FEAST OF THE
BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST C 2019
PROPAGATION
OF THE FAITH HOMILY
In my 51
years as a priest, excluding Christmas and Easter Masses, I have never
experienced a liturgy in which at 6:00 am on each and every school day 1,000
high school girls in full Catholic school uniform sing the opening hymn with
enthusiastic voices accompanied only by one high school girl in the choir loft
striking a well-worn drum. I tell you
looking out from the altar at these Tanzanian girls was a mystical moment of
prayerfulness and joy.
We were
indeed on holy ground. Father Damian
Milliken, a Benedictine priest from Elmira, New York, was presiding at the
Mass. Father Damian is a priest in his
80’s and has ministered in the last 50 years of his priesthood serving the
poorest of the poor in Tanzania, East Africa.
The genuine love and respect that Father Damian enjoys with these young
Tanzanians and their families and all who live in the area around Mazinde Ju is
so Christ-like and uplifting.
Equally
impressive is a religious community of consecrated women who are such an
important part of the teaching faculty.
These are the religious sisters of Usambara. Dressed in their full habit, these sisters
number 500 in Tanzania. These sisters
know in their DNA the joy of the Lord.
Last October
six parishioners from St. Joseph’s parish made this pilgrimage to Tanzania
arriving in the Mount Kilimanjaro International Airport warmly greeted by
Father Damian. As a side bar, we didn’t
have time to hike up Mt Kilimanjaro but that mountain sure is impressive. We visited and became part of the community
of St. Mary’s School in Mazinde Ju located on the side of a mountain in one of
the poorest regions of Tanzania. This
was such a precious God moment for the six of us. We were privileged to enter the world of Father
Damian and the sisters of Usambara and these high school girls who are so very,
very grateful for this educational experience that gives them the opportunity
to go on to a university and have job opportunities which otherwise these
students simply would not have. For
these students come from very poor families.
In a culture
that is so different from what I am used to, to be immediately accepted and
embraced and loved truly is an experience of a lifetime.
To describe
St Mary’s School is a bit of a challenge.
It is a residential school where these students live during the academic
year and are able to get three healthy meals each day. The dormitories these students live in are
filled with bunk beds. Each girl has a
tiny cubicle which houses all her worldly possessions including all her
clothing. I have a beautiful niece for
whom to put all her clothes in this tiny cubicle would simply be
impossible.
These
beloved daughters of God have no sense of entitlement by which they expect
people to take care of them. They are so
grateful for every opportunity in life that is given to them. They are not saddened by the effects of the
poverty of the country; they are joy-filled in the opportunity that is given to
them as students in this quality academic setting that is filled with so much
love and so much spirituality.
Why do I
tell you all this? This weekend is our
parish’s annual Propagation of the Faith Mission Appeal in which we are asked
to spiritually and financially a mission component of the world-wide Catholic
Church. In previous years in this annual Propagation
of the Faith Mission appeal, Father Damian has spoken in parishes in our
diocese; last year Sister Evetha, a religious sister of Usambara and the
principal/head mistress of the school preached the mission homily. This year, Father Damian asked me to preach
in order to save the money that would have cost for him to make the trip.
For the last
three years, I have personally contributed $1,000 which provides a scholarship
for a student for a whole year. I gladly make this $1,000 contribution each
year. I had the profound privilege of
spending some time with this young Tanzanian girl I have sponsoring for the
last three years. I tell you I had to
tell myself: “Be still my heart.” when I realized the opportunity I was giving
this daughter of God in my prayer and in my tithing commitment. In all truth, l cannot think of a better use
of this money. The second collection today
goes in support of this Tanzanian ministry.
I have talked about St. Mary’s School, our contributions also go to
support another nearby high school for schools founded by Father Damian and
headed by Sister Christa, another Sister of Usambara. Father
Damian has also founded St Benedict’s parish with an elementary school
connected to it.
If you wish
to take another step beyond the second collection, I or any of the parishioners
of St. Joe’s who are with us today, would gladly talk to you about the possibility
of you making this pilgrimage to Tanzania and/or providing scholarship money
for a student.
Lest you
think that I have forgotten about the feast that we celebrate today, I think
our support of this Tanzanian ministry has everything to do with the beautiful
feast of the Body and Blood of Christ, the feast of Corpus Christi.
In
reflecting on this Eucharistic Feast, we are celebrating the central prayer of
our faith tradition. We are a part of a
tradition that is nearly 2,000 years old.
At the Table of the Lord, we feed and nourish the deepest hungers of the
human heart.
As a
Eucharistic community, we gather with an attitude of gratitude. We gather to give thanks to the Lord our
God. As we are fed and nourished at the
Eucharistic altar, we seek the grace to live as Jesus lives, to love as Jesus
loves, to forgive as Jesus forgives us.
We continue
our Eucharistic prayer with our parish’s strong commitment to Eucharistic
adoration. Our prayer is the silent
journey of the heart to be in the presence of our God.
While the
Mass is our greatest prayer, it is what we do outside the Mass that also
determines the genuineness of the offering we make at the altar each
Sunday. By our mutual love for one
another, by our concern for those in need, we will be recognized as the
followers of Jesus.
Thus our
missionary support of the educational and spiritual needs of these young
Tanzanians goes to the heart of our Eucharistic prayer. Again, I urge your generosity in today’s
second collection.
Have a
blessed day.
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