The truth is that we
all are looking for heroes but in all the wrong places. Perhaps, we need to define what a hero is. In
the ancient Greek myths a hero was a Ulysses or a Hercules, someone of
extraordinary strength who completed a seemingly impossible mission. The
operative word to define a Greek hero would be courage. Did they have the
courage to complete their mission in life?[1].
There are also heroes
in the Old Testament. Abraham and Samson and David and Deborah and Ruth were
all heroes because against seemingly impossible odds, they still allowed God's
plan to work through them. They had the
courage to stand by God's plan and to bring that plan to completion.
The scriptures
lead up to the greatest of all heroes, Jesus Christ. The first reading is taken from the Book of
Revelation in the section called the Seven Seals. This section begins with the
Book of God's Plan for Mankind being brought forward. It is sealed with seven
seals because God's plan had been disrupted by man's infidelity.Who is
worthy to open the book? an angel calls out. Then the Lamb comes forward. Only the Lamb that was slain can open the
Book. By sacrificing himself totally to God's will, Jesus Christ has restored
God's reign among his people. He is the ultimate hero. He transformed the world
with the Love of God.
And He calls us
to do the same. On the Mountain of the Beatitudes, today's Gospel, he calls us
away from being self centered to being Theocentric or God centered. He calls us
to be poor in Spirit. Whether we are
rich or poor or somewhere in between, the center of our lives must be God, not
money. He tells us that we can't close
our eyes to the atrocities of the world.
Blessed are those who mourn. The Lord wept over Jerusalem because it
refused to recognize the presence of God in its mist. We weep over our society
that allows children to be exploited by drugs, sex and crass commercialism. We
mourn over a society that allows a million and a half abortions a year. The
meek who inherit the earth are those who are not going to allow hatred to
dominate their lives. They will fight
for what is right, but they will be merciful, they will be sincere, they will
be peacemakers for the sake of the Lord.
Finally the beatitudes speak about those who are willing to suffer the
mockery of the world, those who would rather be in the minority who choose God
rather than be in the majority of those who go along with the pagan materialism
of society.
The saints whom
we honor today give us an example of people emptying themselves to allow God's
plan to work in them, people who have the courage to be genuine heroes. They
are not plaster or plastic statues of unreal people in pietistic poses. They
are real people from every walk of life who met the challenge of Christianity
and conquered. They are priests and nuns, like Francis of Assisi and
Catherine of Sienna, married people and single people, like Thomas More and
Rose of Lima, very old and very young, like Theresa of Avila and Theresa of
Liseaux, They are the wealthy, like Thomas Beckett, the middle class, like
Ignatius Loyola, and poor like Martin de Porres. They were geniuses, like
Thomas Aquinas, and people of simple intelligence but vast wisdom, like John
Vianney. All of these and all whom I could not possibly name accepted the
challenge of Christianity and had the courage to wash their baptismal robes in
the Blood of the Lamb, as Revelation says.
They had the courage to live the sacrifice of Christ in their lives. They
had the courage to make the love of God real in the world.
The Book of
Revelation says that there is a throng of people before the throne of the lamb,
people from every race and nation, a number to numerous for anyone to
count. These are those who have gone
before us, who live now and who will live in the future who are willing to
sacrifice everything for the Kingdom of God. These are the true heroes
following the proto hero, the greatest of all heroes, Jesus Christ.
Will I be among
that number? Will you be standing there proclaiming God's love with your life? Well,
that is why we are here today. We pray for the courage to follow the Lord. We
pray for the courage to put God first in our lives. May the Lord help us to stand for Him and
with Him in our lives. Today we pray for the courage to be genuine heroes •
[1] Solemnity of All Saints,
November 1, 2015.Readings: Revelation 7:2-4, 9-14; responsorial Psalm 24:1bc-2,
3-4ab, 5-6; 1 John 3:1-3; Matthew 5:1-12a.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario