INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this feast of Saints Simon and
Jude is, “Impossible!”
This morning - Monday
morning - I knew I had the 12:10 Mass - and the expectation is a short homily -
so once more the question: “What to preach on?”
I read the readings - good stuff - good themes to think and
pray about - but what to preach on?
Then I noticed Jude’s name - as in the Saints of today: Simon and Jude - and everyone - well not everyone - that would be impossible - but everyone knows Saint Jude is the Patron Saint of the Impossible.
What a great title! What a great task - for a little known about
Saint and Apostle to be called: “The Patron Saint of the Impossible.”
So I named my homily, “Impossible” - because I wanted to
think about that reality: the impossible.
IMPOSSIBLE
SITUATIONS
We all remember the song, “The Impossible Dream” from the
1965 Broadway Musical, Man of La Mancha”
- and how many preachers and graduation speakers used it in sermons and
speeches. Father Kevin Milton said he
mentioned it just a few days ago in a sermon.
The song touched a cord - the reality of impossible
situations.
They happen in family - with kids - with health - with money
- with marriages. Sometimes it seems some things - some situations - seem impossible.
Of course some things are impossible - some dreams, some
stars, some possibilities are impossible - unreachable. Death is always the other bracket of our
life. Yet, sometimes there are surprises. Kings and popes can resign - and step
down. King Edward VII - of England
stepped down in 1936 - saying, “I have found it impossible to carry the heavy
burden of responsibility and to discharge my duties as King as I would wish to
do without the help and support of the woman I love.” And we all saw, Pope Benedict step down as
well - for health reasons and the good of
the church. That was something so many said is impossible. So who knows?
I remember my brother telling me that Germany would never be reunited -
and we were all surprised when the Berlin Wall came down. So one never knows.
Yet some things remain impossible. We can’t change yesterday and it’s
impossible for God to stop being God.
YET OR THE BUT
The yet or the but - are what is crucial.
Yet, but, there is resurrection.
Yet, but, there are healings.
Yet, but there are conversions.
And that’s where the energy of naming Jude the Patron Saint
of the Impossible comes in.
Look at the list of characters in today’s gospel - someone
who denied Jesus, someone who doubted Jesus - someone who betrayed Jesus.
That Good Friday night - after Jesus was killed on the cross
- and all was dark - and despair - the Impossible filled Jerusalem and that
Upper Room - but look at today - Jesus
has risen from the dead - the impossible happened - and these 11 who lasted -
lasted long enough to bring Christ to our world.
Sometimes the impossible happens. Sometimes people make
impossible dreams come true.
Simon and Jude - and all the rest of the Apostles - opened
up that door and went for the more.
TWO STEPS
To make the impossible possible, there are two steps. The second
step - is the opening of the doors that are shut and we get moving. The first
step is the prayer and the decision and the choice - coupled with the Holy
Spirit - to get moving again.
Judas dropped out. Judas gave up. Judas decided that Jesus
wasn’t his dream - his life - and hung himself. The other Judas - Jude -decided
differently in the dark of that upper room and then got moving in the direction
of resurrection and new life - the possible.
CONCLUSION
The title of this homily is, “Impossible!”
The message is: to make the impossible, possible, say a
prayer and then go out and do one’s best to make the impossible, possible.
Amen.