I HAVE GRASPED YOU
BY THE HAND
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for Monday in Holy Week is, “I
have grasped you by the hand.”
I heard that message in today’s first reading from Isaiah
42:6.
I can picture that image.
HELD BY THE HAND
The little kid is scared. It’s
her first day at school. Her mom or dad
or both are holding her hand as she is being led into school.
The old man is dying. He’s in
hospice. His family is around the bed - and they are holding his hand.
I had a wedding on Saturday
afternoon. The bridegroom tells me at
the practice, “See that guy over there
in the front bench. When he was 12 and
his sister was 9, they were at Disneyland. They weren’t in the car - when his
parents were in the car - and they were
both killed.” I’m sure when those two kids went to their parents funeral Mass, when
they walked into church - their hands were held by their uncles and aunts -
coming down the aisle.
A neighbor dies at the age of
49. His wife comes down the aisle - this
time alone - but her neibghbor and her husband never hold hands walking across
the parking lot towards the church - but this Monday morning they do.
GOD HOLDS US BY THE
HAND
Isaiah - in today’s first
reading - tells us that God holds us by the hand.
Picture ourselves walking
into heaven God holding us by the hand.
This God who created the
universe - this God who created everything - this God who gave us the gift of
breath and life - this God who made all the crops - this God grasps us by the
hand.
This God walks us out of the
prison of darkness and into the light - walks us out holding our hand.
Kenneth Clark, in his
fascinating book and in his TV documentary on Civilisation, talks about Europe in the 1800’s trying to grasp
light - in the enlightment - joy in the great works of Bethoven - meaning -
reason - hope - in great paintings.
That is true for every age
and every person - out hands, our eyes, our ears, are hoping to grab, grasp, answers, God,
meaning.
Picture Christ’s hands nailed
to the cross this week - wanting to have God his father to reach down to his
son who was feeling forsaken and grasp him.
Picture Christ picturing Mary
of Martha and Mary fame - just below him at Calvary - looking her in the eye -
knowing she had anointed him with expensive perfume just a short time earlier for his death.
Picture Mary his mother
grasping Jesus’ hands when they took him
down from the cross.
CONCLUSION
During this Mass - take one
of your hands and with it grasp your other hand and remember all those who held
you by the hand during this life.
During communion at this mass
when you receive Christ - hold him tight for a moment by hour hand and then
enter into deeper communion with him.