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2023
Preaching the Word
TOP-RATEDPAPAL HOMILIESFR. TONY

32nd Sunday of Year A

The texts of the liturgy urge us to have an attitude of watchfulness in the world so as to be happy once we reach the eternity of God: “So stay awake because you do not know either the day or the hour” (Gospel). This is the attitude proper to the wise man, because “Meditating on her is understanding in its perfect form, and anyone keeping awake for her will soon be free from care” (First Reading). Thus we can end our life in peace, and always be with the Lord (Second Reading).

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

DOCTRINAL MESSAGES

32nd Sunday of Year A

It is proper to human hope to be awake, to look to the horizon of the future, but it is even more proper to Christian hope. Christian hope is achieved both within history and beyond it. Within history, we find the hope in grace and in the mercy of God, the hope for spiritual progress, the hope for a continuous and growing conversion until the end of one's life, the hope in the fidelity and holiness of the Church that will never fail ... Beyond history we have the hope in the possession of God, which we longed for so greatly in our earthly life, and finally achieved. It is the hope of the communion of saints, completely fulfilling the universal longing for fraternal love, which now extends to all time and space. It is the hope in the definitive and glorious consummation of the history of salvation, traced by God from eternity and finally achieved.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy


First of all, it is related to love, because one waits for what one loves and for what one wishes to possess completely and definitively in love. It is closely related to prayer, according to the very teaching of Jesus: "Stay awake, and pray not to be put to the test" (Mt 26:41), especially in the extreme temptation of apostasy and loss of faith. It is also related to the virtue of prudence, especially before temptation. Temptation is part of human nature, but it needs to be dealt with in a very prudent way. If Adam and Eve in paradise, if David from the terrace of his home, if Peter in the palace of Annas had truly "been awake", would they have fallen into temptation? Finally, being awake implies the virtue of fortitude to fulfill effectively what love, prayer, and prudence require of us in keeping with God's will.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy


The closeness with God lived here on earth and taken to its apex in heaven is the banquet with Christ: "Those who were ready went in with him to the wedding hall" (Gospel). There will be the participation in the "triumph" of Christ, who will enter the celestial Jerusalem like the king of kings and the lord of lords. We are called to share in the power and the glory of Christ, the Lord of history and of the universe. We are called to an indescribable and unimaginable joy which surpasses all worldly capacity, before which any joy in this world pales before the jubilation of celestial glory. In all this we wait, and we keep awake in order that we may achieve it. We all endeavor to achieve it, individually and in communion with the Church, on the way towards our goal and as a reward for our waiting.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy


"The greatest among you must be your servant." A service which springs from the love for one's neighbor, and a service that is exercised from the most sincere and genuine love. This is why to love and serve must go hand in hand and complement one another: neither love without service nor service without love. Some of the concrete ways of the service of authority have already been established by the Church, others will be inspired in us by God himself throughout life, provided that the attitude of giving and service has become rooted in our priestly heart.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

PASTORAL SUGGESTIONS

32nd Sunday of Year A

Surely, we must answer this question by saying it is very necessary. It is necessary in the face of the inner world of our passions, which try to overlap and take over without any control or discipline. It is also necessary in the face of the ideology and mentality of our time, which are not always favorable to virtue, values, or Christian life. We must be very watchful over the mass media, both old and new, to put them at the service of the information and education of the human person and of the Christian, rather than at the service of disinformation and immorality. Parents must also be watchful over the friends and school environment of their children, for a bad friend is fatal for a child. Finally, we must be watchful over the working environment in which we spend long hours of the day, and that in certain cases may negatively influence our values and moral decisions.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy


What is it that calls Christians to watchfulness? First of all, we need a simple awareness of the attraction exercised by evil over all people, including Christians. In addition to this, we need to be able to discern and to separate good from evil, straw from wheat, wheat from weeds, so that we can choose the good and avoid evil in all circumstances.

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy


I am especially referring to hope in the hereafter, in other words, in heaven and in everything that heaven means, according to the teaching of the Catechism. In our preaching, or as guides of souls, do we speak about the mysterious and yet true reality of heaven? With our preaching, do we make desirable to Christians the kingdom of heaven? Or are we responsible for their considering it unreal or the culmination of boredom? Throughout the year the liturgy of the Church provides us with several occasions to speak about heaven: the Feast of All Saints, All Souls' Day, the Ascension of the Lord and the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, some Sundays of Ordinary Time, Mass for some deceased member of the Christian community... Does my own Christian witness raise the gaze of Christians to the hope and certainty of heaven?

P. Antonio Izqeuirdo, L.C., Copyright © Dicastery for the Clergy

The Lamp of Faith and
the Oil of Charity

8 November 2020 | Saint Peter’s Square

32nd Sunday of Year A

This Sunday’s Gospel passage (Mt 25:1-13) invites us to prolong the reflection on eternal life that we began on the occasion of the Feast of All Saints and the Commemoration of the Faithful Departed. Jesus recounts the parable of the ten virgins invited to a wedding feast, symbol of the Kingdom of Heaven.

In Jesus’ time it was customary for weddings to be celebrated at night; so the procession of guests took place with lit lamps. Some of the bridesmaids are foolish: they take their lamps but do not take the oil with them; the wise ones instead take the oil with them together with their lamps. The bridegroom is late, late in coming, and they all fall asleep. When a voice alerts them that the bridegroom is about to arrive, in that moment, the foolish ones realize that they do not have oil for their lamps; they ask the wise ones for some, but the latter reply that they cannot give away any oil, because there would not be enough for them all. While the foolish maidens go to buy oil, the bridegroom arrives. The wise maidens enter the banquet hall with him, and the door is closed. The others arrive too late and are turned away.

It is clear that with this parable, Jesus wants to tell us that we must be prepared for the encounter with him. Not only for the final encounter, but also for the everyday great and small encounters, with a view to that encounter for which the lamp of faith is not enough; we also need the oil of charity and good works. As the Apostle Paul says, the faith that truly unites us to Jesus is, “faith working through love” (Gal 5:6). It is what is represented by the behaviour of the wise maidens. Being wise and prudent means not waiting until the last moment to correspond to God’s grace, but to do so actively and immediately, starting right now. “I… yes, I will convert soon…”. “Convert today! Change your life today!”. “Yes, yes, tomorrow”. And the same thing is said tomorrow, and so it never arrives. Today! If we want to be ready for the final encounter with the Lord, we must cooperate with him now and perform good deeds inspired by his love.

We know that unfortunately it happens that we forget the purpose of our life, that is, the definitive appointment with God, thus losing the sense of expectation and making the present absolute. When one makes the present absolute, one looks only to the present, losing the sense of expectation, which is so beautiful and so necessary, and also pulls us away from the contradictions of the moment. This attitude — when one loses the sense of expectation — precludes any view of the hereafter: we do everything as if we will never depart for the other life. 

And so we care only about possessing, about emerging, about establishing ourselves… And always more. If we allow ourselves to be led by what seems most attractive to us, by what we like, by seeking our interests, our life becomes sterile; we do not accumulate any reserve of oil for our lamp, and it will be extinguished before the encounter with the Lord. We must live today, but a today that goes towards tomorrow, towards that encounter, a present full of hope. If, on the other hand, we are vigilant and correspond to God’s grace by doing good, we can serenely await the bridegroom’s coming. The Lord will be able to come even while we are sleeping: this will not worry us, because we have the reserve of oil accumulated through our daily good works, accumulated with that expectation of the Lord, that he may come as soon as possible and that he may come to take us with him.

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Faith Inspires Charity and Charity Safeguards Faith

12 November 2017 | Saint Peter’s Square

32nd Sunday of Year A

This Sunday, the Gospel (cf. Mt 25:1-13) indicates the condition that would allow us to enter the Kingdom of Heaven, and it does so with the parable of the 10 virgins: it is about those maiden brides who were designated to welcome and accompany the bridegroom to the wedding ceremony and, since at that time it was customary to celebrate the ceremony at night, the maiden brides were provided with lamps. The parable states that five of these maidens are wise and five are foolish: indeed, the wise ones have brought oil for their lamps, while the foolish have brought none. The bridegroom’s arrival is delayed and they all fall asleep. At midnight the bridegroom’s arrival is announced; at that moment the foolish maidens realize they have no oil for their lamps, and they ask the wise ones for some. But the latter reply that they cannot give them any because there would not be enough for everyone. Thus, while the foolish maidens go in search of oil, the bridegroom arrives; the wise maidens go in with him to the marriage feast and the door is shut. The five foolish maidens return too late; they knock on the door, but the response is “I do not know you” (v. 12), and they remain outside.

What does Jesus wish to teach us with this parable? He reminds us that we must be ready for the encounter with him. Many times, in the Gospel, Jesus exhorts keeping watch, and he also does so at the end of this narrative. He says: “Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor the hour” (v. 13). But with this parable he tells us that keeping watch does not only mean not to sleep, but to be ready; in fact all the maidens are asleep before the bridegroom’s arrival, but upon waking some are ready and others are not. Thus, here is the meaning of being wise and prudent: it is a matter of not waiting until the last minute of our lives to cooperate with the grace of God, but rather to do so as of now. It would be good to consider for a moment: one day will be the last. If it were today, how prepared am I? But I must do this and that…. Be ready as if it were the last day: this does us good. 

The lamp is a symbol of the faith that illuminates our life, while the oil is a symbol of the charity that nourishes the light of faith, making it fruitful and credible. The condition for being prepared for the encounter with the Lord is not only faith, but a Christian life abundant with love and charity for our neighbour. If we allow ourselves to be guided by what seems more comfortable, by seeking our own interests, then our life becomes barren, incapable of giving life to others, and we accumulate no reserve of oil for the lamp of our faith; and this — faith — will be extinguished at the moment of the Lord’s coming, or even before. If instead we are watchful and seek to do good, with acts of love, of sharing, of service to a neighbour in difficulty, then we can be at peace while we wait for the bridegroom to come: the Lord can come at any moment, and even the slumber of death does not frighten us, because we have a reserve of oil, accumulated through everyday good works. Faith inspires charity and charity safeguards faith.

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5 October 2014 | Saint Peter’s Square

32nd Sunday of Year A

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SOURCE: The Holy See Archive at the Vatican Website © Libreria Editrice Vaticana

True Wisdom is Making the Most of Mortal Life in order to Do Works of Mercy

6 November 2011

32nd Sunday of Year A

The Biblical Readings of this Sunday’s Liturgy invite us to extend the reflection on eternal life that we began on the occasion of the commemoration of the faithful departed. On this point there is a clear difference between those who believe and those who do not believe or, one might likewise say, between those who hope and those who do not hope. 

Indeed St Paul wrote to the Thessalonians: “but we would not have you ignorant, brethren, concerning those who are asleep, that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope” (1 Thess 4:13). Faith in the death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ in this sphere too is a crucial divide. St Paul always reminded the Christians of Ephesus that before accepting the Good News they had been “separated from Christ, alienated from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world” (Eph 2:12). Indeed the religion of the Greeks, the pagan cults and myths, were unable to shed light on the mystery of death; thus an ancient inscription said: “In nihil ab nihilo quam cito recidmus” which means: “how quickly we fall back from nothing to nothing”. If we remove God, we remove Christ and the world falls back into emptiness and darkness. Moreover, this is also confirmed in the expressions of contemporary nihilism that is often unconscious and, unfortunately, infects a great many young people.

Today’s Gospel is a famous parable that speaks of ten maidens invited to a wedding feast, a symbol of the Kingdom of Heaven and of eternal life (Mt 25:1-13). It is a happy image with which, however, Jesus teaches a truth that calls us into question. In fact five of those 10 maidens were admitted to the feast because when the bridegroom arrived they had brought the oil to light their lamps, whereas the other five were left outside because they had been foolish enough not to bring any. What is represented by this “oil”, the indispensable prerequisite for being admitted to the nuptial banquet? 

St Augustine (cf. Discourses 93, 4), and other ancient authors interpreted it as a symbol of love that one cannot purchase but receives as a gift, preserves within one and uses in works. True wisdom is making the most of mortal life in order to do works of mercy, for after death this will no longer be possible. When we are reawoken for the Last Judgement, it will be made on the basis of the love we have shown in our earthly life (cf. Mt 25:31-46). And this love is a gift of Christ, poured out in us by the Holy Spirit. Those who believe in God-Love bear within them invincible hope, like a lamp to light them on their way through the night beyond death to arrive at the great feast of life.

Let us ask Mary, Sedes Sapientiae, to teach us true wisdom, the wisdom that became flesh in Jesus. He is the Way that leads from this life to God, to the Eternal One. He enabled us to know the Father’s face, and thus gave us hope full of love. This is why the Church addresses the Mother of the Lord with these words: “Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra” [our life, our sweetness and our hope]. Let us learn from her to live and die in the hope that never disappoints.

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SOURCE: The Holy See Archive at the Vatican Website © Libreria Editrice Vaticana
SOURCE: The Holy See Archive at the Vatican Website © Libreria Editrice Vaticana