May 2, 2004
Fourth Sunday of Easter
Reading I (Acts 13:14, 43-52) ~ Reading II (Revelation 7:9,
14b-17) ~ Gospel (St. John 10:27-30)
In the Gospel reading today, Our Lord tells us that His sheep
hear His voice and they follow Him. Now when we stop to think about
hearing the Lord’s voice, it is difficult for most of us because
there are so many other voices vying for our ear; what is even
worse, there are so many other voices that are trying to be our
shepherd. If you just think about the typical day of the average
American, many people wake up to the radio, they have the radio on
in the bathroom, they have the TV on near the breakfast table, they
have the radio on in their car, the radio is on at work, the radio
is on again in the car on the way home, the TV is on when they get
home, and many people go to sleep with the TV on. Not one minute of
silence in the entire day. And the voices that are speaking to so
many people are voices that are telling them to do things that are
wrong, leading them astray, leading them either more deeply into
themselves or more deeply into the profligate way of life that
America has now become famous for. What is happening to so many
people is they are being led astray, so we need to look seriously at
this question of hearing the Lord’s voice.
He tells us that His sheep know Him and they follow Him. So we
can ask ourselves, “Are we following Christ?” It is not a question
of whether we come to church, the question is – Do we follow the
Lord? Do we follow Him in our day-to-day lives? Do we seek His voice
to know and to discern what it is that we are supposed to do? How
much silence is there in our lives today? If you think back just a
hundred years ago and for all human history prior to that, it was
almost entirely silent. The only thing that was not silent in a
person’s day was when they would actually have a conversation with
another human being; otherwise, they had time for silence. The
average American today wants to do everything possible to make sure
there is no silence in their day. We are dealing with generations of
sensory overload. People today, if they even have a few moments of
silence, begin to get fidgety because they are so unaccustomed to
being silent and to listening to God in the silence of their hearts
that as soon as there is a little bit of silence they immediately
try to find something to erase it. Each one of us needs to have
silence in order to hear the Lord’s voice because He speaks in the
silence of our hearts.
He has also given to us shepherds to be able to speak to us to
lead us along the way, but we have to choose who our shepherds are
going to be. As I said, there are many voices that are speaking to
us. And if we were really serious, we would have to say there are
many voices that are vying for our souls. Just think where the
average radio and television person leads a person’s soul. Is it
towards Christ, or is it away from Him? I think we all know the
answer to that. The real tragedy is that now even within the Church
there are many voices that are leading us away from Christ. We have
priests and bishops who do not stand for what is correct. They do
not have the guts to stand up for Jesus Christ, but instead being
politically correct is far more important.
We have bishops and priests now who refuse to deny the Eucharist
to people who are in public sin. They refuse to make the distinction
between private and public. For instance, if I knew that one of you
was living a sinful life and you came up to the communion rail, I
would have to give you Holy Communion because, number one, I do not
know if you have been to Confession; or even if I know that you had
not, to deny you Holy Communion would cause a scandal because it
would draw the attention to other people that what you are doing
privately is now being made public. So unless I talk to you first
and tell you, “If you come up to Communion, I will not give you Holy
Communion,” the Church says that even though it is a sacrilege on
your part to receive Holy Communion if you are in the state of
mortal sin, I would still have to give you Communion. However, if
one is a politician who has a public record of being pro-abortion,
pro-euthanasia, pro-human-cloning, if there is some other public
exposition of your sin, like these unfortunate souls who show up all
over the place with rainbow sashes telling people that they are
practicing a homosexual lifestyle and demanding that they receive
Holy Communion, at that point, it is a sacrilege on the part of the
priest to give them Holy Communion because their sin is no longer
private – it is now public. But there are many who do not want to
cause waves, and so they refuse to stand up for Jesus; instead,
being politically correct is what is more important.
The real tragedy is that, in the minds of most Americans, these
are people who would be called “pastoral”. The word pastor means “a
shepherd”. One who is truly pastoral is one who is going to shepherd
the sheep rightly. What has happened, however, is that we have
redefined pastoral to mean “somebody who is willing to let us get
away with anything that we want”. That is not being a good shepherd.
When it came to things that were wrong, Jesus Christ did not remain
silent. He taught the truth; He did not wimp out. He did not water
it down; He told people exactly what was going to happen to them if
they did not change their lives. We look at the first reading today
with Paul and Barnabas; they did the same thing. They went in and
preached the truth. And when the people rejected the truth, they did
not back down and water it down and become politically correct; they
continued to preach the truth right up to the point when they were
thrown out of town. Would that we had priests and bishops today who
would do the same.
If we just stop and think about the mentality that is behind this
kind of thinking – that to be pastoral is to tell people that it is
okay to do whatever they want – it is the same mentality as the
teenage kid who wants to do stupid things and unfortunately the
parents, rather than disciplining the kid, encourage it. They buy
the booze for the kid. They encourage the kid to do immoral things.
They do not set any kind of standard or any kind of curfew. They let
the kid do whatever he wants, hang around with whomever he wants,
and all of his friends say, “Your parents are really cool. Mine, on
the other hand, are mean because they won’t let me do that. They
don’t want me going to parties where I’m going to be getting drunk
and doing immoral things. But your parents are cool; they’re with
it!” Now anybody with two cents of a brain would say, “Obviously,
these are not good parents. They are not doing what they are
supposed to do. If they’re trying to be their kid’s friend, they’re
not being their kid’s parent.” But among the mindset of the other
kids, they are being the best parents because they are letting the
kids do whatever they want to do.
Ask yourself, “How many athletic teams have ever won any kind of
tournament or any kind of championship because they had a coach who
did not discipline them, who did not require any kind of work?” I
remember many years ago watching the Olympics and there was a little
girl who had won the gold medal in gymnastics. They were showing one
of these close-up deals with her coach. The coach pushed this kid,
and pushed her and pushed her and pushed her. One day, she fell off
the bar and came down on her hand and jammed her fingers. This
little girl was crying, and the coach said, “Get up. Get back on the
bar.” She started whimpering about her fingers, and he said, “Get up
and get back on the bar.” She got up, got on the bar, and started
again in pain. He continued to push hard and require very difficult
things of this little girl. When she won the gold medal, she did not
run first to her parents – she ran straight to her coach and gave
him a huge hug.
The same sort of thing is going to happen in heaven for anyone
who had a pastor who required that they live the truth, that they go
to Confession, that they get themselves out of sin, who told them
the hard truth but told them the truth nonetheless. If that is what
helped them get to heaven, they will be eternally grateful. But for
every bad pastor who refuses to preach the truth because they want
to be liked by the people, for every one who allows general
absolution or any other sinful practice, for every one who instead
of requiring virtue and holiness of the people are actually
encouraging them to do things that are not right, then in hell –
where both will be – there will be a line waiting to condemn that
priest or bishop for allowing such things to happen.
We have to make sure that we are following the right shepherd. We
have a Good Shepherd, and none of us is going to be able to stand
before the Lord and say, “But Father said it was okay. The bishop
didn’t do anything about it, so it must have been okay.” The Lord
will look at you and say, “I’ll deal with that priest or that bishop
when they get here. You, on the other hand, knew better, and I’m
going to hold you responsible for what you knew.” We know the truth.
It is written in our hearts and on our minds; we are without excuse.
It would be easy to look around and say, “But look at all the other
Catholics who aren’t doing what they’re supposed to do!” God will
deal with them, but each one of us will have to stand individually
before the Lord, Who is our Shepherd, for judgment. He will look at
each one of us and say, “You knew. You knew Me. You knew what truth
I preached.” The question is – Did we choose to listen to His voice
and follow Him? Or did we choose to listen to someone else’s voice
and follow them because it was easier, more convenient, more
politically correct, more fun, whatever it might be?
In the second reading today, we heard that the Lamb Who was
seated in the middle of the throne is going to be the Shepherd and
is going to lead them to life-giving waters. We need to follow that
Lamb Who is also the Shepherd. We need to seek His voice, we need to
hear Him, and we need to follow Him. It is not an option for us, but
rather it is our salvation. We need to be serious about this whole
matter. There are many voices out there that tell us, “You can do
whatever you want because you’re going to heaven anyway. All you
have to do is believe in Jesus and you’re set for life.” Jesus did
not say that. Scripture never says that. The Church has never taught
it in 2,000 years. It is not true, but it sure makes it a whole lot
easier – until we wind up in hell. The Good Shepherd is the One who
is going to preach the truth, because the Good Shepherd is the
Truth. And He has given us the Holy Spirit to lead us into all
truth, which means to lead us into the fullness of Jesus Christ.
Therefore, it is not beyond any one of us, but in fact it is
incumbent upon each and every one of us.
We need to spend time in silence. We need to hear His voice
speaking in our hearts. And we need to embrace Him Who is the Truth
because He has made very clear in the Gospel reading that His sheep
hear His voice, they recognize it, and they follow Him.
* This text was transcribed from the audio recording with minimal
editing.