Sunday, August 13, 2023

Discouragement is a choice; so is joy (Sunday homily)

 There’s a word for what is happening in all the readings; 

what is happening for Elijah, for Saint Paul, and for Saint Peter. 

That word is discouragement.


And there is a word for what cures it. And that is joy. 


In the first reading, Elijah has fled to the mountain 

because he is discouraged. He tried to spark revival of faith, 

and the queen seeks to kill him. He feels very alone and overwhelmed.


In the second reading, Paul is “in anguish” for his fellow Jews 

who have resisted the message of Jesus Christ.


Peter, in the Gospel, is disheartened by the storm raging around him, 

and he begins to sink.


Meanwhile, there are trends that trouble us all.


So many of us face the same discouragement Elijah and Paul did.

You and I see members of our families, 

people who were once active in the Faith, drifting away.

We see ways our nation is heading in the wrong direction.


There is a ballot measure coming in November that, if enacted, 

would strike down the limited protections we have for unborn children, 

and open the floodgates for abortion on demand.

And it would, very likely, impinge on parents’ authority 

to decide medical treatment for their own children.


If you want to be discouraged, there are plenty of opportunities.

But there is always a choice.

Sometimes people give into fatalism, saying, 

“There’s nothing we can do!” 

Believe me, I’ve felt it too; yet you and I must remind ourselves:

If we truly believe in God, there is no room for fatalism.


Instead, you and I must seek that which Elijah needed to renew, 

and what Peter lost sight of. And that is joy.


I was inspired by reading the words of Charles Chaput, 

former Archbishop of Philadelphia, who said, 

while Christians need to see the world’s problems as they are, 

“we can’t let the weight of the world crush the joy 

that’s our birthright 

by our rebirth in Jesus Christ through baptism,” he said.


So, what is joy? Well, it isn’t simply happiness, 

because we can know joy even in times of great suffering. 

Let me give you an example that may surprise you.


I knew an older couple in Piqua, married over 60 years. 

The wife became ill, and got worse and worse; 

and I was called to visit her in the hospital. 

When I entered that small hospital room, it was packed – 

maybe 20 people or more. 


Everyone was praying, centered on their mother and grandmother, 

in bed, with her husband sitting by her, holding her hand. 

She was leading the prayers. 


Then came a moment when she couldn’t speak, 

but her husband kept praying. 

Then, he finally stopped. We all knew she was gone.

And he broke the silence with these words: 

“I’m heart-broken, but I’m joyful.”


What was that joy? It’s hard to put into words, isn’t it? Yet we know.

He and his wife and their children and grandchildren 

had shared life and love; 

not just on a natural, but a supernatural level.


Death was all too real, 

but something else is infinitely more real, 

and that is Jesus Christ, and that is hope, and that is joy!


That man knew he would see his wife again;

He was drawing on the reservoir of faith they had shared;

He looked forward to experiencing the fullest joy from its source,

Which is Jesus Christ, whom his wife went to meet first.


So we might ask, what steals our joy? Many things, 

including discouragement, resentment, 

and worry about the cares of the world.


Some of us pay too much attention to the news and the Internet. 

It’s just like what happened to Peter: we see the waves crashing 

and the wind howling, and we start to sink.

But it wasn’t the storm that sunk Peter; 

it was looking away from Jesus.



So if stormy news on TV or the Internet gets you anxious, 

there is a simple solution: Turn it off!


Our inflated ego tells us, “oh, I need to know!”

But mostly that’s not true. 

We might need 5 minutes of news, not 5 hours. 


Put down that phone and pick up a Rosary.

Stop looking at the screen, and look instead at another human face. 

Human relationships are messy, 

but they are also where real love happens; 

and they are the only possession we can enjoy for eternity. 


The choice is yours: tremble at the storm, or fix your gaze on Jesus.

When he is our focus, 

what will shine in our face is the light of heaven, pure joy, 

and people will see that, and will want to know where it comes from.

They will want what you and I have.


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Excellent topic. Words and terms like ‘joy’, ‘love’, forgiveness’ and ‘hope’ are used a lot but in confusing ways. Thank you for exploring this topic.

Anonymous said...

Wonderful exegesis. I need to do less "screen time" and more "face time."