Homily for 22nd
Sunday in Ordinary Time
August 30, 2015
Traditions &
Superstitions
We are
blessed, as Catholics, to have rich traditions in our Catholic culture. Things
like fish fries on Fridays in Lent, devotions to this saint or that saint,
statues and holy water and Rosaries and all sorts of things. We have special
blessings for everything from cars to Easter food. This is a wonderful gift!
Being Catholic is kind of like being at an all-you-can-eat restaurant – so many
choices, so little time!
The
objects and blessings that make up part of our tradition are called sacramentals. A sacramental is something
like a crucifix, a holy card, a Rosary, Holy water, a blessing, or any other
object that helps to remind us of Jesus. Sacramentals have no power on their
own, but are meant to remind us of God and bring us closer to the Lord. They
are important parts of our Catholic tradition!
But
Jesus has some sharp words for people in the Gospel who focus on traditions and
neglect the heart of the Law. In His day, the Pharisees were more interested in
making sure their hands were washed properly than in making sure that the poor
are fed. In our day, we sometimes see similar things. We sometimes see people
focusing too much on the traditions, and not enough on the core of Jesus’
message.
For
example, I had a woman come up to me one time in Church with a five-gallon
bucket. I had never seen her before, so I asked her what she was doing with
that bucket. She asked – through a translator – for some holy water. I told her
I could give her a little bit, but not five gallons worth! But she insisted. So
I asked what she wanted to use it for. She said she wanted to give her sons a
bath in holy water to ward off evil. But when I asked her if she came to Mass
weekly, she said that she didn’t. So I didn’t give the lady any holy water, but
instead encouraged her to come to Confession and Mass that weekend!
We must
always be careful to avoid superstition in our religion. Superstition is the
enemy of true faith! Superstition basically means giving something else the
power that belongs to God alone. Jesus alone saves us – not a specific prayer,
not a statue, not wearing a specific medal, not a specific blessing. Only
Jesus!
Again,
Jesus is not condemning all traditions as evil. Jesus Himself was a good Jew,
and He followed the traditions of His religion. But He also recognized that
traditions can be used to draw us closer to God – or can be a distraction from
what God truly wants of us.
What
does God truly want from us? He wants us to love Him; to have a life of prayer,
to follow the commandments, to love our neighbor, to surrender our lives over
to Him. That is the core of the Gospel message – that although we are sinners,
Jesus died for us so that we could be forgiven and healed, if we accept Jesus
into our lives and strive to live for Him and keep His commands. That is the
core of what we believe.
And
sacramentals are supposed to remind us of this! When we look at a crucifix, we
are reminded that Jesus loves us and He died for us. When we receive a
blessing, we remember that God is the giver of all good gifts. When we pray to
St. Jude, we remember that God’s grace was powerfully at work within him, and
we too are called to imitate Jude’s example of holiness. When we look at a
Rosary, we are invited to pray it.
Just a
survey - how many of us own a Rosary? How many of us have prayed the Rosary in
the past year? The past month? The past week? Having a Rosary and not praying
it is like owning a car and never driving it – we need to pray the Rosary in
order for it to make us saints! Sacramentals do no good unless they lead us
closer to Jesus!
So, we
rejoice at all of the sacramentals and rich traditions of our Faith. We
cultivate devotion to saints, we hang crosses on our walls, we get blessings
for our cars. Those traditions are beautiful and rich. But we do not have a
superstitious reliance on these traditions. God alone saves us, and He invites
us to use these traditions and sacramentals as avenues of His grace so that we
can be transformed into saints!
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