Homily for the 5th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Is 58:7-10
Ps. 112:4-5, 6-7, 8-9
1 Cor 2:1-5
Mt 5:13-16
We have talked a fair bit about discipleship, particularly what it is. Today’s readings show us what discipleship looks like. Namely, missionary work.
Salt maintains what is good and preserves it. It also adds flavor to things that are already objectively good. Potatoes are objectively good. French fries are superlatively better. Light, for its part, makes itself known by what it makes possible, and we notice it the most when it’s gone. By light we can know beauty and truth, and we can also know what to avoid. All of this is a bit harder in total darkness.
You can think of the Church as existing in one of two ways in a society. In the first way, the Church, broadly speaking, occupies a position of authority. I mean authority in a sort of cultural sense. People in that society share a general understanding of religion, its terms, and its truths. This isn’t to say that they always agree on religious matters, nor does it mean that people are holier or more religious. In this first mode - called Christendom - the general frameworks and propositions are, more or less, common knowledge. If a conversation starts up around the topics of sin, redemption, salvation, sacraments, or God, you can generally assume that we all understand the terms of discussion.
The Church occupies a slightly different cultural position today. The Church is one voice among many. It doesn’t speak from a place of societal privilege, and its terms and propositions are not as broadly understood, even if we all seem to be using the same words. People are encouraged to build their own religions by picking and choosing. The only problem with that is that if I am the one deciding what’s true and what isn’t, the God that I will end up worshiping ends up looking a lot like me. If you start a conversation with someone on the subject of, say, sin, there’s no guarantee that the two of you are talking about the same thing at all.
This second mode - which has come to be called apostolic, shares a bit in common with the Church in its first few centuries. One voice among many in the marketplace of ideas, no particular authority, and so on. To be clear, I am in no way saying that we’re living in a new Roman empire. That’s simply not the case. Even so, some of the challenges with evangelization are similar.
Yet in this earlier period, even the pagans knew the earliest believers were something different. Look, they said, at how they love each other. _Look at how they cared for the most vulnerable. Look at what they’re saying and doing. Most of it must have looked pretty baffling at first. It looks baffling today, too. This bafflement leads to questions, which in turn lead to conversations, then invitations, which end in conversions. The pathway is similar today.
I heard it frequently as a catechist from people who had finally crossed the threshold to join our class. Yes, truth and beauty are powerful things, and they will draw us across incredible distances. Many of their journeys started with another person: someone they knew or had spoken with once. Someone - a friend, relative, or co-worker, who had made a permanent impression because of…something. This person, this witness, set something in motion which ended in the baptismal font and the altar.
People hunger for something thick or concrete. Our mission work is to take the savor of the Catholic imagination out of these doors and into the world. Here we preserve things that are ever ancient and ever new. In love, we lead people towards what is true and beautiful. We do this by the quiet witness of our lives and a willingness to let the Spirit move as it will in our relationships. Like Saint Paul, not with persuasive words of wisdom but with demonstration.
This call to discipleship - to mission - is shared by all the faithful. In baptism and confirmation, we’ve already chosen to accept it. And if you’re preparing for confirmation, get ready! This is what you’re signing up for. Going forth and all that. It is our task to manifest to others the same love that Jesus poured out on the cross and pours out today on the altar. We’ll need a place ten times the size of this one because of the crowds beating down our doors.