
Remaining Faithful, No Matter the Cost
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Special to the HERALD
(From the issue of 4/6/06)
The following homily was given by Arlington Bishop Paul S.
Loverde on April 2, the Fifth Sunday of Lent and the first anniversary
of the death of Pope John Paul II, at the Cathedral of St. Thomas More
in Arlington.
Every one of us is impressed and touched, I think, by a
person who is faithful to his or her responsibilities in life. When we
observe such a person, remaining faithful in good times and in bad, in
sickness and in health, something within us affirms: “Yes, there
is a good person, someone I want to imitate.”
Remaining faithful, no matter the cost: is this not what we are observing
today in the Gospel account just proclaimed in our hearing? The Lord Jesus
remains ever faithful to doing what God His Father is asking; the Lord
Jesus remains ever faithful to the mission which He received: to give
His life for the salvation of every human person. Jesus Himself points
to this fidelity: “I am troubled now. Yet, what should I say? ‘Father,
save me from this hour?’ But it was for this purpose that I came
to this hour. Father, glorify your name.”
Remaining faithful, no matter the cost: this would ultimately lead Jesus
to suffering and a cruel death. As we heard in today’s second reading,
“In the days when Christ Jesus was in the flesh, he offered prayers
and supplications with loud cries and tears … . Son though he was,
he learned obedience from what he suffered; … .” Jesus’
fidelity led Him to the Cross and then to His glorious resurrection. By
that Dying and Rising, Jesus won for us the priceless gift of salvation;
He freed us from the grip of eternal death and sin. “He became the
source of eternal salvation for all who obey him.” Or, as He Himself
tells us, “And when I am lifted up from the earth, I will draw everyone
to myself.”
Remaining faithful, no matter the cost: this must be the fundamental attitude
of every follower of Jesus. From Baptism on, we are being called each
day to be like Jesus, to think, to speak and to act like Him. Our daily
discipleship is truly a daily imitation of Jesus. So then, we too must
remain faithful to our Baptismal consecration, to the responsibilities
and duties of our individual vocations, whether that be to the priesthood,
the consecrated or religious life, the permanent diaconate, marriage or
the chaste single life. We must remain faithful to Jesus and to all that
He teaches us through the Scriptures, the Living Tradition of the Church
and the Teaching Office or Magisterium of the Church.
Lent is the season for recalling our Baptismal consecration and renewing
our Baptismal commitment. Through prayer, fasting or penance, and almsgiving
or deeds of mercy, we are seeking to become renewed in mind and in heart,
so that we can live in greater fidelity to the Lord.
Remaining faithful, no matter the cost: this was so eminently visible
in Pope John Paul II whose first anniversary of death we are observing
today. Pope John Paul II was truly faithful to the Lord and to the Lord’s
will for his life. He heard Jesus’ call: “Follow Me.”
And in faithful obedience to that summons, Pope John Paul II followed
his Lord and Savior. Remaining faithful meant that the young Karol Wojtyla
would put aside literature, the theater and poetry and enter the seminary
to become a priest. Remaining faithful meant that Father Karol Wojtyla
would move away from his much-loved teaching duties to accept the call
to become a bishop, first as Auxiliary and later as Archbishop of Krakow.
Remaining faithful meant that Cardinal Wojtyla would leave his archdiocese
and native land to follow the Lord’s will that he be Universal Pastor
of the Catholic Church as Pope John Paul II.
Remaining faithful, no matter the cost: this marked the entire papacy
of our beloved Pope John Paul II from the moment of his election on Oct.
16, 1978, to the moment of his death at 9:37 p.m. on April 2, 2005. He
remained faithful to the Lord and to the calling and mission which the
Lord gave him — in proclaiming clearly and fearlessly the Gospel
of Life, in seeking to draw every disciple to true holiness of life, in
upholding the dignity of every human person, in traveling throughout the
world to bring Christ and the Light and Truth of His Gospel to everyone.
Above all, he remained faithful in sickness and increasing infirmity.
When most people would limit public appearance so as not to be seen becoming
weaker and more frail by the ravages of a debilitating illness, Pope John
Paul II remained among us, a shining example of how to carry the cross
of infirmity with dignity and patience. He lived out the paschal mystery
in his life without hesitation or shame. Pope Benedict XVI pointed this
out so beautifully when he, as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, preached the
homily at Pope Jon Paul II’s Funeral. “And reflecting on the
assassination attempt, he said: ‘In sacrificing himself for us all,
Christ gave a new meaning to suffering, opening up a new dimension, a
new order: the order of love … . It is this suffering which burns
and consumes evil with the flame of love and draws forth even from sin
a great flowering of good’. Impelled by this vision, the Pope suffered
and loved in communion with Christ, and that is why the message of his
suffering and his silence proved so eloquent and so fruitful.”
Yes, the legacy which Pope John Paul II left us is precisely “remaining
faithful, no matter the cost.” This fidelity which he lived will
ultimately lead, I believe, to his beatification and canonization. This
same fidelity, held out for us to imitate, leads us to follow Christ more
closely, because remaining faithful to God, no matter the cost, is what
Jesus Himself lived and taught.
In these remaining days of Lent, with the example of Pope John Paul II
to inspire and to guide us, let us seek to remain faithful, no matter
the cost. In doing so, we will be living as true disciples of Jesus, the
Faithful One and our Lord and Savior. Amen.
Copyright ©2006 Arlington
Catholic Herald. All rights reserved.
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