Homily for the 5th Sunday Ordinary
Time
(Cycle A Readings: Isaiah 58:7-10; Psalm 112: 45, 6-7, 8-9; 1 Corinthians 2:1-5; Matthew 5:13-16)
I
don’t know about you, but about this time of the year I get really excited
about those few extra minutes of daylight. I have been known to seem to be
amazed at the fact that it was light before 7:30 this morning, and I’m like a
little kid remarking how it is still light at 5:30!
Light
is so essential to us and that is why we aknowldge Christ as our light and use
symbols of that to remind ourselves. We light this Paschal Candle at the Easter
Vigil and use it for baptisms and funerals; it is why we have candles by the
ambo and the altar, and why we have a lit candle by the tabernacle that holds
the Blessed Sacrament.
But
Jesus says something startling to us today. He says YOU are light; I am light;
WE are light. He doesn’t ask us to become light or to try to be light, he says
we ARE light. And we are light because we are his – we are Christians – we are
“little Christs”. It is because Jesus has called us and we have responded. If
we are light, Jesus tells us that our light must shine among others – giving
light to all in the house.
And
he tells us that we are the salt of the earth. We are salt – that basic element
that flavors food, preserves food, and, in Jesus’ day, was used to make fires
light and burn better. But if we lose our flavor, if we fail to preserve our faith,
if we are no longer starting fires of peace and justice, then we might as well
be put in the truck and dumped on the street to melt the ice.
Jesus’
challenge to his believers, then and now, is that we be who we are – that we
live who we have become. We have been baptized into his life. We come here each
week to receive the Body of Christ, to BE the Body of Christ, and we are called
to live as Christ’s body in the world.
Being
light and being salt is what the New Evangelization is all about. We are supposed to live so that by who we are
and what we do others will give glory to God. Light and salt share an
interesting characteristic – they can both be perceived by the sense – taste
for salt and sight for light – but neither of them is meant to the object of
that perception. When salt is used properly, it enhances the flavor of what it
is put on – and is unnoticeable itself. Same is true of light – we turn on a
light not to look at the light, but to see other things because of it. We are
to live our lives so that those around us see what we do and give glory to God.
Pope
Francis continues to challenge us toward this New Evangelization, to live, as
he put it in his exhortation, the Joy of the Gospel. And he tells us that if we take up this
challenge, we have to go out to everyone – without exception. But, he asks, to
whom do we go first? He is very clear: he says, not so much our “friends and wealthy
neighbors”, but to “the poor and the sick, those who are usually despised and
overlooked, ‘those who cannot repay you’”(48). In other words, he wants us to get
out of our comfort zone. Getting out of your comfort zone is different for
everyone. For me, it was prison ministry. When I was first invited to be a part
of prison ministry, I resisted – mostly because I couldn’t see what a suburban,
white bread, goody-two-shoes could possibly have to contribute to men in
prison. But it’s not about me – it’s about bringing the love and friendship of
Jesus to those who need to hear it desperately. It’s about being salt in a
place of tastelessness and light in a place of darkness.
What
is it for you? Where do you need to get out of your comfort zone? Where do you
have to go? To whom do you need to reach out? How far are you willing to take
the challenge, as Isaiah put it, to share your bread with the hungry, shelter
the oppressed and the homeless, and clothe the naked?
There
are certainly risks involved. But Pope
Francis tells us that he would “prefer a Church which is bruised, hurting and
dirty because it has been out on the streets, rather than a Church which is
unhealthy from being confined and from clinging to its own security”. (49) Are
we willing to risk getting bruised, hurt and dirty in order to bring the “strength,
light and consolation born of friendship with Jesus Christ” (49) to those who
live without it?
You
are the salt of the earth. You are the light of the world. Be salt. Be light.
No comments:
Post a Comment