
Diocesan Youth Rally: All in a Day's Work
The following homily was given by
Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde on Saturday, Sept. 21, for the Diocesan Youth Rally Mass
held at Bishop OConnell High School in Arlington.
It is a joy for me to be with all of you this evening. As I look at each
of you, I see the future of our Church and our world. The theme for this years youth
rally is "All in a days work." Yes, our Scripture readings this evening
clearly remind us that God calls each of us to work in His vineyard. For example, in the
first reading from the Book of the Prophet Isaiah, we hear the Lords invitation in
these words: "Seek the Lord while he may be found, call him while he is near."
And, in the Gospel reading, Jesus Himself invites us through the parable of the landowner
who hired laborers to work in his vineyard. God is inviting us into His vineyard to be His
witnesses to our generation, to our world.
Two events have been deeply etched into our lives at the dawn of this
third Christian millennium: the Jubilee Year of 2000 and the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in
2001. The dawn of this millennium saw pilgrims from every corner of the earth streaming
into Rome and designated Jubilee churches in every diocese to recommit themselves to
Christ and to His Church. The Church threw open the storehouse of graces for all humanity
and invited them to come and draw deeply from this treasure trove.
During the Jubilee Year, diverse groups of people came together in Rome
and their level of participation was truly impressive (cf. Novo Millennio Ineunte,
no 9). This was especially true of the gathering of the worlds young people in
August of 2000. Our Holy Father wrote specifically about those young people in his
Apostolic Letter on the New Millennium. "And how could we fail to recall especially the
joyful and inspiring gathering of young people? If there is an image of the Jubilee of
the Year 2000 that more than any other will live on in memory, it is surely the streams of
young people with whom I was able to engage in a sort of very special dialogue, filled
with mutual affection and deep understanding.
Yet again, the young have shown
themselves to be for Rome and for the Church a special gift of the Spirit of God.
The Jubilee of young people [told] us that young people, whatever their possible
ambiguities, have a profound longing for those genuine values which find their fullness in
Christ. Is not Christ the secret of true freedom and profound joy of heart? Is not Christ
the supreme friend and the teacher of all genuine friendship? If Christ is presented to
young people as he really is, they experience him as the answer that is convincing and
they accept his message, even when it is demanding and bears the mark of the cross. For
this reason, in response to their enthusiasm, I did not hesitate to ask them to make a
radical choice of faith and life and present them with a stupendous task: to become
morning watchmen (cf. Is 21:11-12) at the dawn of the new millennium"
(no. 9).
The second event was the terrorist attacks on our nation. Nineteen men
hijacked four airplanes and flew them into three buildings and a field. Dissatisfied with
life, they chose to end their own and take as many innocent civilians as they could with
them. Why? Only they truly know the answer to that question, but the philosophy they
demonstrated at the dawn of this third Christian millennium is one that elevates
individual passions over the rights of others, and the ethic of death over the natural
right to life of innocents.
The Holy Father at World Youth Day in Toronto consigned to each of you
and to your generation the task of being the builders of a new civilization. He said:
"The aspiration that humanity nurtures, amid countless injustices and sufferings, is
the hope of a new civilization marked by freedom and peace. But for such an undertaking, a
new generation of builders is needed. Moved not by fear or violence but by the urgency
of genuine love, they must learn to build, brick by brick, the city of God within the city
of man.
[Y]ou must be those builders! You are the men and
women of tomorrow. The future is in your hearts and in your hands. God is entrusting to
you the task, at once difficult and uplifting, of working with him in the building of the civilization
of love (Address 7/27/02, 4).
How do you go about building, brick by brick, the city of God within the
city of man and be the morning watchmen of this new millennium? By drawing closer to
Christ in true friendship, by becoming more like Christ in your thoughts, words and
actions, by being holy! This is the basic challenge which Pope John Paul II gives all of
us, especially you who are the young Church, in these opening years of the third Christian
millennium. Our Holy Father says to us: "The time has come to repropose
wholeheartedly to everyone [the] high standard of ordinary Christian living: the
whole life of the Christian community and of Christian families must lead in this
direction" (Novo Millennio Ineunte, 31). Indeed, the universal call to
holiness which comprises the "high standard of ordinary Christian living" is the
foundation from which we set out on our days work.
"All in a days work!" You responded to the Lords
invitation to work in his vineyard at Baptism. You are continually strengthened with the
Lords forgiveness in the Sacrament of Penance and with the Lords Body and
Blood through receiving Holy Communion. You have been formed through Catholic education
whether it be in a Catholic school or religious instruction program in your parish. And,
now, you are being invited by the Lord to work in His vineyard to build the city of God
within the city of man. "All in a days work!"
And, as you are setting out on the adventure of your young lives, the
words of Pope John Paul II are very timely. He teaches us that in the pursuit of holiness
and as we set out on our lifes work, we must discover the vocation to which God
calls each of us. He reminds us: "Service, motivated by prayer, is a preferred route
for the birth and growth of genuine vocations to the priesthood, to the consecrated
and missionary life, and of solid lay vocations, of married and unmarried people, shaped
by dedication to serving others" (LOsservatore Romano, 37, Sept. 11,
2002, no. 3, pg. 2).
Each of you is in a different place in terms of your relationship with
Jesus. Some of you heard the call to come closer to Him in true friendship and to work in
His vineyard earlier in your lives and responded with an enthusiastic "Yes!"
Others of you may have heard the same call and responded "Maybe later, Lord,"
but now want to express a generous "Yes!" Still others may be hearing the
Lords call for the first time in a very clear and new way! No matter when you come
to God, He will provide for that day. He will give you the gift of the Holy Spirit to
strengthen your will in saying and in living a generous "Yes" "Here
I am, Lord, send me!"
"All in a days work!" Will you commit your life to
building the city of God or to building the city of man? Will you say "yes" to
the Lord as He invites you to labor in His vineyard within the specific vocation or
calling in life He will reveal to you?
Dear young people of the Church of Arlington, the Lord is inviting you
to build a new civilization of love and life, to be the morning watchmen in this new
millennium! As your bishop, I echo the Holy Father and challenge you to make a radical
choice of faith and life, to grow into ever deepening friendship with Jesus, possessing
"
a faith full of life for a life full of faith" (LOsservatore
Romano, 37, Sept. 11, 2002, no. 2, pg. 2). Say "yes" to Jesus and to His
Church! He will not fail you or forsake you! Be strong and be courageous! I pray for you
each day and ask that you pray for me too. Together, let us be laborers in the Lords
vineyard and, with Him, build the new city of God!
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