Mass of Confirmation
4 February 2024 - St. Joseph
Cathedral
Readings from the FIFTH SUNDAY IN
ORDINARY TIME
Jb 7:1-4, 6-7
1 Cor 9:16-19, 22-23
Mk 1:29-39
Praised be Jesus Christ!
Some weeks back I
asked Father Morgan which readings they take for the Confirmation Mass here at
the Cathedral and he said that Bishop DeGrood takes the Sunday readings, as for
the people who are there on Sunday afternoon, this is their Sunday Mass. I
mention that to you to explain my puzzlement over the First Reading from the
Book of Job. Confirmation should be a dynamic thing about the outpouring of the
Holy Spirit, about going out on mission, really about conquering the whole
world for Christ and His Gospel. The confirming Bishop should give you a kind
of pep talk at Confirmation. But then from Job we read: “Job spoke, saying: ‘Is
not man’s life on earth drudgery? ... He is a slave who longs for the shade, a
hireling who waits for his wages… Remember that my life is like wind. I shall
not see happiness again.”
Even our Gospel
passage from St. Mark has Jesus retreating, moving on from that town after
performing miracles of healing and casting out demons, in a sense I guess, to
avoid the praise and popularity of those who witnessed them. He told His
disciples they needed to move on to preach elsewhere.
Your Confirmation
today completes your Christian initiation begun at Baptism, already strengthened
and nourished as you are by the Holy Eucharist, healed and forgiven your sins
through the Sacrament of Penance. Now the Holy Spirit comes upon you in
Confirmation to strengthen you in grace, to aid you in bringing Christ to our
world. Confirmation is a soldier’s sacrament. It is a special grace for
athletes. Heroism best describes this Sacrament. Is it even appropriate to talk
about drudgery like Job does?
I pose the
question because I think yes, maybe not right now in your life for you young
people, but maybe for your parents, for your aunts and uncles, for your
grandparents who are here today. Maybe they need a good word. Truth to be told,
being a Catholic Christian is not meant to be a joy ride. Confirmation
strengthens you to stand alongside Christ in His temptation and His fast, along
the path that leads to the Cross. We should not be looking for perks in this
life, but rather the Lord is enough for me.
There is a podcast
of Butler’s Lives of the Saints which I really like, and the other day it was
the life and martyrdom of St. Ignatius of Antioch. Already an older man, the
saintly bishop was condemned to death in the arena in Rome, and drug in chains by
11 ornery soldiers all the way around the Mediterranean by ship from Syria to
Italy. Continually abused by these soldiers, he had the opportunity despite his
chains, in every port where they stopped and through a number of letters he wrote,
to encourage fellow Christians and beg them to pray for strength for him that
he might meet his end in Rome and be torn to pieces and devoured by the wild
beasts in the arena. Kind of like Jesus preaching in the Gospel, Ignatius
encouraged people all along the way and by their prayers and by God’s grace not
only did he die well, but he left a lasting memory for Christians everywhere, a
true witness to Christ, which confirmed them in the faith.
Don’t get me
wrong! I don’t wish any of you a martyr’s death, but I hope and pray that the
grace of Confirmation will keep you from discouragement in life and enable you
to pray with St. Ignatius of Antioch for the strength and courage to follow
Christ beyond the Cross to Glory!
PROPERANTES ADVENTUM DIEI DEI
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