A SERMON FOR THE 10th SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
Thank God we’re not like other
people. Like the arrogant publican in
today’s gospel, it is so very easy to look around us, especially in today’s
morally bereft world, and say to ourselves, or even openly to others, these
words that our Lord rejects as being unworthy of the kingdom of heaven. In fact, it’s so easy to fall into this trap that our Lord emphasizes the
importance of today’s gospel story for our benefit, portraying the two men in
the temple almost as cartoon characters, grotesquely exaggerated in order to
demonstrate the enormous gulf between pride and true humility that they
represent.
Look at the graces we have been
given. In a world that has almost
universally apostasized from the faith, we here today have been given the grace
of keeping it. In a world that seems to
be falling further every day into a spiral of moral depravity, we at least have
maintained the spirit of the Ten Commandments, in principle at least, if not
always in practice. And in a world that
has lost its devotion to the true holy Mass passed down by the apostles and
their successors since the Last Supper, we here today have been given the grace
of preserving it, valid and unsullied by any of the reforms introduced by the modernists
since the early 1950s. Such graces we
have been given. We have kept the faith
of our fathers, we obey God’s laws, we have the true Mass—surely, we are the
elect of God, the new chosen people, the holy ones who alone stand out in an
otherwise blackened world. Surely, we
should thank God that we are not like other men.
And thus we fall. It is a snare of the devil that can entrap us
very easily. We are bombarded by so many
examples of bad behavior every day that it seems almost impossible not to look
down on the sins of others and condemn and despise these other men who do not
match up to our own values. The trap is always there to drag us
down to the level of today’s Pharisee.
Thank God we're not like that Pharisee!
You see what I mean?
Because of the behavior of the
Pharisee in the temple, and of the many other Pharisees that our Lord
encounters during his ministry, the word Pharisee has become synonymous with
“hypocrite.” For us to claim that we are
holier than other men is nothing other than hypocrisy. We must remember that in fact, we are not
holier than other men. On the contrary,
in many ways we are worse. Certainly, we
have been given the graces to keep the faith, hold to our true moral values,
attend the true Mass and receive a valid Holy Communion. But like all graces, all privileges, they
have a corresponding responsibility to use them properly. And do we?
We have been given the grace of knowing the true faith. But do the truths of our faith make a
difference to the way we live our lives?
Do we uphold those truths with more fervor and charity than those who
are ignorant? God has given us the
graces of the true Mass here at St. Margaret Mary's. But do we really look forward with eagerness
to every opportunity we have to attend that Mass and receive our Lord in the
most Blessed Sacrament? And sure, we
know the Ten Commandments. But do we
obey them more carefully than our Protestant and Jewish friends?
The responsibilities that come
with the graces God has given us must make us truly better people. And if we are to be better people we must
thank God for those graces. We must never
thank God that those graces have made us better than other people—people who,
without the moral compass of the Catholic Church to guide them, wallow in
ignorance, devoid of the knowledge of the faith and of God, oblivious to God’s
law and their duty to obey it, completely unaware of the beauty of the Holy
Eucharist and its role in preparing us for our eternal union with God in
heaven. For these people, we must pray,
earnestly and without condescension, that they may share in any graces our good
God has chosen to share with us, his unworthy children.
Let's close today by refocusing
all our attention to the publican who kneels at the back of the temple and
strikes his breast in horror at his own sinfulness. This is who we truly are—sinners who are not
worthy to approach the Holy of Holies, who dare to receive Holy Communion only
because we are commanded to do so by our Lord himself. Let us strike our breasts too as we mutter
our triple Domine, non sum dignus, remembering
our multiple, diverse and manifold offences against God in thought, word and
deed. If we do so in all humility, we
will receive pardon for those sins, and our souls shall be healed.
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