Like the Rest of Humanity
When Christ shares with us today the parable of the Pharisee
and the Publican, it is worth pondering the differing placement of each figure in
the temple area, as well as their contrasting prayers. Jesus notes that the Pharisee “took up his position”---presumably
at the front---because, by contrast, the Publican (or tax collector) “stood off
at a distance.” As for their respective
prayers, the Pharisee “spoke [his] prayer to himself,” while the Publican “would
not even raise his eyes to heaven.”
Moreover, the content of the Pharisee’s prayer is the supremely absurd
statement: “O God, I thank you that I am
not like the rest of humanity;” the Publican speaks simply and honestly, “O
God, be merciful to me a sinner.” And
lest anyone miss the moral of this story, it concludes with the maxim: “[E]veryone who
exalts himself will be humbled, and the one who humbles himself will be
exalted.”
My liturgical task and position as
an ordained Priest is to preside “at the front” of the assembly, “in persona Christi”---in the person of
Christ---no less! On the day of my
Ordination, November 3, 2001 in the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception,
there was a particular moment immediately following Bishop D’Arcy’s invocation
of the Holy Spirit and laying on of hands in which I received a curious, almost
prophetic admonition that I shall never forget.
One of my seminary professors, Fr.
Romanus Cessario, O.P., was vesting me for the first time in my chasuble, the
outer garment worn by Priests when they celebrate the Holy Sacrifice of the
Mass. Apparently noticing that my head
had been bowed toward the ground throughout the Sacred Liturgy (because that
was the habitual posture of my prayer at Mass to which I had grown most
comfortable over the years), he whispered in my ear with firm and almost
scolding authority: “Keep your head up!”
No hug, no tears, no sentimentality---just implicitly the bracing commission: You are a shepherd now and must exercise
oversight---eyes fixed on the people for whom you must lay down your life; on
the danger-filled horizon to guard against wolves intent on slaughter; and on
the Lord from Whose divine shepherding you will receive necessary guidance by a
gaze relentlessly focused on the “Big Picture” of eternal salvation.
About eleven years into my
Priesthood---when I made my first visit last September to the Piper Clinic in
Florida for the initial evaluation of the severity of my TMJ problem---I shared
with the medical staff my narrative of excruciating jaw pain and its probable
cause. Dr. Mark Piper listened intently
and sympathetically, spoke to me about joint displacement and cartilage deterioration,
and then looked me in the eye and (from seemingly out of nowhere) asked about
my neck. He noted that my head was bowed
forward and that this downward bent was both a symptom and a contributing cause
of my jaw pain. Moreover, he insisted on
physical therapy for this condition, both immediately following surgery and as
part of a lifetime of rehabilitation. I
was stunned and incredulous. For the
second time in my life, I was essentially being told by a specialist of utmost
competence: Keep your head up!
Since returning to Queen of Peace
and taking my place in silence beside Fr. John Eze---the principal celebrant
of, and preacher at, all of the Masses of my beloved pastorate---I have had
plenty of opportunities to ponder my simultaneously exalted and humbled
position. There I am in the sanctuary
for all to see but none to hear, my dumbly protruding mouth plugged with
plastic and metal, feeling like a piece of ecclesiastical furniture. But I also ponder the astounding grace of
being the beneficiary of so much sympathy and kind indulgence---an avalanche of
get-well cards, buckets of soup, and countless prayers and words of
encouragement. I have received more
support to "lift me up" than most people who have suffered and
continue to suffer problems deeper than my own---including many parishioners at
Queen of Peace---who may lack such a visibly extended network which often
eagerly comes to the assistance of a public figure like a Pastor. I am tempted
for more reasons than ever to bow my head and close my eyes to pray, brought
closer beyond my choosing to the Eucharistic Lord, Who chose in His silent
abiding in the Tabernacle to be both adored and ignored as “a piece of
ecclesiastical furniture.”
In my prayer during these days of
the sede vacante as we await the
election of a new Pope, I also cannot help but think of the contrast in the
bodily posture of prayer between Bl. John Paul II and Benedict XVI. The Polish Pope (and former actor) would ever
lift his eyes to the crowds he loved but would always bow his head and close
his eyes when he prayed, all the more poignantly when Parkinson’s disease
cruelly bent his neck and humiliatingly bowed his back with the burden of the
Cross of infirmity. Benedict, by
contrast, continually attempted before the crowds to direct attention away from
himself, finally---in his abdication of the papacy---taking his place (like the
Publican) “off at a distance” to pray.
But when Benedict prayed in public, his normal stance was with head up
and eyes wide open. In the membership of
Christ’s Body, humility can take as many different postures and expressions of prayer
as there are persons.
I conclude this meditation by
reflecting on the public prayer of last evening at Queen of Peace, which was a
historic moment in the life of our Parish.
Earlier in the day, the hand-carved Stations of the Cross to be newly
hung in our church finally arrived from Italy.
Throughout yesterday’s special Friday Stations liturgy, a different
Knight of Columbus processed in with each Station, one by one. After the corresponding meditation and prayer
led by Deacon Bill Gallagher (another one of my substitute “voices”), I blessed
and kissed each Station, escorting the one who carried it to the exact position
in church in which it would eventually be fixed in its permanent place. In carrying the Stations, the Knights were
instructed to hold each one high enough for the faithful to see, for the public
veneration of this beautiful image of the Lord.
As it so happened, the face of each Knight was discretely shielded by
the very humanly shaped, divinely conceived mystery he was holding.
After the placement of the 14th
Station, the final prayers, and the singing of “When I Survey the Wondrous
Cross,” I was filled with such joy---the happiness of a father beaming with
pride---as I looked around the church with head raised high to see my people
literally holding the tokens of the Lord’s Passion in their own hands. They were more than pieces of ecclesiastical
furniture; I saw the “living stones” which, St. Peter assures us, constitute
Christ’s exalted temple, His Holy and Beloved Church (1 Pt 2:5). Keeping our eyes fixed on Jesus “lifted up”
on the Cross, we see together the love of God, which humbly abased itself
precisely to be revealed as “like the rest of humanity.” But in so doing, our Crucified Savior opens
the way to our divine exaltation, that---keeping our heads up---we might, as
St. Paul admonishes in the light and power of the Risen Christ, “seek the
things that are above” (Col 3:1).
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