Dedication of the Lateran Basilica
Last Sunday and this Sunday we have unusual situations in the Church calendar. Both are feast days which, if celebrated on weekdays, are not Holy Days of Obligation, but when they land on Sundays, they outrank the readings for that Sunday. Last week was the feast of All Souls ‘’ we can kind of understand why this would outrank the 32nd Sunday of Ordinary time -- after all we are celebrating all those who have been or will be received into God’s heaven -- including, we hope, ourselves. But the feast of the Lateran Basilica of Saint John? Why does that outrank the 33rd Sunday of Ordinary time? Historically the Lateran Basilica was dedicated in the years 324 A.D, after Constantine stopped the persecution of Christians. In a way it marks the emergence of Christianity from an underground movement to one which would eventually reach the whole world. Also, it is the Cathedral of the Bishop of Rome, the pope, and as such celebrates the unity of all local churches with the church of Rome.
For Sundays and major feasts the Church selects three readings from scripture, usually one from the Old Testament, one from the New, usually from a letter of Paul, and one from the gospels. Often the texts are related, but the three texts here seem to be related to each other since they all contain the word “temple”. But in a way, that’s worth looking at in itself.
Ezekiel is a prophet who probably was born in Jerusalem but spent the rest of his life in Babylon.. His book in the bible is a series of prophetic actions and visions, the themes of which include the promise of God to restore the Israelites to their land and kingdom. A famous passage is when God shows Ezekiel a field of bones which get covered with flesh and then made to live again -- probably an inspiration for movies about zombies, but more seriously a prediction that Israel, swallowed up by Babylon, would eventually be restored. Today’s reading looks forward to that time of restoration, when the restored temple will bring about the fulfillment of God’s promises and the source of life-giving water, which will bring about abundant food and healing medicine. In a similar way our Catholic churches are sources of life-giving food and drink, the body and blood of Jesus. In our churches we gather around this sacred feast and through it become one with Catholics all over the world.
The gospel describes a scene in Jesus’ life when he appears to become angry and violent. John describes this as happening early in his public ministry, whereas in the other three gospels it happens in Jesus’ last weeks on earth. If it really occurred late in his ministry, and he didn’t do it twice, which some literalist scholars believe, then it may not be that he was angry, but that he was performing a prophetic sign, like Ezekiel, Jeremiah, and the other prophets often did. If you remember, Hosea at God’s command married a prostitute to symbolize not only God’s love for his people, but his persistence in loving them despite their sins. Jesus is showing his concern for what is sacred. I know when I was very young we had a sense of the sacred when we would enter the church; very little talking and what had to be said was said in whispers; genuflecting when passing the tabernacle, signing ourselves with blessed water when entering the church which recalled our baptism that made us part of God’s family -- we’ve probably lost a lot of that sense of the sacred, unfortunately.
Perhaps the reading from Saint Paul’s letter to the Romans carries a third important message, and one which has immediate application. Paul writes, “Do you not know that you are the temple of God and God’s spirit dwells within you?” How often do we reflect on the fact our bodies are sacred? In a world where we are told that we can do whatever we want with our bodies or the bodies of others, as long as we can get away with it; where the politics of assassination is condoned by some of our fellow citizens; where unborn human beings can be destroyed and their organs sold for medical experiments; where every two or three years we have to fend off another attempt to make assisted suicide legal in this state. But our bodies are sacred, they are temples of the Holy Spirit, individually and collectively -- because since we are one through the Eucharist, the Holy Spirit in each of us is in all of us.
Francis of Assisi, Mother Theresa, Dorothy Day, and many, many of the saints lived their whole lives in recognition of this fact, and saw the service given to even the most destitute of human beings as service to Jesus himself.
To me, the readings of the Feast of the Dedication of the church of the bishop of Rome calls to mind that we live in a sacred world in which God is building up his kingdom, a kingdom in which the ultimate temple will be the dwelling place of God who will give his people his own divine life. So may this be a feast of hope for all of us.