“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are equated equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
In reflecting on these words taken from the second paragraph of our nation’s Declaration of Independence, we must say there are many ways in which we are not all equal. Some people enjoy the blessings of material prosperity much more than others. Some people are more academically gifted than others. Some folks enjoy the blessings of health much more than others.
And so we ask the question: how is equality shared among us? The Declaration of Independence says we are all created equal and that we are endowed by our Creator. The fundamental equality that we all share is that each one of us without exception are God’s beloved sons and daughters. The Declaration of Independence has it right when it says we are created equal, and that we are endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these rights are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Indeed the equality envisioned by the founders of this great nation is a Gospel truth that is to be celebrated. We are God’s beloved, and that we are to relate to one another in ways that reflect that equality.
As we celebrate the Fourth of July weekend and as we give thanks to God for the many blessings we enjoy as citizens of this country that we deeply love, it is good to pause and reflect on being American and being Catholic.
For example, what is the freedom we aspire to as Americans and what is the freedom we aspire to as the disciples of Jesus? As Americans, it is easy for us to lose track of the meaning of freedom that was given to us by our founding fathers and mothers.
Sometimes as Americans we think of freedom as the right to self-expression, to express my individuality in any way I wish and at any time I wish. This is my right as an American, thank you very much.
This overly individualistic view of freedom needs to be balanced and corrected by a Gospel sense of freedom and discipleship. As St Paul says, Christ has set us free – free to serve, free to love, free to celebrate that the Kingdom of God is at hand. Freedom for a disciple isn’t just about individualism. It is the freedom to be about building up the Kingdom of God in the here and now; it is the freedom to serve; it is the freedom to wash the feet of God’s poor.
From today’s Gospel, twenty centuries ago, Jesus summoned 72 committed people and sent them, two by two, to communicate God’s love, to bind up wounds, and to be peacemakers in a troubled world. These ordinary people took with them no great plan, no set speech, no “how-to” manual. They brought only their faith, their trust, and their experience of Jesus. Jesus knew they would make mistakes; nevertheless, he involved them in his mission and gave them his authority.
Jesus may have sent them out without purse, bag, and sandals, but he did not send them out without advice. Yes, they were to live simply. The disciples of Jesus are to experience freedom in that simplicity. They are to be missionaries for the reign of God.
Flash forward now twenty centuries to July 7,2019. We are missioned to share in the mission and ministry of Jesus. This is what it means to be a disciple of Jesus. We need to leave the baggage behind that keeps from focusing on our mission of witnessing to the love of Jesus in our community. We need to leave behind the baggage of old hurts, of grudges that we have been holding on too long, of prejudices that keep us from recognizing in our neighbor one of God’s beloved.
The Gospel invites us to reflect on the truth that Jesus sends all of us out to be missionaries. As American Christians, we have a dual citizenship. We certainly are citizens of America; but as baptized disciples of Jesus Christ, we are also citizens of and belong to the Reign of God.
What would it take for us to live by the values by the founders of this great nation and what it take for us to be more faithful to the mission that Jesus gave to His original apostles and disciples?
As we celebrate our nation’s anniversary of our independence, may we remember and celebrate that indeed we are a nation of immigrants; we celebrate the equality we share with one another; we are a nation of welcome and hospitality; we are a nation that fosters peace and provides opportunities for growth for one and all.
May we retain true to these values as Americans.
As disciples, Jesus challenges us in our life’s work, in our relationships, in our personal spirituality to try to instill elements of the Reign of God into American culture. As we celebrate the great nation that we have been blessed with, let us also be aware of the great gift of faith we have been blessed with.
In today’s gospel passage, Jesus appointed 72 others to go ahead of him with news of God’s love and peace. Those 72, in Luke’s view, represented the diverse nations of the world. Jesus’ mission and message were intended for all. That work of evangelization continues throughout history.
In sending out the 72, Luke wants to tell us the mission of Jesus is not only carried forward by the so called experts like priests and religious but it is the responsibility of every believer in Jesus. Each one of us, as the community of the baptized, are missioned to communicate God’s love, bind up the wounds of our brothers and sisters, and we are to be peace-makers in a troubled world.
The mission of the Church is to carry on the mission of Jesus -- to live as Jesus lives, to love as Jesus loves, to forgive as Jesus forgives us. The mission of the Church is to lift us and to affirm the dignity of each and every person – regardless of their race, regardless of their sexual orientation, regardless of their politics, their religion or whatever difference you can possibly think of. Today’s Gospel makes clear that all of us are to be missionaries proclaiming this mission.
We are both Americans who are committed to the values of the founders of this great nation. We are also the disciples of Jesus committed to binding the wounds of our brothers and sisters and we are to be peace-makers in a troubled world.