Friday, December 25, 2015

Christmas Mass

Link to Today's Readings
Isaiah 9:1-6, 14 + Psalm 96:1-3, 11-13 + Titus 2:11-14 + Luke 2:1-14

Click here to listen to this homily
Delivered at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Mustang, Oklahoma

The coming of the Son of God into the world seems to be so small, so little. This is not how God had to come into the world to save humanity, but how God chose to come. The Son of God is born as an infant like any other infant, a baby boy born into a world so rough and so cruel, a child utterly dependent up his parents for care and sustenance. He was so small, so little.

No wonder a people who had long awaited his coming, who had kept their hope alive over centuries awaiting the coming of the promised Messiah, did not even notice him when he came. There is not even room for him, no one will make room for him. Only those living on the margins of society, shepherds sleeping with their sheep in the field, shepherds who smell like their sheep, are tipped off by angels that the Savior of the world has been born. The sign given them is hardly a sign of greatness—you will find an infant wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger. A manger of all places, an animal’s feeding trough.

From the human point of view, the Incarnation, the Son of God taking our flesh, is a crazy plan, choosing people too little and too vulnerable. But the result, in God’s wisdom, is what is best for us: being born among us, being raised among us, he came as one of us, as our brother. As God with us, Jesus shone a light on our true dignity and God’s might in humility.

The Savior of the world was entrusted to the natural processes of human life, in the most vulnerable of hands, in the most vulnerable of ways, so that God’s glory and salvation would not overwhelm us, but accompany us. So that God’s glory would accompany us in solidarity with the suffering of all of us small and little people, in order to teach us the value of human life and the greatness of each life. No one is too little, too small, too insignificant to share in God’s plan.

As the Savior’s birth teaches us, God is often closer and smaller than we think. So God uses people who are not in the spotlight, who hardly anyone sees, seemingly insignificant people, to bring the greatness of his Son’s life and love into the darkest corners of the world.

A number of years ago when I was stationed at another parish, one of the daily Mass attendees, a local baker, would weekly bring me a box of cookies. She was shocked when I told her one day to stop bringing me cookies, that I was giving them up for a while.  

I told her that the daughter of some long-time friends of mine had been stationed in Afghanistan, thru her work with the Department of Defense, and that her parents were very concerned about her safety. I told the parents of this young woman that I would pray for her, and to make sure I would remember to pray for her on a regular basis, I would give up all sweets during her 6-month tour of duty in Afghanistan. Each time I felt a craving for something sweet, I would automatically be reminded to pray for her.

When I told the baker of the cookies this story, she thoughtfully replied: “Then I should send the cookies I usually bring to you to this young service woman in Afghanistan.” And so she did, and thus began something truly remarkable. The gift of homemade cookies, still delicious even after a couple of weeks travel by mail, would arrive at a remote outpost in Afghanistan, and my friends’ daughter would then share them with everyone else in her company. Soldiers and Department of Defense workers would feast on treats from halfway round the world and feel connected with their homeland. In doing so, they came to know if a very real way they were not alone nor were they forgotten.
My friends’ daughter shared with me upon her safe return from Afghanistan that those monthly boxes of cookies were a powerful sign of God’s presence in a place where God seemed to be absent.

Such are the small yet powerful ways that God chooses to communicate God’s bottomless love to us. My parishioner the baker with her cookies wanted to show my friends’ daughter and those stationed with her what God wanted them to know in those anxious days—You are loved.  You are not forgotten.  Feast on the sweet tenderness of my love. God did not use a thunderbolt from heaven to tell them that, but a far subtler, sweeter means of communication that could risk being overlooked altogether as something as ordinary as, well, some extraordinarily delicious cookies.

St. Ignatius of Loyola has a memorable phrase for thinking about God’s presence all around us. Ignatius said:  God labors and works for me in all the creatures on the face of the earth.” His point was that one of the most common ways God comes to us is through other people.

Because the Son of God left the safety and security of his heavenly home to forever make his home with humanity on this earth, we know this to be true: One of the most common ways God comes to us is through other people. Ignatius invites us to see how our daily experiences of receiving love, even in the smallest acts of human kindness, reveal God’s deep, abiding care for us. For like a secret admirer, God employs incredible creativity in filling our lives with seemingly unsigned love notes.

God not only comes to us in the smallest of ways but also in the smallest of people. For Jesus teaches us that he comes to visit us through the most vulnerable ones, the ones who go unseen by many because they live on the fringes of society—the most marginalized of our sisters and brothers, the least ones. Our eyes are not well trained to see the Son of God coming to us in those around us, especially those people the world pushes to the margins, those people the world chooses to not even see nor acknowledge that they exist.

Jesus clearly teaches in chapter 25 of Matthew’s Gospel that whatever we do for the least of our sisters and brothers—those who are hungry or thirst or naked or a stranger or sick or in prison—we do for him. When we welcome and love them, we are welcoming and loving and serving him. It is no small thing to recognize Jesus coming to us through the most vulnerable people on this planet, for Jesus assures us that our salvation depends upon it.

During this Extraordinary Jubilee Year, which will last until the end of November next year, Pope Francis challenges us to practice the Corporal works of Mercy. Not just to do these good deeds, but to “encounter Christ living in the poor.” Knowing things about Christ is different from knowing Christ.

The same holds true for Christ living in those who are the least of our brothers and sisters. Knowing things about them, statistics about hunger, or statistics stating that there are more people in prison per capita in Oklahoma than almost any other State, is very different from coming to know the people behind the statistics.

In other words, get to know the person who is hungry, or get to know the family who are refugees on the run from terror, or hear the life story of a prisoner behind bars. And in coming to know them, to encounter Christ in his littleness, in his smallness, coming to us through them.

We come to this table to be nourished by the Real Presence of Christ, the greatest gift Jesus gave us—his body and his blood. His presence to us here gives us the grace to be present to Him coming to us in our daily lives in the most ordinary of ways, in hidden, small ways.

What looks like something so small here—a little bread, a cup of wine—is transformed by the power of God into a divine gift—the Gift of God’s Son being born in us once again, coming to life in and through us.

So that strengthened by such a gift, we can welcome him coming to us each day in the most surprising of ways, longing to find room in our lives to welcome Him.

Fr. Joseph A. Jacobi

Sunday, December 13, 2015

3rd Sunday of Advent

Zephaniah 3:14-18A + Isaiah 12:2-3,4,5-6 + Philippians 4:4-7 + Luke 3:10-18

Delivered at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Mustang, Oklahoma

If the prophet Jeremiah speaks of Justice and the prophet Baruch speaks of how Mercy is the companion to Justice, then the prophet Zephaniah is the prophet of Joy. Joy is not necessarily happiness. We know that all too well. They are not the same thing. Happiness is a feeling and, with all feelings, can come and go, be here today and gone tomorrow, like kids who unwrap gifts and then the next day, gifts are no longer the source of happiness. But Joy is something different. It is something that predures, that endures, that lasts, it is that spirit which sustains and lifts us up right in the middle of unhappy times. Joy is that quality of life, that vision of creation that the loving hand of God is in all things and providing for all God’s creatures, even during times of loneliness and boredom, misery, or despair.

Joy, therefore, shines forth in a people of faith who believe in the resurrection of Christ, who know the power of God in Christ to transform even death into new life. Therefore, Joy flows from the gift of the Risen Christ, which is the gift of His Spirit, and in fact, the Church names one of the Fruits of the Spirit as Joy itself. One of the signs of the Holy Spirit working in our lives is Joy itself.
So during this Advent season, as we prepare to receive more fully the Son of God into those parts of our lives where perhaps we have not given Him entrance before, we do so by recognizing the lies we live by that can suck Joy right out of our life. Because Jesus is the Savior, the One who comes to set us free from the lies that keep us in darkness, He wants to bring us the fullness of His Joy. We can only receive that gift and live out that gift if we first bring into the light the lies that keep us in darkness.

One of the lies we live by in our culture is that we are created to possess things and the more things we possess, the more joy-filled we’ll be. We are led to believe that if I can hold in my hand this thing—the newest best gadget, a new car, a new house, whatever it may be—then I will be full of Joy. And this lie, which the tempter tempts us to live by therefore leads us to take a bite out of the fruit, a deadly fruit, called envy, which means we look at what other people have and we never notice all the gifts we have. We want or desire what that person has, never grateful for all that we have been given. Envy sucks Joy right out of one’s life.

Another lie we live by: If I can possess this person, if I can have a relationship with this particular person, they will satisfy all my needs, and then I will know Joy. This lie leads to the deadly fruit, the deadly sin of jealousy—a sin that blinds us to the truth that no one is the possession of anyone else. Actually, God has created every single human being for Himself, not to be possessed or owned by another human being, but ultimately as someone made to return to the One who made them, who created them, who belongs to Him, the Creator of All. You know, when we try to hold on to another person as “mine”, try to limit their freedom, what happens is jealousy displaces all the Joy that resides in a relationship with another.

So the Savior of the World, the One who is constantly coming into the world and trying to break into our lives, He wants to set us free from the lies we live by. As the Light of the World, He also sheds light on the darkness of language that keeps us bound up, keeps us really limited in our Joy—language like “my” or “mine”—that kind of language has the capacity to drain us of Joy itself. Because the Redeemer of the World, the One whose birth fills the Angels and Christmas with Joy—resounding Joy—teaches us that our Heavenly Father did not create us to possess things or to possess others but created us to be possessed by Joy, to be possessed by the One who is Joy.

This is why Saint Paul can speak those powerful words that some people scratch their head at, you know? “Rejoice in the Lord always.” Always? You’ve got to be kidding me! But notice the key words: “Rejoice in the Lord always.” It’s only in this ongoing relationship between us and the Savior of the World, allowing Him to come to us and set us free from the lies we live by, that we can truly be filled with Joy. And have you ever noticed that the most joyful people to walk the face of the earth are the ones who have surrendered themselves completely to the Lord of Joy?

Think about Francis of Assisi, an Italian who lived way back in the 13th century, who literally gave everything his father had given him back to his father and embraced Lady Poverty and is recognized as perhaps the most joyful person to ever walk the face of the earth, who found delight in the gifts of God each day, the simple gifts that many don’t notice: Brother Sun giving him warmth, Sister Moon lighting the way in the dark of night, the creatures of God who brought him much Joy, and the relationships he had with his brothers and others that sustained him throughout his life.

Or, think of Mother Theresa who went and left everything she knew behind to go to the poorest place on earth, the slums of Calcutta, who served the poorest of the poor there, who on her last visit to the United States—I can still remember seeing her face on T.V.—this old woman bent over by age and arthritis. If you looked in her face—radiated Joy, just was permeated with Joy. This woman who had surrendered her entire life to the Lord of Joy and had surrendered to Him present in his broken body, the poor whom she reached out to touch in Joy and whom she recognized was His presence in her midst.
Both Francis of Assisi and Theresa of Calcutta teach us the way to Joy. The way to encounter the source of Joy, and to be nourished by Joy, is to love Christ Jesus, to surrender to Him, and to especially allow Him to come to us, present in the poor.

It’s always fascinating to me to listen to the stories of American youth who go off to third world countries to serve the poor on mission trips. They come back and one of the first things I hear them say is they are just blown away by the joyful spirit of the people they went to serve and who have nothing compared to all that we have materially, but who have everything because they recognize each day that the hand of the Lord feeds them and that they have to trust that somehow the Lord will provide for all they need. It is out of this trust, this surrender to the Lord in His goodness that they are able to be full of gratitude for even the smallest of gifts, the tiniest of things.

So, what shall we do, we who have so much? What shall we do to rejoice always in the Lord? Saint John the Baptist, the one who prepares the way for the coming of the Lord, he tells us. It’s pretty simple. Someone’s hungry? Give him bread. Someone is in need of one of your cloaks and you have two of them? Give it away. In other words, to share what we have, to recognize it is a gift given to be given away. And in giving the gifts we have away to others who need them, to recognize that in fact we are receiving as we give the Lord who comes to us in His need, in the faces of the poor. And then Joy is multiplied! In the giving away of what we have, we are more ready to receive more gifts from the Lord and in the one who receives—gratitude for all that is given from the kindness of hearts that overflow in love.

You and I come here Sunday after Sunday to encounter the God who has made us for Joy and out of Joy, to encounter a God who rejoices in His people, a God who through His son Jesus Christ, has expressed His delight in all that He has made, especially in human beings created in His image, a God who comes to us in this celebration and in the simplest of ways: a little bread, a sip of wine that we recognize as the greatest gift of all, the living presence of the Risen Lord, nourishing us, strengthening us, filling us with Joy, so that we might always be people of gratitude for even the smallest gifts. Because, people who are grateful, who are thankful, are people who are full of Joy. And, Joy is the surest sign of God’s presence in the world.

Father Joseph Jacobi

Sunday, December 6, 2015

2nd Sunday of Advent

Link to today's readings
Baruch 5:1-9 + Psalm 126:1-6 + Philippians 1:4-6, 8-11 + Luke 3:1-6

Click here to listen to today's homily
Delivered at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Mustang, Oklahoma

On the first Sunday of Advent, the prophet Jeremiah spoke of the coming of the long awaited Messiah, the hoped for Savior, naming him the “Lord our Justice.”

Throughout our lives of faith as we daily prepare for the advent of the Lord, we wait actively for the coming of the “Lord our Justice” by making right what has gone wrong in our relationships with one another, with God, and as well by living in right relationship with our common home, the Earth, as God’s gift to us. By doing so, we hasten the coming of the Lord Jesus, the Just One.

But if we are honest with ourselves, we recognize that not only personally as individuals but collectively as a people we have made a mess of justice
over the generations and centuries. So much so that we can fear the coming of God into our lives because we know we have not totally righted the wrongs done. However, on this 2nd Sunday of Advent, the prophet Baruch reminds us
that Justice’s companion is Mercy, and this truth fans the flame of hope in our soul. In God, Justice and Mercy go together, and so the coming of God for which we actively await does not bring us fear of condemnation but the hope of consolation.

When we look back upon our lives, we see how God has leveled the mountainous wrongs we have done, or filled in the valleys of our failures to step up and do the right thing,  making a road for us to to come home to the merciful embrace of God.

Like the people of Israel in Baruch’s time, who live in exile and long to return home, we are a people who have experienced being cut off from our home in the heart of God. We have all felt malaise, a certain “blahness” in our life,
where because of our sinful choices we have distanced ourselves from God
and our truest self as made in the image and likeness of God. But the mercy of God, a special attribute of God’s love, finds a way to bring us home, re-energizing us to move forward toward our eternal home.

Even when we fail to keep God’s Law, when we stumble and fall into a deep valley of despair because of our sin, God’s mercy fills in this valley and God the Good Shepherd comes running to carry us home. Or when we face the insurmountable mountain of “perfecting” our life, God’s mercy levels this mountain so that God comes running to meet us with unabated Joy, like the Prodigal Father welcoming his lost child home.

Sometimes we experience this undeserved mercy of God in the Sacrament of Reconciliation, and other times we experience it in the generous love of others,
especially when tragedy suddenly cripples us. Two softball teams play a championship game. The game is tied going into the bottom of the very last inning, when with 2 outs, the home team’s best hitter smashes a home run.
She sprints around first base with great joy, only to realize she has missed touching first base, and as she suddenly plants her foot to turn back to touch first in order to proceed on her victory dash on around the bases, her leg gives out completely as she rips apart the ligaments supporting her knee. What had been a victory dash full of joy now becomes cries of complete agony. Her teammates rush out from the dugout to carry her around the bases, but the umpire stops them stating that the rules of the game do not allow this and that if they try to do so the home run will be turned into the 3rd out of the inning.
As the heroine lies writhing on the ground in pain, the first baseman from the other team asks the ump if she can assist the home run hitter, who has suddenly become crippled. The ump states that there is nothing in the law of the game that prevents her from doing so. So the first baseman from the other team, and then the pitcher, and then the 2nd baseman and 3rd baseman join together to carry their opponent to 2nd base and then to 3rd base and finally home.  

This is what the mercy of God looks like, where others are willing to “lose” themselves in order to bring us home to experience the victory of God’s redeeming love in Christ.

Most often we encounter the great gift of God’s mercy in the simple yet profound gift of another opportunity, another day to move forward again, another season to begin anew, to start afresh. This fresh start, this beginning with a clean slate, is what a Jubilee Year is all about. This coming Tuesday, December 8th, the Church throughout the world begins the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy.

In the history of the people of Israel, every 50 years was celebrated as a Jubilee, a special year of the Lord’s favor as expressed by the actions of His Chosen People. Every 50 years, debts were completely forgiven and all God’s people started over with their financial slates wiped clean and the crushing burden of debt removed from their shoulders. Every 50 years, land that had been lost to another was given back to its original owner. The Jubilee for Israel was always a concrete reminder of how God’s mercy made everything new again and brought them back home.

This super-abundance of God’s love that helps one to “come home” and to start one’s life anew is expressed in the most powerful way in the person of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the World. In the 15 page document “Misercordia Vultus,”
issued by Pope Francis this past April announcing this Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy, the Pope opens his remarks by stating something simple yet profound about our faith: “Jesus Christ is the face of the Father’s mercy.” When we look at Jesus, when we gaze upon him, we see Mercy enfleshed. When we listen to his words and rejoice in his saving deeds, we see Mercy in action, the “always more” of God the Father’s love for all of God’s creation!

Pope Francis point out in this document on the Jubilee Year of Mercy, that Jesus’ mission is a mission of mercy, saving the lost ones and healing the hurting ones, bringing all to a knowledge of God’s redeeming love. Jesus does not look upon us with pity as if he is standing over us, separated from us, or act from the attitude of pity (“You poor thing”), but rather acts out of compassion by suffering with us.

This mission of mercy propels the 2nd Person of the Divine Trinity to empty himself  of all divine rights and privileges to become little like us, to embrace the fullness of our humanity, to walk among us as one like us in all things but sin. He calls his disciples who have experienced the saving power of His merciful love to embrace His mission of mercy by seeking out the lost and bringing them home to His Father. To create the world anew by the power of His merciful love.

Pope Francis not only spells out our mission in this special year of divine favor,
but he also gives us a very practical way to live out this mission by practicing
the corporal and spiritual works of mercy. The Pope’s “burning desire” is that we reflect upon and act upon the corporal and spiritual works of mercy. 
Pope Francis believes this will awaken our consciences, which have often grown dull in the face of poverty, and allow us to enter more deeply into the heart of the Gospel where the poor have a special experience of God’s mercy.

Jesus himself speaks about almost all of the corporal works of mercy
when he paints a picture of the Final Judgment in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 25: Feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, clothe the naked, welcome the stranger, visit the sick and the imprisoned. The final corporal work of mercybury the dead—is not included in Matthew 25 but has long been practiced as one of the corporal works of mercy. The spiritual works of mercy have been practiced by disciples throughout the centuries: Counsel the doubtful, instruct the ignorant, admonish sinners, comfort the afflicted, forgive offences, bear patiently those who do us ill, and pray for the living and the dead.

Pope Francis reminds us that when we reach out to help others through the corporal or spiritual works of mercy, we are actually serving and loving the broken body of Christ living in them. The Christ who longs to come to us this Advent, to set us free from our anxieties and fears, comes to us in these “little ones,” whom we are called to serve in merciful love. By doing so, we prepare the way for the Lord of mercy to not only come through us to them but to come to us through these little ones.

We mistakenly think that whenever we help the poor or visit the imprisoned
or care for the forgotten ones of this world that we are saving them, but actually, as Pope Francis teaches us over and over again, we are being saved by them.

We think we are saving them from despair, but they are saving us from the
heart-numbing daily despair of modern life which has turned people in on themselves.


Fr. Joseph A. Jacobi

Sunday, November 29, 2015

1st Sunday of Advent

Link to today's readings
Jeremiah 33:14-16 + Psalm 25: 4-5, 8-9, 10, 14 + 1 Thessalonians 3:12-4:2 + Luke 21:25-28, 34-36

Click here to listen to today's homily
Delivered at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Mustang, Oklahoma


During this Advent season we find ourselves in an in-between time. Between the coming of the infant Savior born in Bethlehem and the Son of Man returning in glory to judge all creation. Between those lullabies away in a manger and the storm of the day of the returning Lord.

Advent therefore causes us to look back, to look back and to see how God fulfills God’s promises — how God is always faithful to what God says God will do. Promising to the prophet and through the prophet Jeremiah that He would raise up a “Just Shoot” for Israel and so He does in the Lord Our Justice, the Savior of the World. Looking forward into the future, knowing that the God who is faithful will remain so in the days and years ahead. And so, looking forward with hope, hope-filled hearts, knowing that history itself is not meaningless. Our lives are not meaningless, that rather, we are all heading somewhere toward and ultimate goal, toward this end point who is Jesus, the Christ, the King of Glory and King of the Universe.

So, filled with trust, overflowing with hope, how can we not be an Advent people who live in joy, expectant joy, knowing that the Lord who has come and who will come, continues to come? In fact, we are an Advent people always because the Lord continues to come to us.

The question is: Do we welcome Him as He comes? What prevents us from opening the door of our hearts and our lives to receiving Him today?
The Jesus in Luke describes twin threats to receiving Him as He comes. Carousing and drunkenness? I look at this crowd and say you probably wouldn’t be here this morning if you were under that threat. Maybe too many Christmas parties in the days ahead, but not that threat. But the second threat: The anxieties of daily life. Anxieties that are birthed in the womb of fear, anxieties that cause us to focus solely on today, to protecting what is ours, to hunkering down in our bunkers. In fact, it seems at times that our world runs on the fuel of fear. And that we tend to, therefore, run around and run around in circles trying to anxiously hold on to what we have and always fearful that it will be taken from us.

This kind of fear flows from a lie. It is no accident we call the Evil One “The Father of Lies” and the lie that he wants us to believe: This is all there is. This is all there is. What we can see and touch – that’s all there is. And so, when we lose our possessions or some of the stuff we have, fear paralyses our hearts. When we lose our health in thinking “This is all there is”, fear closes out the joy that should be the mark of our days. 

We can in fact become like trees weighed down with ice. You know, trees as trees are meant to be, they reach to the Heavens. They stretch to the Infinite. Rooted in the earth, they are made to reach to God. The same for us, but when we are bowed down by the frozen nature of our fears, it is hard to stand erect and to reach toward the One who has made us not for fear but to live rooted in joy and to recognize the truth that Jesus comes to proclaim: This is not all there is. There is something much, much more than what we can see and touch.
And so it is every year on the first Sunday of Advent, the Church focuses us on the end time, on the eternal call of God to dwell with Him in glory for all eternity. To recognize, yes, what we do on this earth counts and we will all stand before the Son of Man to be judged on how we have lived, but this is not all there is! That even if we lose it all, even if we lose these frail, fragile lives of ours, whatever we place in God’s hands, that we will possess forever. It is never lost to us. And thus, we can be people of joy even when fear weighs us down, even when we are tempted to embrace fear instead of the trust that God has made us to live from, instead of the very fountain of hope that we are called to drink from.

The challenge therefore for us also is to help others who are bowed down by fear, who are stooped over because of the daily anxieties that weigh them down, to help them to stand erect, to raise up their heads and to see the One coming to them to set them free by the warmth of God’s love and light, the One who comes to them in and through us, the living Body of Christ. We do this in a very special way as Jeremiah reminds us of that title he gives to the Savior by working for justice. He calls the Savior “The Lord of Justice” — that where we see something that has gone awry, we make it right; where something is wrong, we make it right. Where human dignity is bowed down by injustice, we break those bonds and lift people up so that they may see, and only see, the God-given dignity of every human person.

Minoru Yasui understood this truth. Minoru lived during a time of great fear, after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in the early 1940’s in our country. Minoru was a Japanese-American, who lived in the northwest, a bright young man, a lawyer by trade who believed in the founding principles of this country – liberty and equality and justice for all. And so, when a law was passed, a curfew was demanded of all Japanese-Americans — “be in your homes by a certain time” — He said, “This is not right, this is not just. And so, he broke the law. He broke the curfew. He even went to the local police station and said, “Here I am breaking the law, put me away.” Because he wanted to bring to the courts, to the court’s attention, the injustice of such a fear-filled law. And so, as he was put in solitary confinement, Mr. Yasui held on to the hope that his case would prevail. As he spent months upon months all alone in his little cell, he was fueled by this hope that somehow the principles of this country would be lived out by its people. And even when his case failed before the Supreme Court, and he was sent away with other Japanese-Americans to those internment camps on the West Coast, he never gave up his hope that as Americans we would live by what we say we believe — liberty and justice for all.

For his tireless work, for his hope that sustained him to work for the dignity of those who were so discriminated against, this past week he was given the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest recognition any civilian can receive in our land. And he reminds us, as do all people who lift up others who are bowed down, that indeed, working for justice in whatever way we do so, working to make right what has gone wrong, requires this kind of hopefulness, this kind of courage, knowing that that kind of work is the work really of the Lord, Our Justice. The Lord who comes and who continues to come in order to bring God’s justice to the world, in order that all people, especially those who are bowed down by injustice, may be lifted up, may stand erect, raise their heads and know that they, too, have a God-given dignity that no one and no thing can take away.


So, as we move forward on our Advent journey, which really is the journey of our lives, as we pray to the Lord to reveal to us more clearly the fears which dominate our hearts, as we prepare for His coming to us in surprising and mysterious ways during these sacred days, we do so in a spirit of love that fuels our work for justice. Because as Saint Paul said to the community at Thessalonica, and he says to us today, the way forward: Increase and abound in love, day by day, increase and abound in love. And it is basically what our Pope challenges us to do as well. By reaching out to see and touch those that the world has forgotten, and to lift them up, to lift them up by the warmth of the Coming One’s love that surges through us to them, that strengthens them to stand erect in their God-given dignity, to lift their burdens so that they no longer are weighed down. That they might know, as we do, this incredible joy that comes from knowing the Lord who keeps coming to us, as we welcome Him, and as we touch Him broken in the bodies of those around us, with love. We hasten the day of his return, we quicken His coming in glory.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time

Daniel 12:1-3 + Psalm 16:5, 8, 9-10, 11 + Hebrews 10:11-14, 18 + Mark 13:24-32
Delivered at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Mustang, Oklahoma
When listening to Mark’s Gospel, you must always remember the people to whom this life-giving Word of God was first addressed. Mark writes for the Christian community in Rome in the 1st Century during a time of great persecution, during a reign of terror. Because of the violent persecution of the Christians in Rome, they feel like the world as they know it is coming to an end. The day seems to be as dark as night. The stars no longer seem to shine in the sky. The Emperor Nero and his soldiers make sport of the Christians in the Coliseum. They become food for the lions to the blood-thirsty cries of the crowd.
During this darkest of times for Christians in and around Rome, Mark shares the Good News of Jesus Christ, reminding them of the centrality of the Cross. For those who would question, “Why is this happening?” the Evangelist, through the words of Christ, would remind his community: They are asking the wrong question. The real question goes much deeper — “What does it mean? What does it mean?” And the suffering and dying of Jesus, the Son of God, sheds light, gives an answer that brings meaning to a time of seeming meaninglessness.

Because in His love for the world the Son of God gives His life completely on the Cross so that the Cross no longer becomes an instrument of terror, but a sign of hope; because death does not have the last word, life does, as the darkness of the Cross gives way to the never-ending day of the Resurrection. And so Jesus teaches His followers: Only in losing one’s life does one find it, only in giving it away does one receive it back more full than ever before.

The question also those first Christians had to answer, and every Christian community since that time who walked through dark days:  “Who are we going to become? Who are we going to become because of this suffering, this trial, this terror, this seeming darkness?”,  which again is why the Cross is at the very center of Mark’s Gospel. We’ve heard it during this year of Mark: Chapter 8, Chapter 9, and Chapter 10—three predictions of the Passion, the dying of Christ and His Resurrection. Three times those very first disciples, Peter, James, John, the rest—they struggle to understand, they wrestle to comprehend what this means, what the mystery of the Cross means. And Jesus continues to patiently teach them and us that it’s only in following Him along the Way of the Cross, this suffering, self-giving love, that we become something more, that our lives become something more. For the temptation whenever the world seems to be crumbling around us, whenever we think what was certain as sunlight or starlight has vanished from sight, the temptation is to become a people swallowed up by fear and in this darkness to go even deeper into a more profound darkness of violence and despair.

The words of Jesus, spoken first to Peter, James, John, Andrew and the rest, and to those first Christians in Rome suffering and dying, and to all Christians since, the words of Jesus give us strength today to become something more than we ever thought we could be, so that we do not give up this Pearl of Great Price—hope itself—and give in to despair. So that we do not lose the hidden treasure of faith and give in fear, so that we do not give in to fear so that we will not abandon the way of love to walk in the never-ending darkness of hatred.
Because those first Christians persevered in faith, hope and love, even though the world was anew, it seemed to be coming to an end. A new world was born, so that 2,000 years later on the very ground on which they spilled their blood, Popes have walked the Way of the Cross during Holy Week as the way of life, so that the very city that tried to swallow them alive is now the headquarters to the largest Christian church in the world, over 1 billion strong.

We can relate to the Christians in Rome who first heard this word of the Lord passed on to them by the Evangelist Mark. Since the dawn of the millennium fifteen years ago and the promise of a whole new world, what we have experienced instead at times is the darkness of terror and everything we thought to be solid, to no longer be so. From 9/11 on our own American soil to the terrible evil perpetrated in Paris this past Friday, we have lived through some very dark days. In Paris, the City of Light, many people now feel like darkness has enveloped them. They fear to go out to eat at their favorite restaurant, or to their stadiums to cheer on their favorite soccer team, or even just to go to a concert and delight in the sheer pleasure of music. The City of Light now seems to be swallowed by the power of darkness. But that is what the enemy wants us to believe: The temptation that the Great Tempter of humankind wants us to fall into, the temptation to believe that the powers of evil have won the day is great.

Even in our own land, where senseless violence at times seems to make no place safe—workplace or home or even churches. But it is not only terror and violence out there that shakes our world, that tempts us to despair—it is also in our own personal lives whenever the darkness of loss overshadows our day. Not just the loss of someone deeply loved to death, but whenever we lose our job, our very life’s work that we enjoy, or a person close to us whom we have loved for many years betrays our trust, or when a parent strong and sure for many years loses all their strength or even their ability to recognize us anymore. At those times, we can feel like we walk in never-ending night, that we have lost our way and everything which was now solid seems to be as shifting as sand. Everything that was once certain, now shot through with uncertainty.

Yes, we can relate to those first disciples at the center of Mark’s Gospel, that first Christian community in Rome as well, and Christians of all ages who have struggled with the darkness of suffering and sorrow and wonder how the Good News of the Gospel sheds light on all of that. That is why week after week after week, we come here to remember, to remember, to remember a whole new world has already begun with the Resurrection of Christ—the world as we know it and all its troubles truly passing away. The powers of this world destroyed forever by the power of the Resurrection of the Lord. In fact, on that Good Friday when sun went dark at noon, those powers ended and the day a tomb broke open and the Risen Jesus appeared with a life that no one could ever take from Him again, a new age was born.

This one who is the living Word of God, the Word of God in flesh, reminds us that all that we think has passed away is really in God’s hands, and all those who thought that He had passed away forever from their lives, to know that He lives forever and by the power of the Spirit, He walks at our side every day, encouraging us and enlightening us in times of darkness and the temptation to despair, because He knows in the depths of His bones, fully human like us, what it means to feel like one’s life is enveloped by darkness. Even the deepest darkness of all, to feel like one has been abandoned by God. Why else the words from the Cross, in Mark’s Gospel, “My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?”

He who was sustained by the life-giving words of God, who perhaps prayed this very Psalm that sustains us today in our worship, trusting that His Father would indeed show Him the path to life even though in the midst of suffering and dying, struggling to find the way; to trust that somehow the Father would provide fullness of joy in His presence to His faithful ones—a joy that could never, ever be taken away. And in doing so to delight forever at the right hand of the Father, for He is there in glory. And He summons us there to be with Him, not only interceding for us every day when our world seems to crumble around us, but drawing us to Himself by the power of His love and reminding us that there is always more than what we can see in front of us, that by the light of faith, knowing that He walks with us, drawing us every day more into a more abundant life, a more profound peace, and a deeper joy—for He is the Living Word who will never pass away.
Father Joseph Jacobi

Sunday, November 8, 2015

32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time

1 Kings 17:10-16 + Psalm 146:7, 8-9, 9-10 + Hebrews 9:24-28, 18 + Mark 12:38-44
Delivered at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Mustang, Oklahoma
Last Sunday on the Solemnity of All Saints, I talked about how the saints encourage us by their example of life. They show us that it is possible to love God with all that we are and to love our neighbor as our self. Now because of the Solemnity of All Saints, we did not have the usual reading from Mark’s Gospel last Sunday, but if we would have, it was that famous reading about the scribe asking Jesus which is the most important Commandment. And you know His response, it is actually two that go together: To love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, soul and strength, and to love your neighbor as yourself.
In today’s Gospel passage, we see someone who fulfills those Commandments of love, who gives herself fully—fully to God and on behalf of others. And in fact, she would have gone unnoticed that day in the Temple except Jesus sees her. Everybody else is focusing on the wealthy folks and their fine clothes and their big sums of money that come up and deposit those in the Temple treasury. No one sees this widow except Jesus and He points her out to His disciples. And as He does so, He says that her gift is greater than all the rest because she is not giving something from her surplus, she is giving really the gift of herself to God, the gift of herself to God.

Often, this story is called “The Widow’s Mite” reflecting the smallness of her gift, but I think it should be renamed “The Widow’s Might”, because she who had no power in her society, had incredible power to influence others by this sacrifice of love. In fact, she, I believe, is a source of encouragement to Jesus as He goes forward to the Cross. Because in the context of Mark’s Gospel, this is the last time Jesus will be in the Temple. He is in Jerusalem, a few days away from offering His life completely to God. And seeing how this widow does this so freely and generously, I am sure it was able to spur him on to take that very challenging step of giving Himself completely to God on the Cross, on our behalf and out of love of neighbor as well. She is a source of encouragement to Him. She has that power to influence others by her gift.

There are these kinds of generous gifts going on all around us if we but have eyes of faith to see them. People are giving not of their surplus, but giving really gifts that symbolize the gift of themselves completely to God and in service and love of their neighbor. My first week here at [Holy Spirit] back in January 2014, I remember opening my mail in my office and there was an envelope from a family at St. Eugene’s that I knew fairly well. The parents, the two parents, working six days a week at a low-paying job, making great sacrifices so that their children could obtain a Catholic education. And as I opened the envelope, a note fell out with a $10 check saying “Father, please put this in your new church building fund.” I was taken aback, I mean, they don’t have that to give but they gave it. And then it came the next month, and the next month, and every month since—an incredible gift of generosity from this family who is not even connected to us but through Christ and through His sacrificial love.
Or I think about the recent celebration of Oktoberfest when for the first time we threw open the doors of our parish and welcomed others from outside our community to come and to celebrate with us in order to raise money for our new church fund and it was about something much more than just raising money. I remember when the committee told me earlier this year that they were planning for 500 people. I didn’t tell them this but the thought passed my mind, “This is the first year: I think 500 might be a little high.” But you know, 500 showed up that night. Even though there were some kinks the first time around that will be worked out next year, those who came had a great time, a great time, and there was much joy and celebration that night, and people from other parishes and even people who weren’t Catholic were here to enjoy the generosity of our hospitality. And there were those who worked alongside each other: newcomers and people who have been here a long time, you know, Hispanics and Anglos and Asian and African-Americans, all with one goal: Just to give themselves fully to this important project on behalf of the Church but ultimately for the Glory of God. And I remember one “couple of advanced wisdom”—another way for saying they are a little older than most of us—who here until midnight helping to clean up after that celebration—such generosity, such generosity.

Or, I think about the recent project of enclosing our pavilion, making it into a new classroom building. Such commitment on behalf of the leadership team and vision to really direct that project. And the core group of people who were here on most Saturdays, giving of themselves, more than just nails and building a physical building, but really building up a community of faith. Hearing Spanish being spoken next to English as Christians worked side-by-side, on a project together, encouraging each other. And there was even one unlikely source of encouragement to all of us who persevered in that project. It came from a teenager who was here practically every Saturday for four months, usually the first one here and the last one to go in the afternoon, and he came during the week as well. He just poured his heart and soul into the project. For him it was more than building a building, it was just an expression of love for God and love for his neighbors here in our parish. That kind of sacrificial giving was a real inspiration to others who came to give of themselves to the project as well.
I think of our new candidates and catechumens here who become before us this day to enter into a whole-hearted commitment to become one with us in our Catholic faith and who reveal to us something we often forget: We have such an abundance in our church, blessings through the sacraments and the saints, and our moral teaching, and just all the riches of our faith that we often take for granted but that others have to point out to us by their offering of themselves, saying that they want to be part of this living Body of Christ.

There are all sorts of signs of generosity and sacrificial love all around us if we but put on the eyes of Jesus and see as He sees all these incredible acts of the “Widow’s Mite”. I think of couples who are by each other’s side in good and difficult times, times of sickness and health, times when things are going really well and times when it is very challenging, who are faithful and true, and continue to pour out their lives for each other. I think of parents who give so much to their children and even on those days when they don’t find their children likable, they still love them, they still give themselves to their children, they still make those daily sacrifices of love that enable their children to know that they are loved. Or, adult children who are caring for their aging parents, parents who sometimes have lost their mind, who can no longer remember what is going on or perhaps have lost their physical capability to even move or go anywhere on their own—adult children there by their side, walking with them, supporting them, strengthening them, loving them. Or, friends who care for friends in times of great loss, sorrow, for those in this parish who have reached out to welcome others who perhaps have been away or just coming for the first time.

There are all sorts of people giving of themselves in love to others who are actually encouraging others to do the same. And all of this gift-giving, all this generosity, all this sacrificial love really flows from one gift that we celebrate every time we come to this altar of praise. It is the gift of the life of the Son of God who holds nothing back, who gives Himself fully and freely to us. And who simply yet powerfully says, “This is My Body given for you, this is My Blood poured out for you.” So that we might have the strength, the energy, the courage to do the same, to say to others “This is my body, my life that’s broken open for you” and find that there’s so much more of ourselves to give away. “This is My Blood, My Very Life that I pour out for you” and to discover there is so much more to share. And slowly but surely we discover the truth that all widows of faith know: That with God, the jar of flour, it never goes empty – the jug of oil, it will never go dry.
Father Joseph Jacobi

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Solemnity of All Saints

Revelations 4:2-4, 9-14 + Psalm 24 1BC-2, 3-4AB, 5-6 + 1 John 3:1-3 + Matthew 5:1-12A
Delivered at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Mustang, Oklahoma
By the marvelous power of God’s love we have been made into Children of God. Who are we right now? Beloved Children of our Heavenly Father. Baptism makes this truth clear, it makes it an indelible reality in our lives. God, the Father of All Creation, has claimed us as His own beloved sons and daughters. In those water of baptism, we are forever joined to the beloved Child of God, Jesus himself. He reveals to us what our beloved Father is like by teaching us to pray “Abba!” (“Father!”) Yes, remarkable as it may seem, we are to understand our relationship with the God who has created the universe out of nothing, who has power and might beyond belief, we are to relate to this God as a child does in tenderness to his “Papa”, to his “Daddy”, whatever term of tenderness a child may use for his or her father who they know will provide them whatever they need.

And then, by the gift of the Holy Spirit poured into our lives as love and baptism, the very love of God, we have been strengthened to live out of this identity as Children of God. It is by this gift of the Spirit that we can cry out “Abba!” (“Father!”) and, as Jesus does, trust that in God, His Father, all things will be provided to us, all good things will be provided to us.
So our Heavenly Father rejoices whenever we turn to Him with whatever need we have, no matter how big nor how small. It is something like this: My dad is a carpenter. I grew up not having much interest in carpentry, very active in sports in school, extracurricular activities. I never really learned much about making things or fixing things. But, any time I needed something fixed or needed help with making something I would go to my Daddy, my father. And he would drop what he was doing, and he would help me, joyful, excited to do so. It is just a small smidgen of what God’s love for us as father is like: Always ready, always ready to respond to His children’s needs. But we so quickly forget who we are: Beloved children of God.

The key to sanctity, the key to growth in holiness, and the saints teach us this: To grow into our identity as God’s Beloved Children and to recognize everything we have comes from the hand of God.

So, the Father claims us as His own Beloved Children. He sends us His Beloved Son, Jesus, to teach us how to live as a Child of God and they gift us with their life-giving Spirit as divine energy to live in this way. The Divine Trinity – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit – does everything to make our way home to God easy. The Tempter wants to tempt us to believe that it is very difficult, that sanctity – holiness of life – it’s impossible. But the Trinity, out of love for us, makes it easy and always gives us more and more to lead us on our journey home. In fact, with God, there is always more – more joy, more peace, more love. It is the very nature of God to keep giving gifts. And today, we celebrate some of the greatest gifts of God – those men and women of every age and race and background who are with God, who we believe and know are with God and enjoying right now the fullness of life and glory – the saints of God, human like us in all things, who struggled in life as we do with trusting in God’s goodness, and somehow lived out of their identity as beloved Children of God and were able to grow in love of God and of their neighbor in all things.

And they want to help us. They want to help us to be where they are. And so, they assist us at every moment with their prayers. And they delight when we turn to them, as our brother or sister on this earth, that’s when we turn to them and ask for their help in prayer. And so, when we are looking for a parking place, and there is not one single space in sight, we pray, “Mother Cabrini, Mother Cabrini, find me a space for my little machiney.” It works! I was just at OU Medical Center this past week, needing to see someone quickly, not a space in sight, turned to Mother Cabrini and immediately the car right in front of me pulls out, so thank you. Or perhaps one more common to many Catholics who lose their keys or other things: “Tony, Tony, come around. Something’s lost, gotta be found.” Saint Anthony, always there to aid us in our time of need. Or, perhaps, in more serious times, a saint for impossible causes, a saint I know from working with the Latino people of our land who are far from home, who face such challenging situations, Saint Jude. To turn to Jude and to ask him in the face of something seemingly impossible for the help of God.

All the saints go before our God on behalf of us, praying that we might know God’s love and God’s help, and they assist us with their prayers on our journey home to Heaven. So, their prayers give us strength and the example of their life gives us courage. Their lives encourage us that the life of holiness is possible for they were sinners, broken and weak, just like us. But they understood that in their simpleness, in their brokenness, in their weakness, they could always turn to God, who would make them whole, who would strengthen them, and who would aid them in their time of need. And they show us, these holy men and women of God, how to live out the blueprint of holiness which is the Beatitudes. In fact, that first Beatitude, “Blessed are the poor in spirit theirs is the Kingdom of God”, it’s the foundation for all the other Beatitudes.
Every saint in his or her unique way shows us what it means to be poor in spirit, what it means to understand that life and the source of life does not come from us, it comes from outside of us as a gift, and Divine Life comes from outside of us as a gift through the power of the Spirit. They show us what it means to depend upon God in all things and to trust that God will provide. And so, they could live out those other Beatitudes as well – injustice causing them to mourn, and then to turn to find consolation in the God of All Hope, their desire for righteousness, to make right their relationship with God and right their relationship with others, as strong as a deep hunger or an aching thirst, hearts fully devoted to God, leading them to act with mercy and sow the seeds of peace. And their way of living like that of Jesus himself, challenging those in power, and thus like the preacher of the Beatitudes, they, too, will suffer because of it.

The saints by their lives poured out in love of God and others, they show us holiness is not complicated, it’s not just something out there for men and women in monasteries or convents, but holiness is rooted in the very stuff of our daily lives, in the messiness of our lives, as we struggle to love more fully our neighbor, to give our lives more fully to God, it is right there that we are being fired, shaped into who we truly are—saints of God.

At each and every Eucharist the saints join us in singing praise to God, or rather, more correctly, we join them in their endless hymn of praise to God. It is as if Earth is joined to Heaven and a veil is removed and we see how around this table we are joined to the saints in these songs of joy and gratitude to God.

I was this past week at a clergy education day at the Pastoral Center and we had Mass in the chapel there. If you have every been there, you’ve noticed the beautiful stained glass windows along each side and they are arranged so that as Mass is being celebrated, the reflections of those saints are kind of carved into the marble behind the altar so that you can see them right there around the altar praying with us. And so it is that the eyes of faith recognize the presence of the saints here joining us in prayer and with the eyes of faith, we recognize that we are never alone, that they are with us every day, urging us on in this journey of faith, cheering us on in this race of faith, reminding us our destiny—every one of us!—our destiny is life with God forever.
Father Joseph Jacobi

Sunday, September 27, 2015

26th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Link to today's readingsNumbers 11 25-29 + Psalm 19 + James 5:1-6 + Mark 9:38-48


Delivered at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Mustang, Oklahoma


What a remarkable week this has been and what an incredible time to be Catholic! This weekend our Holy Father, Pope Francis, wraps up his visit to the United States by participating in the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia.
He has spoken throughout this week on the importance of the family. But in an even larger context, Pope Francis has challenged us to reflect upon what it means to be a member of the human family.
 
He has done so by preaching the Gospel with joy, in a way which many people
have not heard the Gospel message before. In a very clear and engaging manner, the Pope wraps his flesh around the Mercy of God; he embodies this attribute of God, he extending the merciful touch of the Lord Jesus to those who are broken, forgotten, and considered disposable by the world. Where others only focus on statistics about poverty or mass migration, Pope Francis always sees the human faces behind the numbers, each one with their only particular hopes and dreams, joys and sorrows.
 
Reporters try to label Pope Francis, to put him into a certain political category,
but his loving service to Christ suffering in the broken ones transcends all labels and categories. What he preaches, he does. What he says flows into action, whether by breaking bread with the homeless of our nation’s capital, or visiting those who are forgotten because they are locked up behind iron bars, or driving about town in a little Fiat instead of a grand limousine. Our Pope preaches the Gospel not only with his encouraging and challenging words, but also by humbly pouring out his life in service to all humanity, especially the forgotten ones who live outside the mainstream.
 
One of the striking images from his visit took place when he welcomed little 5-year old Sofie Cruz to his Pope-mobile while on the parade route through D.C.
Sofie had broken through the security barrier, and was making her way toward the Pope, and the security detail thought to prevent her, but like Jesus, the Pope made clear that no one should hinder a child from coming to him.
In that one image, a thousand powerful words were spoken, and something beyond words happened---the Vicar of Christ showing us what it means
to welcome and receive the little ones, those without power or prestige,
those who have no standing in our land.
 
Francis is a Pope who includes the excluded; who teaches us, like Christ,
that the way to greatness is to serve the least ones; who is more at home in a humble abode of a poor family than in the Vatican Palace, and who would rather rub elbows with the forgotten of this world than with the famous.
 
One of the more formal titles for the leader of the Roman Catholic Church is
“Pontifex Maximus,” or the great bridge-builder. We have seen in this short window of time how this Pope has built bridges, bringing people together of all faiths, races, ethnicities, backgrounds, and way of life. From the chamber of the joint session of Congress to the great hall of the United Nations, this Pope not only brought people who are very different from one another together, but also challenged them to end divisions and find new ways to strengthen their ties.
 
In his recent encyclical, “Laudato Si” and by his strong words this week, Pope Francis reminds us that we need to care not only for one another but also for our common home, the Earth, which is God’s good gift to us.
 
The very inclusive nature of Jesus, as seen in Pope Francis, confronts attitudes of division and privilege For there can be no coming of the Kingdom of God while we insist on being separate, different, or special, expecting privilege or power or positions of influence over others. God our Creator has made us to be “for” each other, not “over” or “against.” To be “for life for all”, as Thomas Groome would say.
 
 
So the challenge becomes cutting out of our lives those attitudes and behaviors
which pit us against one another. The rub of the Gospel comes in removing those things from our lives which divide us and work against being for others and for life.
 
Jesus talks about self-mutilation not in a literal sense, but speaks in hyperbole
to wake us up to those attitudes and behaviors which have to be removed from our lives if we want to enjoy the reign of God. Those things that we consider to be as important as a hand or foot.
 
We as Catholics have to cut out the attitude that we have all the answers,
and enter into dialogue, along with our Holy Father, with all the children of this world, to discover the way forward together. We are to cut off our absolute allegiance to a political party and its platform, and cut out demonizing those who are not members of our particular party. There is something more important than being a Republican or a Democrat, and that is being an American who works for liberty and justice for all. We have to cut out the attitude that our country is always right and that we have the right to do whatever we want to advance our agenda, and accept the truth that we are citizens of the world, and that we as a nation must work together with other nations to further peace and prosperity for all people in corner of our common home. We are more than one nation under God—we are one human family under God.
 
Christ’s teaching is not easy, for it is a radical call to change the way we think
in order to change the way we act. It is a call for a change of heart in order to love as He loves. We have to cut off the feet that lead us away from others
and instead walk together and work together “for all for life.” We cut off the hands that are grabbing everything we can get, and instead give all we have for the betterment of others and this planet. We cut out eyes which look only inward in self-absorption and instead look outward toward the needs of others and see the face of Christ, especially in those who are hurting.
 
We must move beyond the comfort of our own groups, move beyond thinking in terms of insiders and outsiders, and see that we are all in this great adventure of life together. Jesus would have us his disciples always “thinking outside the box”:  always ready and willing to embrace new ways and new partners in the work of the Reign of God. The Spirit of the living God blows where it will and it blows upon everyone.
 
We are called to strive for a higher goal than only what’s best for me, or for my group, or for my party, or for my nation---for the goal for which we strive is the Kingdom of God. Our Pope and the social teachings of our Church challenge us to go beyond the borders we place on our lives, and realize that just as Jesus is for all, so we shall be. So we serve and help and lift up other people, not because they are Catholic, or because they profess to believe in Christ or because they have an ID card, but we serve and help and lift up others because we are Catholic.
 
The theme for the gathering of the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia is,
“Love is Our Mission:  The Family Fully Alive!” Love was Jesus’ mission, and it is our mission as well. We are most fully alive when we reach out over the gaps
that separate us from one another to grasp another’s hand in friendship. We are most fully alive when compassion breaks down the barriers which separate us.
When we love one another, we are fully alive; when we are truly concerned about the well-being of others and give ourselves on their behalf, we are filled with peace and joy.
 
So we might have the strength to build bridges between peoples, we are reminded at every Mass that God in Christ has bridged the distance between heaven and earth. So we might have the strength to live for others, the Crucified and Risen Christ gives us a share in divine life at this Eucharist. He gives himself to us so we can give ourselves for all for life.
 
Listen carefully to the words of Jesus and vow to make them your own:

“This is my body, given up for you.   This is my blood poured out for you.”
 
Fr. Joseph A. Jacobi