Yesterday was the feast day of our patron, St Francis de Sales. After
his ordination in 1593, Francis lived just over the mountains from Switzerland -- Calvinist territory. He decided to lead an expedition to convert
the Calvinists back to Catholicism.
For three years, Francis and his cousin traveled through the
countryside. They had doors slammed in their
faces and rocks thrown at them. In the bitter winters, Francis' feet froze so
badly they bled as he tramped through the snow. He slept in haylofts if he
could. Once he slept in a tree to avoid
wolves and tied himself to a branch to keep from falling out. He was so frozen the next morning he had to
be cut down. After three years, his cousin left him alone and he had not made
one convert.
Francis' unusual patience kept him working. No one would listen to
him, no one would even open their door. So Francis found a way to get under the
door. He wrote out his sermons, copied them by hand, and slipped them under the
doors. In a few more years, Francis had
converted 40,000 people back to Catholicism.
In today's
Gospel, Jesus calls Simon, Andrew, James and John. He says:
"Come follow me, and I will make you fishers of men." Immediately
they respond to his call by leaving their nets and following him. These first followers of Jesus aren't called
into just a private relationship with Jesus.
Instead, they are part of the twelve who become the first leaders of his church.
Now, you
might ask why were Simon, Andrew, and James willing to give their lives to
proclaim Jesus' message and to build his Church? And why did St Francis de Sales work so
diligently to convert people back to Jesus' church, the Catholic Church? Certainly, it is possible to follow Jesus and
to get to heaven without going to church.
But, is that the best way, the path that Jesus himself gave us? Jesus said to Simon Peter:
"Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church and the
gates of hell will not prevail against it." Jesus formed a community of believers, a
church, and he taught the first leaders of the church. He formed a church, a mystical body on earth,
as the guardian of the truth and the best and easiest way for us to get to
heaven. And he gave this church seven
unique means of distributing graces, seven sacraments. Through these seven sacraments, all of us are
able to gain graces to help us on our journey.
We have all
had someone tell us that they're spiritual but not religious. That is, they have a personal relationship
with Jesus. They don't need any church
to get in the way and to tell them what to do. Do we need a church? Why are we gathered here today and not just
meditating on our own?
In his homily for the January 1st Mass celebrating the solemnity of
Mary, Pope Francis said: “The Church is like a mother who tenderly holds Jesus
and gives him to everyone with joy and generosity…Without the Church, Jesus
Christ ends up as an idea, a moral teaching, a feeling.”
Without the Church and her guidance, our relationship with Christ “would be at the mercy of our imagination, our interpretations, our moods,” he continued.
“Our faith is not an abstract doctrine or philosophy, but a vital and full relationship with a person: Jesus Christ” who lives among us and can be encountered inside the Church through her sacraments, Pope Francis explained.
Jesus told us that our spiritual life is like a vine in which he is the trunk and we are the branches. We are interconnected with others in the Church, through our beliefs, our worship, and our desire to know and understand the truth.
Without the Church and her guidance, our relationship with Christ “would be at the mercy of our imagination, our interpretations, our moods,” he continued.
“Our faith is not an abstract doctrine or philosophy, but a vital and full relationship with a person: Jesus Christ” who lives among us and can be encountered inside the Church through her sacraments, Pope Francis explained.
Jesus told us that our spiritual life is like a vine in which he is the trunk and we are the branches. We are interconnected with others in the Church, through our beliefs, our worship, and our desire to know and understand the truth.
The first
reading is from the book of the prophet Jonah.
Jonah was a reluctant prophet.
God told him to go to Nineveh and tell the people about their wicked
ways. So, Jonah reacted like we might
react, he boarded a ship headed in the opposite direction. Then, there was a terrible storm and the ship
threatened to break apart. The sailors
threw Jonah overboard in the hope of calming the storm. Wouldn't you know, Jonah was swallowed by a
whale who carried him to Nineveh and spit him out on the beach. Finally, Jonah did as God commanded and
warned the people that their city would be destroyed in forty days. The people responded to Jonah's warning by fasting
and putting on sackcloth. Then, our
merciful God spared the city.
Today, our
culture in America is much like it was in the time of the prophet Jonah and the
time of St Francis de Sales. Like each
of these men, we have an opportunity to evangelize our culture and to proclaim
the truth to a fallen world. At the end
of each mass, like the prophet Jonah, we are sent out into our world. Hopefully, we won't need to be thrown
overboard in a storm or to be swallowed by a whale to understand our important
role in building His kingdom. I pray
that each one of us will be inspired by St Francis de Sales and will tell
everyone we meet about our loving and merciful God and about his Mystical body
on earth, his Church.
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