*A stripped down version this week, as I'm trying to get out the door to make it to our annual diocesan priestly retreat. Please pray for us!*
Readings for Sunday, October 6/ 27th Sunday in Ordinary Time:
Habakkuk 1:2-3; 2:2-4
Psalm 95:1-2, 6-9
2 Timothy 1:6-8, 13-14
Luke 17:5-10
In recent weeks the scriptures,
especially the Gospels, have been speaking to us of the poor and our need to go
outside of our comfort zones to serve them and, in serving them, to serve the
Lord. As we gather on this first Sunday in October, we recall that October is
Respect Life Month, a month in which we are called to be mindful of the dignity
of every human person and to continue to work in our hearts and in our world
for greater respect for all human life.
Often these days we hear of the
need to care for animals and to protect the environment, and rightly so since
the Lord placed all of these things under our care to protect and preserve. But
while we have an obligation to preserve the gift of creation, we have an even
greater obligation to fight for true respect to be shown to every human person.
It is not an optional thing in the Christian life, but rather is the foundation
upon which so much of our moral teaches rests. If we look at the beginning of
the Book of Genesis we see the story of the creation of the universe. We hear
how the light is separated from dark, sky and earth, the animals and plants are
created and then finally man and woman. The fact that man and woman are last in
the lineup of creation emphasizes that humanity is the crown of creation, the
culmination and high point because unlike anything else that God created, we
are made in His own image and likeness. We are unique among all of creation.
Interestingly enough, if you read the second chapter of Genesis, it gives
another account of creation. In this account Adam is created first and then the
animals and such are given to him and lastly woman comes to complete him. In
that story we see that all things are entrusted to man’s care and that while
all things must be cherished, the most valuable thing of all is the woman,
another person whom Adam knows as different from all other creatures. We are
unique, created in God’s image and for that reason we must be respected. All of
us.
It can be easy to try to limit
our respect for others sometimes. I’ve heard often and said myself the familiar
phrase “you have to earn my respect.” While that can fly in the working world,
that is not something that should be in our hearts as we interact with other
people. We have an obligation to love and respect others not because of what
they have done or not done, any attributes or accolades, or whether we get
along with them or not, but simply because they were created by God and loved
the same as we are. This can be difficult because sometimes people do things or
we perceive something that makes us lose some respect for them. Sometimes we’ve
been hurt by someone or we have some aversion to a person or group. It is for
us to comply with God’s grace to find healing and renewal in that place of our
hearts and to do all that we can to show respect and love.
Yesterday there was an article in
the paper about an inmate who spent some forty years in solitary confinement
and died only two days after his release from prison. I’m not making any
political points, I don’t know all the facts of the cases and I’m not making
any judgments one way or the other. All I know is that when I read that there
was sorrow in my heart for him because he didn’t get to experience the freedom
he was created for, even if it might have been by his own choosing. That’s what
God desires of us – to be able to look at others and despite whatever good or
wrong they have done, to see in them still the image of God and to honor them
as such.
When I was thinking about this in
regards to my own life I realized how easy it is to talk pie in the sky
theology around respect for others and knew that I needed to have concrete
things to put into practice. As I was praying, three things came to me. A few
years ago there was a movie released call ‘Eat Pray Love’ which you’ve likely
seen or heard of. While I love to eat as much as anyone else, for our purposes
today I want to take out the word ‘eat’ and insert the word ‘think.’ Think Pray
Love.
The first concrete thing we can
do to grow in respect for others is to think. Think about God’s love for you.
Think about how many blessings God has given you in this life, each of them a
sign of His love and your goodness in His sight. Think about how when in times
of temptation or trial the Lord walked with you to give you strength and to
guide you along the right path. Think about the times when you were lost in
your sin and the Lord was there even then to persist in His love and to bring
you back to Himself. There is nothing that we can do to change God’s love for us
and when we realize that and take that knowledge into our hearts, we are able
to recognize that it’s true not only for ourselves but for everyone else as
well. God loves all of us the same and regardless of what happens in this life
that love is always present. We are invited to love in the same way.
The second thing we can do is
pray. Mother Teresa was a blessed woman who was able to have such an incredible
impact upon the world and saw the face of Christ in the poor everywhere she
went. The reason that she was able to see Christ in the poor was because she
already knew the face of Christ in prayer. Each day she spent an hour in the
convent chapel in communion with the Lord, drawing closer to Him and because
she knew His face in prayer she was able to walk out in the streets and see Him
without having to try; she knew His face and Knew voice. If we immerse
ourselves in prayer each day and become friends with Christ, we will not have
to struggle to see Christ in others – especially those we might not respect so
much right now – because we will know Him already in every face we meet.
The last thing is to love. This
is the most important piece of the puzzle because if we respect others in our
hearts and keep close to God in prayer but have no sign of love for others, we
are lost. It is for us to show the love that we know God has for others. One
concrete thing is to think of one person or group of persons that we might not
show respect like they deserve and to work intentionally to show them greater
respect. When we do this it changes not only our hearts as we become more like
Christ, but it also has the power to change the hearts of others. Too often we
undervalue ourselves and think less of ourselves than we actually are, but an
act of kindness shown renews within us the awareness of God’s infinite love for
us and the fact that we were created ‘good’ in the eyes of God.
As we continue in this
celebration of the Holy Mass, let us ask the Lord’s grace to come into our
hearts and to transform us to help us love and He loves, and to see others as
He sees them – as cherished men and women, all created in the image of our
Father.