Saturday, November 29, 2025

1st Sunday Advent Yr A (Gospel: Matt 24: 37-44) Stay Awake

 



I always like the fact that we celebrate Christmas in the middle of winter when the evenings are short and it is usually cold (unless you live in Florida!). Then we begin to light candles and put up coloured lights and decorations to remind us of the coming of our King. It is a time of great hope and hopefully also a time that will bring joy. ‘Advent’—which simply means ‘coming’—is meant to be a time of preparing for two things: we are preparing for the coming of Jesus at Christmas, and we are also remembering that Christ will come again at the end of time. Each Sunday in the Creed we say that, ‘He will come again to judge the living and the dead.’ We don’t know when that will be, but we believe that it will happen. The Lord asks us to ‘stay awake’ and not to forget him, because none of us know when we will die, but the important thing is that we do not forget the Lord, who loves us and who created us. And so each Christmas we remember that Jesus came among us, for us, to help us, to teach us about God, about the world to come and above all to die for us, so that we can join in the happiness of God when we die ourselves.

The best way that we can prepare ourselves is in the heart, by trying to give time to God and being open to what He wants to say to us. The Lord is constantly speaking to us but often we are not listening because we are too busy or distracted. People sometimes ask me if God speaks to me. Yes, God speaks to me all the time, but not through visions or voices. It's usually through other people or through the Scriptures. It took me quite a while to learn how to listen so that I might hear what God is saying to me. Advent is a good time to try and listen again and hear what the Lord has to say to us. That is why the readings are about getting ready for the one who is coming, and not being so distracted by the world around us that we forget him.

One thing that is characteristic of the Gospels is that they are full of hope. The message of God to us—the Good News—is always one of hope and it is certainly something we need in a world where we are constantly hearing of so many terrible things happening around us. 




We don't hear of all the wonderful things that are constantly happening around us: the many acts of kindness that people continually do for each other, looking out for each other especially when we are struggling. This is the Spirit at work in us and this is what makes the world bearable, in spite of the awful things that happen. I have no doubt the amount of good that is done every day far outweighs the amount of evil, but we don't hear about it.

In Nov 2016, several serious fires were started in different parts of Israel, just to cause suffering. Then, to everyone’s amazement one group that came to help out were firefighters from Palestine. As you know there is a lot of tension and hatred between these two countries at the best of times, but there is more goodness in people than evil. We just don’t usually hear about it.

Not long after the war between Israel and Hamas started, when one of the hostages, an 85 year old woman by the name of Yocheved Lifshitz, was being released by Hamas, she turned to one of the Hamas militants, extended her hand and said, ‘Shalom.’ He didn’t seem to know what to do except to accept her hand. Good continually overcomes evil.


Yocheved Lifshitz wishes 'Shalom' to Hamas militant

I often hear of situations where someone is in real trouble, financially. Then when they think there is no hope, someone unexpected comes along and offers them the help they need. God sends someone to them.

After the last hurricane Milton, one of our parishioners lost the roof of her house, which had just recently been replaced, but it was not done properly. She had no way of paying for it. Then two of our parishioners heard about it, stepped up and offered to pay for a new roof. You never hear about things like that on the news. God is at work all the time.

Jesus reminds us that while we get on with the ordinary things of everyday life—eating, drinking, marrying, working—we must not forget the eternal things. It is a warning to us never to become so immersed in time and the things of the world, that we forget eternity. Even though the worldly affairs are important, we must not let them distract us from the reality of God; the reality that we will die, that life and death are in his hands, and that whenever He does come for us, He must find us ready.

In one sense we can never be ready enough for God. How do you prepare to meet God? And yet this is what God has created us for and we believe it will be wonderful beyond our wildest dreams, if we have made any effort to be ready.

Jesus says that when the Son of Man comes, of two people doing the same thing, one will be taken the other left. What does this mean? It means that although both people were doing the same ordinary things that we all have to do, one of them had not forgotten about God, but the other had; the one who had forgotten was left behind.

 


If we get totally immersed in the world, or in our families, or in our work, then we have missed what it is about, because there is much more to our life than this. 

As you well know, it is often when someone becomes seriously ill, or dies, that we suddenly start realizing how much we have become immersed in the world. We do have to get on with the day to day things of working and living, but we are being told to make sure that we also make time for God. 

I think a good way to prepare for a happy Christmas, is to keep it simple and spend some time remembering what it is about. Even go to mass once a week, or spend a few minutes in a church every few days. That way we will remember what we are celebrating.

The Angel said to the shepherds: do not be afraid. 

I bring you news of great joy.

Today in the town of David

a Savior has been born for you;

He is Christ the Lord.

Friday, November 21, 2025

34th Sunday, Feast of Christ the King (Gospel: Jn 18:33b-37) Jesus Christ is Lord

 


 

You could sum up what I am about to say with four words: Jesus Christ is Lord. That is really all that matters. Jesus Christ is Lord.

 

Some time ago I was asked to visit a man in hospital. He was probably in his 70s. When he saw me he must have felt uncomfortable, as he began to tell me in so many words, how he didn’t really need me there, as he had a close relationship with God. He seemed to want to prove how tough he was. He then went on to talk about how he was on a first name basis with the Holy Trinity, describing how he related to the Father, Son and Spirit and the Virgin Mary, as if they were buddies at the bar. I can’t remember the exact words he used, but I remember finding myself being disgusted at the way he spoke, as it was so disrespectful. I don’t think he meant to be disrespectful, but it was.

 

The only way we should come before God, is on our knees with our face to the ground, in awe and reverence for who and what God is. Yes, Jesus is our brother, having taken on human flesh, but He is also the creator of the world, the one who will come to judge the living and dead, the one before whom everyone will bow down and tremble. It is so important that we don’t forget that. That is also why we begin every mass by acknowledging that we are sinners and asking for God’s mercy.

 

In the Prophet Isaiah, Isaiah is given a vision of heaven, where he sees God on his throne. His reaction? He is terrified. Immediately he recognizes his sinfulness before God’s holiness and he is afraid it will kill him.

‘Woe is me, for I am lost. For I am a man of unclean lips, who dwell among a people of unclean lips, for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of Hosts.’ (Is 6:5)

 

Then it says that an angel came down and touched him on the lips with a hot coal, to purify him and reassure him he would not die.


 


The Prophet Ezekiel is also shown a vision of heaven:

‘I then saw what looked like a throne made of sapphire. And sitting on the throne was a figure in the shape of a human. From the waist up it was glowing like metal in a hot furnace and from the waist down it looked like the flames of a fire. I realized I was seeing the brightness of God’s glory, so I bowed my face to the ground.’ (Ezek 1:26-28)

 

In Revelations, St. John the Apostle saw a similar vision of Jesus in his glory, except that Jesus comes towards him. He says he was so frightened that he fainted, even though he had lived with Jesus for three years.

 

It is very easy to become casual about our faith, but it is so important that we don’t, that we remember who and what God is, who Jesus is. It is a wonderful thing that Jesus invites us to have a personal relationship with him and he speaks to us as a friend, but we still have to be careful of how we approach God. He is the Lord and master of all things, the King of Kings, the judge of the living and the dead.

 

Think about when you receive the Eucharist. We are receiving the Body of Christ, not a thing, not holy bread, not a symbol, but Jesus, the Son of God. How do you dress? How do you hold it when it is put in your hand? Do you flick it back into your mouth, or walk away with it? When was the last time you confessed your sins, as the Lord asks us to, so that we are not receiving his Body and Blood unworthily? St. Paul writes:

‘Therefore, whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner, will be guilty of sinning against the Body and Blood of the Lord. Each one must examine himself before he eats of the bread and drinks of the cup. Anyone who eats and drinks without recognizing the body, eats and drinks judgement on himself. That is why many among you are weak and sick and some have fallen asleep’ (1 Cor 11: 27-30).

 



Recently a deacon friend of mine was talking to a Muslim friend. He was explaining the mass to him and how the bread and wine really and truly become the body and blood of Jesus? It is really God? And my friend said yes. His friend thought for a minute and then said, ‘And this is how they dress?!’ It says it all.

 

If you were given a chance to have a personal meeting with the pope, how would you dress? We receive the Son of God in each mass, but how do we dress.

 

Does that mean we should be afraid? No. It is Jesus himself who wants us to receive him in the Eucharist. Pope Francis put it beautifully. He says, ‘The Eucharist is food for sinners, not a reward for saints,’ but we must be careful how we go about it. We can never be casual, or we may bring condemnation on ourselves and that applies just as much to me. In fact, it is more serious for me, because the Lord comes into my hands as a priest in every mass. It is a great responsibility and one which often scares me, because I too will be accountable as his priest.

 

Often you hear people talking about God and religion as if it were something optional. You can take it or leave it, it’s up to you. God is not the optional extra. We are the optional extra. God exists, but we need not be here except that God created us and keeps us in existence. God also entrusted his world to our care, not to do what we like with it, but to look after it. Our world and our gifts and talents have been entrusted to us to use for his glory. When we die we will have to show God what we did with those gifts.

 

On the last three Sundays of the year, including today, we read Gospels that refer to God’s judgement of us. The parable of the ten virgins, five of whom were left outside, because they hadn’t bothered to prepare. They were casual about their role and they were left behind. There is also the parable of the talents, where the king gives different amounts of money to three servants according to their ability. Two of them invested it and he commends them and rewards them. But he condemns the one who did nothing with what he was given. He wasn’t condemned because he did something, but because he didn’t do anything. He was indifferent. Jesus mentioned so many times how there is no room for indifference. God has entrusted us with various gifts and talents and He expects us to use them.

 

There is also the Gospel where at the judgement the sheep are separated from the goats.

‘When the Son of man comes in his glory and all the angels with him… and all the nations will be assembled before him. And He will separate them one from another as the shepherd separates the sheep from the goats.’ (See Matt 25:31-45)


 


One group was condemned. Why? because they didn’t do anything. They didn’t specifically carry out wrong actions, but they didn’t do anything. They had been entrusted with the world and the people around them and they ignored everything and did only what they wanted, ignoring God and ignoring God’s creation. And when they say, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and not feed you, or naked and not clothe you…’ And God says, ‘Whatever you neglected to do to one of these little ones, you neglected to do it to me.’ (Matt 25:45).

 

The Lord is reminding us that it is his world, his creation and we have been entrusted with his creation to take care of it. It’s not just about us. It is about God. That is also why it is so sad when we get to the stage where we feel we can go completely against God’s Commandments and say that it is none of his business. We can do what we want. The Lord gave us specific Commandments to follow and we will be accountable.

If you think of something like the border situation, where there are so many people coming across illegally. Understandably it is upsetting and every country has a right to control its borders, but the very first thing, is to take care of the human being in front of you. If here is a person in front of you and they are starving, or suffering, we have an obligation to help them. The second thing is to deal with the political side of things. If you find yourself saying, ‘Why should we help them? They are illegal,’ remember this Gospel passage. To ignore the basic needs of any human being is to ignore the Lord. He didn’t say, ‘I was illegal and so it was ok not to help me.’ He said, ‘I was in need, but you failed to help me.’ It is easy to get caught up in the political, or legal side of it, forgetting the needs of each person.

 

As you probably recall a man by the name of Rami Qumsieh has been here a few times, selling religious artifacts to support the Christians in the Holy Land. Afterwards someone emailed me to say that we shouldn’t have to support them as the Church has lots of money. Think of this Gospel.

 

For us to be faithful means we must make conscious decisions to follow God’s law, continually looking to see if we are living it. That’s why we keep reading the Scriptures. Often God’s laws make us uncomfortable, because they challenge us when we are going off track. The irony is that it is God’s very laws that will lead us to the greatest freedom and happiness, but we must choose. We will be different and it will cost us, because we will meet resistance, just as Jesus said we would. But what could be greater than following the very path that God points out to us, the only one that leads to happiness.

 

Much of our world has rejected the ways of God and we must decide who we follow. But we cannot be casual about it. In Revelations the angel says to one of the communities, ‘I know your deeds, how you are neither hot nor cold, but only lukewarm. I wish you were one or the other. But since you are lukewarm, neither hot nor cold, I am going to spit you out of my mouth.’ (Rev 3:15-17). There is no room for indifference. We must choose whom we belong to.

 

‘…At the name of Jesus, every knee shall bow and every tongue confess, in heaven on earth and under the earth, that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the father’ (Phil 2:10-11).

 




Sunday, November 16, 2025

33rd Sunday Year C (Gospel: Luke 21:5-19) "If my people will humble themselves..."

 



Not too long ago while I was sitting in traffic, I noticed a Scripture reference on the back window of another car. It just read, 2 Chron. 7:14. I wasn’t familiar with that reference, so when I got home I looked it up. The quotation it was referring to is in the second book of Chronicles, which reads:

If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.’

 

I thought it was so perfect, so prophetic for the times we are in. The Lord is reminding us that although we are living in a time of great evil, our only hope is to turn back to him, to acknowledge our sinfulness and to ask for his forgiveness.

If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.’

 

The message of Christianity is very simple: God created us out of love, to live in his presence and share in his joy and that is what our first parents had. But then they rejected what God told them and lost what God had given them. That sin was passed on to us. So the human race was no longer in the state that God had originally intended for us.

 

It says in the creation account in Genesis that before the Fall, Adam and Eve walked in the garden with God. They were in God’s presence, totally fulfilled. But because of the devil’s envy, he tricked them into rejecting God’s word and as a result they lost what God had given them. They lost paradise, which is what God wanted for them, for us. God’s desire for us is that we would be completely happy and fulfilled in every way.

 



The worst part of the Fall, was that they had no way of undoing the damage by themselves. But because God loves us, He would not leave his creation in that fallen state and so God the Son took on human nature in the person of Jesus and through his self-sacrifice, He atoned for that sin and reopened the possibility of heaven for us. Now God offers that possibility to us once again.

When the angel Gabriel told Mary that she would conceive, she also told her that she must name the child, Jesus (See Luke 1:31). The name means, ‘Who Saves.’ He would save his people from their sins.

 

Imagine a project that you worked on for years, maybe a dream home, or a company that you built up, or a great tapestry, or work of art. It took years of meticulous work to create. Then someone came along and wrecked it. Would you just leave it in its ruined state, or would you try and rebuild it? More than likely you would try and rebuild it. This is what God did with his creation. He reopened for us the possibility of life with God, which would mean total happiness and fulfillment in every possible way. This is what God has done for us through the death and resurrection of Jesus and now God offers that life to us, but we must choose it. It is not a given and it is possible to lose it. It is only through Jesus that this happens.

 

I am the Way, the Truth and the Life. No one can come to the Father except through me.” (Jn 14:6)

I am the Gate. Whoever enters through me will be saved…” (Jn 10:9)  

I am the Good Shepherd…”

I am the Bread of Life. Whoever comes to me will never hunger. Whoever believes in me will never thirst.” (Jn 6:35)

 




Heaven is real and it is where we want to go when our time on earth is complete, but hell is also real. In the Gospels Jesus speaks of hell 23 times. The loss of God is a real possibility and one we must take seriously. Heaven doesn’t just happen. We must choose it and we choose it primarily by the way we live. If we say we love God then we must do what He commands us to do and not just in a vague kind of way, but exactly as He asks us to. God tells us what to do, but we have to choose to do it or not. God has given us that freedom and we will have that freedom right up until the day we die. But now is the time of choice. What you are doing with you life right now, is what you are choosing for eternity. Am I living by the ways of God, or by my own desires only. If you presume everyone goes to heaven when they die, then you should read the Gospels. Not everyone will go to heaven, which in itself is a very frightening thought.

 

It is sad to see so many people today who are obviously lost, in the sense of not knowing what the purpose of their life is. And so they are pulled in different directions by the different voices of the world. There is only one place we will find fulfillment and that is in Jesus. He is the doorway to heaven, the doorway to what all of us long for. We will only be fulfilled in God. No human being and no earthly thing is going to fulfill us. Only God can do that. That’s why it is so important to listen to what God tells us to do, because God is telling us how to reach that happiness. He shows us the path, but we must decide to follow it or not.

 

I think many people have a sense that we are in a time of decision. Our world and country are becoming more polarized all the time. We need to choose which side we are on. If we are to choose God, then we must be careful about how we live, because God tells us exactly what we must and must not do. ‘If you love me you will keep my commandments.’ And I will ask the Father and He will give you another Advocate to be with you always, the Spirit of truth. (Jn 14:15-16). God doesn’t just leave us to our own devices, but constantly guides us and shows us what we need to do. The turning back to God that is needed begins with me. We must also pray for our country, for all the people around us, that they will have the grace to turn back to God as well.

 

If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.’