
Go Forth to Announce the Coming of God
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Special to the Herald
(From the issue of 8/5/04)
This homily was given by Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde at the
Cathedral of St. Thomas More in Arlington on July 4, 2004, the Fourteenth
Sunday in Ordinary time.
I propose three scenes as the framework for this homily. The first scene
is depicted for us in today’s Gospel passage: Jesus appointing and sending
forth His disciples, in pairs, to proclaim the coming of God’s Kingdom. " …
the Lord appointed 72 others whom he sent ahead of him in pairs to every
town and place he intended to visit … say to them, ‘The Kingdom of God is at
hand for you.’ "
The second scene took place many centuries later, on Oct. 20, 1863. A
seminarian, Damien De Veuster, and his companions boarded the train for
Bremerhaven, Germany, where a ship which would take them to Hawai’i as
missionaries of the Lord Jesus. This Damien is known now as Father Damien,
the Leper Priest of Moloka’i, beatified by Pope John Paul II in June, 1994.
The third scene is taking place here — in our cathedral. Father
Christopher Murphy, a priest of this diocesan church of Arlington, is being
missioned for service as a missionary in the diocesan church of San Juan de
la Maguana in the Dominican Republic. Bishop John Keating, my predecessor,
began this missionary outreach from our diocese to the Diocese of San Juan
de la Maguana and since that beginning priests have been serving God’s
people in two parishes: one in Banica and the other in Pedro Santana,
together with the outlying stations connected to these parishes.
Yes, from His initial sending forth of the 72 disciples, the Lord Jesus
continues to choose, to call and to mission men and women — priests,
deacons, religious and laity — to go forth to every place and proclaim the
Good News of God’s reign. Our Holy Father has reminded us often that the
Church is by nature missionary. In his 1990 encyclical, "Mission of Christ
the Redeemer," he wrote: "Today, as never before, the Church has the
opportunity of bringing the gospel, by witness and word, to all people and
nations" (No. 92). Moreover, the missionary mandate is not only being given
to priests and religious, but also to every member of the Church, to be
exercised in ways which are in keeping with our individual vocations. "No
believer in Christ, no institution of the Church, can avoid this supreme
duty: to proclaim Christ to all peoples" (Ibid, No. 3).
So, today, we are sending forth one of our own priests to proclaim Christ
and His Gospel of salvation to the people in the Dominican Republic. He will
join Father Daniel Gee in this missionary service, replacing Father Jack
O’Hara who will return here; others too will assist. Father Murphy, we give
thanks to God and to you for your willingness to serve the Church in this
manner — as a missionary. Your second name is Damien, so we do ask the
prayerful intercession of Blessed Damien, as you go forth from us to preach
the Gospel and to serve God’s people in Banica and in Pedro Santana. Please
know that our prayers and support accompany you each day, as in word and in
deed, you too echo the Lord’s words: "The Kingdom of God is at hand for
you."
Yes, the third scene is taking place here in our midst in this Cathedral.
Not only is Father Murphy being missioned, but, in a very real sense, so are
we — each one in keeping with his or her individual vocation. The Lord Jesus
is sending us forth, to our families, to the workplace, to our communities,
with the mandate to announce that "the Kingdom of God is at hand for you"
also. Moreover, we are to be instruments of the Lord in making His Kingdom
present and visible and tangible. This means that we must be unafraid to
inject into our American society the gospel virtues and values. We must
speak the truth about human life and the dignity of every person, born and
unborn; about the meaning and sanctity of marriage understood in the natural
law and in the Scriptures as the union of one man with one woman; about
pursuing justice and peace in our relationships with one another and in our
business dealings. As we go about proclaiming God’s Kingdom, we are
participating in a process that will please God and return our great country
to the vision and ideals proclaimed by the founders of these United States
in the Declaration of Independence, signed on this very day, July 4, in
1776.
Yes, Father Christopher Murphy and indeed, each of us, is being missioned
this day to announce the coming of God’s Kingdom through the saving death
and resurrection of the One Savior of the World, the Lord Jesus Christ.
Strengthened by God’s transforming grace, may we put out into the deep,
confidently and perseveringly, because we are rooted in Jesus, who promises:
"Behold, I am with you always, even to the end of the age."
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