SECOND
SUNDAY OF YEAR "B"
Cycle
B:1 Cor 6, 13 15: THE BODY
Introduction: We have a duty to bear
witness to Christian morality by our exemplary lives. There are times when we
Christians are not the holy people that God expects. We have scandalised others
by our petty quarrels and immoral lives. We may well have scared people away
from Jesus. Let us ask pardon for this.
The Homily:
I would like to comment on the 2nd. reading of today. It’s about the human
body. The Corinthians argued that you can eat what you want, “Food is meant for
the stomach and the stomach for food.” So, they said, you can have sex with
anyone you want, because the body was made for sex as well as for food.
However, St. Paul
has far more reverence for the body than this. He reflects that we are members
of Christ’s body, and that our bodies are his. We are temples of the Holy
Spirit (1 Cor 6,19) and the temple of the living God (2 Cor 6,16). Can you
imagine – the Holy Spirit making use of your body as if it were a church ? Can
you imagine it? Just think of it. Your body is a church in which God is pleased
to dwell. This is the way to glorify God in our bodies.
When we die, our bodies are prepared for
burial. The body is not a piece of outworn clothing, which has been cast so
that the soul can be free. The body is much more than that for a Christian.
There is nothing that befalls the soul in which the body does not take part. We
receive impressions of this world, but also of the divine world partly through
the body. Every sacrament is a gift of God, conferred on the soul by means of
physical actions: the waters of baptism, the oil of chrism, the bread and wine
of communion are all taken from the material world. We can do neither good nor
evil except in conjunction with our body. From the first day to the last, the
body has been a co-worker of the soul in all things, and is, together with the
soul, the total man. The body remains
marked, as it were, forever by the imprint of the soul and the common life body
and soul had together. Linked with the soul, the body is also linked through
the sacraments to Jesus Christ himself.
I’d like to remind you that God worked out
our salvation in the body of Christ. The body of Jesus is very really the
physical material out of which God fashioned our salvation; and we would do
well to unite our bodies to his in order to allow his salvation to flow into
us. More than that. Think of all the
skills and excellences you have acquired through the use of your body and all
the labour that they entailed. Will all that be exposed to futility and waste
at the time of death ? Certainly not ! Our body may be made of dust, but it is star
dust. God will never allow our body to be junked.
The Resurrection of Christ tells us that
our bodies are pointing in a special direction, an eternal consummation in
God. The idea of consummation makes you
think of marriage. Quite correct. The eternal consummation we look forward to
is the Marriage Feast of the Lamb; the very same Lamb pointed out by John
Baptist in today’s Gospel.
Without
physical life, there can be no well-being and development. God has fashioned the human being in such a
way that when all the components work in harmony, we enjoy good health and
happiness. The body is meant to work,
but also meant for enjoyment, appropriate pleasure, to be touched and held,
caressed, celebrated and surrendered.
And yet there is something mysterious about the body. You have your body and yet you don’t. If I
asked you, “Are you your body?” you’ll probably answer “Yes, and No.” There’s
something more, something that you can’t quite explain. You are your body and yet you’re not. Here is a mystery calling for reverence for
the unknown and proper use of the known; calling for appreciation and not
exploitation.
You
can glorify God in your body, praying God to take possession of it like a
temple. So your body can become a sacrifice acceptable to God, taking care to
respect our bodies and other peoples’.
We can never treat another body merely as a sexual object. The body is for the Lord, ultimately. But St.
Paul goes on to say: “...and the Lord is for the
body.” The Lord is for the body. Since the birth of Christ, God has a body
like ours, affirming and healing our bodies and so preparing them for heaven.
PRAYER (Janet Morley)
O God, satisfy the hunger of our bodies for
food and shelter, health and human touch.
Satisfy the hunger of our spirits for dignity and freedom. Satisfy the
hunger of our minds to understand our world, the reasons for the pain, the ways
we are connected to each other. Satisfy
the hunger of our hearts that all who share the earth with us shall share our
satisfaction. And satisfy the hunger of
our hands to help you make it so through Jesus Christ.
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