When I first moved out to the Terre Haute Deanery for my first ever stint as a pastor, I was tasked with having to finish off the closing of Holy Rosary parish in Seelyville.
The North Star is located
almost directly on the line the Earth spins around and so it always is in the
same place in the sky and was used by sailors and others as a reliable way to
orient themselves.
In my final
homily at Holy Rosary in Seelyville before the parish was merged into
Annunciation, I encouraged the parishioners of Holy Rosary in Seelyville to
keep their eyes fixed on the only True North Star, Jesus in the Eucharist, and if
they did that, they would be able to weather whatever storms came their way,
including the closing of their parish.
I have tried
to follow my own advice as much as possible.
Jesus’ Real Presence in the Eucharist has been a North Star, a fixed
point that I know is true, and I have kept my eyes fixed on Jesus throughout my
time in seminary and the priesthood.
There has been a lot that has happened in my priesthood, a lot of the
things from my priesthood have been good beyond my wildest dreams, and some of
it has been difficult, but all of the things that have happened have been a
blessing to me.
Tonight, the
Church asks that the homily reflect on 3 related topics, the priesthood, the
Eucharist and service to the poor and our friends.
Right after
the homily, I will wash the feet of 12 parishioners as a reminder of what Jesus
did before the First Mass. At that First
Mass he also instituted the priesthood and also, for the first time turned
bread and wine into Himself.
It is pretty
easy to see how these three themes of the priesthood, the Eucharist and service are related. In the priesthood, we are
called to die to ourselves. This “death
to self” is actually sometimes easier in big ways than it is in small ways that
no one will ever see. In both arenas,
the public and the private, the priest is called to die to self, and so is
every person who is baptized.
Dying to our
own desires and wants; dying to how we want to spend our free time; all those
ways of dying, like Jesus’ death, bears fruit in other people’s lives because
when we lay our wants to the side, we more easily recognize the ways we can
serve others. And Jesus says when we
serve others, we also serve Him.
May Jesus in
the Eucharist be a North Star for all of us, a point that we fix our eyes and
hearts on, and, in walking toward Jesus, also imitate His laying down His life,
so we may share in His Resurrection
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