Second Sunday in Ordinary Time,
January 20, 2008:
I want to
start today by conducting a very informal poll.
How many of you would say that you are a saint?
Let me tell
you a story about King Henry III of Bavaria in the 11th Century. He
was a God-fearing king but the demands of being a ruler did not leave him much
time for his spiritual life. One day he got so fed up with being a king that he
went to the Abbot of the local monastery and asked to be admitted as a monk for
the rest of his life. “Your Majesty,” said the Abbot, “do you understand that you
must make a vow of obedience as a monk? That will be hard because you have been
a king.” “I understand,” said Henry. “The rest of my life I will be obedient to
you, as Christ leads you.” “Then I will tell you what to do,” said the Abbot.
“Go back to your throne and serve faithfully in the place where God has put
you.” King Henry returned to his throne, ruled his people in a very godly way,
and thus became a saintly king.
In today’s
second reading, St. Paul reminds us that we are all “called to be saints.” He reminds us that holiness or saintliness –
they are the same – is not a call that God places in the lives of just a
few. It is not meant to be rare, but
rather the norm. You know, Pope John
Paul II, canonized more saints than all popes before him combined, and he very
consciously canonized not just priest and religious, but people from every
state of life so that we might be reminded when we look at the saints that they
are like us and that we too are called to be like them.
Like King
Henry we sometimes believe that we need to run away from the demands of life and
escape to a monastery, a convent or the desert, if we want to become a saint.
But, as the Abbot reminds us, God expects us to be saints in the concrete
situations of our personal, family and business or professional lives.
This is a
perfect reflection as we begin Ordinary Time in the Church calendar. As we begin this period of Ordinary Time, the
Church reminds us that holiness is meant to be very ordinary, very common.
Let’s look
at what St. Paul says, “Paul…to the church of God that is in
Corinth, to you who have been sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be holy, with
all those everywhere who call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
There are
two interesting points in this verse. First, Paul does not address the word of
God to the Corinthians alone but also to “all those everywhere who call upon
the name of our Lord” That includes even
us gathered here today to call on the Lord’s name. Secondly, Paul refers to the
people he is writing to as men and women “called to be holy” or called to be
saints. Again that includes us. We may
not feel like we are saints yet, but that is the purpose for which God has
called us. We are all called to holiness.
A saint or
someone who has been sanctified literally means someone who has been set apart.
That God has called us to be saints means that God means for us to be special
people in the world, not people who simply follow the crowd wherever the
current wind blows.
For some of
us the call of God may require a change of state in life. God may require of us
what Jesus required of his disciples, “If
you wish to be perfect, go, sell your possessions, and give the money to the
poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me.” The
life of such a disciple is a life-long quest for perfection according to the
mind of Jesus.
For most of
us, however, God calls us to be His faithful children in the midst of the
trials and challenges of normal life in society. The call of God is that we be
in the world but not of the world. We participate fully in society, in
politics, in business, in education, in health-care delivery, and in dispensing
justice through making and implementing just laws. Our world needs holy parents, holy children,
holy doctors and nurses, holy teachers, holy garbage collectors, farmers –
wherever we find ourselves, whatever we do.
Shortly after he converted to Catholicism
in the late 1930s, Thomas Merton was walking the streets of New York with his
friend, Robert Lax. Lax was Jewish, and he asked Merton what he wanted to be,
now that he was Catholic. “I don’t know,” Merton replied, adding simply that he
wanted to be a good Catholic. Lax stopped him in his tracks. “What you should
say,” he told him, “is that you want to be a saint!” Merton was dumbfounded. “How
do you expect me to become a saint?” Merton asked him. Lax said: “All
that is necessary to be a saint is to
want to be one. Don’t you believe that God will make you what He created
you to be, if you will consent to let him do it? All you have to do is desire
it.”
My brothers
and sisters, to be a saint is to be ourselves – the person God created us to
be. God has called us to be saints. All
of us here today are called to be holy. Let
us each desire to live saintly lives and may God consent to make each of us
saints.
May God
give you peace.