Homily for Easter 4 – Good Shepherd Sunday
April 26, 2026
Sharing In the Mission of the Church
The sign
that a plant or an animal is mature is that it can reproduce. And the sign that
a Christian has a mature faith is that they can also reproduce – by making
other Christians.
It is
often said that the Church does not have a mission, the Church is
a mission. The mission of the Church is very simple – Jesus outlines it in
Matthew 28 when He says, “Go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them,
and teaching them to observe all I have commanded you.” So the Church’s mission
is threefold: to evangelize (make disciples), celebrate the Sacraments, and
catechize (teach others how to follow Jesus).
But the
Church’s mission is not just for priests and nuns – it is for every
Christian! If you’ve received the Sacrament of Confirmation, you are both
empowered and required to bring souls to Christ – the entire point of that
Sacrament is to make you a missionary in your own life!
But let’s
ask – why is it necessary for a mature Christian to have a hunger for souls?
Because if we love Jesus, we must love what He loves – and what does He love
more than anything? Souls! He would do anything to purchase our souls, even to
death. St. John Bosco, who ran a boarding school for poor boys in Turin, Italy,
had the following phrase inscribed over the door of his school: “Da Mihi
Animas, Cetera Tolle” – Give me souls, take away all the rest. When young St.
Dominic Savio walked through the door and read the motto, he immediately
understood and said, “Ah, here your business is not to make money, but to make
saints!”
Jesus
makes a pretty radical claim: that He is “the way, the truth, and the life.” He
is not one truth among many or just one way to live your life. No, there
is an exclusivity in what He claims – He is the only One who leads to Heaven,
and that His Church is the only true religion. In fact, we believe that
“outside the Church there is no salvation.” Does this mean that only baptized Catholics
go to Heaven? Not necessarily. Rather, it means that anyone who is saved is
saved in and through Jesus Christ – not through their own religion,
deity, or spiritual practice – and that the Catholic Church has the fullness of
what Christ taught and the best access to Him. This radical claim should spur
us on to want to bring every soul to Jesus in the Catholic Faith. We were
beggars who have found spiritual food in the Eucharist, so we turn to the
hungry around us to share this feast.
How do
we do this? Our three readings give us the three ways to participate in the
mission of the Church for souls. First, by prayer and suffering for souls. St.
Peter’s letter, which we read as our second reading, speaks to us of the great
good of suffering well, in union with Christ’s suffering. If Christ’s suffering
saved the world, then our suffering can also help Him save souls. Not that we
can add anything to Christ’s sufferings, but since we are members of the Body
of Christ, we are applying Christ’s sufferings to Monroe in 2026. Christ wants
to suffer and pray in and through us for souls, here and now, because we
as Christians are called to extend the presence of Christ throughout history
and throughout the world.
Here’s
an example. When St. Therese of Lisieux was in her teen years in France in the
1800s, she had a burning desire to pray for the conversion of sinners. One day,
she happened to read in her father’s newspaper that a horrendous crime had been
committed: a man named Henri Pranzini was found guilty of murder and would be
executed in a few days. Therese made it her mission to pray and sacrifice for
this man, especially praying that the Precious Blood from the Wounds of Christ
would grant him the grace of repentance. But Pranzini showed no signs of
repentance – he turned down the offer of Confession, and continued to grow
angrier and more hateful as the fateful day approached. As Therese read the
paper daily to check on his status, she only increased her prayers more and
more fervently. Finally, the day arrived – and Pranzini was led to the
guillotine, executed for his crime. The following day, Therese desperately
checked the paper – and lo and behold, the article on the front page described Pranzini
standing on the scaffolding, holding a crucifix and kissing the Sacred Wounds three
times before his death! He had repented, at the last possible moment! Therese
saw that as the answer to her prayer – the power of fasting and sacrificing for
souls!
But
prayer should be coupled with words and deeds. Today’s first reading shows
Peter using such powerful words that over 3,000 people were baptized that very
day! (His arm must have been very tired from all those baptisms!) Notice that
Peter did two things as he preached: he invited, and he explained. He gives
very specific instructions: repent, be baptized, believe in the Lord Jesus. We,
too, should be concrete in our invitations: “Hey, want to go to Sunday Mass
together?” “I know you’re struggling with something, could we pray together?”
“You look like you could use some peace and quiet – want to come to Adoration?”
This is how Jesus worked – His first encounter in John’s Gospel were with two
men who followed Him from a distance. He asked them, “What are you looking
for?” They asked Him where He was staying, and He responded with those powerful
words, “Come and see.” It was an invitation to meet their deepest need by
coming to see Him – so we hear the needs of modern men and women: need for
love, meaning and purpose, acceptance, forgiveness – and invite them to meet
Christ.
But our
invitation must also be supported by explanation. What would you say if you
invited someone to pray the Rosary, but they responded, “Nah, you Catholics
worship Mary. I don’t do that.” How would you respond? St. Peter tells us in
his letter that we should always have a reason for the hope within us. Do you
know your faith well enough to explain it to a nonbeliever? We need to! Study
the Catechism, read good spiritual books or listen to Catholic podcasts, dive
into the Bible. We need to be able to explain our Faith – we could say to our
unbelieving friend, “As Catholics, we don’t worship Mary; rather, we honor her,
since she was closest to Christ on earth, she is closest to Him in Heaven. Now
will you pray the Rosary with me?”
Prayer
is good, and words are good, but this must also be supported by the power of
our witness. Listen to the words of St. Charles Borromeo: “Be sure that you
first preach by the way you live. If you do not, people will notice that you
say one thing, but live otherwise, and your words will bring only cynical
laughter and a derisive shake of the head.” But to be clear – just “being
nice” is not witnessing to the truth of Jesus Christ. Witness is directly
commensurate to what we’re willing to sacrifice for.
Back in
2015, twenty Christian Egyptian construction workers were captured by Islamic
radicals and brought to Libya. These terrorists wanted to make a statement that
Christianity is powerless in the face of the weapons and force of Islam. They
brought them to a beach and gave them a chance to give up their Christian
faith, but each of the twenty refused to deny the Lord. So the captors beheaded
them one-by-one…but there was a twenty-first person who had been kidnapped as
well. It was a friend of the twenty, but he professed no particular religion.
But upon seeing his friends die for this Jesus, he said to the terrorists,
“Their God is my God now.” And he lost his life as well – evangelized by the
silent witness of the twenty who died for Christ.
Sacrifice
is what sets believers apart from nonbelievers. I used to have a close friend
named Lance, who was an atheist. He and his wife had adopted their niece and
nephew out of a horrifically abusive situation. The two kids were pretty broken
and psychologically wounded – they had major behavior problems and were
in-and-out of psychiatric hospitals. One day I was hiking with Lance and I
asked him, “As an atheist, what do you think is the meaning of life?” He said,
“I think it’s to make the world a better place.” Hmm, okay. I can accept that.
But later that day we were talking about the struggles he was having with his
kids and I asked, “If you had to do it all over again and adopt those kids,
with all of their challenges, would you do it?” He thought for a moment and
said, “No, probably not. It’s been too hard.” I thought – what a perfect
opportunity to “make the world a better place”, as he claimed – but because it
cost him something, he wasn’t willing to do it, because he had no faith, no
desire to imitate Christ.
The only
credible witness is sacrificial love. Ordinary kindnesses can be done by pagans
and atheists; but making a sacrifice for the sake of God is something only
possible with the grace of Jesus Christ. We see this in the Gospel – Jesus is
the “Good Shepherd” Who is willing to lay down His life for the sheep. If
Christ had not died for us, would we believe His teachings? Would we know of
His love for us? Probably not. Likewise, if a Christian does not die daily to
himself, the world will not see the truth of Christianity reflected in their
lives.
My
friends, we should be filled with a zeal for souls to come to know the love of
God and win Heaven, because the mission of the Church is our mission,
too.