Guest Preacher: Fr Simon Yong SJ
Those who came last night, well, that was your rebate:
a short homily. See, I am like the Government, give a small rebate (like
Kedai1M or BaucarBuku1M) and then bang you somewhere else (like 6%GST). Today
is a longer homily and a continuation of yesterday’s.
I began last night with an observation about cut Pandan
leaves. If you are interested, Google, Infiorate di Spello. It is an
Umbrian town in Italy renowned for its floral arrangements during Corpus
Christi. The best tag to describe what they do is “Spare No Effort”. Take a
look at the images that you Googled and you will be amazed by the intricacies
of the floral arrangements. They are what you might call the “Before” pictures
because the moment the Procession of the Blessed Sacrament passes by, the
floral creations are stepped on and they are gone. To those who are sensitive,
this surely feels like a scandalous waste.
The finale to the Novena is the theme Being
Rich in Mercy. The theme can have two meanings. Firstly, it could be a
description of God. If it is a description of God, then, there is a ring of
redundancy to it because God’s mercy is always rich—as we heard in today’s
Gospel. He fed not only 5000 but presumably the spouses and children of the
5000 men. Listen to the Collect from the 3rd Sunday in Ordinary
Time. It is taken from the previous missal which uses a dynamic equivalent
approach when translating from the original Latin.
Almighty
Father, the love you offer always exceeds the furthest expression of our
human longing, for you are greater than the human heart. Direct each
thought, each effort of our life, so that the limit of our faults and
weaknesses may not obscure the vision of your glory or keep us from the
peace you have promised.
Sacred Scriptures brim with instances of God’s
abundant mercies. In fact, the Parable of the Prodigal Son has often been
renamed as the Parable of the Prodigal Father to highlight the quality of God’s
mercy as always more than we can think. Thus, the Collect evokes the unlimited
response that God is inviting us to which brings me to the second meaning.
The theme is more an invitation to respond than a
description of God’s prodigality. If it is an invitation, then, the call is to
be merciful as the title of this Year suggests. Merciful like the Father is an
invitation to be as merciful as the Father is.
The Latin term magnum opus is used to designate a
piece of great work. For example, which do you think is Beethoven’s magnum
opus? The 6th Symphony? The point is that in terms of our
response to God, it is not because we are incapable of magnum opus. Instead,
many amongst us are “Judasians”, if there were such a
word. The spiritual descendants of Judas are legionary.
I consciously used the word feasible last night. It is
not feasible to do such a thing in Malaysia, like lining the entire
processional route with flower. It would most certainly be a scandal to many
people because it is wanton wastage.
But, really extravagance is truly a symbol of love. In
fact, God’s middle name is extravagance. Mirrored in the image and like of God,
extravagance is the symphony of a generous of heart. The great Cathedrals of
Europe are testaments of this kind of generosity and also an indication that we
recognise not only God’s rule or God’s sovereignty but we can image God’s
magnificent mercy. This is exemplified by the woman who along with breaking an
expensive alabaster jar of pure nard to anoint the feet of Christ the Lord,
also damped them with her tears and wiped them with her hair. She was not
afraid of God’s mercy because she trusted in Him. Quite unlike for Judas. The fear
of God’s mercy was the response of Judas which explains why, instead of taking
the route of Peter, he hung himself in despair of God’s mercy.
However, today our response these days may not be directly
from a despair of God’s mercy but rather it is circumscribed by a fear of
inadequacy. There is not enough for ourselves and certainly not enough for God.
It is interesting though that this fear of shortage is sometimes expressed
through opulence and ostentation. Like an unnamed official who built a RM24M-
mansion just a little too big for he and wife’s needs. What about acquiring a
legendary 2999 pairs of shoes too many or last count, my favourite fat cow’s 11
Hermès Birkin handbags. A display of ostentatious opulence for self
and not for God will always come across as ugly and distasteful. As the
case may be, dictators who build monuments to themselves are mostly notorious
for their infamy.
If fear is not the reason for our restrained response,
perhaps the crave for comfort and calculative convenience might explain our
present “Judasian” spirituality. Once a person expressed this opinion whilst
discussing the building a new church. He said, “The church is for our use and
so our needs should determine how the building should be like”. It is true that
the church is built for our use. But, a church building is also sacramental in
the sense that it expresses what it means to praise, worship and glorify God
and by that we are saved. A church built, according to the principle of
accommodating our needs first might purely be a convenient construction for
self-worship and not only that. When we are calculative with God, then whatever
we do for Him will be tainted by an impurity of heart: what will I get for what
I do for God?
A priest, whom you may have gone to for confession,
has this reputation as a Touch-and-Go priest because before you can finish
rattling off (not even listing) your sins, he is already making the hand
gesture of the Absolution. His queue was always the fastest and the shortest.
All my years as parish priest, I tried to rush through Mass at a pace that makes
it just a little short of passing through Smart-Tag. A bit more like a
Touch-and-Go, perhaps? Why? Cut this and cut that because they feel redundant
and unnecessary. Finish Mass fast so that people can go off. A long Mass is
just really inconvenient and then there is always the excuse that we have to
let people out before the next wave comes in.
I am sure you must have heard this a lot: The
Eucharist is the Source and Summit of Christian life. This makes Sunday a holy
day of obligation dedicated to the Lord. But, our actions belie our “Judasian”
behaviour. When Judas plotted to have Jesus arrested, he sealed it with a kiss.
The kiss as it were, got the act over and done with. In a sense, Sunday can
also be an obligation to get-it-over-and-done-with. I know of a parish where
the Sunset Mass is packed with people who because they have kept the “let-us-get-it-over-and-be-done-with”
to the last minute, they come and often leave at Communion time.
Judas was not rich and that 30 pieces of silver did
not represent his acquisitive greed. His was a heart miserly and miserable. Our
measure of love for God will be our measure of love for each other. It is not
really our forgiveness of others that measures our love for God. Jesus’ right
relationship with His Father became the standard of His relationship with the
world.
So, the road to a mercy extravagant requires that we
free our relationship with God from the clutches of convenience, comfort,
feasibility and the fear of inadequacy. The sea of flowers or even the daring wastage
of the flowers is indicative of who God is and the length we go to in our love
for Him will bear fruits of charity and mercy. This is one way of expressing
the principle of sacramentality. Love is shown in deeds rather than in words.
When we are tight-fisted with God whom we cannot perceive then we will often be
miserly towards those whom we can see. There is a correlation between a deep
love for God expressed through an untiring missionary outreach and a
corresponding link between a compliant love for God that fulfils the minimum
necessity of obligation.
In the Philippines, an eminent Jesuit psychologist
came up with this term to describe a Filipino reality. A taxi driver, festooned
with all the paraphernalia of Catholicism, rosaries, not one but a few hanging
from the rear-view of his Taxi, Perpetual Succour stickers and every name of
Mary you can find are pasted on the dashboard. You climb into this most
Catholic of taxis and the driver asks you, “Sir, you want girls. Or boys”?
He calls it “Split-level Christianity”. Truth
is, this phenomenon is not restricted to Filipinos. So, ang mga pinoy dito, huwag
kang mag-alala. Hindi ako mapanlait ka”. There is no need to insult the
Filipinos because everyone here suffers from some forms of schizophrenia. For
example, the servers here. They are orderly in the way they process and carry
out their duties. It is most pleasant visually but go to their rooms and you
will probably find chaos—sweaty smelly gym gears strewn all over the floor etc.
I am not saying they are untidy because I have never visited their rooms. The
point is, we proclaim our love for love God but our lives frequently do not
reflect it. It is basically a matter of degree how big the gap is between what
we believe and how we live our lives. Conversion is the tough work of narrowing
that gap.
Yesterday, I witness evidence of extravagance at work
especially in the days running up to the Procession last night. There was an
outpouring of generosity in accompanying the Lord as He leads us to heaven. Here,
I also want to make an apologetic digression about a person whom I think gets
it or is more clued in on the idea of the extravagance of generosity. A few
days ago, I told a Jesuit joke and said that your parish priest does not look
holy but he is. His work ethics certainly reveal an understated holiness. I
pray that God canonises him because I am not. I am purely making an
observation. He drops practically everything when there is an emergency. He
goes to wakes and takes time to hear confession until 1 or 2 am. You can say, he
is doing what he is supposed to do, so what? Well, I cannot do what he does. I
do not offer to hear confessions at wakes or I definitely do not drop
everything immediately when there is an emergency. The truth is, I wish I could
be more like him. And I can safely say that many priests like me would do just
the necessary. This is not a pissing contest but really an indication that for
a person to be able to do more than what is necessary, it is an indication[1]
that his or her love for God is the motivating drive to reach the furthest ends
of the earth.
And for us, like it or not, the road to a mercy rich
and extravagant begins humbly with what we often take for granted or even
complained about: The uselessness of the Liturgy. Here and there in the
homilies, I pointed this out. Once again, I return to your servers. The
servers’ deliberate style, even the candlesticks on the altar which you will be
hard-pressed to find in other parishes, the men who are formally dressed and
the women who have their heads covered, all these are but indications of
“uselessness” or “inconvenience” or “wastage”. In a way, the slowing down of
time, the demarcation between sacred and profane spaces through dressing or
veiling, they could be symbolic acts against the encroachment of utilitarianism.
Whatever is done here has no benefits except that the actions represent a
recognition of who God is and without any thoughts of the benefits. We worship
God because we want to and not because we have to. If you do not come to Mass
on Sunday, God is not going to strike you down or make you have a car accident.
But, if you come, it is an indication that this seemingly useless ritual is an
expression of your love for Him. If there is anything that can be said of last
night’s procession, it is this. That which is most useless is that which saves
us.
[1] Of course, wanting to do more could also
come from an impure motive. Like, doing more not for God’s glory but for the
praise of fellowmen.
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