Homily - Sixth Sunday of Easter
May 22, 2022


Hello ,

It is so important not to name the persons by their illness
but rather that they have an illness. They are more than their illness; they are to be treated as persons.

Here is the my homily for the Sixth Sunday of Easter. Please feel free to share it with others.

See everyone next Sunday at masses!

God bless,

Fr. Brendan
Peace I Give you

“My peace I give to you.
My peace I leave with you.”

Over the last couple of days,
our new mental health ministry team called “Hope and Wellness”
along with couple of staff members and myself attended
the National Mental Health Professionals Catholic Association
here in Los Altos on retreat.
It has been amazing to hear these speakers
talking from the heart about how we can be more attentive
to the needs of those who are suffering from mental illness.
It was so powerful.
There were many lessons one could take from these days
that I’m still unpacking the content. 

One of the things they brought up is
how important it is to not name the persons by their illness
but rather that they have an illness.
They are more than their illness;
they are to be treated as persons.
For instance: A person is not a schizophrenic.
He is suffering from schizophrenia.
She is not a bipolar.
She is suffering from bipolar disease. 

It seems like a very small thing
but we are more than our diseases.
We are more than our wounds and our brokenness.
We have a soul.
And part of it is that when we treat people as persons
who have an illness as opposed to the person being the illness,
it makes all the difference in the world. 

This is very clear among medical professionals
that when you go to a hospital:
you are treated for your disease versus being a person who has a disease
whether it be a physical illness or a mental illness.
It is really the same with a physical illness.

One of the things they were trying to help us understand
is how these episodes of mental illness
can come about and how trauma plays a role in it
and how so many of us are well equipped to cope
with these stressful situations and traumas.
While many of us manage them quite well,
there are a significant number of people,
who are ill equipped to deal with these episodes;
these stressors; or these extra traumas that happen to all of us.
Because they are ill equipped to deal with these episodes,
whether it be by genetic conditioning if you would;
or whether by environmental conditions
or home conditions that have enabled them,
they are often ill equipped or mal equipped.
In other words, they have learned bad habits
that make even the situation then more stressful
not only for them but for all those around them.

It was powerful and again as I say, I am still unpacking it.
One of the core areas that they also spoke of was
how important it is that when we reach out to somebody
who is having a mental health episode,
that we treat them as a person and
that we are not trying to cure them but care for them;
that we are not trying to heal them
but we are trying to companion with them
so they don’t further isolate
but that they come into community,
which can make a complex situation even worse.

When I was reflecting on today’s scripture, I was thinking;
Isn't that what we are called to do for all as a disciple?
What are we called to do for each other?
As a disciple to not see each other as the wounds that we have;
or the brokenness that we have;
that we are called to see each other as individuals,
as persons, as souls, yes with wounds and with brokenness.

Jesus, over and over again, does this; he goes to the wounded and broken;
he examples this and says tend to them as human beings first,
as souls with struggles.
He goes out and meets them.
He commands his disciples saying, “Love one another.”
This is the critical component:
Loving is the way to peace.

We all want peace.
When I say “peace” we are not talking about “not war.”
We are talking about an inner peace, a centeredness.
A calmness that comes from within our spirit
and that can only come when we ourselves are
calm and centered in our own soul
Then we can be centered and
be able to companion others in their souls to this peace.

What does that require of us?
It requires of us, as you have heard me say 1,000 times
and I will continue to say it: 
We have to be men and women of prayer
so we can center ourselves;
that we know our own soul;
and that we know our own weakness;
our own brokenness; our own tendencies
maybe to not be able to handle our own stress sometimes. 

Out of that centeredness in Christ’s love and Christ’s peace
we are in a position then to offer that gentleness,
that care, not cure to others;
that we are willing to be present to them
so that we can deescalate a situation
whether it be a mental health challenge for somebody;
or whether it be just a regular stressful situation in our own life.

We have committed as a parish to be
a Mental Illness stigma-free environment
so that we can minister to one another;
that we can be honest; that we all have struggles.
But we need to do that not only
for people struggling with mental illness
but do that for everyone.
As the song says “All are welcome.”
And that we are called to care for one another;
that we are called to love one another where we are at;
and the only way we can do that is if we are centered on Christ.

That is the only way that I know we can do that.
That is because this is our center.
The center is in Christ and in the Eucharist
and out of there, we get nourished;
we get strengthened; and
then we go forth to do the work of being a disciple,
focusing more on care than cure;
on presence and accompaniment than on trying to change people.

Today, we come to bring peace as Christ has given us peace,
a peace the world cannot give
because this peace is based in love,
the love that God gave to us first and
then we pass on to others.

“My peace I give to you.
My peace I leave with you.”
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