Sunday, November 03, 2024

Present Tense Saints

Sermon for the Sunday in the Octave of All Saints

Our Lord sits
on the mountain 
to teach.

His disciples 
are those who
have climbed after Him
scaling the rocky crags
against gravity,
against comfort,
against the better judgment 
of others
to hear this Man teach.

Already,
they show themselves 
to be blessed
for "blessed are those
who hunger and thirst
for righteousness' sake
for theirs is
the Kingdom of Heaven."

And how the disciples
demonstrate that!

In clambering uphill
they have demonstrated 
their hunger and thirst
for the teaching of Christ 
because they know 
that what He teaches 
is not just righteous 
but Righteousness
itself.

Last week,
we recognise 
Jesus as our King
and this week 
we follow Him
and set ourselves apart for Him
from the World.

And if we set ourselves 
apart from the world
for Righteousness' sake
God sets us apart for Him.

We become holy.
We become saints.

[PAUSE]

We are only as holy
as far as we are apart from 
Sin, the World and the Devil.

Our salvation is 
precisely the end of 
our separation from God,
our return to the full health
that God has wanted for us 
from Eternity.

Our Lord promises those 
who hunger and thirst
for righteousness' sake
a place in His Kingdom 
which St Peter describes as an
eternal Kingdom,
something that even
the prophet Daniel knows to be true.

Something is Eternal
if it is connected 
with God's age.

Just as we have 
the Stone Age,
the Iron Age,
the Bronze Age,
whatever is Eternal
is of the God Age.

Think about that,
because,
for God,
Time is not a limitation.

He is as present now
as He was a million years ago
and a million years to come.

All Time is present to God
at once.

And this is the Eternal life
that He offers in His Kingdom.
He offers His saints
to be of His Age,
Eternal, 
not simply everlasting 
but unbound to Time.

St John tells us
that we cannot understand 
what we will be like
when we are in His Kingdom 
but we will be like Him
because we will see Him as He is.

When Jesus says
that God is not the God of the dead 
but of the living
He shows us that
Abraham,
Isaac,
Jacob,
Moses,
Elijah
and all the saints are still alive
and that Death 
for the saints
is an event,
not a state of being.

The saints are not dead.

[PAUSE]

And, we know that St Peter says
the ears of the Lord
are open to
the prayers of the righteous,
and their prayers ascend 
before God like incense.

St Jerome says,
"If the Apostles and Martyrs, 
while still in the body, 
can pray for others, 
at a time when 
they must still be anxious for themselves, how much more 
after their crowns, 
victories, and triumphs are won!"

We also no that 
nothing in Heaven and Earth
or under the Earth,
not even life and death
can separate us 
from the love of Christ.

And the saints are righteous 
because they show 
the love of Christ to us
even as Christ in Heaven 
shows His love for us on earth.

[PAUSE]

So,
the saints are alive,
but are no longer
bound by Time and Space.

The saints still love us
because they are perfected
in the love of God,
and Love is something 
that requires action.

The saints have passed 
through death 
but are neither 
separated from God
nor from us
because nothing separates us
from the love of God.

The saints pray
just as they have 
throughout their lives
hungering and thirsting
for Righteousness' sake.

Prayer is more than just words.

It is a communication 
at a deeper level between 
us and God
and 
us and those who love God.

Likewise,
we pray for our departed loved ones
for their happiness in God.

This prayer is an expression
of our continued love 
for those who have died.

The saints prayer for us
is an expression of
their continued love
for us who are yet to 
undergo death.

This is true communion
for these prayers
bring us closer to God 
because God is love.

This is precisely 
the communion of the saints
a communion expressed 
through mutual prayer
and, at its summit, 
Christ Himself 
in the Blessed Sacrament
of the altar.

[PAUSE]

We should rejoice
that we have such
a cloud of witnesses
cheering us on
bringing their concerns for us
to God,
and that our prayers
do the same
for those in need
whether living 
or departed.

There will be those
who try to show us
that we are wrong,
who say the saints are dead
who say the dead heart nothing
who say that praying for the dead
does nothing.

But these are they
who do not understand prayer
who do not understand death
and who do not understand 
that Love and Power are the same in God
and grow in the hearts 
of those who hunger and thirst 
for Righteousness' sake.

May Holy Mary,
Mother of God
and all the Holy Angels and Saints 
pray for us
and may the souls 
of the faithful departed 
through the love of God 
rest in peace.
Amen.



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