Sunday, May 26, 2024

There is embedded in us a Trinitarian spirituality.

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     TRINITY SUNDAY  B  2024

Today we celebrate the solemnity of the Blessed Trinity.  As Catholic Christians, there is embedded within us is a Trinitarian Spirituality.   We believe in God the Father who is our creator and life-giver.  All is a gift of God.  We believe that God sent his only begotten Son, Christ Jesus, into the world to reveal God’s love for us and to be our Savior and Lord.  We believe in God the Holy Spirit who, on the great feast of Pentecost which we celebrated last Sunday, was sent to us as the Breath and the Spirit of God who will be with us all days until the end of time.  We are the recipients of the gifts of the Spirit that are to be used and shared in the service of one another and the building up of our faith community.

There have been many books written on the dogma, the doctrine of the Trinity – of three persons in one God.  But may our prayer this day not focus so much on doctrine and dogma; rather may our focus be all about the relationships that have been so life-giving for all of us.  So too, a summary of the great mystery of the Trinity is that God is love.  God is revealed as a communion of persons.  The love that is within the union of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is shared with us.  As the Gospel proclaims:  “God so loved the world that He gave us His only Son soi that                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     everyone who believes in Him may not be lost, but may have eternal life.”

Our participation in the life of God is seen in the liturgical greeting that the priest gives immediately following the sign of the cross in every Mass.  “May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you.” 

This feast day of the Blessed Trinity is not a feast for scholars; it is a celebration for lovers.  We celebrate the mystery of the inner life of God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the inner life of God is communal, is relational; it is family, in contemplating the Trinity, we reflect on the family of God.  Today is feast of God’s love and mercy.  Pope Francis Writes that mercy reveals the very nature of the Most Holy Trinity.

Two truths illustrate for us who God is.  God loves people, and secondly, God lives in a holy and healthy relationship of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  If we are made in the image and likeness of God, we too are to love people and be engaged in relationships.  This is a beautiful summary of our spiritual journey.

We beg forgiveness for the sins of racism, judgments, gossip, violence, division, and whatever divides us from one another.  We ask for the grace to be brothers and sisters to one another.

Moses is the first person to address us in today’s Liturgy of the Word.  We get to eavesdrop on a homily he preached to inspire his people to strengthen their commitment.  If we listen as heirs of his tradition, we hear him call us to remember our own experience of God.  He took his people through their memories of the Exodus and hearing God’s voice.  That suggests that we too might recall how and when we have been aware of God’s presence, of God’s love, of God’s grandeur.  He’s recommending that we allow this Day of the Lord to claim some of our time so that we can remember and appreciate the ways we have come to know God in our individual and communal lives. 

On this Memorial Day weekend, may we remember those who have given their lives in the service of our country.  We gather in prayer as a grateful nation and a grateful people.  This leads us into the Eucharistic mystery as we gather to give thanks to the Lord our God.

Today’s Gospel describes Jesus’ final appearance to the disciples and his commissioning of them to carry on the work of evangelization.  Jesus said to his disciples: “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing time in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.” This is a much-expanded vision than the earlier mandate to go only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.

One of Pope Francis’s favorite themes is the commission given to us by the Lord himself is for us to be missionary disciples.  This call demands that we meet people where they are; we accompany people in the journey of life wherever we find people; and we proclaim to them their God-given dignity as God’s beloved sons and daughters.  As missionary disciples we don’t wait for people to come to us, we are commissioned and sent forth to raise people up wherever they are and help them to claim the love that God has for them.

As we celebrate and seek to understand the mystery of the Trinity, we try to explain the meaning of the Trinity in words, but it must be known in the experience of God that goes beyond words.  As we participate in the divine life of God in the sacraments, we share in the love of God.

And so, we begin our liturgy and most often we begin our prayer as we were baptized: “In the name of the Father and of the son and of the Holy Spirit.”  We profess our faith and trust in the God who is love.  

The final sentence of today’s Gospel are the words of Jesus; “I am with you always, until the end of the age.”  The divine presence will remain with the disciples perpetually.  As the disciples of the Lord, may we hear those words of Jesus spoken to us: “I am with you.”

 

Have a Blessed Day.

 

 

Monday, May 20, 2024

In Pentecost, God is born again in a body of believers that is the Church.

 

 

PENTECOST 2024

We usually think of the great feast of Pentecost as the feast of the Holy Spirit.  Would invite you to enlarge this feast day to be the feast of the Church that has received the Holy Spirit.  We are the Church of the Holy Spirit.   We are the People of God who have received the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.

In the great Feast of Pentecost, God is born again not in one body that was Jesus but in a body of believers that is the Church.  Pentecost is the Feast of the birth of the Church.  The Spirit of the Risen Christ is in the Body of believers, in the community of the baptized, in the whole Church.

The feast of Pentecost brings to a close the season of Easter because the gift of the Spirit is the inevitable outcome of the death and resurrection of Jesus. The church understood clearly that what happened to Jesus on Easter Sunday was not just an amazing miracle to prove that he really was the Son of God. It was rather the next step in God’s desire to heal, once and for all, the relationship between himself and a broken humanity. Now the outpouring of the Spirit of Jesus means that our relationship with God is fundamentally transformed. So, let’s celebrate of our new life in the Spirit and the birthday of the church as the new people of God.

God chose a young virgin named Mary to bear God’s Son, and Jesus chose a bunch of Galilean fishermen to share in His ministry.  Now God chooses you and me to hear His message of hope and promise and love in this place and inour world this day.

Initially the disciples were locked in the upper room out of fear.  On the Day of Pentecost those locked doors were thrown open; the fear in the disciples was replaced with a Spirit-filled courage and enthusiasm.  They were now fearless proclaimers of the Word of God.

What had changed for the disciples?  They received the Holy Spirit.

The great truth of Pentecost – for the first disciples and for us as well – is that the Holy Spirit has the power to enlarge and expand the human heart if we allow the Spirit of Jesus to grow and enliven us from within.

Some people call this feast of Pentecost as the feast of locked doors.  And so, we ask ourselves what are the fears and anxieties of our lives that keep us imprisoned, that keep us behind locked doors our of fear?

Perhaps our locked doors is that we are divided into liberal and conservative camps.  We have been so committed to our private little wars that we no longer see ourselves as a communion of faith and love.

And so we pray: “ Come Holy Spirit fill the hearts of your faithful and renew the face of the earth.”

And so, we don’t just commemorate the coming of the Holy Spirit on the first disciples on the day of Pentecost.  On this feast we celebrate not just the original outpouring of the Spirit upon the Church two thousand years ago.  We also rejoice in God’s ongoing outpouring of the Spirit.  The Holy Spirit is God’s dynamic presence in the Church.  It’s the Holy Spirit who inspires to us live lives of love and service, who encourages when we falter, and who forgives us when we deliberatively turn away from God.  Without the constant presence of the Holy Spirit in the Church, we could never live the kind of life that God intends us to live – the kind of life that Jesus lived when he walked this earth.

The Scripture readings call us to a deeper awareness that the gifts of the Holy Spirit call us to a missionary people who seek through the presence of the Spirit to enable us to seek unity among God’s people.

The Church is, in the words of The Second Vatican Council, ‘missionary by its very nature’.  All its members, all who are baptized in the Spirit, are consecrated as missionary disciples of Jesus and called to take responsibility for the evangelization of the world.  A Church that turns in on itself and stops being missionary is no longer the Church of Christ but simply a sodality, a group of like-minded people who simply like each other’s company.  Pope Francis, in his first Apostolic Exhortation, the JOY OF THE GOSPPLE, urges the Church to be true to its missionary calling.  He wants the Church to reach out towards those on the margins and bring healing and hope to the wounded of this world.  He states:  “I prefer a Church which is bruised, hurting and dirty because it has been out on the streets, rather than a Church which is unhealthy from being confined and from clinging to its own security.  We need, he insists, a church that knows how to open her arms and welcome everyone.

 

Now you may rightly ask if we are the Church of the Holy Spirit and we believe that the Spirit is God is present among, why is there is so much craziness in our world, why so much pain and hardship, why so much war and acts of terrorism, why is that so much division in our world.  Why do some experience the church as harsh and judgmental rather than witnessing to the love and forgiveness of God.

These realities in our Church and in our world force us to recognize that we are a part of an imperfect Church and are left wondering whether ours is the kind of Church that Jesus hoped for, the kind of Church that Jesus shed his blood for.

Be assured that we are not yet the Church that Jesus hoped for, but we are the Church that Jesus suffered and died for.  As St Paul teaches in his letter to the Romans: ”God proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us.”

And so, we pray again and again:  “Come Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful and renew the face of the earth.

 

Have a blessed day.