SHEEP!!! |
Zechariah 9:9-10
Psalm 145:1-2, 8-11, 13-14
Romans 8:9, 11-13
Matthew 11:25-30
Transitions in parish life are
always bittersweet. It was hard for me to leave behind the parish family that I
had come to know and love after being there for two years and I know that it
was tough for y’all to see Fr. Lee leave after ten years here and becoming such
an important part of your lives and community. For me, though, and hopefully
for you as well, there is still a great sense of joy in transition because it
gives us the chance to reflect back upon the many ways that God has acted in
our lives before, the blessings we’ve received, the relationships that have
changed us and give thanks to the Lord for those things. And it is a chance to
start anew, to witness the work of God in a new context, and to build new
relationships. That said, I’m very happy to be here to see what God has in
store for us.
Apparently that joy is evening
showing on my face a little these days. Friday I went home to celebrate the 4th
with my family and my oldest sister came up and said to me, “Brent, you
look…happy!” Now that might not seem like a big deal, but it was and reason is
this: I’m not a very visually expressive person. Often I am having a great time
and you simply can’t tell from my facial expression. And I can remember several
Christmases when I got absolutely incredible gifts and my response was a
subdued “cool,” much to my parents’ frustration. So when my sister told me I
looked happy, it really struck me and was good to hear that the joy in my heart
was actually showing in my face. The joy is showing more now not because my
other assignments weren’t enjoyable (quite the opposite!) but that it I’m
entering into the state of life that I was created for and for which I have
longed – to become a father in a community.
A quick snapshot of my vocation
story: I was baptized Catholic, raised in the Methodist faith, and confirmed on
my 11th birthday in the Methodist Church. Then my mom decided to
become Catholic and my stepdad returned to the Church and I came along with
them and, joy of joys, I got to start my religious education all over again in
a new church when I had just finished it. You can probably guess how excited I
was about this becoming Catholic thing! But I became Catholic nonetheless, or
at least attended the Church. I say that because while I was externally
Catholic, I was internally an atheist. I thought all of the stuff I was
hearing, seeing, and doing was just a bunch of nonsense, but I had to continue
on to keep mom happy. Eventually I got involved in the high school youth group
and began to believe in God and experience great conversion. Right before my
senior year of high school I began to feel a calling to ‘something more’ in the
Church. It took me a year to realize it might be priesthood and two more years
to work up the courage to actually pursue that path. By that time I was already
in my second year at LSU. I transferred to the seminary in Covington and
complete my undergrad work in two years and graduated. Then I took a year off
to think about become a monk, because what better place for a simple little
introvert that in a quiet monastery where I could read and pray and serve in a
hidden capacity, right? Well, I went and had a great time, but things changed
when I returned home.
One day I went to my parish and
asked the pastor if he could hear my confession and he was gracious enough to
do so. We talked for a little bit about my discernment and he sent me off on my
way. Later on in prayer I realized that what my pastor had done for me was what
I had desired in my heart along: to be able to be in the midst of a community
in order to know people and journey with them as they walk toward the Lord. His
example gave me clarity and I returned to the seminary that summer and four
years later was ordained a priest.
Doing Communion Visits during mission in Nicaragua |
The simple point in the midst of
this all is that I want to get to know you and have you know me so that
together we can walk toward the Lord Jesus who bids us come. Because that’s the
reason we’re here. The whole Gospel and the whole Bible in general can be
summed up in the three simple words Jesus speaks to us today, “Come to me.” Our
whole life is about coming to Jesus over and over and over again. It’s about
trying our best to recognize and to live the truth that Jesus really is the
center of everything. Often we’ll think of our lives like a pie – a chunk of
our time for work, a chunk for family, a chunk for this and that activity – but
our relationship with Jesus isn’t supposed to be a piece of the larger pie,
it’s the crust that hold all the rest together. This is my ultimate goal for
each and every one of us, myself included: to come to a place in our lives
where we have a deep, unshakable conviction in our hearts that without a daily,
personal, intimate relationship with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, we are
dead. Jesus Christ is the way, the truth, and the life and today he bids us
come to Him and find peace. All of us. Nobody is an exception because all of us
are weary, all of us have burdens we’re carrying through this life, and all of
us want peace. Come. Place yourself in His hands and He places Himself in yours
at Holy Communion. Come to Jesus.
In a time of transition there are
always little tweaks and changes and you can see a few of them already with the
vestments, altar cross, and chanting. There are particular reasons for each of
those things, which I will explain in subsequent homilies, and the main reason
is always to give another opportunity, another way, to encounter Jesus Christ
and to walk away changed because that’s what it’s all about. So as we begin to
walk together toward the Lord Jesus, let us call upon the protection of our
heavenly patrons to watch over us and keep us safe: St. Ann, pray for us. St.
Vincent de Paul, pray for us. Amen.
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