Today we celebrate a special occasion just for St. Henry.
That’s why the readings and the Mass prayers were different.
We recall when this church was consecrated
by Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk on October 3, 1982.
Here we are, 40 years later.
And this is a glass-half-full-or-half-empty kind of situation.
The constant of our times is constant change.
You and I experience it in this parish –
but that reflects the larger society.
That said, I bet many of wish we could find, here,
a refuge from that constant froth.
May I point out that when this church was built,
it was a deliberate expression of change?
This design departs notably from the old, familiar style.
Maybe you like that, or you don’t, but it wasn’t an accident.
The hope was to express openness.
And the point I’m making is that a certain amount of flux
was baked into this parish’s DNA right from the beginning.
And I think that “openness” this church building tries to model
is at work in this community.
If you drive past St. Henry, early, mid-day or evening,
have you noticed? There’s always some cars, always some activity.
Our fields and our Parish Activity Center are busy!
In the midst of the change with our three parishes becoming one,
That activity level is increasing. That’s openness in action.
Every week I sign paperwork approving expenditures
and big numbers make my eyes pop: one was $21,000!
Then I saw what it was: it was your gifts to St. Vincent de Paul.
That’s openness.
Thank you for that openness.
It is disorienting and tiring to experience change;
At the same time, your openness is a healthy thing.
The task ahead for all Catholics in our country –
not just this parish –
is to rethink and reorient how open we are,
how engaging we are, in sharing our faith.
For the longest time, we Catholics were so low-key about that.
This is a culture shift and it won’t be easy.
Forgive me for reminding you: when you and I met two years ago,
and I listened to the questions and observations of our parishioners,
a frequent yearning was to revive the practice of our Faith,
to bring people back in these doors, and to bring new people, if we can.
If we’re going to do anything with that desire, we can’t sit still.
I agree with those who’d like a little rest from change!
But we don’t want to get stiff and stuck.
This church was designed to challenge us to action.
Surely you noticed, the light comes in and changes through the day.
We need a refuge, but we don’t want to close ourselves off.
Indeed, you and I must be willing to be that water that flows out,
as we heard described in the first reading.
If you noticed, it starts as a trickle –
that’s a symbol of each of us individually;
but all those trickles become a flood, giving life.
That flood happens as each of us shares our hope with others.
Invites others to pray in this church,
to join our men’s and women’s retreats,
to help assemble blessings in a bag
or to walk with women facing challenging pregnancies.
Our Bishop Leibold School, which is growing
and continues to win awards, is another channel of this life.
Let me be candid: there are some who are more salty than fresh water!
There’s always something to find wrong if you look.
And that’s OK, because finding leads to fixing.
Keep me in the loop.
But I don’t buy that there’s not a great deal more
good to celebrate and life to share.
Be part of that flood!