Homily for Ordinary Time 29
October 19, 2025
Christian Friendship
A young
college student named Francis ended up being assigned an interesting roommate:
an older man, an ex-soldier, named Ignatius, who had just gone through a major
conversion to Christ. Francis was a party animal who wanted nothing of Ignatius’
religiosity, but despite their differences, the two became close friends and
ended up rooming together for three years. They got along well except for one
annoying habit: every single day, Ignatius would say to his friend, “Francis,
what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul?”
Day
after day, Ignatius would say this, and Francis grew rather annoyed. He told him
to mind his own business, that he wasn’t all that religious and that this
question was really bothersome: “What does it profit a man to gain the whole
world and lose his soul?” But Ignatius never stopped – year after year.
It began
to wear down his younger friend. Finally, in the third year of college, Francis
broke down and realized that Ignatius was right – it was meaningless to pursue
all the parties, the girls, the success without even a thought to his own soul.
He finally said, “Ignatius, you’re right. I’ve been wasting my life without
Christ. What must I do?” Ignatius told him about a new group he was founding,
called the Company of Jesus, and Francis agreed to join. We now know them as
St. Ignatius of Loyola and St. Francis Xavier, two of the first six Jesuits. It
was friendship that led Francis to become a saint!
All of
us need friends – and our readings are all about that. In the first reading,
Moses is given a task by God to help Israel win the battle, by raising his
hands aloft. But he couldn’t do that without Aaron and Hur to help him when he
grew tired. In the second reading, Paul is writing to his friend and protégé Timothy,
who is a close collaborator in Paul’s work. Neither Paul nor Moses were a “lone
ranger” – they knew that they needed others to accomplish God’s tasks.
We too
need Christian friends, but we are sometimes afraid to admit it. A 2020 study
found that 28% of young men say they have zero close friends. So many are
turning to technology – a Pew Research Study from 2024 revealed that 67% of
young adults have interacted with an AI “companion” (a website where you can
have a “conversation” with a computer that responds like a real person) and 23%
prefer digital relationships to human relationships. But our hearts yearn for
real, authentic, healthy friendships – all of us!
But what
makes a Christian friendship unique? Aristotle identifies three levels of
friendship. First is friendship of utility – I’m friends with this
person because they can do something for me. Maybe they can help my career, or they’re
one of the “cool kids,” or they just take away my loneliness. But fundamentally
this is based on using another person, not love. A second type of
friendship is friendship of pleasure – I’m friends with this person
because we like to do fun stuff together. This would be our fishing buddies,
sports teammates, coworkers with whom we like to share a drink. Nothing wrong
with these friendships, but they’re pretty shallow and they don’t require a
whole lot of commitment. But Aristotle mentions a third, deeper kind of
friendship – what he calls friendship of virtue, where we have a common
goal of becoming a virtuous, holy person and pursuing Christ together. This is
a deep, lasting friendship based on the only enduring bond: the love of Jesus
Christ.
So how
do we find those kinds of friendships? A wise priest once gave some profound
dating advice that we can apply to friendships: “Start running after Jesus, and
once you’ve been running after Him for a while, look around and see who’s
running with you. That’s who you should date.” That’s also who you should
become friends with – people who are pursuing Christ, who make you a better
person. One day I opened a Dove chocolate to find the inside message to be
quite profound: “Your vibe attracts your tribe.” If you pursue Christ, you will
find Christ-centered friendships.
But
then, of course, we have to actually go out and seek friendships, instead of
waiting for them to come to us. My mom had a great saying: “The phone works
both ways” – in other words, instead of waiting for someone else to take the
initiative in a friendship, maybe I need to go out and get to know fellow
Christians – through Walking With Purpose, our men’s groups, Youth Encounters,
etc. I know everyone thinks they’re an introvert, but really we’re just all
stuck in our middle-school mindset where we’re afraid of rejection. And that’s
where Christ can help us – if we realize that we are profoundly, passionately
loved by Him, then we can take risks in relationships because we are grounded
in our identity in Christ. No matter whether I fit into this group or develop
this friendship, my deeper friendship with Christ is unshakeable.
But
there’s the key – our deepest friendship must be with Christ. But let me ask –
do you have only a friendship of utility with Him? I often bring food to
Cardinal Kung because you win the hearts of teenagers through their stomachs.
So I had a plate of cookies one day and this sixth-grader named Kenny asked if
he could have one. I gave him one and he replied, “Gee, Fr. Joseph, you’re very
easy to manipulate!” Kids say the darndest things…but don’t we often treat God
like that, just a Divine Vending Machine? “What do I want today – healing, a
job, help on a test…” and we put in our three Hail Mary’s and think that we
will get what we want. But apart from asking God from stuff, we don’t ever
spend time with Him.
This is
a friendship of utility, and it is not the point of the Gospel! Jesus
talks about how God wants to give us good things if we persevere in prayer, but
then He says these words which have always haunted me: “When the Son of Man
comes, will He find faith on the earth?” In other words, are we merely using
God to get what we want, or will we have a living faith that seeks Him for
His sake, loves Him, and trusts that He gives us what we truly need?
We
develop that kind of friendship with Christ in a similar manner as our other
friends. We spend time with Him – prayer, the Sacraments. We listen to Him – He
speaks through His Word in the Bible. We begin to adopt His values. We try to
please Him in our thoughts, words, and deeds.
So,
pursue Christian friendships – we deeply desire them, and they will make us
happier and holier. And most fundamentally, pursue a friendship with Christ. Then
our faith becomes less about a set of doctrines and rules, and more about a
love affair with a God Who calls us “friends”.