Monday, October 3, 2011

10/9/2011 – Homily for the 28th Sunday in ordinary time – Homily for Respect Life Month - Isaiah 25:6-10a, Psalm 23

It is interesting that two of the readings that we hear today are ones that we often have in our Catholic funeral liturgies. From the prophet Isaiah, we hear a vision of a great banquet that God prepares for us, a banquet of rich food and the best wines, a vision that foreshadows the heavenly banquet that awaits us when we unite with God in the eternal life we have after we end our lives here on earth.  At this banquet God will wipe away our tears, he will destroy death forever by giving us everlasting life.  I think that all of us can relate to this message and this wonderful banquet because food and banquets are so integral a part of the celebrations that we have here as a part of our lives here on earth.  Think of the wonderful meals Marion, Natalie, and the Friendship Committee prepare for our funerals and the mass of anointing, the way our families celebrate Christmas, birthdays, and other holidays, and the wedding banquet that we had last weekend at the country club here in Yazoo City to celebrate the marriage of Rachel Parker and Josh Brewer.

Then, in Psalm 23, a psalm most of us learned about when we were children, we hear about the Lord as our shepherd, a shepherd who leads us to green pastures and restful waters, who guides us down the right path, who protects us even when we travel through the dark valleys of struggle and crisis in our lives.  And if we have the Lord as our shepherd and as the center of our lives, that means that everything else is not at the center and is not the primary focus of our lives here on earth.  
        
As we hear these readings today, we recognize the month of October specifically in the way we Catholics should respect all human life. This year’s theme of Respect Life month comes directly from Jesus’: “I came so that all might have life and have it to the full.”  As we think about God’s heavenly banquet, about what awaits us in eternal salvation and in the new life that we gain through Christ’s death and resurrection, it is good for us to reflect upon all of the goodness and life that we have here on earth.  Even as we go through the ups and downs of life, as we work hard to provide a good life for ourselves, as we try to live out the Gospel values and the vocations to which God calls us, I think that we often can take many aspects of our lives and our faith for granted.  Yet, respect for life is something we certainly cannot take for granted, not in our world today where the modern lifestyles of many in our society & the policies our nation enacts can be so contrary to the Gospel of life that our faith proclaims.  Pope John Paul II stated in very strong words that the dignity of life in our society faces multiple threats, both old & new, from the culture of death that exists today.  It might shock us that in all the abundance and opportunities we have in our world & in our modern American society, that the Pope would call it a culture of death. Yes, poverty, hunger, endemic diseases, & violence have plagued humanity since the beginning of civilization. Yet, the new threats that plague our modern world include abortions that are easily obtained, euthanasia, human cloning, human embryonic stem cell research, widespread recreational drug use, lack of access to health care, the use of the death penalty, and tampering with our world's ecological balance. I can go on to list other abuses that exist in our modern American society that threaten the dignity of human life, but the list would be overwhelming.  As followers of Christ, we are called to reflect upon what we can do as individuals & as a community of faith to promote the respect for life in our society & in our lives.  Our Catholic stance on life respects all human life from the moment of conception to the moment of natural death.  A catchy way is remember it is “from the womb to the tomb.”  The late Cardinal Bernadin of Chicago saw all of the issues that fall under our respect for human life as a seamless garment encompassing many different aspects of life.

As I mentioned, the entire month of October is designated as Respect Life Month for us Catholics each year.  However, it is not something that we should recognize just in one particular month or only during special times of the year.  Our respect for human life should becomes an intrinsic part of the way we live out the Catholic faith that we all profess & believe.  There are both little and big ways we can probably think of in which we can incorporate the Gospel of life into our daily lives.  It’s one think to see God’s glory in the heavenly banquet, or to see Jesus as our Good Shepherd, but do we relate this to the Gospel of Life that we are taught to follow?  Do we see Christ in the unborn baby whose life is threatened, in the child or youth who is lonely or who is being bullied and picked on in school?  Do we see him in the prisoner who has no one visiting him & has no one to bring God's message of salvation to him?  Do we see Christ in the homeless person waiting in line to get something to eat at Manna House?   Do we see him in the single mother who decided not to have an abortion, but who is at the end of her ropes trying to earn a living & trying to care for & nurture a child at the same time?  And how to reach out to these individuals who perhaps need help or a kind word and encouragement in their lives? Respecting life is not just an abstract concept, but it is truly living out the Gospel of Life in our lives.  

No comments:

Post a Comment