
Jubilarians — You Are Witnesses!
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Bishop of Arlington
(From the issue of 10/30/03)
The following homily was given by Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde
during the Marriage Jubilee Mass at St. Thomas More Cathedral in Arlington,
on Sunday, Oct. 26, 2003.
In a particular way, I wish to speak to you, our golden and silver
marriage Jubilarians, who are gathered in this cathedral this afternoon,
surrounded by your immediate family members, other relatives and friends
and, indeed, by our entire diocesan community, who, present in spirit, are
praying for you and rejoicing with you on this special day.
Dear Jubilarians, you are witnesses! For 50 and 25 years you have been
witnessing to the truth, rooted in both the Word of God and in the natural
law, that marriage is the union of one man with one woman. God alone is the
author of marriage and from the beginning of creation He has intended that
the union of marriage involves only one man with one woman. The Catechism
of the Catholic Church teaches us: "The vocation to marriage is written
in the very nature of man and woman as they came from the hand of the
Creator. Marriage is not a purely human institution despite the many
variations it may have undergone through the centuries in different
cultures, social structures and spiritual attitudes. These differences
should not cause us to forget its common and permanent characteristics.
Although the dignity of this institution is not transparent everywhere with
the same clarity, same sense of the greatness, the matrimonial union exists
in all cultures. ‘The well-being of the individual person and of both human
and Christian society is closely bound up with the healthy state of conjugal
and family life’" (no. 1603). I thank you for witnessing to the dignity and
sanctity of marriage. Especially in these days, we are in need of your
witness because there are increasing efforts to redefine marriage completely
by extending it from the union of one man with one woman to include the
union of two men or of two women. Your witness strengthens us to remain
steadfast in our defense of marriage as it is intended by God, its author
and creator.
Dear Jubilarians, you are witnesses! For 50 and 25 years, you have been
witnessing in your own lives to the transforming power of prayer. After all,
the Lord has indeed heard the prayer you made when first married — the
prayer whose words echoed what Tobiah said to the Lord when he married his
wife Sarah, the prayer heard in today’s first ready: "[Lord], call down your
mercy on me and on her, and allow us to live together to a happy old age."
Today, we gather as a diocesan family to recognize that God has answered
your prayer. God has been with you through the years to strengthen you in
times of trial and to gladden your hearts in times of blessing. Yes, prayer
is essential to each of us living out the individual vocation God has given
us because in the experience of prayer, we become more open to God’s
transforming grace and become more able to respond generously and faithfully
to His will in our lives.
Dear Jubilarians, you are witnesses! For 50 and 25 years, you have been
witnessing to the power of love transformed by the presence of Jesus Christ.
From the moment you gave your consent before God and His Church, the Lord
Jesus has been a partner in your lives as husband and wife. His presence,
deepened through daily prayer and the reception of the sacraments,
especially Penance and Eucharist, has truly transformed your love for each
other. His presence has enabled your mutual love to become the kind of love
described by St. Paul in today’s second reading taken from his First Letter
to the Corinthians. You have seen the many faces of this love in yourself or
your spouse over the years. St. Paul gives us a picture of what love looks
like and of what love does not look like, so that we can pattern our lives
on authentic Gospel love. We need these concrete guidelines as a measuring
stick and an inspiration.
Yes, we each need to savor the many faces of love described by St. Paul.
Whatever our individual vocations, however many more years are left to us
for the journey to the Father’s house, we are called to live out in our
daily lives the multi-faceted love St. Paul outlines. He tells us that love
is patient, kind, not jealous, not pompous, not inflated (with itself), not
rude; love does not seek its own interests, is not quick tempered, does not
brood over injury, does not rejoice over wrongdoing but rejoices with the
truth. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures
all things. Love never fails. The loss of gospel love in our world has led
to the breakdown of families and, indeed, to a profound loss of truth and of
respect for human life. With your witness, dear Jubilarians, each of us,
whatever our individual vocation, is strengthened to invite the Lord Jesus
to come more deeply into our lives each day, and to be, with us, a partner
and a companion, as we seek to live more generously and faithfully the
responsibilities of our calling as priests, persons living the consecrated
life, married persons, widowed persons or single persons dedicated to the
Lord by chastity and self-giving.
As we congratulate you, our jubilee couples, for your witness of gospel
love in your marriages, we entrust you and ourselves to our Blessed Mother.
Today’s gospel reading projects before us the wedding at Cana. We see so
clearly the solicitude of Our Lady for the newly-married couple, who were on
the brink of being embarrassed during their wedding reception because the
wine had run out. Mary interceded for them with Her Son who performed His
first miracle in answer to His Mother’s request. How closely Our Lady is to
all married couples, especially to you who today are observing your golden
and silver anniversaries! How fitting that we celebrate marriage jubilees in
this month dedicated to her! How loved are married couples, since Jesus
chose to perform His first miracle at a wedding.
Dear Jubilarians and dear married couples all, with Mary’s prayer
assisting you, open your hearts to the Lord Jesus everyday, so that He may
transform the water of your human love into the wine of Gospel love — the
love you need to continue to live in gratitude the holy and marvelous
vocation to which He has called you.
Dear Jubilarians, as we thank you once again for your witness, each one
of us here recommits himself or herself to the vocation God has given us,
asking the help of Our Blessed Lady to become, with you, witnesses to the
Gospel of Truth and Hope, of Peace and Justice, and of Life and Love.
Copyright ©2003 Arlington Catholic
Herald. All rights reserved. |