Since we are
surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us persevere
in running the
race that lies before us while keeping our eyes fixed on Jesus.
Hebrews 12:1-4
Many
of you might remember the thriller film, The
Sixth Sense, which tells the story of Cole Sear, a troubled, isolated boy,
who is able to see and talk to the dead, and an equally troubled child
psychologist (played by Bruce Willis), who tries to help him. The most famous
lines from the film belong to the young boy. “I see dead people!”
In
a way, that is exactly what the writer of our second reading is telling us when
he says, “we are surrounded by a “cloud of witnesses.” In fact, he is saying four things.
( First, our second
reading is telling us that living the Christian life is like running a race. It
is not a stroll for the lazy and indifferent. It takes the serious discipline
of an athlete. We need to train every day of our lives. We need to know where
we are going, remain focused, and keep our eyes fixed on the finish line. G.K.
Chesterton said it best when he wrote, “The Christian ideal has not been tried
and found wanting: it has been found difficult and left untried.” The biggest
threat to Christianity are not those who persecute it, but those who claim the
name and think it ought to be easy, but who are unwilling to walk the talk!
( Second, our
second reading is telling us that there are people “in the stands,” people who
have run the race before us and who have already crossed the finish line, who
are cheering us on! It challenges us to remember that we are surrounded by a
large group of supportive onlookers as we live out our lives as Christians.
This is precisely what we mean when we say in our Creed that we believe in the
“communion of the saints.” By that, we mean that we believe that there is an
ongoing and real connection between those who have practiced the faith before
us and those of us who are trying to practice the same faith today – an unbroken
connection between those living here and those living in eternity. I, for one,
do not actually see dead people, but
I do feel their presence, helping me
along the way. I believe that I am not alone on my journey of faith, but I am
part of a larger story, a great procession of people marching through history. I have you
and I have that “great cloud of witnesses,” all those holy men and women from
every time and place,” who have finished their race and have crossed the
finished line, but now are watching us race toward that same finish line - and
they are cheering us on!
T
The
writer of this Letter to the Hebrews mentions some great Old Testament saints, lining the
race track, people like Abel, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, the
parents of Moses, Gideon, Samson, Job, Rahab, Samson, David and Samuel.
( Just think of the
holy men and women who have been baptized in this Cathedral, who have prayed in this Cathedral, who were married in this Cathedral, who were buried buried from this Cathedral. Think of Bishop Flaget, whose bones are buried
downstairs! He rode horseback from here as far north as Wisconsin and Michigan,
all over Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio and Tennessee. Think of Mother Catherine
Spalding, whose bronze statue graces our front sidewalk. She started and
orphanage, a school and a hospital directly under where I am standing. This
place reeks of their holiness!
I can feel their presence, and not only theirs, but the little old ladies who had been keeping the lights on when I arrived here in 1983, before we were able to revitalize this congregation and restore these buildings. Yes, I still remember many of them and I can still feel their presence watching over us!
I can feel the presence of my parents, grandparents, uncles, aunts, my sister, the nuns and priests who taught me and the hundreds of parishioners I have buried in all the parishes I have served. I feel them cheering me on as I race toward the finish line!
I can feel their presence, and not only theirs, but the little old ladies who had been keeping the lights on when I arrived here in 1983, before we were able to revitalize this congregation and restore these buildings. Yes, I still remember many of them and I can still feel their presence watching over us!
I can feel the presence of my parents, grandparents, uncles, aunts, my sister, the nuns and priests who taught me and the hundreds of parishioners I have buried in all the parishes I have served. I feel them cheering me on as I race toward the finish line!
( Third, our second
reading tells us to “persevere in running the race that lies before us.”
Dropping out of the race is always an option, especially when one leaves home
and enters college. One of the big questions I used to ask college students
when I worked at Bellarmine University, is this one: “Will you abandon the
religious upbringing of your childhood or will you choose it for myself of your
own free will? Will you persevere in living your Catholic Christian faith or will you simply drop out of the race
because it is too hard, because it is too much trouble, because it demands too
much, because it is too inconvenient or because others around you are dropping
out as well. The writer of our second reading is right! Perseverance in running
the race requires the personal discipline and self-control of an athlete!
Sometimes it means running against the wind, swimming against the tide and
taking the road less traveled. Let us, however, listen to the encouragement of
those who have finished the race before us and are cheering us on from the
sidelines, rather than those who have dropped out of the race for whatever
reason!
( Fourth, our
second reading tells us to “keep our eyes fixed on Jesus.” Distractions are a
problem for all of us no matter how many laps we have completed. There are
those who seek to draw our attention away from the race we are running. “Look
here! Look over there! Look at me! Look at this! Pay attention to this! Pay
attention to that! See this! See that!” If we are to persevere in running this
race, we must keep our eyes fixed on the finish line, we must “keep our eyes
fixed on Jesus.” We must remain focused on what we are doing and why we are
doing it, until we hear Jesus say to us at the finish line, “Well done, good
and faithful servant, enter into the joy of your master!”
No comments:
Post a Comment