The
Resurrection of Change:
The Thirty-Second
Sunday in Ordinary Time
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November 10, 2019
2 Maccabees 7:1-2,
9-14; Psalm 17; 2 Thessalonians 2:16-3:5; Luke 20:27-38
When Christians speak of death,
we speak of life. Even after the Resurrection of Jesus, debate ensued between
the Sadducees and Pharisees about whether Jesus really rose from the dead
because no one fully understood what happens during a resurrection. Even if it
happened to Jesus, what does it hold for a believer that professes that our
bodies will rise to new life with Christ on the last day? What we do know is
that death must occur.
The
Maccabean brothers believed that God would raise the faithful to heaven as they
went to their brutal deaths. Their tormentors, those who do not believe in God,
cannot be saved. The Pharisees hoped in the possibility of the resurrection as
well, and the Sadducees vehemently denied it. No one really knows what happened
to Jesus of Nazareth when he was resurrected to our Christ. We as Christians
believe that we will enter into eternal life with Christ and will begin a new
phase of life with God, and it is very consoling to hear these words during
times of funerals. The questions linger as we hope in God as we contemplate our
own mortality.
The Sadducees was the ruling religious
elite within Judaism. They were men of wealth and high social status and their
members were often drawn from the priesthood. They held seats on the Sanhedrin,
the Jewish supreme court, and, like most ruling bodies, they had conservative
political and religious views. They were strict constructionists to the Mosaic Law,
and they were in opposition to the Pharisees who held looser interpretations of
the unwritten customs and traditions. The Sadducees worked with the Romans to
assure peace, and they were enmeshed in their business dealings, which
consolidated their authority. They oversaw the running of the Temple as a
religious center, civic, and financial center, and their decisions served their
own interests more than they benefitted the ordinary Jewish citizen. After the
Jewish revolt in 70 A.D., Jerusalem and the Temple were destroyed. With the
people in dispersion, the Sadducees and the existing social structure had no
further reason to exist and they simply disappeared.
The death of the Maccabean brothers
inspired many others to witness to the faith, like martyrs. The demise of the
Sadducees allowed a new expression of the faith to occur. We have challenges to
our faith, and we have to decide how to respond to the signs of the times. Are
we supposed to fight the changes that alter our understanding of the faith, or
are we somehow move in a new way that is uncomfortable for us, even if it seems
to be challenges our long-held assumptions? The church is going through
significant changes this current day. The meeting of bishops to discuss church
life in the Amazon may alter the paradigms we hold about how church ought to
be. They recommend three changes: (1.) in order to feed many Catholics with the
Eucharist, the church can ordain older married men of proven virtues and may
reopen the diaconate to women, (2.) the church may change liturgies and ways of
worshipping that may seem foreign to our inherited European model because
indigenous people express themselves differently, and (3.) every nation in the
world is called to sacrifice their consumeristic ways to better honor the
environmental challenges before us. Some will fight these changes and hold to a
hard line because it is what they know and it is where they find comfort, and
some will keep asking questions to understand that in embracing these changes,
we do not lose Christ, though Church as we know it will be different.
How do you
internally respond to these proposed changes? It is best to open our hearts and
minds to the Holy Spirit and let the Spirit inform our consciences because
these new realities may be unsettling. It comes back to the original question:
Do you believe in the Resurrection, which only occurs after death? No one likes
thoughts about death, but when we Christians speak of death, we speak of life. Are
we being invited into a new death and resurrection?
Scripture for Daily Mass
First
Reading:
Monday: (Wisdom 1) Love justice,
you who judge the earth; think of the Lord in goodness and seek him in
integrity of hear.
Tuesday: (Wisdom 2) God formed
man to be imperishable; the image of his own nature he made them. But by the
envy of the Devil, death entered the world, and they who are in his possession
experience it.
Wednesday: (Wisdom 6) Terribly
and swiftly shall he come against you, because judgment is stern for the
exalted–For the lowly may be pardoned out of mercy.
Thursday: (Wisdom 7) n Wisdom is
a spirit intelligent, holy, unique, Manifold, subtle, agile, clear, unstained,
certain, Not baneful, loving the good, keen, unhampered, beneficent, kindly,
Firm, secure, tranquil, all-powerful, all-seeing, And pervading all spirits,
though they be intelligent, pure and very subtle.
Friday (Wisdom 13) All men were
by nature foolish who were in ignorance of God, and who from the good things
seen did not succeed in knowing him who is, and from studying the works did not
discern the artisan.
Saturday (Wisdom 18) When
peaceful stillness compassed everything and the night in its swift course was
half spent, Your all-powerful word, from heaven's royal throne bounded, a
fierce warrior, into the doomed land, bearing the sharp sword of your
inexorable decree.
Gospel:
Monday: (Luke 17) "Things
that cause sin will inevitably occur, but woe to the one through whom they
occur. It would be better for him if a millstone were put around his neck
and he be thrown into the sea than for him to cause one of these little ones to
sin.
Tuesday: (Luke 17) "Who
among you would say to your servant who has just come in from plowing or
tending sheep in the field, 'Come here immediately and take your place at
table'?
Wednesday (Luke 17) As he was
entering a village, ten lepers met him. They stood at a distance from him and
raised their voice, saying, "Jesus, Master! Have pity on us!" And
when he saw them, he said, "Go show yourselves to the priests."
Thursday (Luke 17) "The
coming of the Kingdom of God cannot be observed, and no one will announce,
'Look, here it is,' or, 'There it is.' For behold, the Kingdom of God is among
you."
Friday (Luke 17) "As it was
in the days of Noah, so it will be in the days of the Son of Man; they were
eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage up to the day that Noah
entered the ark, and the flood came and destroyed them all.
Saturday (Luke 18) Will not God
then secure the rights of his chosen ones who call out to him day and night?
Will he be slow to answer them? I tell you, he will see to it that justice is
done for them speedily.
Saints of the Week
November 10: Leo the Great, pope and doctor (d. 461) tried
to bring peace to warring Roman factions that were leaving Gaul vulnerable to
barbarian invasions. As pope, he tried to keep peace again - in particular
during his meeting with Attila the Hun, whom he persuaded not to plunder Rome.
However, in Attila's next attack three years later, Rome was leveled. Some of
Leo's writings on the incarnation were influential in formulating doctrine at
the Council of Chalcedon.
November 11: Martin of Tours, bishop (316-397), became
an Roman soldier in Hungary because he was born into a military family. After
he became a Christian, he left the army because he saw his faith in opposition
to military service. He settled in Gaul and began its first monastery. He was
proclaimed bishop in 371 and worked to spread the faith in at time of great
uncertainty and conflict. He divided sections of his diocese into parishes.
November 12: Josaphat, bishop and martyr (1580-1623)
was a Ukranian who entered the Basilian order and was ordained in the Byzantine
rite. He was named the archbishop of Polotsk, Russia and attempted to unite the
Ukrainian church with Rome. His opponents killed him. He is the first Eastern
saint to be formally canonized.
November 13: Francis Xavier Cabrini, religious
(1850-1917) was an Italian-born daughter to a Lombardy family of 13
children. She wanted to become a nun, but needed to stay at her parents’ farm
because of their poor health. A priest asked her to help work in a girls’
school and she stayed for six years before the bishop asked her to care for
girls in poor schools and hospitals. With six sisters, she came to the U.S. in
1889 to work among Italian immigrants. She was the first American citizen to be
canonized.
November 13: Stanislaus Kostka, S.J., religious
(1550-1568) was a Polish novice who walked from his home to Rome to enter
the Jesuits on his 17th birthday. He feared reprisals by his father
against the Society in Poland so we went to directly see the Superior General
in person. Francis Borgia admitted him after Peter Canisius had him take a
month in school before applying for entrance. Because of his early death,
Kostka is revered as the patron saint of Jesuit novices.
November 14: Pedro Arrupe, S.J., Superior General (1917-1991)
was the 28th Superior General of the Jesuits. He was born in the
Basque region of the Iberian Peninsula. He is considered one of the great
reformers of the Society because he was asked by the Pope to carry out the
reforms of Vatican II. November 14th is the commemoration of his
birth.
November 14: Joseph Pignatelli, S.J., religious and
Superior General (1737-1811) was born in Zaragosa, Spain and entered the
Jesuits during a turbulent era. He was known as the unofficial leader of the
Jesuits in Sardinia when the Order was suppressed and placed in exile. He
worked with European leaders to continue an underground existence and he was
appointed Novice Master under Catherine the Great, who allowed the Society to
receive new recruits. He secured the restoration of the Society partly in 1803
and fully in 1811 and bridged a link between the two eras of the Society. He
oversaw a temperate reform of the Order that assured their survival.
November 15: Albert
the Great, bishop and doctor (1200-1280), joined the Dominicans to teach
theology in Germany and Paris. Thomas Aquinas was his student. With his
reluctance, he was made bishop of Ratisbon. He resigned after four years so he
could teach again. His intellectual pursuits included philosophy, natural
science, theology, and Arabic language and culture. He applied Aristotle's
philosophy to theology.
November 16: Roch Gonzalez, John del Castillo, and
Alphonsus Rodriguez, S.J. (1576-1628) were Jesuit priests born to
Paraguayan nobility who were architects of the Paraguayan reductions, societies
of immigrants based on religious faith. They taught the indigenous population
how to plant farms and other basic life skills that would protect them from the
insidious slave trades of Spain and Portugal. By the time the Jesuits were
expelled, 57 such settlements were established. Roch was a staunch opponent of
the slave trade. He, John, and Alphonsus were killed when the envy of a local
witch doctor lost his authority at the expense of their growing medical
expertise.
November 16: Margaret
of Scotland (1046-1093) was raised in Hungary because the Danes invaded
England. She returned after the Norman Conquest in 1066 and sought refuge in
Scotland. She married the king and bore him eight children. She corrected many
wayward abuses within the church and clarified church practices.
November 16: Gertrude the Great (1256-1302) was placed for childrearing into a Benedictine monastery at age 5
in Saxony. She lived with two mystics named Mechthild and as she developed her
intellectual and spiritual gifts, she too became a mystic. Her spiritual
instructions are collected into five volumes. She wrote prayers as a first
advocate of the Sacred Heart.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Nov
10, 1549. At Rome, the death of Paul III, to whom the Society owes its first
constitution as a religious order.
·
Nov
11, 1676. In St James's Palace, London, Claude la Colombiere preached on All
Saints.
·
Nov
12, 1919. Fr. General Ledochowski issued an instruction concerning the use of
typewriters. He said that they could be allowed in offices but not in personal
rooms, nor should they be carried from one house to another.
·
Nov
13, 1865. The death of James Oliver Van de Velde, second bishop of the city of
Chicago from 1848 to 1853.
·
Nov
14, 1854. In Spain, the community left Loyola for the Balearic Isles, in
conformity with a government order.
·
Nov
15, 1628. The deaths of St Roch Gonzalez and Fr. Alphonsus Rodriguez. They were
some of the architects of the Jesuit missions in Uruguay and Paraguay.
·
Nov
16, 1989. In El Salvador, the murder of six Jesuits connected with the
University of Central America together with two of their lay colleagues.
John, thank you for addressing the issues of today. I am deeply troubled by the divisions within the Church as Christ gets pushed aside in favour of following rules and turning back the clock to a "better" time. Blessings as you share this with your people!
ReplyDeleteLynda, I share the same distress. I want us to see Christ together and to focus upon his plans for us. How do you suppose we should proceed going forward? The Pope is bringing us forward and we have to let Trent be in the past. Its hold on us for 460 years is not easy to shake.
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