
Master, To Whom Shall We Go?
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 8/31/06)
The following homily was given by Arlington
Bishop Paul S. Loverde on Aug. 27, the 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time, at
the Cathedral of St. Thomas More in Arlington.
The Gospel scene just proclaimed
in our hearing took place centuries ago and yet, because the Word of God
is living and present, this scene is taking place right now in our midst.
Jesus has spoken “hard sayings” to us. Some among us murmur,
“This saying is hard; who can accept it?” Sadly, even some
within the Church no longer accompany Jesus; they walk away and leave.
Jesus turns to us and says, “Do you also want to leave?” What
is our reply? With Simon Peter, will we answer, “Master, to whom
shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe
and are convinced that you are the Holy One of God”? Yes, as we
listen to Christ and to the Teaching Office of the Church, the Magisterium,
which echoes Christ’s voice and the Truth He proclaims, we hear
“hard sayings,” that is, teachings that clearly challenge
our own preconceptions of what the Catholic Faith is all about and challenge
the contemporary culture in which we live. These teachings direct us to
live in the world but to be not of the world, to live in the way Christ
points out by His own example and through His Church. For example, we
are to forgive while holding on to a grudge or even taking revenge is
how society would counsel us to act. We are to uphold and protect human
life from conception to natural death while attacks on human life, like
abortion, embryonic stem-cell research and physician-assisted suicide
are judged by the culture of death surrounding us as acceptable and politically
correct. We are to defend marriage as the union only of one man with one
woman while the society around us would say that doing this is discriminating
and unfair. Other examples could also be cited. In the end, we are to
make our own — to obey — all of Christ’s teachings made
clear through the Church while many in society, even within the Church,
try to pick and choose only those which seem convenient to them in a “cafeteria-style”
approach.
So, now, as centuries ago, Jesus is asking us, “Do you also want
to leave?” What is our response this morning as we gather with the
Lord Jesus in this renewal of His life-giving Death and Resurrection?
With Simon Peter, we respond, do we not, “Master, to whom shall
we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and
are convinced that You are the Holy One of God.”
Our response is rooted in a process of deepening faith in Jesus. Like
Simon Peter, we too admit, “We have come to believe.” This
deepening faith is ongoing. It is purified by our struggles to put aside
our own preconceptions, our own personal preferences, in loving obedience
to Jesus, Who speaks to our hearts “words [that are] Spirit and
life, words that are truly life-giving. Christ tells us that He alone
is the Way, the Truth and the Life. Christ founded the Church with the
guaranteed guidance of God the Holy Spirit so that we would follow His
way in safety, know His truth with certainty and live His life in union
with Him. In the end, our obedience is to Christ Jesus Himself, as He
speaks to us and leads us through His representatives whom He gives us,
especially the pope and the bishops, who are in union with St. Peter’s
successor. We give to Christ our “obedience of faith.” “We
have come to believe and are convinced that You are the Holy One of God.”
A new school year is about to begin for our young people, from pre-school
through college and university. This is a privileged opportunity for them
and, indeed, for all of us, to grow in the knowledge and understanding
of Christ’s truth through the official teachings of His Church.
This will happen through our Catholic schools, parish catechetical programs,
youth ministry, campus ministry, Theology on Tap gatherings and adult
study sessions.
Not only is this new school year a privileged opportunity to grow in the
knowledge and understanding of Christ’s truth, but it is also a
graced time to deepen our union with the Lord Jesus and through Him, with
the Father and the Holy Spirit. The Christian way of life is ultimately
living in a deeply personal relationship with the Trinity within the community
of Christ’s disciples, the Church. Our constant prayer must be:
“Come, Lord Jesus, live in me; transform me; unite my heart with
Yours now and forever. Make my heart the dwelling place of God, Three
in One.”
As I conclude this homily, permit me to summarize all that we have reflected
upon with a brief passage from the current issue of Magnificat, an aid
to worship and prayer published monthly and familiar to many of you.
“Many murmur, ‘This saying is hard; who can accept it?’
If we approach Christianity from our own presuppositions, we completely
miss the fact, as Pope Benedict XVI writes, that ‘being Christian
is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter
with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive
direction.’ We are to look beyond the ‘saying’ to the
Say-er. This is what it means to ‘be subordinate to one another
out of reverence for Christ.’ ‘Decide today whom you will
serve’ — your ideas and preconceptions, or ‘the Lord’”
(pp 367-68).
Yes, the Gospel scene is being relived right now. Jesus is asking, “Do
you also want to leave?” And, by His transforming grace, we are
replying, “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal
life. We have come to believe and are convinced that You are the Holy
One of God.” “Yes, Lord, we will stay with You each day until,
by Your grace, we are with You in heaven. Amen.”
Copyright (c) 2006 Arlington Catholic
Herald
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