When we are confronted with someone presenting a religious message,
there are three ways we can respond.
First, we might say, “Isn’t that interesting?”
A few years back, visiting Washington, D.C.,
I saw some Buddhist monks in their bright orange robes.
That was my response: “isn’t that interesting?”
A second response is, “Is this useful?”
A lot of people send their children to Catholic schools,
who aren’t themselves Catholic, or even Christian.
They appreciate the discipline,
the quality of education, and the moral values –
and our Bishop Leibold School has all this in spades.
In other words, they see a Catholic education as “useful.”
Then there is a third response we can give.
And that is to ask, “Is this true?”
Week after week, deacons and priests give homilies.
We try to make it interesting.
I have tried to make you laugh, only to have you not laugh –
how crushing!
Many of us try to give something practical.
But in the end, the only real question is: Is it true?
When Peter and Paul gave their witness,
maybe in a synagogue, or someone’s home,
or on riverbank or in a public square,
there was little reason for anyone to ask, “is this useful?”
Have you ever seen a street preacher?
Or maybe someone on late-night TV?
Don’t you think that’s how Peter and Paul looked to the Romans?
Then, now and always, people ask what gives meaning to life.
In every age, people have gazed at the stars
and wondered what caused them to be there,
and to move in the way they do.
Here come Peter and Paul who say,
none of the gods you believe in are true.
They are false, every one of them.
The one true God is the God of the Jews.
This odd people who you conquered.
It was to that people God himself came, and became man.
He became, not a Roman, not a Greek, but a Jew!
And what did you Romans do? You crucified him!
The one true God died on a cross – and rose again!
That’s your hope! Not Caesar, but Christ!
And God’s Plan was to send us—Peter, Paul—to tell you!
If you ever go to Rome, you can visit the places
where both Peter and Paul’s bones were buried.
There are huge basilicas built over their graves.
Their bones are still there, sometimes on display!
And while it would take too long to explain it,
There is no good reason to doubt
those really are Peter’s bones, and Paul’s,
in the two churches that bear their names.
So while we might wonder about a lot of things
about this Catholic Faith,
here’s a good, solid fact which hard-nosed people can appreciate:
their bones are in Rome.
What strikes me is this.
Their presence in Rome, which is beyond doubt,
Therefore that makes it beyond doubt they really believed it.
And they convinced others to believe and die for this Faith.
No other reason for them to go to Rome, to die there,
and for anyone to remember them.
So, the improbable, persuasive witness of Paul and Peter continues.
We hear their words. We know they died for it.
And so, I put the question to you:
Is it true? If so, what changes, today, for you?
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