ALL SAINTS
CELEBRATING PEOPLE OF EVERY TIME, CULTURE AND WAY OF LIFE
The tapistries on the walls of Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles, California, picture canonized saints blended in with ordinary people from every time, culture and way of life. It is a stunning depiction of our belief in "the communion of saints" marching through history, a procession in which we will someday be a part.
CATHEDRAL OF THE ASSUMPTION HOMILY
Feast of All Saints
November 1, 2016
I had a
vision of a great multitude which no one could
count, from every nation,
race, people and tongue. They stood before
the throne (of
God), wearing white robes…..
REVELATION 7:2-4,9-14
Immediately after we were baptized, we were dressed in a white garment. When it was placed on us, the
priest or deacon addressed us by name, saying these words, “You have become a
new creation and have clothed yourself in Christ. See in this white garment the
outward sign of your Christian dignity. With your family and friends to help
you by word and example, bring that dignity unstained into the everlasting life
of heaven.”
In our first reading today, St.
John gets a glimpse, across many generations to come,
of a “great multitude which no one can count, from every nation, race, people
and tongue, dressed in white garments, standing before the throne of God.” Today’s feast reminds us that all people, including you and me, are called to stand before God with that
great, uncountable throng of people from every part of the world, from every
age! According to St. John in our second readings, we are God’s adopted children! As children of light, we were called at our baptisms to
become saints! Yes, you heard me, we are heaven bound, we are called to become
saints!
What is a saint? Most of us have developed our ideas about holiness
from a well-intentioned, but narrow, view of canonized saints. In its effort to
hold up before us models of holiness, the church has sometimes elevated some
saints to the point that they have sometimes become super-human! Some saints
come off as life-hating masochists. Mostly virgins and celibates, some might
admire them, but most people do not see themselves imitating them! My favorite definition of sanctity
comes from Kentucky ’s
famous Trappist monk, Thomas Merton.
This is the definition of holiness that guides me personally. “Sanctity,” he
writes, “is not a matter of being less human, but more human that other men.
This implies a greater capacity for concern, for suffering, for understanding,
for sympathy, and also for humor, for joy, for appreciation of the good and
beautiful things of life.” This is the
same message as the Beatitudes in today’s gospel! To borrow an idea from an old
commercial, holiness is about “being all that you can be.” Holiness, then, is not about being perfect,
but about becoming the very best human being we can become: the best spouse,
the best parent, the best church member, the best student, the best doctor, the
best teacher, the best politician, the best artist, the best social worker or
the best priest!
In other words, we become holy, not by mimicking the saints of old, but
by answering our own unique calls. We
become holy, not by wearing sandals, a hair shirt and living on bread and
water, but by living out our own unique call, not somebody else’s
call. We hear our calls by listening to
our hearts. While it is true that some
people in the Bible received their calls in visions and dramatic events, most
of us receive our calls in a simple, quiet knowing, the proverbial still, small
voice within us. We do, however, have to
shut up long enough for God to get a words in edgewise! It helps to spend some quality time with God.
Most of the time, calls are not shown to us directly, but are mediated through
people, symbols, dreams, symptoms, happenstance and synchronicities. We need to
recognize that our calls can come in many disguises. Our unfolding as human
beings requires that we be in constant dialogue with God who has called us to
co-create ourselves, to do something with our lives and to contribute to the
world God has given us.
Someday, after we have done something with our lives, after we have
become all we can be, God will call us home to be with him forever. At our
funerals, we will be carried into church, one last time. Our bodies will be
sprinkled with baptismal water and we will be covered be covered with a large
white pall, a huge white baptismal robe.
At the end of our funeral Mass, dressed in that white robe, our funeral
Mass our family and friends will commend us to God with these words, “May the
angels lead you into paradise; may the martyrs come to welcome you and take you
to the holy city….May choirs of angels
welcome you…..” And then, we too will be
a saint! And some day, in the distant
future, the church will gather on an All Saints Day like this, to honor us!
No comments:
Post a Comment