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What’s happening in America?
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Social media is saturated with divisive language and clips of violence. People are pouring into our streets crying for justice.
Others remain cooped up, terrified of contracting the Coronavirus. Millions more are barely making ends meet.
What’s happening to our nation? How can we make sense of it?
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It feels like we’ve contracted an autoimmune disease.
Autoimmune diseases confuse the body’s natural defense system, so that the body can no longer tell the difference between healthy and unhealthy cells; normal cells are mistaken for a threat.
As a result, the body starts attacking itself.
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America is attacking itself.
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Evils like racism, inequality, poverty, and corruption, cause some to mistake their neighbors for a threat.
The root of our civil – even spiritual – unrest lies in this scary truth.
Sometimes we mistake other human beings for threats, as if they don’t belong in our society, much like foreign or malignant cells in the body.
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This “us versus them” mentality has festered for generations. Now it’s boiling to the surface again, causing fear and division to spew across America.
But a house divided isn’t simply an American problem. It’s global, stretching back to the beginning of our shared human story.
Consider the first question a human being asks God in the bible.
“Am I my brother’s keeper?”
Meaning: Am I responsible for contributing to the well-being of my neighbor? Should I consider another person’s health and happiness? Or does the world revolve around me and my own desires?
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This is the question Cain asks God after murdering his own brother Abel. “Am I my brother’s keeper?”
It’s a question we’re still wrestling with today.
But as Christians, we know the answer is a resounding, YES!
Yes, we are our brother’s keeper. Yes, we are responsible for caring for the poor, the sick, the imprisoned, and the marginalized. It’s exactly what Jesus himself did and taught.
It’s what our faith demands of us. Love your God. Love your neighbor.
But as we’re finding out once again, it’s much easier said than done. This “autoimmune mentality,” can infect every human heart.
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Today we celebrate the feast of Corpus Christi, the Body and Blood of our Lord.
As Catholics, we believe that Jesus offers us his Body and Blood in the Eucharist. The Eucharist is what binds us to God.
In today’s Gospel, Jesus declares, “Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me and I in him… The one who feeds on me will have life because of me” (John 6:54-57).
We feed on Jesus in order to have life. It’s that simple.
But what do we do with that life we’re given?
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We become our brother’s keeper.
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Christians need to be their brother’s keeper now more than ever. Look to the streets. There’s growing unrest. There’s fear, frustration, and anger in people’s voices crying to be heard.
There’s also the added fear of a global pandemic, a possible recession, and long-term unemployment.
Many people are questioning, “Where is God in all of this?”
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God is in us.
It’s a humbling, frightening truth, but we are the body of Christ here on earth.
It’s a truth the Saints have understood well. Consider Saint Francis of Assisi. He experienced enough turmoil in his own day to write his magnificent prayer for peace:
“Lord, make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is darkness, light; where there is sadness, joy.”
That’s what we’re called to do today – to bring light where there is darkness, justice where there is injustice, a voice where there is silence.
Perhaps this is only the beginning, a smidgeon of the answer.
But we are our brother’s keeper. Instead of perceiving our neighbor as a threat like a malignant cell in the body, we were created to love one another the way Christ has loved us.
Both in and out of season.
With every act of love, we can say those sacred words with Jesus, “This is my body, this is my blood.”
This is my voice, my time, my energy, my heart, my strength, my talent, given up for you. We do it in memory of Christ.
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In this Eucharist, may the Lord give us a renewed sense of commitment to accepting the role of our brother’s keeper, regardless of the person’s race, gender, religion, or politics.
Because love is the foundation to any promise of lasting peace.
Love is what Christ would do, for he is our brother’s keeper.
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We can strive to be a peace maker!
Amen