Friday, March 25, 2016

Homily for Good Friday 2016 (March 25, 2016)





Normally on the 25th of March, we celebrate the Annunciation of the Lord. We hear of the Angel Gabriel sent from God to the Virgin of Nazareth with the words, “Hail full of grace, the Lord is with you.” And we hear the magnificent words of the Virgin Mary, “Let it be done unto me according to your word.” With those sacred and powerful words, the earthly ministry of the Eternal Son of God begins.


Today we hear no words of the Virgin Mary, but are struck by the silence of the Virgin Mother. On this day, when we would expect to hear with her that “the Holy Spirit will come upon you and the power of the Most High will overshadow you,” we hear with her, “Behold your Son,” and “Behold your Mother.” And then, “It is finished.”


At the cross her station keeping, stood the mournful mother weeping, close to Jesus to the last.


A little more than forty days ago, we approached the Altar to receive the imposition of the Ashes of repentance. We traveled with the Lord Jesus to the desert, to the mountain, and to the city of God, Jerusalem. Now we approach the Altar to make our act of reverence to the wood of the Cross on which hung the Savior of the World. And there we stand with Mary, his Mother and ours. From the Cross, Christ gave her to us. At the Cross, she gives us to Him.


At the Cross her station keeping, stands our mournful Mother weeping, bringing us to Jesus to the last.


Preached at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church, Monroe, NC

Homily for Holy Thursday 2016 (March 24, 2016)





I was never good at sharing. When I was a child I wanted my own room, my own desk, my own book, and my own box of crayons. I was never good at sharing, at least when I was a child.
The Son of God, however, is very good at sharing. The Lord Jesus is very good at sharing. He shares with us everything that is his, and he shares with us in everything that is ours. The Lord Jesus is very good at sharing.

The Lord Jesus has shared so much with us. When the Son of God came from heaven to the womb of the Virgin Mary, he shared the glory of heaven with the people of earth. He brought heaven’s praises to our humble prayers. He shared with all of creation the glory that was his before the foundation of the world. And Jesus shared with us the privilege to call upon God as Father. He shared his Father with us.

The Lord Jesus shares with us in everything that is ours. He knows what it is like to be a child in a far country because he was a child in Egypt. The Lord Jesus shares with us in our celebrations because he was a guest at the wedding at Cana. He shares with us in our grief for he wept at the tomb of Lazarus. The Lord Jesus shares with us in the joy of friendship as with his disciples and in the sadness of betrayal as with Judas. He shares with us in our sufferings for he was scourged and nailed to a cross. He shares with us in everything.

The Lord Jesus has shared his mission with us. He has shared his sacred work with us. In our baptism Christ the Lord bestowed a royal priesthood upon each of us. We are each sharers in his mission as priest, prophet and king. We each are united to Christ in offering the sacrifice of our lives, in proclaiming the words of salvation, and shepherding the kingdom of God. The Lord Jesus has shared this royal mission with all of us.

But then, with the kindness of a brother, the Lord Jesus chose some of us, at least two of us here, to share in his sacred ministry by the laying on of hands. The Lord Jesus chose us not because we were worthy but to show the abundance of his mercy. The Lord Jesus shares with his priests his sacred work in a particular way. The Lord Jesus shares with his priests his power, but his power is shared only for the glory of God and for the loving service of his people. The Lord Jesus shares with his priests the privilege of living with, and crying with, and preaching with, and rejoicing with the holy and glorious people of God. The Lord Jesus has shared so much with us.

And tonight, the Lord Jesus shares with us his Body and Blood. On the night before he died, he gathered his apostles. He consecrated bread and wine to be his Body and Blood. He consecrated his apostles so that they would consecrate bread and wine to be his Body and Blood. Through his Body and Blood, the Lord Jesus consecrates you and me so that we can share in his life as we make our way to the Kingdom where he lives and reigns with the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God forever and ever. Amen.

Preached at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church, Monroe, NC