Homily - Second Sunday in Ordinary Time
January 17, 2021
Greetings!

We tend to become like those we listen to. It makes sense, right? Those to whom we listen and whom we spend time with and the more time we spend with them, the more we will become like them. It is true for all of us.

Here is my homily from this past Sunday. Please feel free to pass this along to others.

I have started a new prayer retreat titled "Cairns on the Second Mountain. Last Tuesday , I spoke about the foundational cairn on this prayer journey called humility. The Second Mountain or discipleship is not about achievement or success, but about letting go and accepting the unearned love of God. Humility is, above all - honesty. We are sinners in need of God’s mercy and grace, every day of our lives.

Next week’s cairn will be “Love.” We cannot be on the Second Mountain if we do not have love. Love is the centerpiece cairn for the Second Mountain. It is the tallest and most necessary. The first two of self-awareness and humility lead into it and the other two cairns of gratitude and joy flow out of it.

So come join me on the retreat and learn more about this essential cairn of life. Here are the links for the talk:
YouTube: St Simon Presentations - YouTube        
 
The next session is January 19, 2021 at 7:00pm. Previous sessions are available at St Simon Presentations - YouTube

God bless,

Fr. Brendan
We Listen to What we Like
“Speak Lord, your servant is listening.”

We tend to listen to those who we like.
Whether that is CNN or FOX News;
whether it is ABC or NBC;
whether that is President-Elect Biden or President Trump;
whether it is our Uncle Joe or Auntie Betty,
whether it is Pope Francis or Rush Limbaugh.
Whoever we like, we tend to listen to.
Here is the part that is also true,
we tend to become like them.
It makes sense, right?
Those to whom we listen and whom we spend time with
and the more time we spend with them,
the more we will become like them.
It is true for all of us.

Today’s scripture readings are about who we listen to;
and then who we follow.
They are about vocational calls.
We have this beautiful text from the first reading,
which is the call of young Samuel as a prophet and judge.
He was so young at the time,
he did not even know how to listen well.
It took the fourth time of God calling that he listened to him
but even Eli who is the old prophet misunderstood also.
We hear that it eventually dawns on Eli, he says,
“Oh the next time you hear, then just say
‘Speak Lord, your servant is listening.’”
In other words, it takes some training to listen well.
Even Eli, in the older part of his ministry
is struggling with guiding the young Samuel.

And then in today’s gospel this beautiful exchange
with the first disciple who has been called by Jesus.
Andrew is the disciple of John the Baptist and John says,
“Look. There is the lamb of God.”
In other words, follow him; listen to him. And they do.
They go and they follow him.
And Jesus says, “What do you really want?”
He drew them out of themselves.
What were they really wanting?
Were they really wanting to listen and follow?
Or just listen from a distance?
He invites them to come and to see,
so to listen, to come, to see.
And they liked what they heard.
They liked what they saw.
And they followed Jesus.
So much so that Andrew runs off and tells his brother, Peter,
who of course becomes the leader of the apostles and our first pope.
He obviously listened well.

This challenge of listening is true for all of us.
I mean, we can get caught up in lots of different things
but who we listen to,
who we spend time with
is generally who we follow.
And that is true of our faith in a profound way.
And this is the challenge sometimes.
We tend to listen to preachers,
even listening to me
or listening to someone else
and we want to make sure that
who we are listening to is doing what John the Baptist did,
which is pointing to Jesus so that we listen directly to Jesus.

And then hopefully we will like what we hear
and then follow Jesus more deeply, more profoundly.
And then do as Andrew did, which is share that message with others.
This is this beautiful virtuous circle
that we like what we hear and we share what we hear
because it is so powerful because it is so changing.

This liking and following is very much the call of every vocation
whether it is as a priest or whether it is as a lay person.
Think about when you met your spouse for the first time,
there are those people who see and fall in love at first sight.
That is true.
That does happen.
Or at first hearing, we hear what they say
and we are transfixed by what they say.
And that does happen but for most of us,
most of us we listenand then a bit like Eli
we have to listen again and listen again.
And then we like what we hear;
or we look; and then look again; and look again.
And then we like what we see.

But that is not enough for a marriage or any vocation.
We have to keep looking and keep listening until we fall in love.
Now again, I know that can happen and
what we hear today is a very dramatic story in the gospel.
It seems to be on the first hearing.
I suspect that these disciples had heard of Jesus
and had heard Jesus before
but now their hearts were open in a new way.
They move from liking what they saw
to loving what they saw and heard.
And that is how you come to follow.

Let’s face it, anyone of your marriages starts with that liking
but somewhere along the line,
you love who you see and who you hear;
and you want to be in their presence as much as possible.
That is what falling in love is all about.
And in that loving enterprise, you become more with what you see.
You become like your spouse more and more
and they become like you more and more every day.
And that is a good thing, I hope, for both of you.

But it is not magic.
It just doesn’t happen.
I mean it is a commitment to listening and
spending time with them so that you will follow.
The social media companies have figured this out.
That is why they have fed us;
that is why we are in the bit of the trouble we are in
because we like what we see or hear and
when then they feed more of us
so we have this sort of echo chamber
that we just get what we like and then that goes to an extreme.

And what happens is we hear nothing else.
Very few of us will listen to people who we do not like;
because we don’t like them
we are not going to listen to them.
That becomes this echo chamber that is really dangerous.
We have to open our hearts and our minds
to those whom we do not like and
find out what they have to say that is good.
And acknowledge the good.
And if we do not like what others have to say
then we need to be able to articulate that in a calm and civil way.

For the purposes of our discipleship, let’s be very clear:
We are called to listen to Jesus Christ.
We are called to listen to God’s Son.
That is why we call ourselves Christian
because we are Christ-followers.

Sometimes, we do not like what Jesus has to say.
And the temptation is to turn Jesus off
but then we will not become like him anymore.
Oh, we might be a Catholic.
We might be a Christian even
but that does not make us true Christ-like people.
That does not make us followers of Jesus the Christ, the Messiah.
That requires of us, like Eli and Samuel,
a deeper listening;
a willingness to spend time with him
so that we can answer God just like Samuel did: 
“Speak Lord. I am listening. I come to do your will.”

One of the challenges is that we are terrified of giving ourselves
over blindly to God’s Will.
What is God’s Will for me?
How do I even know what that is?
I received a beautiful little reading from Thomas Merton,
the great American Trappist. He says this: 

“Doing God’s Will is not giving ourselves over to some divine fate
but rather submitting ourselves to the creative action
that God and I will co-create together.”

It is a beautiful way to understand that
God does not have this destiny per se for us
but that creatively together, by agreeing and
listening to what Jesus has to say to us,
what Christ is guiding us to
we come to know God’s Will and
together creatively it comes alive in our life;
into action and into word
that is more like Christ and like God.

In short, what we are called to do is to listen to Jesus
even when we do not like what he has to say
because we are called to listen deeper.
And then when we spend time,
which of course you have heard me say 1,000 times,
spend time in prayer, listening to Jesus
but not just in the silence of our own room
but in everything that God has in our life;
to our family; to our friends;
to every good action that happens God is speaking loudly to us.
Christ helps us to understand what that is.

Then if we do that well,
we will become more of what we listen to;
we will become more like Christ.
That is the echo chamber that I want to be in.
That is the echo chamber I hope that you want to be in;
to listen to Christ well so that I can become
more like Christ better each and every day.
That is what we do when we come to the Eucharist.
We become what we receive.
The Body of Christ broken for others.
The Blood of Christ poured out for others.

“Speak Lord, your servant is listening.”
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