Friday, March 29, 2013

HOMILY for March 28, 2013: Mass of The Lord's Supper, Cycle C

PODCAST - Press sideways triangle below to listen

Mass of the Lord’s Supper, Cycle C
Sisters of St. Joseph Motherhouse, Chestnut Hill, PA
March 28, 2013

The Power of Storytelling
By (Rev. Msgr.) Nicholas P. Amato


Storybook Time at the Library

Last Saturday I was at the library and witnessed a children’s storybook time.
About 30 children sat in a circle around the reader who began by holding up the large book and asking questions about the cover.

She then paged through it and had them all look at the full page pictures, asking more questions to quicken their imaginations and arouse their interest.

I noticed how she spoke in an animated way with lots of pauses, and oo’s and aha’s and my, my, my’s.

Soon she had every child’s imagination and began taking them through their experience of the story’s plot.

As the hour came to an end and parents began arriving to pick up their little ones, the children had been transformed by what they’d heard.

Like the story-time at the library last week, tonight’s 3 readings are one continuous story that yearns to draw us into it, not only in terms of our understanding, but in terms of our actual experiencing it and living out of it.

A 3-Chapter Story

Chapter one of tonight’s story is our hearing of the first Passover.

It is the defining experience for Judaism and testifies to the truth that all women and men are meant to be free and that God is concerned when they are not.

It is the Passover of the Jewish people.

The link to the second reading from Corinthians is that every Eucharist is a celebration of the Passing-over of the Lord and that it is accomplished definitively in the shedding of Jesus’ blood

Jesus is the Lamb of God, whose blood marks, not the doorposts of the Hebrews in Egypt, but marks us tonight for salvation.

When we, the members of his body, become what we eat, we live the mystery of deliverance that we celebrate.

And if, like Christ, we are bread broken and consumed for others and wine poured out for the thirst of the world, we witness that deliverance to the world.

The Gospel tells us to what degree we are to be “broken and given” and “wine poured out” for others.

Washing a guest’s feet was a gesture of hospitality and it was the work of the household’s slaves.

Jesus’ washing the feet of his disciples, then, shows us a servant who handles our humanity with love, despite our friendship or enmity with him.

Furthermore, he asks us to follow his example: to serve one another, despite the dust and smell and misunderstandings that life entails.

We too have part with Jesus in the hospitality that his death and resurrection offer all and washing each other helps us move from understanding to experience 

Moving from Understanding à Experience à Action

As with in storybook time a good book is worth a recap: the 1st reading of the Passover speaks of our need for liberation.

It helps us understand our inclination to sin as well as our yearning for deliverance

In the 2nd reading we have Jesus as a model of our own Passing-over.

To understand him as the lamb of the new Passover who offered his own body and blood so I can eat, taste and assimilate what he has given of himself makes all the difference in the world of my experience.

Finally, the Gospel, as the lynch pin, the connector that completes the child in me hearing that story to it becoming my story in enfleshed in my hands being washed and then washing and drying the hands of another.

Conclusion

As the parents in the library last Saturday came for their children, it is similarly time for us to go, to go and to put into practice what we have heard and believed with out own hearts.

It will take the action of washing each other’s hands, the action of eating body and blood in order to become the story of liberation we crave

It is the story of liberation that God wants so much to give us and which we have just received

May we leave this “library” a different child of God from the child who sat down here an hour ago!