Monthly Archives: November 2024

Christ the King

Dear Folks,
This is the Feast of Christ the King! This is the culmination of the Liturgical year, and the happy ending to the great story of life, the universe and everything! Next week we begin the Year of Grace 2025. We will read a lot of the Gospel of Luke, and that has some powerful stories on hope for the sinner.
Pope Francis has said that it is time to strengthen and share hope, so the Jubilee year 2025 will be themed Pilgrims of Hope. Pilgrims are, by definition, on a journey, and so they focus in on a hoped-for destination. Our hope is in the Kingdom of God. We can hope for
good events happening now, but the goods of the earth all pass away. Civilizations rise and fall. We can build things and see them destroyed. The Kingdom is forever.
Our ultimate hope is for Jesus being seen by all as King of Kings, Lord of Lords. “Every knee shall bend, of those in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father (See Philippians 2:10-11).” At this time, all evil will be vanquished, all lies exposed, and justice will reign forever. If we ever get discouraged by world events, and how evil seems to be prospering, we remember
that it will lose in the end and goodness will win.
This is not, by the way, an excuse to be lackadaisical about building a better world now. First, our work to help those in need, defend the helpless, and lift up the lowly is part of our witness to the Gospel. We cannot evangelize if we are not reflecting God’s love with our actions. Second, if we are not doing this work, we are rejecting Christ and will be counted among those who do not know Him (if you doubt this, I challenge you to read Matthew 25
very carefully!).
Those who truly believe in the victory of Jesus can be an unstoppable force for good, because nothing in the world will discourage them. We might not live to see the fruit of our
labors, but Jesus said “One sows and another reaps (John 4:37).” If we try our best ten thousand times and fail ten thousand times, we are still doing the work of the Kingdom, and when the time comes, we will rejoice. Not only that, but we can rejoice now, in good times
and in bad, because the King is coming.
Blessings,
Fr. Jim 

S

Jesus is Coming

Dear Folks,

Today we get into the Apocalyptic chapter of the Gospel of Mark. Matthew (chapter 24), Mark (14) and Luke (21) all have a chapter that starts with the destruction of the Temple, and winds up talking about the Second Coming of Jesus.

The destruction of the Temple would have been a horrible thought for Israelites. It was the center of their national identity and their relationship with God. Going to the temple was a sacred act, and there were hymns celebrating the trip (See Psalm 122). I saw a video of the tearing down of St. Jean’s church in Muskegon, a church that had been there since 1885.

Those who were attached to it were surely grieving. The destruction of the Temple would have been a far worse trauma. It had been destroyed by the Babylonians in 587 B. C., and Israel had ceased to be a nation for over a generation, being slaves in exile. The destruction of the Temple in A. D. 70 was also a huge trauma, and the letter to the Hebrews

spends a lot of time helping Jewish Christians on how to understand the faith in light of the destruction of the temple. The Gospel of John will teach powerfully, that Jesus is the new Temple, and we have everything we need.

A critical apocalyptic text is Daniel chapter 7. It speaks of “coming on the clouds of heaven one like a Son of Man.” Jesus frequently referred to Himself as the Son of Man, and when interrogated by the high priest if He was the Messiah He said, “I am, and you will see the Son of Man seated at the right hand of the Power and coming with the clouds of heaven

(Mark 14:62).” The closer He got to the cross, the more open He was about His identity.

“Apocalypse” is from the Greek word for “removal of the veil.” “Revelation” is from the Latin equivalent. Apocalyptic literature will use strange images, and sometimes numbers to show the meaning of what is happening at the time. It is often written in times of persecution, and the basic message is that it may appear that God’s plan is failing, but if you could see past the veil of appearances, that plan is unrolling and on the path to success.

Therefore, however discouraging things are, don’t give up. However bad things get, don’t get slack. However corrupt other people become and how horribly they behave, we are called to be faithful. Remember that what we see is not all of reality, and not the best part. Our story is part of a much larger story. Even if civilization collapses, God will be able to do great things, and the kingdom will still be winning. Jesus said, “heaven and earth

will pass away, but my words will not pass away.” (Mark 13:31). Nothing of the earth is guaranteed. The truth of the Gospel is. Our job is to grow strong in our faith such that whatever happens, our faith in God will rule our lives.

Blessings,

Fr. Jim

How Deep is our Faith?

Dear Folks,
There are some people in the Bible who deserve more recognition than they usually get. Our first reading this Sunday; 1Kings 17:10-16, tell the story of the Widow of Zarephath, and I consider her one of the great heroes of the Bible.
Consider her situation. She had gotten married and had a son (I’m guessing recently, since the son was apparently still too young to help collect sticks). Her husband died. Widows didn’t have a lot of options financially, but she did the best she could. Then came the drought, and therefore the famine. She now had no one who would hire her, nothing left to sell, no one from whom she could beg anymore, and now her food was almost gone. She was getting ready for her and her son to have one last taste of food before they starved to death. Imagine the heaviness of her heart as she ponders all her hopes and dreams being crushed, the horrible fate that
was looming.
Then this scruffy looking strange man comes and asks for a drink of water. Immediately she goes to get it. Even in her current situation, her hospitality goes so deep that she doesn’t hesitate. The he calls after her asking for some food.
Oh.
Any other time it would not have been a question, of course she would feed a stranger. Not so easy today. She explains the situation, and the reasonable expectation was that he would respond, “I’m so sorry. I’ll go ask someone else.” Instead, he has the nerve to say okay fine but first feed me. I don’t imagine she put much stock in his promise “The jar of flour shall not go empty, nor the jug of oil run dry, until the day that the LORD sends rain upon the earth.” There was nothing about him to tell her he could work miracles, and it would be more likely he would say anything to get what he wanted, even scamming a starving widow. I expect she figured she and her son were going to starve to death and nothing could change that. She had one last decision to make in her life, and that was to be generous to a stranger. She chose to be generous. She had so little to give, but gave with great love. God rewarded her, and I consider her one of the underappreciated heroes of the Bible.
I would also mention Shiphrah and Puah (Exodus 1:15-21). They were Israelite midwives who were being oppressed in Egypt. They defied the mightiest king in the world to save the babies
from slaughter. They succeeded because they were clever and had tremendous courage. They had a terrible situation and responded in faith. Their faith went that deep.
In our Gospel this Sunday, we see the contrast between the Scribes and Pharisees, whose faith was just on the surface and the widow giving her small coins whose faith was deep enough to give when she had so little.
Challenge for us: how deep does our faith go? Will it still work when we are at the end of our rope, worn down to nothing, crushed by life? May God grant us the grace.
Blessings,
Fr. Jim