What
did the parable mean in today’s Gospel? Jesus said the servants are
to be ready for their master’s return and so they were to be sure
their lamps were lit and be ready for when the master comes to the
door and knocks, so they would be ready to let him in. What is all
this referring to? The parable refers to the Day of Judgment, when
Jesus, the master will come and ask us, his servants, for an account
of what each of us did in our life, good or bad. If we are prepared
for our judgment all will go well, if not Jesus states the servant
will be beaten. In another words, if we don’t prepare every day for
our judgment and live as though it were our last day, we will suffer
in the next life for not living out our faith as we should. Jesus
said, “Much
will be required of the person entrusted with much, and still more
will be demanded of the person entrusted with more.”
Catholics
are entrusted with much, because we have the fullness of truth
revealed by God. Therefore, more is demanded of us. The four marks of
the Church help us to know we are the one true Church founded by
Christ. And His one true Church was given everything mankind needs to
obtain eternal salvation. Do you remember from your Catechism
classes, what are the four marks of the Church? The four marks are
four ways everyone can tell the Catholic Church is the one true
Church founded by Christ. The Church is One, Holy, Catholic and
Apostolic. And no other church makes that claim. We are the only
Church who claims to be founded by Christ Himself.
We
are one, because we are one if faith, one is sacrifice, one in
sacraments and we have one head of the Church, who is the pope. No
matter what Catholic Church you go to, in Kansas, in Nebraska, in
Ireland, in Brazil, in Africa, in Japan, in Russia, in France, in
Pakistan, we all have the same faith and believe in the same
doctrines.
We
all have the same sacrifice of the Mass. In every Catholic Church,
there is a liturgy of the word and liturgy of the Eucharist and
everyone receives the real and true body of Christ in Holy Communion.
We
are one in the sacraments. In another words, the 7 sacraments are the
same everywhere around the world.
And
we are one by our obedience and love for the pope and so we are all
one in following the pope as head of the Church.
The
Church is Holy because the founder of our Church, Jesus Christ is
infinitely holy and because we are all called to holiness and are
able to become holy by the 7 sacraments, which sanctify us. The
teachings of the church are holy and the people who make up the
church are holy.
We
are Catholic, which means the Church is for every person, no matter
race, color, nation or ethnic background, our Church is for everyone.
Our
Church is apostolic, which means what we believe has been given to us
through the apostles. We have apostolic succession, and so the
bishops today are successors of the apostles, through the laying on
of the hands through the sacrament of ordination.
Because
we are the one true Church founded by Christ and because we have the
fullness of truth revealed by God and because we have the four marks
of the Church, this causes us to reflect upon the wonderful gift we
have of being Catholic and our responsibility to live out our faith.
As Jesus said, “Much
will be required of the person entrusted with much, and still more
will be demanded of the person entrusted with more.”
By
having this faith, much is required of us. First, of all we are not
saved by faith alone. In the book of St. James, he said, “faith
without works is dead”.
God requires we live out our faith by loving and caring for others,
which is why we are to do good deeds. What good would be our faith,
if we did nothing with it?
Besides
living out our faith and constantly studying it, we must openly
profess it. If fail to know our faith or to study our faith, we can
eventually lose our faith, which is the pearl of great price. For if
we don’t know our faith, how can we believe it and share it with
others. If we know our faith, if we study our faith, we will want to
profess it because we will want others to know and love what we
believe.
The
beautiful thing about being Catholic is that priests come and go, but
the Catholic faith never changes. You as parishioners remain, the
faith remains and what really matters is what we all believe as
Catholics.
The
Catechism
of the Catholic Church
gives us everything we need to believe as Catholics. The Catechism
is what makes us one in our faith. What is in the catechism has come
down to us from the apostles.
We
can go to Mass here at Holy Trinity, or at Holy Cross, or St. Paul in
Lyons, or St. Joseph in Mcpherson and no matter where we go, the
faith is the same because of the Catechism
of the Catholic Church,
this is what makes us Catholic, the same faith.
An
example of what I am saying is this, if I were to say to you, if you
purposely miss Mass on Sunday or Holy Day of obligation it is sin
requiring confession before you can receive Holy Communion. This
comes from the Catechism
of the Catholic Church,
paragraph #2181 states, “….the
faithful are obliged to participate in the Eucharist on days of
obligation, unless excused for a serious reason (for example,
illness, the care of infants) or dispensed by their own pastor. Those
who deliberately fail in this obligation commit a grave sin.”
These
are not my words. These are the words of the Catechism
of the Catholic Church.
This is what Catholics believe everywhere.
The
parable Jesus gave to His apostles is a reminder, we are to always be
ready for the day and the hour when Our Lord will come to knock at
our door for our judgment. In order to be ready, we need to study
our faith and come to know our faith, to live out our faith, to grow
in our faith, to share our faith by professing our faith.
The
Virgin Mary is a great woman of faith. May She give us a portion of
Her faith, so we will be prepared for the day and hour we will be
held accountable when Jesus, Her Son, the Master, returns.