Every Holy Thursday, by mandate of the Church, the homily is
to focus on charity, the Eucharist and the priesthood. Given the atmosphere of things right now, I
want to spend most of my time focusing on the priesthood.
I love movies and so I watch a lot of previews online to see
which ones I really want to see.
I was recently watching one for an upcoming summer
blockbuster in which the villain said a phrase that really caught my
attention. He said – “If you can make
God bleed people will cease to believe in Him and there will be blood in the
water, and the sharks will come.”
The same applies to God’s Church. There are many out there who think that if
they can make the Church bleed, people will stop believing in it.
And OH, they have tried.
The attacks on the Church in the last two weeks would be sad if they
were not also a display of the most childish journalism.
1) The Indianapolis
Star published an article a few days ago on page 2 of the main section about
protests in London
calling for the Pope’s resignation. In
paragraph 7 that we learn it was a couple dozen protesters.
A COUPLE DOZEN. I
just returned last month from the March for Life, which saw 250,000 young
people protest the atrocities against life that our country commits daily, and not
a word in the star. 30 people stand on
the streets of London,
and they make national news. HUM
2) A little over a week ago, another article in the Star,
pretending to be balanced, talked about the abuse case that is now making
headlines and quoted two people on behalf of the Church. First, Hans Kung. What they didn’t say is that Hans Kung was
one of the few people to actually be forbidden to teach theology by Pope
Benedict when he was still a Cardinal.
Who honestly thinks that Hans Kung is going to speak on BEHALF of the
Catholic Church or Pope Benedict.
REALLY? Hans Kung?
The articles other voice “on behalf of the Church” was a
member of the “Voice of the Faithful.”
The Voice of the “Faithful” is a group of people who consider themselves
Catholic but who hate nearly every central teaching of the Church.
Those are the two voices who are supposed to give a balanced
perspective on the Church and celibacy??
The article also featured a juvenile understanding of things
Catholic, interchanging celibacy and chastity as if they were the same thing –
a pretty serious mistake when celibacy was the point of the article.
3) New York Times
writer Maureen Dowd has absolutely gone off the deep end with her story trying
to link Pope Benedict to a case in Wisconsin. I could spend 10 minutes debunking every lie
in her article, but many have charitably done so on the internet.
4) MSNBC published a
headline which they apologized for a day later which said “Pope Describes
Touching Boys: I Went Too Far.” The article had nothing to do with the pope. Was the headline an accident? To the
average person on the street who won’t care to follow up with the facts, can
that damage ever be repaired?
5) Cartoons in
editorials have been blatantly anti-Catholic and anti-priesthood throughout the
country.
6) Newsweek magazine
recently published an article by Fr. Richard McBrien, a teacher at, surprise,
Notre Dame, who has been teaching outright against the Church for 4
decades. Again, a big shock that he
wasn’t exactly pro Church or pro priesthood.
6) The media machine
also loves to talk about a priest shortage (a sure sign that the priesthood is
dying out in their minds) – but the United States has one of the best
ratio of Catholics to priests in the world.
Are the numbers lower than the 50’s, yes, but that is because we had
more than we needed. A priest friend of
mine is a pastor of a parish with about 500 people in it. The rectory he lives in housed at least two
priests in the 50’s, perhaps three. My
priest friend has three parishes and manages just fine - those priests had one
parish. Is there a decline, or is the
situation just getting more realistic?
I could go on, but you’ve all seen the Church and the
priesthood dragged through the mud
Before moving on, let me here say for the first of many
times, the crimes committed against children by priests is sickening, needs to
be punished to the fullest extent of both Church and secular law, it needs to
be rooted out NOW. Any bishops that
knowingly protected those priests ought to resign instantly. This homily tonight is not about justification
of the tragedies that have happened in any way!
The question that does need to be raised here is this – do
the actions of this small portion of priests apply to the priesthood in
general? To the over 400,000 priests serving today.
A question here needs to be asked – what would motivate
people to attack the Church and the priesthood in this way?
Some just like seeing if they can move something that claims
to immovable by human beings
Some have genuinely been hurt by a member of the Church
But I suspect most see the Church as the last voice that
speaks out against contraception, abortion, wars of aggression, unjust social
structures, and unchecked greed.
The real battle here is between two competing views of what
sets human beings free. Atheists and
others who hate the Church particularly or Christianity in general like to
offer one view of freedom. They say, “If
we can just get rid of God and get rid of the Church, then human beings will be
truly free. They believe, ultimately,
that religion suffocates humanity and stifles its flowering. That view is contrasted with the view of the
Church. What sets humanity free in the
eyes of the Church is living as Christ showed us. The
two sides directly contradict the other, and so there is a war going on between
these two views of where true freedom lies.
We get a glimpse in tonight’s Gospel of those with the mindset
that religion suffocates humanity, and we see what perhaps motivates them.
Something VERY interesting happens. Peter says to Jesus, “You will NEVER
wash my feet.”
Why is Peter so offended?? – It is because the world is
safer where God does Godly things, and humans do human things.
If we keep God over there, in heaven, the good guy, the guy
who floats on a cloud, and if we are the human beings who are to simply
continue to wallow in the mire and the muck of our lives, then we don’t have to
go through the uncomfortable hassle of CHANGING, of SEEKING FORGIVENESS, OF
CONVERSION!!
God, you stay over there, we say. Be Holy, fix things, send down hail and fire
if you want, just leave us alone. Be
God, and we will be human sinners.
We want, down deep, to be left to the madness of our
sins. We want there to be a divide
between the Holy and the Human.
So when Peter sees Christ on a knee, he freaks out. Lord, you will NEVER wash my feet!”
But with Christ’s words, we see the gravity of this
moment. Peter wasn’t just saying that to
Jesus to be nice. He meant what he said,
and we see the severity of the situation affirmed by Jesus when he says –
“Unless I wash you, you will have no inheritance with me.”
That human beings can stand in the place of Christ, and be
his presence in our midst through the sacraments is more than some can
handle. The Catholic Priesthood stands
in opposition to the divide between the Holy and the Human. The Priesthood reminds people that humans are
supposed to do God things, and that God works and does human things.
Priests are, in some ways, the last reminders to our world
of what Jesus was sent to do. A friend
of mine once said “You don’t get it, you are the last sign of the Church to
people out there.”
He didn’t mean me – he meant THE PRIESTHOOD. He meant this
white collar. The priesthood is not an
individual priest, it is something much more than that. Trust me, I know my own limitations very
well. Indeed, no doubt, some of you
probably wish I preached differently, or held my hands differently, or didn’t
chant, or smiled more, and I’m sure you have a list for Fr. Joe as well – much
shorter than mine of course! – and I’m sure he has a list of things for me that
he’d like to see changed! I, of course,
have no complaints for him! that myself
and Fr. Joe have shortcomings is the whole point that most of the world doesn’t
get. The Holy and the Human, through
Christ, through his Church, through his priests and through ALL OF US are to be
mingled. This mingling takes place most
notably through the Eucharist. We
receive him, and the Holy and the Human mingle.
Those that say to Christ – “You will never wash me” and who
want God to stay in Heaven so that they don’t have to change have to overcome
the priesthood itself. They have to
devalue the priesthood, they have to change it and bend it according to their
own will. The first thing they always
come after – celibacy. A great Church
historian once said that all the great attacks on the Church start by attacking
the priesthood and celibacy. That is
true from the earliest heresies through Arians, the Gnostics, the Agnostics,
the Lollards, the Jansenists, the Donatists, the Hussites, the Lutherans, and
now the dissenters of the Church and atheists.
The game plan has always been this – TOPPLE THE PRIESTHOOD AND WE TOPPLE
THE CHURCH.
Celibacy is said to cause all the problems that we see right
now with the abuse cases. They hear not
just angry journalists but even some ex priests saying – “I made this vow in my
youth, and it just became more than I was expecting.” HELLO – does that sound like any marriages
any of you know about?? EVERY vow
becomes more than people bargained for.
Married Life, Religious Life, The Priesthood – it all is more difficult
and MORE rewarding if lived right, than people bargained for.
Also, those who hate the Church have always, throughout
history, sought to make the priesthood a club that anyone can join, because
they know that then it loses its power. They
portray the current priesthood as some rich boy’s club set up solely to keep
others out and preserve power. Let me
just say that that historian was right, when you meet someone who is trying to
change the Catholic priesthood into what they think it should be, you should
run far away from them because Heresy and Dissent and hatred of the Church follow
quickly in their footsteps. To those
people, the priesthood is no longer something that God gives as a gift to the
Church, it is something humanity makes for itself. The divide between the Holy and Human is
reestablished. Humanity is free to be
irresponsible and live however they want once again.
the Letter of the Hebrews in this morning’s office of
readings smashes the portrayal of priesthood as an “all are welcome club” to
pieces. Referring to the priesthood, St. Paul says “ONE DOES NOT
TAKE THIS HONOR ON HIS OWN INITIATIVE.” The
priesthood was established by Christ – about that the Scriptures are very
clear.
In the preparation of the Gifts, the priest pours water into
that which is still wine and says silently, “By the mingling of this water and wine
may we come to share in the divinity of Christ who humbled himself to share in
our humanity.” Priests are called in
every age by God to be signs that in Christ the Holy and the Human have
mingled. In the Eucharist, the Holy and
the Human have mingled. And in all of us
here, the Holy and the Human have mixed.
It is the Church’s vision of humanity which is meant to set us free. May we not settle for the vision of humanity
that those who hate the Church and want to devalue the priesthood offer up.
And so, we remember the words of that movie, “If we can make
God bleed, people will stop believing in Him.”
Well God has been bleeding for 2,000 years now, and His Church has been
bleeding for 2,000 years because it is full of people who sin. Some rejoice at the blood because they
believe it spells the end of God or of His Church or both, thus setting
humanity free to rule itself. We the
Church mourn our sins, but just as those who hate the Church, we too rejoice
over the fact that God is bleeding; we rejoice because Christ’s blood will win
us a freedom that those who hate the Church could never imagine.
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