Hell of a title for a post isn't it?
Of course, those aren't my words. My words are usually rather inadequate, inarticulate, ineffective I think in getting across the point and so more often than not, I turn to others who I think make the point I'd like to make better than I can make it.
A few days ago, I expressed my frustration with folks who seem complacent about pursuing and exercising their faith.
Today, I find Fr. Longenecker dealing directly with that complacency in what I consider to be an excellent piece:
The kid had stumped them.
I like kids like that. See, they were into this “Jesus is a really nice guy” kind of Christianity and for them it was the whole suburban, respectable Christian schtick and their son put a bomb under the whole thing. Stood things on their head if you like.
You see if Jesus is just your Uncle Don then church just becomes an hour a week when you tootle along to hear some nice person tell you some nice things about what Uncle Don thought and taught and maybe you’ll pick up a few pointers on how you can be more like Uncle Don too one day. Then you sing a nice song about gathering all together and feel warm about life for a few minutes, then out the door and back to the real world.
I’m with the tenth grader. Why bother?
Here was my answer to the nice American suburban couple, “Well, we Catholics have a good reason to
go to church. See, Jesus Christ is the Second Person of the Holy Trinity. He’s God in human form and he’s at church waiting for us. We’re supposed to be in him and him in us and that means we have to receive him sacramentally at communion and you can’t really do that on your own.” The Dad was impressed, “I like that!” he said. Mother was not. She was especially not impressed that Dad was impressed. The idea of becoming a Catholic horrified her.
I also like that. I wish my Catholicism horrified more smug Christians.
I wanted to go on and say that there are other reasons for bothering with church too. Like the fact that it is there that I actually receive the supernatural confidence, wisdom and power to try somehow in my own frail and failure way to live the life of Christ in the world. I wanted to explain that without the Eucharist my life would still appear to be real, but I would increasingly be like a mannequin made of dust. I wanted to explain that it was at the Eucharist in church that I plugged into the Divine Power, that it was there that I died and was made alive again. I wanted to explain that it was there that the cosmos opens up to me like a flower unfolding and that it was there that in some inexplicable way that I experienced first hand both the transcendence and the immanence of the Almighty. I wanted to explain that there a window opens, the light comes in, a transaction takes place in which my mortality is transfused with immortality. I wanted to explain that in this ritual my whole world is for a moment transposed into the court of heaven and the threshold of eternity. I wanted to explain that this is why I bother with church, and that of course if their church had none of this then her son was right.
Why bother?
After 40 years of being away from the Catholic Church, after more than 10 years of attempting to find Christ and myself in a Protestant church, I have bothered to revert to my roots and I am so grateful that I did.
I am home. My faith, though flawed in far too many ways, is being fed, nurtured and matured.
The Eucharist is central. The Eucharist is key.
I need it weekly. I need Him who is found in that Eucharist as often as I can receive Him.
I'm of the firm belief that we all do. How could you not need God?
Lord, grant us the wisdom, and the faith, to reckon with that Truth.
And to respond to it.