heard, one of the faces on the back wall of the Sistine Chapel, in the great mural The Final Judgment is the face of Michelangelo.  Caravaggio put himself into most of his famous paintings.  And even if they don’t put their image into their paintings, a painter pours his or her heart and soul into creating a work of beauty, a work which shows forth the splendor of the truth.

            Today’s readings focus us in on offering what we have, of putting ourselves into what we are doing, no matter how little or how big.  The first reading from Genesis is the story where Melchizedek blesses bread and wine and offers them to God Most High, and then Abram offers him a tenth (or tithe) of everything.  The Letter to the Hebrews makes a big deal out of this event, because one greater blesses one who is lesser, and you only offer a tithe if there is a debt to be paid to another.  Now, Melchizedek must have been pretty important to make Abram, the Father of the Chosen People, the lesser of the two, and for Abram to offer Melchizedek a tithe.  The author of the Letter to the Hebrews focuses in on Melchizedek’s name, which means king of righteousness, and his country, King of Salem, from the root word, shalom, which makes him the King of Peace, and that, unlike almost everyone else in Scripture, there is no lineage.  Melchizedek just shows up without father or mother or ancestors.  For this reason, the Letter to the Hebrews states that Melchizedek was a foreshadowing of Christ, the true King of Righteousness and King of Peace, who is the co-eternal Son of the Father, without beginning.  When you throw in offering bread and wine, too, it is not hard to see why the author equated the two. 
            And in the Gospel, there are only five loaves and two fish to feed five thousand men, not to mention women and children.  But they are offered to Jesus who miraculously multiplies them so that it is enough, and not just enough, but enough to satisfy everyone. 
            And so we often talk about stewardship: sharing the time, talent, and treasure we have with the Church to continue the work of Christ.  Think of anything you like here at St. John or St. Thomas.  We can’t do it without people generously donating their time.  Think of anything you like here at St. John or St. Thomas.  We can’t do it without people coming together to use a diversity of gifts towards a common goal.  No one person has a monopoly on all the gifts necessary to preach Jesus Christ and His salvation.  Think of anything you like here at St. John or St. Thomas.  We can’t do it without people giving of their treasure to fund the staff salaries, the opportunities for retreats and programs, etc.  And the burden is not the laity’s alone to bear.  I also feel compelled to give to our parish each week, to the scholarship fund for St. Thomas Aquinas parish school, to the Capital Campaign we are in for the school, to DSA, and my list, probably like yours, goes on and on, even beyond this parish.
            But, as we celebrate Corpus Christi today, I want to ask you: do you put yourself in the celebration of the Mass?  Do you invest your energy when you come here each Sunday, or is it something to pass an hour on a Sunday morning?  I can tell you that, for me, celebrating Mass is exhausting.  Our sacristans and Mass coordinators and servers and tell you that it’s not uncommon for me to yawn out of fatigue after the first Mass and before the second.  Why?  Because each time I celebrate Mass, I try to pour myself in what I am saying or chanting and doing.  I try to bring all of who I am, and when I offer all of me, it can be exhausting.
            Because we are all members of the priesthood of the faithful, we have a priestly office, even if it isn’t the same as the ministerial priesthood.  All of us baptized are invited by Holy Mother Church to offer who we are to the Father with the Son in the power of the Holy Spirit.  Yes, we pass the basket to collect our treasure.  Yes, we bring up bread and wine.  But united with that bread and wine is supposed to be all of who we are.  Did you have a crummy week where nothing seemed to go right?  Offer it to God, united with the bread and wine as you silently listen to the words of Jesus offering His Body and Blood to the Father.  Did you have a great week where everything was just how you wanted it?  Rejoice and thank God by offering it united to the bread and the wine.  This morning, eight of our parish children have the opportunity to offer their excitement, and maybe a little nervousness, with that bread and wine, as they prepare to receive the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ, the eternal High Priest and Victim for the first time.  All of us, no matter what our age, vocation, occupation, or race, can put ourselves into the Paschal Mystery and offer ourselves to God.    As Lumen gentium, 34 from the Second Vatican Council stated:

all their works, prayers and apostolic endeavors, their ordinary married and family life, their daily occupations, their physical and mental relaxation, if carried out in the Spirit, and even the hardships of life, if patiently borne—all these become “spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.”  Together with the offering of the Lord’s body, they are most fittingly offered in the celebration of the Eucharist.

Pour yourself into this, and every Mass.  Make it not just a routine, but a purposeful time to unite yourself to the Lord by offering your lives with the bread and wine, which will be given back to you as the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity, of our Lord Jesus Christ.  Put yourself into the beautiful work of art that the Mass is.