
Expressions of Faith
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde Special to the Herald
(From the issue of 4/28/05)
The following homily was given by Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde
during the Mass for Expectant Parents, at St. Andrew the Apostle Church in
Clifton, on Sunday, April 24.
My dear Brothers and Sisters in the Risen Lord Jesus,
One word will summarize our reflection — "Faith." Why do I say that? In
today’s Gospel from St. John’s account, Jesus tells us: "Do not let your
heart be troubled. You have faith in God; have faith also in me. … I am the
Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
… Amen, Amen I say to you, whoever believes in me will do the works that I
do and will do even greater ones than these because I am going to the
Father."
In today’s first reading from the Acts of the Apostles, we are reminded
that "the word of God continued to spread, and the number of the disciples
in Jerusalem increased greatly … ." The increase in disciples resulted from
their acceptance by faith of Christ, who is their Lord and Savior. "Even a
large number of the [Jewish] priests were becoming obedient to the faith."
In today’s second reading from the First Letter of St. Peter, we are
urged to come to Jesus, the center of our faith, the very One in whom we put
our faith. After all, He is " … a living stone, rejected by human beings but
chosen and precious in the sight of God … ."
Faith lies at the core and center of our lives as disciples, faith which
is our total surrender to God revealing Himself in Christ. Faith is not only
the submission of our intellect, but also the surrender of all we are and
have. Faith implies trust for how could we trust someone in whom we did not
believe. Faith and trust lead to love, which is the expression of this
surrender.
Faith is tangibly expressed, first, by our prayer and reception of the
sacraments. Prayer is more than words, more than the perfunctory expression
of our needs. Prayer is entering into a divine dialogue, whereby first, we
listen to the Lord, Who is speaking to us, and then we respond with
praise, with thanksgiving, with sorrow, with petition. Those four are indeed
the four ends of prayer. Receiving the sacraments means receiving within us
the very life of Christ, divine grace, and we receive His life as we
encounter Him through the outward sign of each sacrament, especially the
sacraments of Penance and the Eucharist. For in Penance, that sacrament of
divine mercy, His life is restored to us or deepened within us. And in the
Eucharist, where we are present again at His dying and rising, He feeds us
with His very self. Indeed, as the late Pope John Paul II reminded us in the
opening words of his encyclical letter, the Eucharist is the very life of
the Church. Yes, faith is expressed in prayer and through the reception of
the sacraments.
But faith is also expressed by our obedient acceptance of Church
teachings, all of them, not just the ones we like, since Church teachings
are rooted in the Scripture and in the living tradition of the Church and
are expressed by the Magesterium. Faith-filled disciples are not
cafeteria-style disciples who happen to pick and choose what they like. No,
faith is expressed by our accepting all the teachings of the Church.
Faith too is expressed by authentic Christ-like outreach to the poor and
the needy. Christian love is faith in action. We are strengthened by Christ
in this eucharistic Sacrifice so that we may serve Christ out there in our
brothers and sisters. Recall what Christ told us in St. Matthews’s Gospel,
"What you do for the least of my brothers and sisters, you do for me." Yes,
faith lies at the center and core of who we are and what we do as disciples
of the Risen Christ Jesus.
It is the role of St. Peter and of his successors, the popes, to keep us
united in faith and in love by pointing to Christ the Way, the Truth and the
Life; by pointing us to Christ and inviting us to come to Him, the living
cornerstone; and by teaching us the faith in its integrity and fullness. As
we recall our beloved Pope John Paul II, who assuredly taught us the faith
and led us to Christ, so today and in the days to come, we pray for our new
pope, Benedict XVI, who will likewise be the center and source of our faith
and love and who will lead us to Jesus the Lord.
In his first homily after being elected the 264th successor to St. Peter
on April 19th, on that next morning, Pope Benedict XVI spoke about faith and
I quote, "Being an ‘adult’ means having a faith which does not follow the
waves of today’s fashions or the latest novelties. A faith which is deeply
rooted in friendship with Christ is adult and mature. It is this friendship
which opens us up to all that is good and gives the knowledge to judge true
from false and deceit from truth. We must become mature in this adult faith;
we must guide the flock of Christ to this faith. And it is this faith — only
faith — which creates unity and takes form in love." Yes our new Holy Father
calls us to be faith-filled disciples.
Permit me to address myself in a particular way to the expectant parents
among us, including those awaiting the adoption of a child. Dear parents, it
is a privilege and a joy to be gathered with you during the celebration of
this Eucharistic Sacrifice. God’s people gathered here with me are a sign of
our entire diocesan family, who are praying for you, mothers and fathers
awaiting the birth of their child and mothers and fathers awaiting the
adoption of a child. The sacrifices you make and will make for the sake of
these children are a tangible expression of your love for them. The best
gift you can give them is the opportunity to grow and to develop in our
Catholic Faith. When your children live in faith, they, like you, will be
able to cope with life’s uncertainties and difficulties, they will be able
to interpret reality wisely and lovingly, they will live in friendship with
Jesus Christ and journey toward faith’s goal: eternal life in the presence
of our Triune God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Yes dear parents, you are
the first teachers of faith to your children; may you be the best of
teachers, by your own witness of life and by clear explanations and
teachings. Be faith-filled parents.
Sisters and brothers all, "Faith" so well summarizes today’s homily. So
with St. Peter, we too come to Jesus, Who is the Way the Truth and the Life,
and proclaim "Lord, to whom else shall we go? You alone have the words of
eternal life!" Amen.
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