Divine Mercy 2024 “Christ’s Glorified
Body Still Has His Wounds???”
Leading up
to Divine Mercy Sunday in 2020, I was in my room at the Mayo Clinic having had
several brain surgeries. I was doing
Mass every day from my hospital room, but had plenty of time to research my
homilies. I was thinking then about
Christ’s Resurrected and Glorified Body still having wounds from His
Crucifixion. The Catholic Church teaches
that everyone, at the final judgment, will have their soul and body reunited,
and that the bodies of those entering Heaven will be perfect…so I was thinking “Why
does Jesus’s Glorified Body still has wounds”?
And it turns
out that St. Thomas Aquinas, 800 years ago, asked the same question and has a
really beautiful answer… St. Thomas said, essentially, that Christ’s resurrected
Body still has his wounds because they were earned out of love, and so seeing
his wounds in Heaven will cause us all the more to be thankful for his
sacrifice for us.
And that
made sense to me, and I preached from my hospital room 4 years ago that I hope
all the victims of priestly sexual assault will still see my wounds, and that
we will be able to rejoice together.
Everyone
here today has wounds and scars…some scars come from surgeries or injuries or
cancer, and many of us also have hidden scars of depression, anxiety, or the mental
and emotional scars of watching a person that we love suffer.
Again, the
beautiful teaching of the Catholic Church is that EVERY SINGLE DROP of our
suffering can be offered up for other people.
If you haven’t done that yet, I invite you to do that now…there’s no
magic formula… you can just say some version of “Jesus I offer my suffering up
for _______” or “I offering my suffering up for wherever you see the graces are
most needed” and hopefully, when you get to Heaven, those who you have suffered
for will be able to see your scars and rejoice together with you!
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