It has been said that there are two truly American
holidays. Thanksgiving Day (in late autumn) looks inward to the heart and soul
of America, and so is celebrated at home, at table, among family and friends.
Independence Day (in summer) looks outward to the world of nations and states,
and so is celebrated (as John Adams said it should be) “by pomp and parade,
with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires and illuminations from one end
of this continent to the other.”
Well, maybe not this year, a year conspicuously
lacking in a lot of those things, those social activities Adams – and many of
us – just took for granted until a few months ago. Even our gathering for Mass
today takes place under unusual circumstances, which reflect the reality and
the ongoing virulence of this pandemic, and its multiple effects on our
spiritual and religious experience as well as on our social existence as
citizens. Meanwhile, especially in the last several weeks, our awareness of the
pandemic’s different impacts on different groups and of other past and present unjust
social circumstances have increasingly forced us to face up to the moral
dilemmas and unfinished business of our often painful national history. Not for
the first time – and probably not the last – all Americans are being challenged
to come to terms with our problematic past and its poisonous effects on our
present, so as to be better able to face our future united in a common life
with a common purpose.
It is always challenging to reexamine our history -
just as challenging as it is to reconsider our own personal stories. We are all
always more comfortable with whatever versions of our national and personal
stories we have gotten used to telling ourselves. But however awkward, it is a
perennial challenge to be faced – all the more so when we really take seriously
our citizenship in the kingdom of God and how the additional demands of God’s
kingdom alter all our other commitments, all our earthly loyalties, all our
ethnic and national histories, all our personal and racial stories.
As Pope Saint Paul VI once said, "Jesus Christ is … Lord
of the new universe, the great hidden key to human history and the part we play
in it." [Homily, Manila,
1970]
Indeed, Saint Paul, in our second reading today from
his letter to the early Christian community in Rome, at that time the imperial
capital of the largest and most powerful empire the world had ever then known,
reminds us that, even while we remain thoroughly engaged in the otherwise
ordinary-seeming life of our world, we are simultaneously living a new life,
given to us through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Paul’s idea is
that Christ’s new life has become our new life too, thereby reversing the
death-ward direction of our ordinary existence and empowering us to allow
ourselves and our entire lives – public and private - to be re-shaped by the
Gospel’s stirring call to a total reorientation of our lives.
As Catholics, of course, we have a long history
(going back to Roman times) of thinking seriously about how to relate our faith
to civil society – a long tradition of practical wisdom which we need to take
seriously both as disciples and as citizens.
What resources does our faith offer to help us heal
our civic life this Independence Day? What lessons have we learned from the past,
and what can we do together – now - both to promote the common good of our country and
to care for our common home this planet earth?
Homily for the 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, July 5, 2020.
No comments:
Post a Comment