Homilies
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19th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 7 August 2022
Many years ago there was quite a popular film that was made called, “Dead Poets Society.” It starred Robyn Williams as a slightly eccentric schoolteacher – if ‘slight’ can ever be used to describe Robyn William’s eccentricity. At this school, though, he mentored a group of students into realising their potential. The catchcry of the film, Carpe Diem, “Seize the Day”, became somewhat famous in itself and got to be widely used. The film was very much a portrayal of the philosophy of Henry Thoreau. Thoreau was a well-known American humanist philosopher of the 19th century. His famous work was called, Walden, and was an account of him leaving the city and retiring to the side of…
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18th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 31 July 2022
How would we describe the most precious, the most valuable thing in our possession? What would be the thing that we would not exchange for any amount of money or satisfaction? In other words, what is of the greatest value for us? Years ago, there was a wealthy man who, with his devoted young son, shared a passion for art collecting. Together they travelled around the world, adding only the finest art treasures to their collection. The widowed man looked on with satisfaction as his only child became an experienced art collector. One winter though war broke out and the young man left to fight in battle. Only after a few short weeks, his father…
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17th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 24 July 2022
If we were to ask ourselves what personal characteristics we would most value about ourselves, I doubt that many of us would answer ‘dependency’. We live in a culture which prizes anything but dependency. Independence, autonomy, self-reliance are the things that we aspire to for ourselves and that we like to see in other people. Further, in recent times we have coined a whole lot of phrases and words that make us even more suspicious of the experience of dependency: we speak of ‘dependent relationships,’ of people just acting out of their dependencies, and we speak of the phenomenon of ‘co-dependency’ and all it variations. In short dependency does not have much sale value…
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16th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 17 July 2022
Some twenty-five years ago I completed my Master’s thesis in Theology. When the title of the thesis was read out at the Graduation Ceremony everyone laughed. I don’t think that they were laughing at me in particular, but the title of the thesis was so incomprehensible to everyone that it certainly drew a chuckle from the audience. The title was “Manifestation of the Other: A Study of David Tracy’s Heterology.” Perhaps it is no wonder it drew a gasp of incomprehension. What was the thesis all about? Well, through the 1980s and 1990s David Tracy was a philosopher of religion writing out of Chicago. He was a writer who sought to address the question of how…
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13th Sunday in Ordinary Time – 26 June 2022
One of the most important things we can learn about the gospels is about the nature of the language that the writers use. It is the language of parables – a language, it seems, favoured by Jesus himself. Jesus was a great teacher as we know. He was a great storyteller and he constantly uses stories to communicate his message. But the parables are not simply stories. A parable is very particular kind of story: it is a story that is designed to confuse us, to unsettle us, even in some cases, to shock us. This tendency to confuse, to unsettle, to shock is at the heart of the parables. The point in the confusion is that a…
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Pentecost – 5 June 2022
As most weeks draw to their end, we can often feel somewhat fragmented. It’s been a difficult week at work; we haven’t achieved all that we would like to, there have been issues at home, at school. The world is full of dismay! In our own way each of us asks, “Where is the Spirit of God in all of this?” Where is the Spirit which Jesus has promised us? Where is the Gift of God’s life that we celebrate in this great festival of Pentecost? How is the Spirit of God given to us in the daily struggle of our lives, and in our effort to make sense of all that threatens to fragment our life?” If only the Spirit…
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4th Sunday of Easter – 8 May 2022
One of the lines that we often hear in political life is the claim that an action or a particular policy was pursued because, “it was the right thing to do.” The assertion seems to justify all manner of decisions and it is given out in such a way to counter all opposing arguments such that the alleged rightness being claimed is simply given as fact. The process by which the determination that something has been right’ is arrived at is, of course, never explained. “I did it because it simply was the right thing to do, and I require no further justification,” seems to be the implication. Hearing this assertion a number…
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Anzac Day – 25 April 2022
The conclusion to the Ode we recite on this day each year has become etched in our minds: “Lest we forget.” The problem is, of course, that we do forget, and that we forget all too easily. The horror of war, its senseless brutality, and its needless destruction are never too far from eruption. The criminal tragedy of Ukraine is played out daily before us. However, let us not forget those other theatres of violence – Afghanistan, Myanmar, South Sudan, Syria – to name just several. And in each situation, we are left with the hauntingly relentless question of “Why?” Why does it have to be this way? Why are otherwise…
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2nd Sunday of Easter – 24 April 2022
Last Sunday morning we came together in our church in glorious April sunshine to celebrate the Resurrection of the Lord. So, too, did our brothers and sisters in Ukraine. Like us, they came to their churches with a feast day promising hope and possibility. We left our church streaming into the beautiful day with every sense of the opportunity that Easter brings us. Our brothers and sisters in Ukraine did not. They came to celebrate life; yet they found death. They came to share peace; instead they met violence. They came to be sprinkled with water; instead they left covered in blood. The juxtaposition between the hopes of our brothers…
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Easter – 17 April 2022
On the darkness of this night, the darkness of the world itself is only too apparent. Each celebration of Easter is prefaced, as it were, with the world’s suffering, especially the suffering of those who are innocent. This year we are conscious of the suffering of Ukraine, the brutality and senselessness of war. The horror of it all arrests us, and we stand bewildered by our violence towards one another. To gather in the night, on this night, is to stand in the face of our confusion and in the midst of our questions which resist their answer. In our hearts, we hear the echo of the question, “Who will roll away the stone…