Homily for the
Seventh Sunday of Easter
May 17, 2015
The True Church
The
author of the “Lord of the Rings” series, JRR Tolkien, converted to Catholicism
through an interesting route. He was born with virtually no faith at all, but his
father died when he was quite young – age 4. His mother Mabel, torn with grief,
sought a way to deal with her sadness – so she turned to faith, but her nominal
Protestant background provided little consolation. So Tolkien’s mother started
to search for another faith, one that was more substantial and offered greater
truth. When JRR was eight, his mother converted to Catholicism – and brought
her two young sons with her!
But the
story doesn’t end there. Sadly, the family was immediately rejected because of
this conversion – they thought Mabel and the boys had gone off the deep end! Within
a year, the stress of having their entire family turn their backs on them
proved too much, and Tolkien’s mother died tragically, leaving her two boys in
the care of an old aunt who paid them no attention. Left to themselves, the
Tolkien boys found themselves spending more and more time at their local
Catholic church – they would serve Mass for the priest, clean up around the
church, and even eat breakfast with the priests before heading off to school.
Later on in life, Tolkien said that he first learned charity and forgiveness
from the pastor of that Catholic Church. He remained convicted of the truth of
the Catholic faith and was willing to hold to it, despite personal cost.
Truth is
something worth seeking. It’s something worth fighting for, even worth dying
for. But our world is one that is full of opinions – just look at the vast
number of blogs and comment boxes on websites, all full of opinions…and very
little truth. Is it possible to find truth in the modern world? In particular,
is it possible to find truth about God, about humanity, about our eternal
destiny?
Yes, it
is. In John’s Gospel, Jesus says that He is the Truth – He’s not an opinion,
not one man among many, but THE Truth. He proved that His words are truth when
He rose from the dead. So if Jesus is the Truth – if He reveals the Truth about
God, about who we are as His beloved sons and daughters – then we must follow
Him.
And if
Jesus, Truth Himself, starts a religion, we can be assured that it is the true
one. Jesus set up the Catholic religion upon the faith of Simon Peter, the
first Pope, and He promised His Apostles that “the gates of Hell will not
prevail against the Church” – in other words, that His Church would never stray
from teaching the truth about God and our relationship to Him.
I am
Catholic because I believe that the Catholic Church is the one true Church
founded by Jesus Christ. But I almost wandered away in my teen years. Growing
up, I went to a Catholic church that was pretty cold and unfriendly. The people
were grumpy, the priests were boring, the music was lame…so when I reached my
late teens, I started to go to a Methodist church a few times, and I went with
my friend to his Lutheran church. I was amazed at how warm and welcoming these
other churches were! I immediately felt at home there…except, they didn’t have
the Eucharist, and they didn’t have the fullness of truth. So, I returned to
the Catholic Church, knowing that truth is more important that warm feelings or
good preaching.
You see,
we believe, as Catholics, that the Catholic Church has the fullness of truth.
Other faiths have partial truth – for example, our Protestant brothers and
sisters share with us truths such as baptism and a love for the Scriptures.
Even other non-Christian religions like Muslims and Hindus have part of the
truth – they all encourage people to be kind and compassionate, for example.
But the Catholic Church has the fullness of truth – everything that we need to
know about God and how to best love Him, we can find in the Catholic Church. It’s
a bold claim, I know…but who would want to belong to a religion that didn’t claim to be the true religion?
It’s
kind of like this: you could probably build a house with just a hammer, a saw,
and a few nails, right? It may not look pretty, but you could do it if you had
to. But it would be a lot easier if you also had a tape measure, and a level,
and a screwdriver, right? Of course! We would want every tool we need to build
the best house possible.
In the
same way, can those of other faiths get to Heaven with the partial truth in
their religion? Yes, but it is harder. As Catholics, we have so many tools for
holiness: the Rosary, devotions, Eucharistic Adoration, the teachings of the
Holy Father, the examples of the Saints, the two-thousand-year-old Tradition,
and so much more. Why settle for less when we can have every tool in the
toolbox?
Jesus
only wants one religion – He says so in today’s Gospel, as He prays “that all
may be one.” There are currently over 33,000 different branches of
Christianity, from Methodists and Episcopalians to Evangelicals and
Non-Denominationals. That was clearly not Jesus’ will! He wanted all to be one,
united in the one Church He founded – the Catholic Church.
When we
read this weekend’s Gospel (John 17), we are basically eavesdropping in on
Jesus’ final prayer before He is crucified. He prays to the Father for us – for
the Church – and He prays that we may be consecrated in the truth – in other
words, He is consecrating the Apostles to bring His Truth to the world. Our
Catholic faith is built upon those Apostles who handed on that Truth down
through the centuries. The teachings of the Catholic church are the same,
unchanging teachings that were handed on to the Apostles from Jesus.
So, for
this reason, we should be proud to be Catholic. In today’s world where many
people believe that there are “many equal paths to God” or that they can be “spiritual
but not religious,” we respectfully disagree with those assertions. While we
respect the partial truths that are in all other religions, we are confident
that we have the fullness of truth in the Catholic Church, the religion that
Jesus founded. And this Truth, more than any external reason like good music or
a beautiful church building, is why we are Catholic!
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