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[__ver-06__] Homily – Nov 17, 2024 / 33rd Sunday (Year B) ● Daniel 12:1-3 ● Pslam 16:5 ● Hebrews 10:11-14,18 ● + Mark 13:24-32 ●
[__01_ Introduction to Life After Death _] From a human perspective, we are interested in the concept of life after death primarily because it can offer comfort and meaning in the face of our mortality and also the possibility of being PHYSICALLY REVIVED.
What is LIFE after death?
Is it simply a PHYSICAL MATERIAL
REVIVAL?
The Q of what happens after we die is not
only a religious one but also a scientific one. A compelling medical case was reported
by doctors/physicians at hospital in Japan in 2011. A young woman, who had
overdosed and died from cardiac arrest, was found hours later in a remote
forest. Doctors revived her after more than six hours, using advanced
technology to circulate blood and oxygen through her body. Remarkably, there
was LIFE AFTER HER PHYISCAL DEATH. She walked out of the hospital 3 weeks
later. This case highlights how medical science is advancing, with patients
surviving traumas and illnesses that would have been fatal just a few decades
ago.
While it’s easy to discuss a person
surviving cardiac arrest, we might not want think about our own mortality. Yet,
death remains the ultimate common denominator. As Benjamin Franklin famously
said, "Nothing is certain except death and taxes"—though some manage
to avoid the IRS and taxes. But if we invest time learning how to maximize our
wealth and live well, should we not also prepare for the absolute certainty of
death?
[__02_Near Death Experiences_] There is also a field I want to mention called “near death experiences” is documented by scientists and religious folks alike.
Jesuit
Father Robert Spitzer points to the field of research known as “near death
experiences” which report descriptions of individuals or events who “while in
cardiac arrest” come to connect with people who have died or gain information
that they never knew before. While
acknowledging the potential significance of near death experiences to
understand the immortality of the soul, Father Spitzer emphasizes the need for
rigorous scientific research. Check out
Father Spitzer or his website,
crediblecatholic.com
[__03_Gospel and End of the World _]
In today’s Gospel, Jesus speaks about the
end of the world, which is not only and what happens next – which is not only
PHYSICAL –but also spiritual.
Jesus predicts the PHYSICAL destruction of
the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 AD. 40 years after Jesus’ prediction, the Romans
destroyed the Temple, a catastrophic event for the Jewish people. The Temple
was not only a religious center but also symbolized the universe itself, with
its art of PLANETS, STARS, NATURE, GARDEN OF EDEN, ANGELS, WATER, LIGHT … depicting
the creation of the cosmos. This connection between the Temple and the universe
was a cosmic image of God’s creation, truly a microcosm.
Even today, churches often reflect this
same idea. For instance, if you visit South Orange campus and Seton Hall
University's chapel, you’ll see stars painted on the ceiling, a reminder of the
cosmic relationship between the Church and the universe.
Our church 60th / 110th anniversary in 2024 – has
ceiling skylights to allow the sun’s rays to reach us, connecting us to the
solar system and beyond.
The destruction of the Temple was a profound sorrow, not just a “near death experience” but a “death experience” and sorrow. This destruction points to a fulfillment of Jesus' words: “While heaven and earth will pass away, my words will not pass away.” While the exact time of the world’s end is unknown, we are all called to prepare for the end of our own lives.
[__03_Preparation, why? _]
The Lord Himself urges us to prepare in
the way we pray and live. We pray, for
example, “Lead us
NOT into temptation and deliver us from evil.”
All of us are
tempted away from God in some way each day, and temptations we face are not
necessarily clear-cut physically and material evil choices or outright
dishonesty. Sometimes there is something more subtle or spiritual.
The 1st
Commandment simply reminds us to put God first and have no other gods before
him.
We can tempted and
led into evil when we come to “overvalue”
or “worship” material things, e.g.
WORK – is good. But
does “work” or doing work or making money become a temptation or an IDOL?
(e.g., workaholism)
POPULARITY – is
good. But does being popular or liked become our primary goal.
These can become idols
and lead us into temptation.
In examining our
lives for these idols or temptations, we are not just doing this to look good
on the outside – on the exterior – but to have an interior life with God in
friendship.
True friendships is
based not only on what we can see and touch, but also on the invisible and
intangible.
[__04_Interior Life / Prepare, Pray _]
Jesus is calling us into a
relationship with Him, to INTERIOR LIFE OF PRAYER AND ONGOING PREPARATION. And
this relationship is not just an occasional prayer but an ongoing discipline,
similar to studying.
And, I suggest that studying has both
a material and physical reality.
There is a principle in actual studying
that we should "spaced intervals" and "summarization" can
be applied to our spiritual life.
**Spaced
Intervals: Daily Prayer**
“Spaced intervals” in prayer mean
committing time each day to connect with God. Whether we're facing trouble, [It’s
time to pray] anxiety, illness [It’s…], or joy [It’s…], it’s always time to
pray. But, it’s also time to PREPARE and
LEARN.
This is also why we come to church every
Sunday not just to read passively and listen but also to study God’s Word. As St. Jerome wrote: ignorance of the
Scriptures is ignorance of Christ. Or,
to re-state, our intelligent reading of the Scriptures – every day and at least
every Sunday equals intelligence of Christ.
It is important that we all make effort to
read the Bible. You can read the New Testament – the Gospel and all the
Epistles – in 3 months, if you read for 15 minutes per day.
We need spaced intervals to pray and also
to study God’s Word.
Prayer - as St. Paul writes
- is meant to be unceasing - but it also is not “one and done”. It does not
happen all at once.
[__05_Conclusion _]
The Gospel this Sunday is
given to us to help us prepare for a test, an examination and final interview
with Jesus who also wants us to examine our lives in a space interval, with a
summary, each day. This is our nightly examination of conscience which is
informed by reading the Gospel regularly.
And, we are called to take
these spaced intervals to be with Christ not only in church, but also at
school, in front of the computer, alone or with others.
Gospel reading is itself a
prayer and summarized in the Lord's Prayer.
Regarding the day and hour
of the Lord’s coming, no one knows – except … our … Father … who art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom, come Thy will be done on earth as it is in
heaven. Give us this day our daily bread as and forgive us our trespasses as we
forgive those who trespass against us.
… And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. One day the end of our lives will come, it's time to pray and to prepare. [__end__]