Thursday, January 23, 2025

Catholic Ministry Appeal (Sunday Homily)

 As you know, this time of year we revisit the Catholic Ministries Appeal. 

And Archbishop Schnurr prepares a homily and sends it out, with the option of playing an audio.


The Archbishop leaves it up to the priests 

whether to play the audio or not. 

My preference is to take his message and present it in my own homily. 

All the good parts that follow are from the Archbishop! 

If you don’t like anything that follows this introduction, that’s my fault!


Salvation history tells the story of God’s unfailing love for us. 

From the first moment of creation, with His loving, outstretched hand, 

God began to put order into the chaos of nothingness. 


After the heavens and earth came into being 

and were filled with the manifold wonders of creation, God paused. 

He looked at what He had made and saw that it was very good. 


Man and woman, created in God’s own image and likeness, 

stand at the pinnacle of creation, 

and it is to man and woman 

that God entrusted the care of all He had made. 


Even after the Fall, when all hope for mankind 

and the world seemed lost, God did not abandon His creation. 

Rather, He began, little by little, to guide it back to Himself, 

to restore what had been lost by sin. 


God’s greatest desire is that we should all experience 

the same fullness of life and love 

which was His gift to mankind at the beginning of time. 



Looking toward the coming of Jesus as Messiah, 

Isaiah proclaims, as we hear today, “The Lord delights in you.” 

He has made us for Himself, and as the bridegroom 

gives everything for his bride, so does God give everything to us. 


He delights in us and wants us to have all 

that is necessary for our salvation. 

Furthermore, God has made us stewards of all His creation, 

and He calls us to use everything at our disposal for the good of others – 

thereby sharing in His work of redemption. 


Saint Paul points out, each of us has something to contribute. 

The Holy Spirit, poured into our souls at Baptism 

and strengthened and sealed by the grace of Confirmation, 

nurtures the gifts and talents 

which God entrusted to us from the first moment of our conception. 

The Holy Spirit enables those talents to bear fruit. 


The gifts God gives us are meant to benefit one another. 

You and I need each other. 

This is the sign that is the Church: 

Jesus did not merely create an individual relationship with each of us; 

he created His Body on earth, and calls us to be part of Him.


A temptation exists to think that my contribution 

may not be significant, that I don’t really have much of a role to play 

within the seemingly limitless expanse of God’s work of redemption. 


But you and I really know that isn’t true. It’s an excuse. 

As you see at wedding feast at Cana, God gives abundantly. 




But notice: you and I have to be willing to cooperate. 

Maybe Jesus would have granted the gift of wine 

without Mary coming to him – but that’s not how it happened. 

You and I have to be ready to cooperate. 


So the connection to the Catholic Ministries Appeal is obvious. 

Every donation to this annual archdiocesan collection 

supports various parts of God’s work of redemption 

which none of us can accomplish on our own. 

The ministries supported by the CMA assist the most vulnerable, including the hungry, sick, imprisoned, the hospitalized and the marginalized members of society.


The funds raised through the CMA 

provide for the formation of seminarians, our future priests, 

who make God present to us through the sacraments. 

They also support our retired priests who continue to minister 

to the People of God in this archdiocese and beyond.


Archbishop Schnurr thanks you for your support for the Catholic Ministry Appeal, and so do I. 

Our family of parishes has been very generous over the years,

and with your help again, we can continue 

to combine our small, personal contributions together 

to make a big difference together.


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