TEXT: 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 9, 2023

July 9, 2023 Father De Celles Homily


The 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time

July 9, 2023

Homily by Fr. John De Celles

St. Raymond of Peñafort Catholic Church

Springfield, VA


Last Tuesday our nation celebrated 247 years of freedom.

As Catholics, it is especially right for us to celebrate that freedom

since we believe that God created us in the beginning

to live in freedom:

In a very real way we are not fully human if we are not free.

And yet, as we celebrate freedom,

particularly in the context of freedom from the yoke of a foreign king,

         we hear Christ telling us that in order to be truly free we must, as He says:

                  “Take My yoke upon you.”


Think about this.

With all the things we think of or experience as “freedom”,

have you ever thought about how free we actually are?


As Americans, we are free to enter any profession we want.

But in a very real way our freedom to do so is limited

by one responsibility or another,

or by lack of financial resources,

or even lack of the requisite intelligence necessary to enter that field.


We are free to buy whatever we want.

But how free are we to buy whatever we want if we don’t have the money?

And even if we have the money to buy the things we want,

         do we really freely choose what we want?

Did you design the clothes you’re wearing,

or are you wearing them because someone else said they’re fashionable?

We let people tell us what to wear all the time.

There’s a kind of limitation of freedom, isn’t there?


We’re also free to hold whatever political beliefs we wish.

But how many of us, freely bind ourselves to this or that

political movement or candidate or media outlet,

and then, almost slavishly believe and follow whatever they decide for us?


These are all very real obstacles to freedom.

But the worst obstacle is summarized in one word: sin.

How many times do we start out to do something good,

but wind up doing the exact opposite?

As St. Paul writes in his letter to the Romans:

“I do not understand my own actions.

For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate.”

Yes, sin is freely chosen, but temptation can be powerfully coercive,

and once chosen, we can easily become its slave.


Now, all of this is not to make you think freedom is an illusion or meaningless,

but rather to remind us that freedom as the world normally thinks of freedom

is never complete, and is always constrained by something.


Unfortunately, the realization of the obstacles to freedom

leads many to think that everything that in anyway

seems to constrain freedom must be removed.

I say “unfortunately” because a lot of things some consider

         to be obstacles or constraints on freedom

actually work to enhance freedom.


For example, the laws of society:

At first glance, laws can seem to deny you the freedom

to do whatever you want,

but in the end they actually promote your freedom.

For instance,

the law says you’re not free to kill other people whenever you want,

but that in turn enhances the freedom of everyone both to live,

and to live without paralyzing fear that someone’s going to kill you.


Or take the case of children.

Children are equal citizens under our American law and constitution.

Yet, we wisely do not give them the freedoms of an adult:

They can’t drink alcohol or sign valid contracts, and they can’t vote.

More importantly, children, especially little children, need parental discipline

—not to constrain their freedom, but to enhance that freedom.

When a child freely runs out to play in traffic,

parents very quickly teach them

they do not have that freedom to get run over,

so they’ll be free to play another day.


And more important still, parents have to teach their kids

the self-discipline that is key to being a free adult.

How many adults that you know seem to be controlled by emotions or appetites,

especially hatred, fear, pride, greed, envy, gluttony or lust?

Are they truly free?


_____

In the end, every human being

must have a set of rules guiding his or her behavior

         that limit their freedom to be foolish or evil

         in order to increase their over-all freedom of life.


These rules are what we call our “moral principles” or “values”.

Nowadays, some would say that we can all figure out

what’s right and wrong on our own,

and don’t need a Church or the Bible or a preacher to teach us about morality.


Now, it’s true that some things are very easy to recognize as right or wrong.

Unfortunately, some are not so easy to recognize,

         and some things that should be easy

still aren’t always recognized like they should be.


And so the Church steps in to remind us.

For example, it seems pretty obvious to us today

that you should feed people who can’t feed themselves.

And yet, throughout the centuries, it’s been the Church

that’s had to constantly remind us.


It seems pretty obvious to us today that man is endowed by his Creator

to certain freedoms and rights.

And yet, again, this comes to us from the Judeo-Christian understanding of man

as being created in the image of God

with God-given rights and freedoms.


With all that, it’s amazing to me how so many, nowadays, attack the Church

as an enemy of freedom

when it teaches that some things that to some seem to enhance freedom,

like contraception, abortion, extra-marital sex and homosexual acts,

in reality, constrain freedom.

For example, in an abortion,

the freedom of a mother to abort destroys the freedom of a baby to live.


___

If all this is true, that on the one hand we’re never completely free in this world,

         and on the other hand that we need rules

to properly order the freedom we have so that freedom will thrive,

         that still leaves us with a lot of questions.

In particular:

Is there any freedom that can be achieved in this world without limitation?

And if so, what rules do we follow

that will enhance that freedom in our lives?


In today’s Gospel we hear Jesus pray to His Father:

“Although you have hidden these things from the wise and the learned,

you have revealed them to little ones.”

The most amazing thing about children is their openness to others,

how they so freely give and receive love.

We see how two little children who are complete strangers

can play like fast friends in the sand box.

This is what Jesus is talking about:

Unless you are willing to LOVE as freely as a child….


And this is the freedom we all seek: the freedom to love.

And what surprise is there in that?

Scripture makes it very clear that man is created

in the image of the God who IS love

—He created us to receive His love and love Him in return.

And in His image He created us as male and female and told us to multiply

—to love family and all the rest of mankind.

In short, man is a creature designed to love.


And so, after the freedom to live,

freedom to love is the most basic of freedoms,

and the freedom most completely realizable on earth.

Because it’s pretty hard to block this freedom—because it’s inside you.

It doesn’t take any money or education,

and opportunities abound at every moment.


Of course, there is one major obstacles to this freedom: sin.

But what is sin but a choice not to love, or to abuse love in some way?

When we yield to the temptation of our own passions,

and let hatred, fear, pride, greed, envy or lust control us.

All these choices not to love are sins.


But as difficult as these obstacles are, they can be overcome,

and the freedom to love can be realized on earth

through the love of Christ.


The love of Christ frees us from sin, and frees us to love.

And the rule or the law that protects our freedom is the law of love:

         “You shall love the Lord your God

with all your heart, soul, mind and strength…

and your neighbor as yourself.”

And that law of love has more specific content, the “rules of love,” so to speak,

the Ten Commandments and the moral teaching of Jesus,  

which help us to know what love truly is,

and what things might destroy love.

And how are you free to exercise a gift if you don’t even know what it is?

And how can we be free to enjoy something by acting to destroy it?


For example, I mentioned before how the prohibition against killing

protects our freedom to live;

that’s the 5th Commandment, “You shall not kill.”

But all the Commandments are like this.

Think about the 6th Commandment, “Thou shall not commit adultery.”

If you exercise a supposed freedom to cheat on your spouse,

         you’ll probably lose your freedom to enjoy the happiness of marriage.

And how will children be free to live and love in a family

if moms and dads are free to abandon or tear apart that family?


And how can we exercise the freedom to marry

if we don’t even understand what marriage is?

Some people today say we’re free to define marriage however we want.

But if we say a wall is a door, we still can’t walk through the wall.

Lies bind and enslave you to illusions, while the truth will set us free.

So the Church, following the words of Jesus himself,

explains the truth about marriage, and so frees us to enjoy it.


___

And so Christ goes on to tell us in today’s Gospel,

“Come to Me, all you who labor and are burdened,

and I will give you rest.”

Come to Me with all the things that deny you the freedom to love,

         to become who you were created to be.

Whether it’s your own sinful choices, or your own limitations,

or the sins of others, or the limitations others impose on you.

Come to Me and I will give you My love, My freedom.


He says,

Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me”:

What does a yoke do?

It guides us in the ways to go.

So Jesus is saying, freely choose to love Me, and to be guided by My love.

And He says, “For I am meek and humble of heart.”

In other words,

Learn from Me because I don’t use My freedom to be prideful or selfish,

but I freely choose to humbly love.

And He says if we do this, if we exchange the burden of sin for the yoke of love,

“You will find rest”—you will find true freedom.


Because, He says, “My yoke is easy, and My burden light”:

         It’s easy and light because this will be the most natural thing in the world for you to do.

Like a bird was created to fly freely in the sky,

you were created to live freely in love, guided by Christ’s love.

Is a bird not free because it has wings that guide it into the air?

If we clip his wings he may be more free to hop around on the ground,

         but he is not free to be what he was born to be.

In the same way, that yoke of Christ’s love frees us to live as we were created, 

         and to be lifted up by His love.


_____

July 4th, 1776, was truly a momentous day

in the history of our nation and the world,

and should be celebrated by all Americans, and, I think, by all mankind.

But let us never use the limited freedom we enjoy and celebrate as an excuse

to lose sight of the most fundamental freedom

God has in mind for all of us: the freedom to love.

Let us, instead, accept the yoke of Jesus Christ, a yoke that is easy and light.

Because it is a yoke of love, that guides in love and to love,

and, thereby, to true, perfect, and everlasting freedom.