My friends, if you follow the Sunday Scriptures closely, you may have noticed that again this week I didn’t use the chosen feast, that of, The Dedication of the Lateran Basilica, which we celebrate about every seven years on a Sunday, when November 9th falls on a Sunday. As I looked at the chosen Scriptures for this feast, which calls us through readings from the prophets, Ezekiel, Saint Paul in his letter to the Corinthians, and Jesus in the gospel of John, to respect and treasure the temple, with our brother Jesus clearly telling us in John that he, Jesus, basically, “is the only temple that we should treasure,” I felt that clear idea could be woven into the Scriptures for the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time and added upon, as Jesus always wants us to go deeper.
So, turning to the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, we see the virtue of faith being uplifted in the Old Testament reading from Maccabees, where we come face-to-face with what seven brothers are willing to endure to remain faithful to their God at the hands of their Greek captors.
At first glance this reading may seem to some as an unusual choice because of the violence that it depicts, and we may ask why? The “good,” if we can use that word, comes when we take the next step, beyond the violence, to understand why the brothers are willing to endure what they do. Because they – each, believed so strongly in the God who made a covenant with their people, “to be their God, and they would be God’s people,” they received the courage to stand strong in the face of ignorance, and cruel violence. These brothers knew that there was more than this life, and that basically, God would more than give back anything they may have lost in their earthly journeys.
The times in which we live my friends, have shown us an uptick in this same kind of ignorance and cruel violence around our world. Many days for me, and I know this is true for you as well, I wonder how much more evil that shows itself in the form of greed, selfishness, and lack of concern for the common good, we can endure.
One of the lessons of the Maccabees’ reading that we should see, and lay upon our hearts, is the counsel, “to not become what we abhor.” Those of you who demonstrate on Monday evenings with placards asking for better in our country than what we are seeing at present, are sometimes abused by violent reactions from some driving by — loud cars and other abusive gestures. We must always remember not to react in like manner.
Paul, in his letter to the Thessalonians encourages his converts to pray that they be “delivered from confused and evil persons” – a worthy prayer for all of us too, it would seem. Paul goes on to pray, “may the Spirit rule in your hearts.” This reminds me of the Christian Brothers’ Prayer that Jim Hanzel, a former Christian brother, and member of All Are One pray each time we are together – “Live Jesus in our hearts forever.” In my years as a chaplain, and now as a pastor, I routinely encourage people in times of trouble, when seemingly the path forward doesn’t appear clear, to simply utter the name of “Jesus” – there is, I know from personal experience, great strength in his name.
The story we heard today in Luke’s gospel about another seven brothers who attempt to “give” the same woman children, in turn upon the death of a previous brother who failed, is one that ties together well, I think, the two feasts we are considering today, that of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica and the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time. As with so many issues that Jesus comments on in Scripture, encouraging people to see “a bigger picture,” this gospel from Luke is no exception.
The teller of the story wonders out loud whose wife the woman will be in eternity as all have married her. And even though we may smile at this story, having off spring was of great importance in Jesus’ time, especially for women, and here it would be to have a son who could care for and support a mother if widowed, who had no power in this society, but that she was connected to a man. But again, Jesus must direct his hearers to a greater message – life in eternity will be different – all will be cared for, all will be equal, somehow, in the embrace of a Loving God.
You may be wondering why an annual feast celebrating a basilica that sometimes falls on a Sunday, and when it does, is so important that it takes precedence over the regular Sunday feast. When Constantine made Christianity the state religion in 312 CE, Christians received, through the gift of this basilica, which has grown over time, a place to publicly worship, and pray, which in the first few centuries, they didn’t have.
There is, always, as we all know, the danger of making material things more important than spiritual things and I believe it is for this reason that all the readings for this Dedication of the Lateran Basilica point not to the “material building,” but to the temple, which is Jesus, the Christ, living within each of us. Again, when too much emphasis is placed on the “material” temple, there is the danger of losing sight of the spiritual temple that exists within each of us, within all of creation, really. Paul said it in the letter to the Corinthians – “Don’t you realize that you are God’s temple”?! He says further, “Jesus, the Christ” lays the foundation” [!]
The seven brothers in the Maccabees reading, even well before our brother Jesus lived, had a sense of this awesome reality – that they were God’s temples, and that is why they had the strength to give their lives to uplift the importance of answering to a higher power.
So my friends, when times are tough in our own lives, we need to realize that life brings both good and not so good, tyrants come and go, but by holding onto our core values, attempting each day, to be our best, we will be true to our baptisms, saying, “yes” to who we follow, not merely the “material” temples of this world, but more so, the temples that exist in each person, in all of creation.
And because we all love a good story, I will end with one. Steve Hartman, CBS commentator and producer of the On the Road series this past Friday shared the story of a 6-year-old girl named Marion from Springfield, Massachusetts, who took it upon herself to help save an endangered salamander, the axolotl. She felt, it was her responsibility to do so . The axolotl, it turns out, can reproduce its limbs, if for any reason, it loses them. Scientists from Harvard have been studying how axolotls do this in the hopes that we humans can learn how to do the same when they lose limbs. Harvard sadly, lost its funding for this project in the spring, so enter 6- year-old Marion to help—she made a power point and established a fundraiser, which brought in $1,000. Steve, in talking to Marion, wanted to know why this was important for her to do. She said, it wasn’t just because the axolotl “is cute,” but because it can grow again any of its body limbs! –she felt that even though many animals are endangered, “it was her destiny” to save this one. The female scientist at Harvard interviewed, and her colleagues were given great hope not in the amount of the gift (and their funding was later reinstated), but in the size of the giver—that someone so small could care so much!
So, there you have it friends, each of us doing our part, recognizing the “temples” where we find them, and as we heard here, even in an animal, one, I had never heard of before! Amen? Amen!