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THE HEALTHY BODY OF CHRIST

A healthy body of Christ is an effective and efficacious functioning Church that works in harmony, teamwork, and a peaceful spirit, uplifting each other in service of God and others. It is a Trinitarian model of individuality in diversity for the salvation of all.

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For Paul, Christian unity will be inside the Church if it fulfils its proper function as a living body of the Mystical Body of Christ. A body is healthy and efficient only when each part functions perfectly. The different parts of the human body are not jealous of each other and do not covet each other’s functions.

THE BODY OF CHRIST

The assembly of the people of God is the living body of Christ: the inclusive Church for all. The Church is not just a building or a place of gathering. The Church is a body created by God the Father, saved by God the Son and governed by the Holy Spirit who sanctifies it. The purpose of the Church as a living institution alive and active and constantly undergoing transformation and reformation is the topic of the readings today.

CHARACTERISTICS OF A HEALTHY BODY OF CHRIST

A healthy body of Christ manifests spiritual and bodily coherence attributes. Thus, the fundamental question is: What are the characteristics of a healthy body of Christ?

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  1. Exhibiting the fruits of the Spirit,
  2. Growing in Jesus – individual transformation in the image and likeness of Christ.
  3. Forgiving is the central core of interpersonal relationships and growth.
  4. Avoiding gossip, backbiting, slandering, jealousy, envy, pulling others down etc.
  5. Checking our hypercritical attitudes.
  6. Healing/reconciling our broken relationships
  7. Extending grace of healing, tolerance, and solidarity,
  8.  Generosity in service, empathy, sympathy and self-effacing
  9. Having difficult conversations with the guidance of the Holy Spirit.

REFORMATION IN THE BODY OF CHRIST: THE CHURCH

The corruption of any institution begins with its inability to renew or reform itself periodically. Gladly, through the Holy Spirit, the Church is constantly undergoing renewal and reformations. These enable the Church to represent Christ better.  However, these reformations do not come easily. There is much opposition and reluctance by those whose existing status quo fits them.

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God is with his Church at every age and time. So, the Church will always survive all adversaries against it from outside and within. However, the Church’s inability to reform itself based on the Gospel truth and signs of time renders it obsolete in the ever-changing world. The lack of internal reformation in the Church’s structures, mission, and teachings makes us inconsequential.

Against this background, the role and presence of the Holy Spirit are fundamental in the prophetic, liturgical, and the Church’s teaching.

OUR THEME

The scriptural readings of this third Sunday emphasise two principles of our Christian faith that lead us to maturity and profundity. The Word of God and the Gifts of the Holy Spirit lead us to Christian unity and help us live lives of service in Christian Communities.

With the embodiment of the Holy Spirit at work in the Church and in us its members. There is no room for jealousy, envy and competition in the House or Church of God. There is room for the temperament, personality, gifts and talents of everyone or members of the Church. 

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Hence in this season of Ordinary Time, the liturgical calendar of the Church invites us to a season of tranquillity and spiritual growth spiritually. The readings of today invite us to celebrate the life-giving role of the Spirit in the history of the People of God, the Christian community and in the life, message and mission of Christ.

In all, one of the themes is we celebrate as the body of Christ in which we all, laity and clergy, belong. We are invited and challenged to use our God-given talents, gifts and empowerment for the sake of his Church.

FR TONY KADAVIL THEME OF TODAY

The central theme of the Gospel is Jesus’ inaugural address in the synagogue of Nazareth. In it, he outlines his mission of total liberation, which marked a crucial moment in his public ministry.

The Scripture readings for today focus on the importance and liberating power of the Word of God as sacramental, making God present in our midst.

The biblical readings challenge us to listen to the Word of God and accept it into our hearts. Then, we can put it into practice as we live out our lives, thus liberating ourselves and others from all types of bondages.

FIRST READING: NEHEMIAH 8:2-6, 8-10. 

Nehemiah, the governor, Ezra, the priest and scribe, and the Levites set out to re-establish the Jewish Laws and bring his people back to the religion of Moses.

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Israel’s spiritual renewal through the priest Ezra was a call to reform the Jewish faith. He assured them of restoration to the glory lost due to sins. The renewing strength comes from the joy of having the Lord with us. Therefore, we are encouraged not to mourn or give in to desperation but to let the Word of God be our comfort.

Thus, the Prophet Nehemiah 8:2-4, 5-6, 8-10 proclaims the Word of God that moves the hearts and minds of Israel to tears and a profound desire to change their lifestyle. Indeed, the Word of God is awesomely powerful and life-changing!

OUR REACTION TO THE WORD OF GOD

The people of Israel wept on listening to the scriptures because the Word of God convicted them like a mirror. This, too, should be our experience with the Word of God. When the Word of God is proclaimed or preached, we can listen to it. It is supposed to make us sober, self-reflective and purpose-driven to change or mend our ways or lifestyles. 

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It is like standing before a mirror and seeing ourselves in it. Then, we come to know the defects in our physical appearance. Similarly, when we listen to the Word of God, the defects or errors in our souls become visible to our spiritual eyes. We become aware of whether our ways are the ways of God or not.

Sadly, today the contrary is the case with many of us. We are distracted when the Word of God is being proclaimed. Listening with attention to the Word of God is a liturgical act lost in the Eucharist and other celebrations in the Church.

More tragically, the Word of God is mocked when it is preached. The listeners clapped for the preacher rather than for his sobriety of heart. It was like saying to the preacher, “Well done for saying these things to them.” Everyone else deserved to hear it, not him.

Another form of bastardising the Word of God is when the preacher becomes an entertainer. Do not get me wrong. There is a sense of humour that should accompany preaching. However, it does not overshadow the seriousness or effectiveness of the Word.

Let us read the Word of God slowly. When we read the Word of God meditatively, we can better reflect on and interpret its message. The Holy Spirit will help us understand and put it into action.

PSALMS 19:8, 9, 10, 15

In his Apostolic Letter of 30 September 2019, “Aperuit illis”, Pope Francis established that the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time is the Sunday of the Word of God.

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Hence, on a Sunday, the Pope declares it as the Sunday of the Word of God. The Psalmist reminds us with the proclamation: Your words, Lord, are Spirit and life (cf John 6:63c).

The fundamental truth here is that there can be no reformation or renewal of the Christian life without holistic adherence to the Word of God. The compass for our doctrinal, dogmatic, liturgical, pastoral and moral teachings as a Church is anchored in the Word of God and the Sacred Tradition handed down to us through the apostolic teaching.

Of course, the sacred mysteries of our faith are carefully reflected upon and taught under the inspirational action of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit guides the Church through the Magisterium of the Church. 

SECOND READING: 1 CORINTHIANS 12:12-30

This biblical passage paints the most famous picture of the Christian unity of the Church ever written. Graphically, St. Paul presents an image of the human body to illustrate fundamental teaching on the Christian unity of the Church. He argues that the body is one, though made of many parts. So the Church forms many individuals into a living unity in Christ.

However, Christian unity or renewal is not attainable without the presence and action of the Holy Spirit and the proper assimilation of the Word of God.

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As such, the Holy Spirit enables the Word of God to be imbued in our hearts and transforms it into a concrete manifestation of Gifts, Services, Activities, and talents in our personal and communitarian lives.

Hence, for Paul, all are united in the Spirit. There is no room for petty jealousy, envy, division, competition, or discrimination among Christians.

FROM PAUL’S PERSPECTIVE, CERTAIN THINGS OUGHT TO EXIST IN THE CHURCH, THE BODY OF CHRIST.

1. We ought to realise that we need each other. There can be no such thing as isolation or an individual in the Church. Individualism is one of the tragedies of Christianity or the Church in modern times.  

Far too often, people in the Church become so engrossed in the bit of the work. Such that, they are doing and so convinced of its supreme importance that they neglect or even criticize others who have chosen to do other work.

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I did work in a Diocese in Mexico, precisely the Diocese of Ciudad Valles in San Luis Potosí, which has this slogan on the logo of the lay association: “juntos si, solo no”. A Spanish phrase that means “together yes, alone no”. It is a way of overemphasizing the importance of teamwork and Christian unity in the Church.

2. We ought to respect each other. In the body, there is no question of relative importance. If any limb or organ ceases to function, the whole body is thrown out of equilibrium. It is so with the Church.

 “All service ranks the same with God.” Whenever we begin to think about our importance in the Christian Church, the possibility of real Christian unity is gone.

3. We ought to sympathise or empathise with each other. If any part of the body is affected, all the others suffer in sympathy because they cannot help it. The Church is a whole.

WE ARE CHRIST TO THE WORLD TODAY

In a nutshell, Paul is telling us that the unity of the Church despite its diversities is paramount for Christian testimony in the world. The Church as the body of Christ is a metaphorical expression that means that we as its members become and do what Christ did and would do.

In other words, Christ is no longer in this world in the body. Therefore, if he wants a task done within the world, he finds a man who can do it.

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If he wants a child taught, he has to find a teacher to teach him. If he wants a sick person cured, he looks for a doctor or healer to do his work. Likewise, if he wants his story told, he finds a man to communicate it.

We have to be the body of Christ, hands to do his work, feet to run upon his errands, and a voice to speak for him.

Finally, the sense of belonging to the body of Christ creates a deep feeling of supreme glory in every Christian. That is, we are part and parcel of Christ, merely human as we are. We are part of the body of Christ upon the earth.

ESSENTIAL SERVICES THROUGH THE BODY OF CHRIST AND NOT HIERARCHICAL STRUCTURES

At the end of the passage, Paul discusses various forms of gifts, services, and activities in the Church. First and foremost, he mentions the apostles and places them ahead of everything else in the Church community. Why should that be?

The essential qualification of being an apostle was that he must have companied with Jesus during his earthly life and been a witness of the Resurrection (Ac.1:22). This makes them indispensable in the Church.

Later, besides the apostles, Paul added the prophets. Then he mentioned the workers of miracles, healers, teachers, helpers, administrators and speakers of various kinds of tongues. Thereby, he recognized the individuality of the Spirit’s gifts to each one of us. While strongly affirming that there is no individualism or communism of the spiritual gifts. In the view of Paul, all Christians are not apostles, prophets, and teachers and so on. There is always a division of works in the body of Christ, the Church.

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Equally, Paul acknowledges that some parts of the body are never seen. Yet, whose functions are indispensable to others. In the same way, some serve the Church in ways that win no publicity, but without whose service the Church could not go on. Like those who dedicate the time and energy to keep the Church and its environment clean.

ASPIRATION FOR GREATER OR HIGHER GIFTS

In the end, Paul speaks of a great gift than all the others. In his view, all Christians should aspire for this higher gift. It will help control the danger that those who have different Christmas or talents will be at variance with each other. In other words, to avoid this tragedy of self-importance over others in the Christian communities. So that the effective working of the body of Christ will be hindered by petty envy, jealousies and rivalries. Paul invites and admonishes all Christians to aspire for the gifts of faith, hope and love. Unequivocally, he places love as the highest gift of the Holy Spirit to Christendom.

Love is the only thing that can bind the Church into a perfect unity. Hence, Paul went on in 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 to sing the hymn to love. 

THE GOSPEL OF LUKE 1:1-4; 4:14-21

The first part of our gospel text begins with the personal testimony of Luke on the life, message and mission of Christ. Luke made us realize two things essential to present an orderly account of the Jesus Story.

It is most significant that Luke was not satisfied with the story of Christ from others’ accounts. He must have his own experience and rediscover Jesus Christ for himself.

True religion is never a second-hand thing. It is a personal discovery. Therefore, the beauty of the four gospels is that they are accounts of the personal experience of their authors on the person of Christ. 

No passage of the Bible sheds such a floodlight on the doctrine of the inspiration of scripture. No one would deny that the Gospel of Luke is not an inspired document of historical research.

Yet Luke begins by affirming that it is the product of the most careful historical research. God’s inspiration or revelation does not come to the man who sits with folded hands and a lazy mind and only waits. Indeed, God always inspires the man who thinks, seeks, and searches for Him.

True inspiration comes when the seeking mind of man joins with the revealing Spirit of God. The Word of God is given, but it is given to the man who is seeking it: Seek, and you shall find (Matt.7:7).

The second part of today’s Gospel situates us in the context of the beginning of Christ’s public ministry. In the Nazareth synagogue, Jesus cites the prophecy of Isaiah, where the Spirit of God will bring freedom to the poor and the oppressed through him.

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Many biblical scholars view this passage as the Messianic manifesto of Jesus: life, message, and mission as Christ. It was the beginning of his public ministry, according to the Gospel of Luke.

For Luke, this Messianic manifestos of Jesus confirm these actions of the Spirit of God in the individual and communal life of the Church. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he has anointed me to bring glad tidings to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, and to proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord.

Therefore, the mission of Jesus is indeed the mission of every Christian. It is to bring the Good news to the poor; to give liberation to captives; to grant healing to the sick and afflicted; to free the oppressed, and proclaim the year of favour and grace the Lord to all.

FUNDAMENTAL QUESTIONS

What is your relationship with the Word of God? Are you attentive and responsive to it whenever it is proclaimed?

Do you have time to read, reflect and assimilate the Word of God personally?

Do you feel part of the Church: the Mystical Body of Christ? What is your role or function in the overall functioning of the body of Christ, the Church?

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How are you part of or contributing to the mission of Christ to bring good news or favour of the Lord to the poor? Do you participate in the apostolic mission to proclaim freedom to the captives or the oppressed? As well as the recovery of sight to the blind.

How healthy are you as a part of the Mystical Body of Christ the Church?

 OUR PRAYER

Lord Jesus Christ, many of us today have only a handed-down religion that has not become a personal spirituality or faith, lived out incompletely. May your Spirit help us through the riches of your Word to listen, ruminate, absorb, and live it, to nourish our spiritual lives. May we manifest our gifts and talents through personal commitment to Christ in familial, communal, parochial, and ecclesial life. Amen.

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