In
this season of new beginnings, just three weeks into a new year, the Church
today recalls what we might call the organizational beginning of Jesus’ public
mission – with Jesus’ call of Simon and Andrew and James and John to be
apostles and missionaries, the very core from whom the Church would expand and
grow. Today’s Gospel must surely be a Religious Vocation Director’s dream
text! Not that I would ever be likely to
serve as a vocation director, part of the job description of which is presumably
to be young and thin. Nor have I ever been
much called upon to give Paulist Appeal talks, which is what is supposed to
happen today. Some of you may have come to Mass today expecting to hear your
former Pastor, who will be celebrating his Golden Jubilee, 50
years as a priest in 2018, and who was scheduled to be preaching our Paulist
Appeal today. Unfortunately he is in bed with the flu. So you’re stuck
with me instead.
Be
that as it may, today’s Gospel is indeed a Vocation preacher’s dream, and so it
is an easy transition to speak about a particular vocation – that of the
Paulist Fathers – and to ask all of you who are here today not necessarily to
become Paulists yourselves (although if there is anyone here who fits that
profile, let’s talk later) but to offer your support to the Paulists – as
people in this parish have done so consistently and so generously ever since
the late Fr. Tom Connellon came to Immaculate Conception in 1973 as our first
Paulist pastor.
By the way, one of the best Vocation-Promotion-Recruitment
films ever made was Fisher of Men,
our own Paulist Vocation-Promotion-Recruitment film from the early 1960s, which
takes its title from Jesus’ famous words in today’s Gospel. It was written and
produced by the founder of Paulist Productions, as a "day in the
life" of a fictional Paulist priest (played by Brian Keith, the star of
the 961 movie, The Parent Trap), with
scenes filmed at out Paulist parish and at our university ministry in Los
Angeles. It is visually very dated obviously, but still well worth seeing.
One
of my own favorite vocation stories is from the 4th century. In 391,
Saint Augustine, then 36 years old, but baptized only 4 years, visited the
North African town of Hippo. Knowing Augustine’s reputation as a talented orator,
the Bishop, Valeriaus, took advantage of his presence to say that, because of
his age, he needed the assistance of a younger priest, who was a good speaker.
The congregation took the hint; grabbed hold of Augustine; and refused to
release him until he agreed to be ordained!
Like
Saint Augustine, our 19th-century Paulist founder, Servant of God
Isaac Hecker, also told his own account of his own personal journey – how God
led him into the Catholic Church and then inspired him to devote the rest of his
life to leading others there as well. Often
in my boyhood, Hecker wrote, when
lying at night on the shavings before the oven in the bake house, I would start
up, roused in spite of myself, by some great thought … What does God desire
from me? … What is it He has sent me into the world to do? These were the
ceaseless questions of my heart, that rested, meanwhile, in an unshaken
confidence that time would bring the answer.
For
all the drama we may be inclined to associate with the vocations of the
Apostles or of Saint Augustine, Hecker’s account illustrates how God’s call can
come in the midst of our ordinary, everyday activities. And it was to share the
Church’s life in our ordinary, everyday world that Hecker founded the Paulist
Fathers 160 years ago. Animated by Hecker’s vision and inspiration, generations
of Paulist priests have crisscrossed this country in order (as we like to say)
to “Give the Word a Voice.”
But
none of that happens automatically. When the Paulists started they were just
four in number and had the immediate task of building a brand new parish,
church and all, from nothing. So they sent out an appeal, announcing their
hopes and plans, and asking for contributions to buy land and build on it. A
lot has changed in the world in 160 years. But that hasn’t. We need all of you
to be our partners, to share our hopes, and to help us build and grow the
community of God’s kingdom here in East Tennessee and throughout this country.
The brochures in the pews illustrate how our Annual Paulist
Appeal supports the important work of priestly formation, our seminarians (some of whom you know personally). Our Annual Paulist Appeal supports this important he work of priestly formation, which is essential
for our future; it supports our mission and ministries in the present; and it helps
the community care for our senior Paulists, some of whom have served here in
the past. If you have already been contacted by mail and have already given, I
thank you. For everyone else, there is an envelope attached to the brochure and
there are larger, easier-to-use envelopes in the pews. Whatever or however you
may plan to give, please take the time between now and the collection to check the boxes and fill in the blanks, and put that envelope in
the 2nd collection.
Again
on behalf of all the Paulists Fathers from senior ministry to our students and
novices, I thank you for your support of the Paulist Fathers past and present.
Homily for the Annual Paulist Appeal, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville TN, the 3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time, January 21, 2018.
To give online to the Annual Paulist Appeal, go to paulist.org/apa
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