HOMILY FOR THIRTIETH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME, YEAR B (WORLD MISSION SUNDAY). 24.10.2021.
Readings:
Isaiah 56:1-6; Psalm 96; Roman 10:9-18 and Mark 16:15-20.
FOR WE CANNOT BUT SPEAK ABOUT WHAT WE HAVE SEEN AND HEARD.
Today the Holy
Mother Church celebrates World Mission Sunday, as was decreed by Pope Pius XI
in 1926, for every Church/institution/parish. In the year 2019, we had the
central theme: “Baptized and sent,”
which was aimed at rekindling the missionary spirit in the life of the Church.
Last year it was the question of the Lord, “Whom
shall I send?” (Is 6:8) and for this year the theme of the mission Sunday
is, “For
we cannot but speak about what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20). Pope
Francis emphasizes in his message released on January 29, 2021 that “Once we experience the power of God’s love,
and recognize his fatherly presence in our personal and community life, we
cannot help but proclaim and share what we have seen and heard.” This was
the experience of the Disciples of Christ sent on mission as seen in the
selected readings for today’s celebration.
In Pope Francis’
message for World Mission Sunday, he outlined the experience of the disciples
as those who saw Christ cure the sick, dine with sinners, feed the hungry, draw
near to the outcast, touch the unclean, identify with the needy, propose the
beatitude and teach in a new authoritative way. He draws our consciousness to the difficulties attached to the mission,
as things were not always easy: the experience of marginalization, segregation,
language barrier, culture shock, and imprisonment combined with internal and
external struggles. Yet, rather than these experiences leading the disciples to
step back or withdraw, these experiences impelled them to turn problems,
conflicts and difficulties into opportunities for mission. It is a heavy task;
I am a witness to it. However, we are called to endure hardship by clinging to
Christ who commissioned us.
In today’s
Gospel, after Christ had commissioned the disciples saying “Go into the world and preach the Gospel to
all creation, he said, ‘He who believes and is baptized will be saved; but he
who does not believe will be condemned. These signs will accompany those who
believe…” In Christ’s last
statements, he made a promise of SALVATION and a WARNING. He did not say
condemnation belonged to the person who was not baptized, but to the person who
does not believe in Him. Practically, if
you are baptized and yet you do not believe in the baptism you have received,
then there is a fundamental problem. Christ wants us to know that condemnation
does not rest on baptism but on disbelief. More reason the Church urges us to
profess our faith at the reception of the sacraments (of baptism) and the Holy
Mass (I believe). However, it will be terribly wrong to consider baptism as
non-essential to salvation. It is essential and indispensable as Christ commanded
it. Obedience to his commandment becomes
an essential tool for salvation.
Also, while
Christ commissioned his disciples, he gave them signs that will accompany those
who believe. Those accompanying signs signify
Christ’s continuous presence with and in His Church. And this is an excellent
pattern for ministry; first to preach the Gospel of Christ, followed by the
signs. Signs are meant to follow believers, not believers following signs.
So, if you are fond of following priests, pastors or prophets as miracle
working men and women of God, then know therefore that your ‘Christianity’ is
not in accordance with the teachings of Christ.
These are the
people Isaiah referred to in the first reading, who are outside the borders of Israel.
The reading is a promise directed to God’s discouraged people, who have slacked in obedience and
righteousness. They see no reason to repent as long as things look down.
God shakes them out of this by calling them to keep justice and do
righteousness in anticipation of what he will do.
In view of the
above, St. Paul in the second reading said, “If you confess with yours lips that Jesus is Lord and believe in your
heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” We gain God’s
righteousness by confessing and believing in the person and works of Christ.
When we confess with our mouth, we agree with what God said about Jesus Christ
and what He said about himself, and to believe in him as missionaries is to
have total dependence on Christ. The dependence on him that enables us to go into the world and preach the Gospel
to all creation. St. Paul further asked, “How are men to go into the world if they do not believe in him? How are
they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? How are they to hear
without a preacher?” Invariably, there is the necessity of a preacher or a
missionary. And Paul adds, “How beautiful
are the feet of those who preach good news.”
As we celebrate
World Mission Sunday, we, as in the case of the Apostles and the early
Christians, can say, “We cannot but speak
about what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20). If this is the case, we cannot keep the Lord to ourselves; we cannot
hoard God’s saving grace. So, our mission is to bring Christ to the world as
given to us. We are urged to support the mission of Christ as a collective
responsibility, as “Some give to the
mission by going while others go to the mission by giving.” Also, the
liturgy reminds us of who we are: we are missionaries in different capacities
by the virtue of our baptism, and that is why it is necessary that we renew our
baptismal commitments every year. Lastly, we pray through the Blessed Virgin
Mary, Our Mother and the first missionary to take her Son Christ in the womb to
her cousin Elizabeth, to continue her maternal intercession for all
missionaries.
Happy World
Mission Sunday!
Fr. Ken Dogbo,
OSJ
May God almighty help us to carry out our individual missions in accordance to His will. Amen
ReplyDelete"Some give to the mission by going and some go by giving"... May God help us to be part of his labourers. Happy Mission Sunday, Padre!
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