Readings of the day: Exodus 40:16-21, 34-38; Psalm 84:3, 4, 5-6a, 8a, 11; Matthew 13:47-53
Thursday of the 17th Week in Ordinary Time
This homily was given at the Kateri House Women's Residence Chapel, St. Joseph's College, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
What kinds of homes do we live in, and with what kinds of keepsakes or treasures do we fill our homes?
Through the likes of Moses and Jesus, God
proposes for us today a dwelling that is much more permanent than anything we
have ever known. God proposes to make God’s dwelling, heaven, forever our home.
All God asks of us is to make of our hearts God’s home on earth—a tabernacle of
sorts, meant to move about, to change, to be disassembled and reassembled as
our earthly pilgrimage progresses—but still God’s home on earth. As St.
Alphonsus Liguori, whom we celebrate today, once said, “The human heart is, so
to speak, the paradise of God.” Jesus, too, asks us to make of our hearts “the
paradise of God,” the storehouse of “what is new and what is old,” while God
prepares our permanent home in heaven.
Thursday of the 17th Week in Ordinary Time
This homily was given at the Kateri House Women's Residence Chapel, St. Joseph's College, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
What kinds of homes do we live in, and with what kinds of keepsakes or treasures do we fill our homes?
Is it fair for me to presume
that, since we are near the middle of a major city, most of us live in houses,
apartments, or other, say, permanent dwellings? Having said this, I think of
and invite us to pray for everybody, especially in the midst of our city of
Edmonton but around the world, who are homeless or who otherwise do not have a
permanent home; a permanent and safe place to keep even a few treasures.
As a member of a religious
order under a vow of poverty, my experience is nowhere near the experience of
poverty, of uncertainty as to where to find safe shelter, food, and other
necessities that homeless people experience. Yet, as a Basilian, I have had the
experience of moving from one place and one form of ministry to another often
enough that this tends to minimize the amount of material goods I and my
Basilian brothers might accumulate. We have in our Basilian houses decorations
that show both that these are religious houses and that they are places of warm
hospitality, not only toward fellow Basilians but anybody who may visit our
homes.
Today, the Book of Exodus
features Moses, who builds the tabernacle that is to house the Ark of the Covenant,
and all this within a structure called the Tent of Meeting. The impermanence of
this structure, even though it was to be the dwelling of God himself among the
people of Israel, is remarkable to me. The Ark of the Covenant and its
tabernacle within the Tent of Meeting was designed to be disassembled and
reassembled as the people of Israel under Moses’ leadership journeyed from
Egypt to their more permanent homeland of Israel. It would be many more
centuries before the home of the God of Israel on Earth would become a more
permanent structure, the Temple of Jerusalem, and even this first temple and
its successor would not last forever.
Our Gospel reading today, from
Matthew, focuses on our most permanent dwelling of all: The Kingdom of Heaven.
It is to be the dwelling of “the righteous,” those people who have acted
according to God’s love for us toward one another, especially people most in
need. The Kingdom of Heaven will not be a place for people with the greatest
number of earthly treasures, but for people who have made in their hearts a permanent
dwelling for our God, our ultimate treasure, “beauty ever ancient yet ever
new,” as St. Augustine of Hippo once prayed.
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