Pro-life
Preaching Hints
November 15 - 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time
Dn 12:1-3 Heb 10:11-14, 18 Mk 13:24-32
We have arrived at a time of the Church year when the
readings speak of the Second Coming of Christ. This is a theme,
of course, that is echoed in every Mass: “Christ will come
again…We wait in joyful hope for the coming of our Savior, Jesus
Christ…And ready to greet him when he comes again, we offer you
in thanksgiving this holy and living sacrifice.”
In some gospel passages, the teaching about the effects of
Christ’s passion, death, and resurrection is interspersed with
teaching about his second coming. These are two critical moments
of salvation history: in the one, the power of sin and death are
overthrown at their roots; in the other, the victory is brought
to its culmination and full manifestation. Both of these moments
are described with apocalyptic language and imagery from Old
Testament passages such as today’s first reading from Daniel.
What is being conveyed here is the destruction of one kingdom
and the inauguration of another. This, of course, is what Christ
came to do. His kingdom is among us, thanks to his death and
resurrection, made present again to us in every Mass. That
kingdom, as the liturgy tells us, is “A kingdom of truth and
life, a kingdom of holiness and grace, a kingdom of justice,
love, and peace” (Preface of Christ the King).
We live now in the “in between” time, when the kingdom of
Christ has been inaugurated on earth, but not yet brought to its
full manifestation. The power of sin and death – revealed in
evils such as abortion – has been destroyed at its roots. Yet we
still struggle, in and through Christ, to bring about a Culture
of Life. We must bear witness to the truth, life, holiness,
grace, justice, love, and peace that characterize the kingdom.
The apocalyptic language of the readings should inspire in us
both the awareness of how awesome a struggle this is, and the
confidence in the final victory – a victory marked by the
triumph of life. “Many of those who sleep in the dust of the
earth shall awake” (First reading). Life has the last word. “Now
he waits until his enemies are made his footstool” (Second
reading) – and the last enemy to be destroyed will be death
itself.
Mercy also has the last word, as the second reading likewise
conveys – mercy that reaches even to those who have taken life
by abortion and similar sins.
Back
|