2022 Homilies

Homily for July 10, 2022
Fifth Sunday After Pentecost

Let Us Beg Christ to Be With Us

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Homily

After casting out the demons from these two men in today’s Gospel, the demons’ dramatic overtaking of a herd of pigs which run off a cliff to be drowned in the sea all the people of the town came out to see the man who caused this to happen. It’s not surprising they wanted to see Jesus. What is surprising is that they beg Him to leave their area. Beg Him to leave! Why? Well, probably because they are afraid of Him. Why afraid? He liberated these two men from the power of Satan, these two men who had terrorized many people over the years, these men are now back to their old selves and the threat is gone. But the rest of the town wants Jesus gone.

There's no way to know for sure why they were afraid of Jesus, but I suggest that one major reason is that Jesus shook them up. You would think people would be grateful for having witnessed this great display of power over the forces of evil that they would want to find out more about this Jesus, but that is not what happens. I believe they wanted everything to go back to what was normal, predictable, regular. They wanted life to be regular according to the patterns they were used to, before this Jesus came and turned it all upside down. Who knows what He might do next? He's gotta go!

It is much neater, safer and certainly a whole lot more comfortable for them if Jesus just goes away. We don't care Who He is, we don't care why He is here, we don't care where He comes from or where He is going, as long as He is going away from here.

In a certain way, I believe over the past decades there has been a similar attitude that has gradually overcome more and more people in the industrialized and technologically developed Western world. There are people who don't want Jesus in their neighborhood, and certainly not in their personal lives. What are the reasons? There are some people who know Jesus and they reject Him because they are evil. Simple as that! If you are evil, why would you love or want to spend time with someone who casts out evil?

There are some people who misunderstand Jesus and His teaching, and there are surely many, many ways in which people can misunderstand Jesus—each one incorrect, but each one can seem like a reason to not believe in Him.

Then there are people who are simply ignorant about Jesus. They know little or nothing about Him and it is surprising how many people today fall into this category. So of course, they do not reject Him. They don't even know Him.

Perhaps the biggest reason people reject Jesus, or neglect Jesus, is because they want to control their own lives without any outside interference, especially if that interference calls for holiness, moral living, loving enemies, denying oneself, taking up a cross, learning to control passions rather than giving in to them. If that external interference calls for obedience, trust and hope in a glory that is beyond this mortal world, then maybe it seems easier just to go your own way and do your own thing.

As science and technology have created such astounding changes in the course of our lives during the past few centuries, especially even the past 50 years, there is always the temptation to believe that we can, in effect, create a paradise on earth through the stuff we have, and the stuff we are sure is just around the corner. Even if it's not paradise exactly, it's paradise enough for me, because in my personal philosophy I believe that I have a kind of god-like control over my life. No need for a Savior. In fact those who do believe in a Savior are frequently getting in the way of what I want to do, and how I want to live. "We need to get Jesus out of our neighborhood!" Now, almost no one would say that directly. But when people despise the life of the unborn and the elderly, when they disregard the proper use of sexual behavior, when they center their lives around politics, or pleasure-seeking, or materialistic living they turn against the 2,000-year-old culture that has been created by the Gospel message, and so they turn against the Christ Who gave us this message. It’s true that this culture has never been perfectly Christian. But the culture that is slowly replacing it is leading us to violence, fear and hopelessness. More than 40 Christian churches have been attacked in the U.S. in the last 45 days, most of them Catholic.

Then there are also those who don't cry out for Jesus to go away. They just pretty much ignore Him, most of the time, as they go about their lives. But they reserve the right to call on Him if the need ever comes up.

And there are those who want Jesus to be with them, but they too are tempted by the desire to live as people who want to be in control of their own lives. They struggle sometimes to find a place for Christ, to hear His voice, to trust in Him, to speak with Him, to be guided by Him, to obey and believe in Him, to find joy and satisfaction in Him rather than in their own attempts to make life satisfying and complete. Jesus often increases for them on Sunday morning and decreases for them as the week moves along. Sometimes they even hide the fact they follow Him, because others might disapprove.

Perhaps we belong, in some degree, to this last group. We face an increasing opposition to Christ in our neighborhood, and we are tempted to live sometimes as though He is not with us as well. The only solution is to do exactly the opposite as the Gerasene crowd did: let us beg Christ to be with us, stay with us, enlighten us, strengthen us, favor us, heal us, and help us to understand better how much He loves us. Let us not be complacent—but insistent and persistent, "O Lord come among us and never leave us alone."