Today is the long awaited
Sign-up day for Eucharistic Adoration. And after the homily, you will
have the opportunity to sign up and spend an hour with Jesus every
week. I am certain Jesus Himself has been waiting for this day.
In the second reading from
the book of James, it said, “What good is it, my brothers and
sisters, if someone says he has faith but does not have works?” Can
faith save him?”
All
of us are here at Mass because we have faith. We have faith that by
coming to Mass, we are worshiping God, by giving our self totally to
God and He gives Himself totally to us. We have faith that Jesus
through the priest will change bread and wine into His body and
blood. Our visible senses of seeing and tasting and feeling cause us
to think its only bread, but our faith tells us the Eucharist it the
real resurrected person of Jesus. And during Eucharistic Adoration,
we believe we are truly gazing upon Jesus and He is gazing upon us.
Jesus is alive. Jesus is risen. Jesus is here in the Eucharist. This
is our faith.
But
we do not live by faith alone. We are also to do actions (works).
The reading today said, “What good is it, my brothers and
sisters, if someone says he has faith but does not have works?” Can
faith save him?” James also
said, “Faith without works is dead.”
Therefore, faith and works are necessary for salvation. If we have
faith, we need to put into action. What are the works we are to do?
There are the 7 corporal and 7 spiritual works of mercy? The seven
corporal works of mercy are: Feed the hungry. Give drink to the
thirsty. Clothe the naked. Shelter the homeless. Visit the sick.
Visit the imprisoned. Bury the dead. The seven spiritual works of
mercy are: To instruct the ignorant. To counsel the doubtful. To
admonish the sinner. To bear wrongs patiently. To forgive offenses
willingly. To comfort the afflicted. To pray for the living and the
dead.
Have
you ever wondered which type of mercy is a greater, the corporal or
the spiritual? I believe Jesus gives us the answer when He went to
the house of His friends, Lazarus, Martha and Mary. Remember Martha
was busy preparing a meal for Jesus, who was hungry and thirsty. But
He corrected her when she wanted Our Lord to ask her sister Mary to
help her. Mary stayed sitting at the feet of Jesus listening to Him.
Our Lord told Martha, “Mary has chosen the better part
and it will not be taken from her.” Jesus
wanted Martha and us to know that
to listen, to pray and to
talk to Our Lord, is a greater work of mercy. Not that the others
aren’t important, they certainly are important and they are very
much needed. But for Mary to sit at the feet of Jesus adoring Him,
was a greater act of love because she was being merciful to Jesus
Himself, by just being with Him.
When
we make our Holy Hour we are sitting at the feet of Jesus. Its a
better work to come and be with Him than to do other things. For
Martha she was doing a necessary work to prepare a meal for Jesus.
But its better to just be with Him, to listen to Him and adore Him.
This is what Eucharistic adoration is all about—to just be with
Jesus and to love Him and allow Him to love us in return.
It is more efficacious to do
something directly for Jesus than to do something for our neighbor.
For example. If a soldier dies to save the life of another soldier in
battle, he laid down his life for a friend. But if someone dies for
the sake of protecting Jesus in the Eucharist, the person will be
considered a martyr and can become a saint because he laid down his
life for Jesus. One such person is St. Tarscius who was a 12 yr. old
boy who was attacked and killed by non-Catholic boys. He was an altar
boy carrying Hosts to prisoners and he refused to give the Hosts to
his attackers. They beat him to death as he died clutching the Hosts
and they were not able to take the pyx with Hosts from him. They
could not even remove the pyx from his hands even after he died. The
point is we can and should do all sorts of works for others, but the
greatest work we can do is for something directly for Jesus. And to
be with Him in adoration, it is more pleasing to be Him than if we
were to do all sorts of other good works.
There
are 168 hours in a week and Our Lord is asking every one of us
to spend one hour a week with
Him. During His agony in the garden, Jesus told Peter, “Could
you not even watch one hour with me?” Our
Lord is saying to each of us today, “Come by yourself to
an out way place and rest awhile.” If
Jesus often went to a quiet place to pray, shouldn’t we? And there
is no better place than to be with Him in His real true presence in
Eucharistic adoration. Everyone who makes a Holy Hour will always
leave their hour with a greater peace than when they came.
In
just a few minutes is the sign up. You can sign up your family and
your family can come together to be with Jesus. You can also sign up
individually. Jesus is not only wanting adults to be with Him, He
also wants children. Remember when the Apostles were trying to keep
the children from Him, He said, “Let the little children
come to me.” If you sign up
your family for a Holy Hour, you can also sign up for a personal Holy
Hour, so you can be with Jesus all to yourself. If you choose to do
this, please use two separate forms. One for you and one for your
family.
Young
people can also have their
own Holy Hour. A high school boy, Neal Adams, at St. Rose in Council
Grove signed up. Every week, we rode his bicycle to the church to do
his Holy Hour and then would go to school right after his hour was
complete. He also enjoyed substituting for others. There was also a
10 yr. old boy at St Patrick in Wichita who on his own, without the
encouragement of his parents, decided to make a Holy Hour every week.
Because he lived a few blocks from the church, he would walk to
church to do his Holy Hour. He never missed his Holy Hour until he
was 30 years old, when he died unexpectedly.
Neither parents believed their child would keep the commitment, but
both boys proved their parents wrong. Parents, give your child a
chance, if he or she wants to sign up.
There
are four sections of the day you can sign up. 6am to noon, noon to
6pm, 6pm to midnight and midnight to 6am. Please mark you first
choice and then your second choice. I believe from midnight to 6am is
the best and to those who sign up, they are Our Lord’s “specials”,
because He will give special graces for your special act of love. Men
I encourage you take a night hour. Women are sometimes fearful to
come at night. How can anyone
be afraid in our quiet town of Little River. I
knew an older
lady at St. Francis parish in Wichita who did
two Holy Hours 2am and 3am
every week. She did this for over 20 years. She
wasn’t afraid to come at night.
We
will call you today starting at 11am to assign you an hour. Though it
will be your Holy Hour, adoration is for everyone. And anyone can
come day or night whenever they want to be with Jesus. So we should
welcome anyone who wants to
come and pray during our hour.
Next Sunday we will start
adoration. Immediately after Mass, we will have a Eucharistic
procession and so PSR will be delayed until the procession is
complete. Everyone should come for the procession including the
children. After the procession we will begin Adoration.
I
have personally seen the lives of many change and not just those who
come to adoration, but also their families. Relationships will be
healed. People will come back to church. Non-Catholics will become
Catholic. This will be the 5th parish, I have been involved in
getting adoration started and honestly, it is Jesus who makes these
things happen and its Jesus who continues adoration.
Don’t
worry, if something comes up, if you are unable to make your Holy
Hour, you will be able to find someone to take your hour. You will
see, people will be willing
to take
your hour. You
can ask family and friends to take it. All who sign up will have a
list of adorers, whom they can contact.
Some
of you may be thinking, “What will I do for a whole hour?” You
can pray the Rosary, read the bible, pray prayers from a prayer book
and most importantly talk to Him about your life, your family, your
job, and just gaze upon Him with eyes of faith and then listen to
Him. And then before long the hour is over and you wondered where
time went.
There
are a lot of things to pray for. With
the terrible crisis in the world from covid, from the government over
reaching, from abortion, violence, war, persecutions, drugs, not to
mention the crisis in our own Catholic Church with a bishop saying
one thing and another bishop saying the total opposite. The
world is in a sad state.
But
when we come to Jesus, He will help us to have peace in the midst of
everything. He will help us to endure life’s difficulties. He will
strengthen us to be witnesses and most especially, He will prepare
us-- for our home in heaven. Every hour we spend with Him, Mother
Teresa said it is recorded in heaven and will have a great glory.
Catherine
Murphy, the coordinator of
St. Anthony in Strong City typed a letter for you that was in
the bulletin a few weeks ago. She said, “During adoration
this week, I asked the Lord what I should say to the people of Little
River about adoration. In the stillness of my heart I heard, “Tell
them I love them, and tell them I want them to come to me. I want
them to tell me all of their joys, their sorrows, their
disappointments, who and what they are worried about. I already know
all of these things, but I want them to talk to me as a friend. I am
The Best Friend who will never betray them or abandon them. I love
My Precious Children.”
My
dear parishioners, Jesus is here in the Eucharist and He loves you so
much! By our faith, and by just being with Him, we reveal our love
for Him and for others. Don’t be afraid. Sign-up. And trust Jesus.
May, Mary our Mother, give us Her sweet nudge to sign up and adore
Her Son every week in
Eucharistic adoration.