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32nd Sunday of Ordinary Time
11-10-2019
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Three men died and went to heaven. St. Peter
asked the first if he had been faithful to his wife; he admitted to two
affairs during his marriage. St. Peter said, then you only get to drive
a compact car in heaven. He asked the same question to the second man;
he admitted to one affair so he was given a mid-size car to drive. The
third man said he had been true to his wife until the day he died; he
was given the luxury car.
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A week later the three men were driving
around heaven and they met at a red light. The man in the luxury car was
crying; the other two asked him what could be the matter. He said that
he just passed his wife and she was on a skateboard. Now that I’ve told
you a joke, let’s talk about the gospel.
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Sometime ago I walked through a cemetery, I
will never forget its name, it has a very consoling name-a name that
reminded me of Calvary- it was called “Hills of Eternity.” I walked
through path after path, stone upon stone and I came upon a massive
memorial.
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It was the grave of a young man, 20 years
old. Beneath his name and dates, a single line was carved. It read, “How
many hopes lie buried here.” Haven’t we all thought, felt or said that
at some time. When we stood by the grave of a loved one, not necessarily
a young person, but someone we loved?
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For so many the supreme sorrow is death,
death and all the lesser forms of death. Pain, loss, lovelessness,
loneliness, a kind of death by installments. For many people death means
the end, the more life there is in us the more joy. Even when we
seemingly have nothing to live for, we live for life. Because none of us
really wants to die. Not because our faith is infirm, rather because
there is so much to live for. We all want to go to heaven, but not yet.
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The Sadducees in the gospel held that there
was no hereafter, no heaven, and they pose a crafty riddle to Jesus.
They bring up the silly case of the woman with seven husbands. Don’t we
all have questions about heaven, not about matrimonial status? We wonder
if babies who have died will still be babies in heaven. Will the
elderly still be old in heaven, will we recognize one another. The
people we did not like on earth, will we have to pal around with them in
heaven.
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Will our pets be in heaven, dogs have to be.
Will our scars be gone, our receding hairlines, our embarrassments,
will we be bored? And what will we do all day, will it be
air-conditioned? In short, what is heaven like? Through the ages all
kinds of people have given us all kinds of answers. But, listen to what
Jesus says to the Sadducees, when they ask what will happen to the woman
with seven husbands when they all die?
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He says the woman in the story is not going
to be anybody’s wife. He said in effect that the whole question was
irrelevant. Why? Because things will be different. People will be
different, heaven will be different. All will be radically different,
forget about your questions. Because all will be beyond our questions,
beyond our imagination. Just as five hundred years ago our ancestors
could not imagine an artificial heart, or a computer or television. So
we cannot imagine heaven.
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Just as the crawling homely caterpillar in
its wildest dreams could never imagine that it could fly as a gorgeously
colored butterfly. Jesus is saying to forget all your categories, all
your paradigms, all your preconceptions. Heaven is beyond time, beyond
experience, heaven is eternal life with God. Heaven is so entirely
different, so completely beyond our present thinking.
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So spectacularly full and rich that no one
questions it, no answers would be understood. And so only one thing
really counts, only one thing remains…Faith. A faith that does not come
from knowing whose wife the woman will be. Or from knowing any details,
it is a faith that comes from believing Jesus. And trusting that when He
says heaven will be different, it will be different. And that Jesus
loves us beyond measure and desires that all be saved. We are given no
specifics, no solutions, no answers and no picture postcards.
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Instead we are called simply to surrender.
Surrender our questions and our difficulties and our logical puzzles.
And to trust that God will handle things better than we could ever
imagine. And that God’s love and care for us will surpass all that we
can ask or imagine.
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When all is said and done, when we think
about heaven we still come back to St. Paul. He echoes Jesus when he
says, no eye has seen, nor ear heard. Nor has it even entered into the
heart of man what God has prepared for those who love Him. That is what
Jesus is really saying about heaven, case closed. It really does come
down to this believe deeply that Jesus loves you. And that love endures
through time and eternity. And that the curiosities about heaven will
take care of themselves. Just be prepared to be surprised at the answers
you never had questions for.
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| Yours in Christ, |
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| Fr. Bob Warren, SA |
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