HEALING PLACES,
HOLY PLACES
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 5th Monday in
Ordinary Time is, “Healing Places, Holy Places.”
Churches are holy places - as well as healing places.
LOURDES
Today we celebrate the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes.
Lourdes is certainly one of the planets great holy places
and healing places.
What are your holy places? Where are your healing places?
Father John Barry - who taught us in the minor seminary -
once said in the classroom, “If you ever get a chance to go to Lourdes, go.”
Then he added, “And make sure you got to the baths there.”
In 1996 I got my chance on a trip to Ireland and then
France with my two sisters and my brother-in-law. Each of us got a spot to pick in France. My
sister Peggy - a nun - picked Lourdes - maybe because today - February 11 - her
birthday. My sister Mary picked
Bordeaux. Her husband picked Paris. I picked the most important Marian Shrine
in the world: Chartres.
Each - was a healing place - a neat picture of St.
Alphonsus in Bordeaux and Montmartre - the church of the Sacred Heart - Sacré-Cœur - overlooking
Paris. Chartres was on my bucket list. And my sisters to their loss wouldn’t go
into the baths when we visited Lourdes.
VARIOUS HOLY AND HEALING PLACES
The title of my homily is, “Healing Places, Holy Places.”
Today’s two readings can be healing places.
Many people sit with their Bible - which puts them in a
holy place and a healing place.
The first reading is the beginning of the Book of Genesis.
It tells us of the creation of the world. [Cf. Genesis 1: 1-19.]
Where are your Holy Places: the Maryland Shore, the
mountains, the oceans, the sky at night, looking out the kitchen window at the
morning sunrise? Where are your healing
places: the bathtub, a good shower, your marriage bed - whether your spouse is
living or dead [memories] swimming, exercising, walking, a good book, shopping,
a rocking chair, a nap, sleep, a good
meal out with family or friends, Thanksgiving Dinner, seeing a baby or baby-sitting
a grandkid?
Where are your healing moments with Jesu? The people in today’s gospel [Mark 6: 53-56] - just had to touch the
tassel of Jesus’ cloak - or the hem of his garment as we heard last week - and
they were healed. How do you touch Jesus: in communion, in the bread, in the
readings, in the adoration chapel, at Mary’s shrine, in prayers?
My mother on the way home from work - taking care of an
older woman who was younger than she was - but basically bedridden, my mom
would get a whole loaf of fresh rye bread - uncut - stress on the fresh - and
she would put on a pot of tea and eat the whole loaf - with cold butter - cold,
cold butter on freshly baked rye bread.
It can be very healing after a long day of work - especially with my
sister Mary.
Food, friends, bread, wine, communion with each other -
what a great Mass of healing for anyone!
CONCLUSION:
The title of my homily was: “Holy Places - Healing
Places.” Lourdes, Chartres, Fatima, the Grand Canyon, Lake Louise, all can be
great holy places - wonderful healing
places - to visit, so too your favorite chair at home or bench here in church.