CAN WE HEAR?
Author: Fr. Michael Byron September 04, 2021
Last weekend, I was enjoying part of my vacation at a
nice hotel in Milwaukee, WI. At 5:00pm Saturday, I turned on my laptop in order to watch the livestream Mass from here at Pax. As some of you know, the video that day was
just fine, but there was no sound. I was
very frustrated (you could
say angry) because the previous week the problem had been the opposite;
we had sound but no video. I emailed my
displeasure to a couple of the staff who [delete comma between “staff” and “who”]told me that there had been a lightning strike and the power surge here
on our campus that [delete word “that”] had messed up the whole
system, and they were working hard to fix it. Meanwhile, if you have ever checked out our livestream, I could see that there were
dozens and dozens of people tuned in literally from all over the world to that Mass, and many of them
were typing comments to our great operators of the equipment here saying that
they couldn’t hear anything. I felt
helpless, and I’m sure they did, too.
Eventually one viewer commented
that he/she wished that they could understand American Sign Language (ASL),
because our interpreter for the deaf was clearly visible on screen, as usual,
and the members of our deaf community were the only ones who were having no
trouble understanding what Father LaCanne was communicating.
That got me to thinking: Is the real problem here a lack of sound? Or
is it my inability to know how to recognize what’s happening in the
communication? For those viewers who
knew what to look for, last week’s live stream was not any problem at all. But I couldn’t figure it out. I don’t know ASL. So you might say that today’s homily just
sort of fell into my lap! (Which was helpful because I spent most of yesterday
at the State Fair).
All of today’s scriptures are
about inclusion, especially inclusion of those who may appear to some of us as
the most vulnerable – those who we’d perhaps be less quick to think of as our
teachers, our examples, our guides into holy living, our wisdom figures. Isaiah speaks of God’s particular concern for those whose hearts are
frightened and the blind and the deaf and the lame and the mute and our poor planet Earth. Our task is not to exercise dominion over any
of those; it is
rather to let them be our guides, our revealers as to the things and the people
to whom God pays
greatest attention. The great temptation
is our pride in presuming to hear and understand things that others do
not. Religious people can be
particularly prone to that. St. James,
in our Second Reading today, is very well
aware of that. He is excoriating the self-righteous
religious people who ponder to money and image, and who are not even at
worship. Especially at worship! He says, “Did not God choose those who are
poor in the world to be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom that he promised
to those who love him?” The so-called
poor are not merely to be tolerated by the rest of us; not merely to be
welcomed among us. They will be the ones
who lead us to God, if we have the humility to believe and allow that. They are our gifts! Our life.
And in the Gospel today, before we get all tangled up
in the details of the story of the healing of the deaf man, let us be very
aware of where all these things took place. Not in Israel. Jesus was moving
about in Tyre and Sidon (towns that still exist today in Lebanon), and then he
moved on to the Decapolis (which is in the country of Jordan). These are all pagan places, full of people
that many a pious Jew would disregard as unworthy of God’s attention. Foreigners, heathen. To
be kept at a safe distance. These are the very ones who can’t keep quiet about
who the real Jesus is! The paradox here
is that to believe God’s concern is only for Christians is thereby to become
something other than Christian. It’s
what Jesus himself showed us.
Imagine that. God loves Arabs,
Jews, Latin Americans, Africans, Asians, the sick and sorrowing and poor and
immigrant. Those who are “other” are not
merely to be put up with. “They” will
lead us to virtue and eventually, we hope, to heaven.
So again, perhaps what can get in
our way of being aware of what God is doing for us all the time is not God’s
failure to communicate, but instead is our pre-emptive deciding about where and
through whom God
communicates. Certainly we Catholics
understand that Eucharist,these scriptures,
this table, this assembly, is a privileged place for that to happen. But to limit God to this and especially to
limit God to the wealthy, powerful, charming, convenient people in our world is
a colossal, even sinful mistake. Our
Lord is capable and desiring to communicate with us. We just need to know how to understand.
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