Saturday, October 17, 2009

29th Sunday Year B - Mission Sunday -

In the times we are living in there is much talk about religion and religious extremism. We are seeing a lot of examples of bad practice of religion, when it is used as an excuse for violence or corruption. It raises the question, what exactly is the purpose of the Church? Why did Jesus bring about a Church? Well the mission or purpose of the Church is to make God known to people and to make the work of Jesus Christ known to people. Jesus’ own life was about revealing God to us and of course dying for us. It is not about filling churches, it is about teaching people about God and helping people to discover God. People often say to me, 'I wish such and such a person would just go back to mass.' But just going back to mass is not enough. Faith has to come first. Once someone discovers God and begins to grow in their faith, and they begin to recognise their own hunger for God ,then they may come to the church to pray with other people who also believe. That’s why we come here: to pray together and to be fed spiritually.

None of us are strong enough to make it on our own. We need the support of each other. So we listen to the teachings of Christ and then we celebrate the last supper, where Jesus made himself present in the form of bread and wine, so that he could be with us always. That is what the mass is.

The purpose of Christ coming to us was basically two-fold. First of all to make God known to us, to teach us about him and show us what God is like and how God relates to us. Anything we want to know about God we will discover in Jesus. It says in the letter to the Colossians, ‘He is the image of the invisible God’.

If I painted a picture of myself, it would just be a picture, but it wouldn’t move or speak. If God painted a picture of himself it would be the person of Jesus. Not just a picture, but a real person. That’s who Jesus is, the image of God. At one stage Philip, one of the Apostles, said to Jesus, ‘just show us the Father and then we shall be satisfied’. And Jesus said, ‘do you not understand that to have seen me is to have seen the Father?’ They are one and the same. So by looking to Jesus and learning about him, we are learning about who God is and what God is like.

The second purpose of Christ coming to us was to free us from the power of Satan, from the power of sin. So by dying for us, Jesus reopened the way to God for us. You could say that Jesus rebuilt the bridge between God and humanity which had collapsed because of Original Sin. It is now open to us if we turn to him. The choice is ours. And the mission of the Church is to let people know about this, what God has done for us and what is there for us all, by turning to Jesus Christ.

All people have a right to hear about God and to know about him. And it is our mission to make this known to people, because God has told us to. It should never be forced on people, but if this is the truth about God, which we believe it is, then people have a right to know that truth. It is up to them whether they decide to believe it or not.

Is this mission still being fulfilled today? Of course it is. Here am I speaking to you about it two thousand years later. How much faith we do or don’t have is irrelevant. The fact that we are here at all is what is important. So the mission of the Church, is to pass on this truth about God that God has made known to us. It is the message which makes sense of our whole life and all people have a right to know this.

What is the best way to pass on this message? By living it as well as we can ourselves. That is the best way we can teach others about what we believe in. I will finish with the words of St. Francis of Assisi who used to say, ‘let us go and preach the gospel; and if necessary, use words.’