
Fr.
John Ryan
TWENTY SIXTH
SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME
30th September 2007
Paul's first letter to Timothy is rich with advice. In the passage
presented to us today there are a number of suggestions made.
You must aim to be upright and religious, filled with faith and love,
perseverance and gentleness. Fight the good fight of faith and win the
eternal life to which you were called and for which you made your noble
profession of faith before many witnesses. Now, before God, the source
of all life, and before Jesus Christ, who witnessed to his noble profession
of faith before Pontius Pilate, I charge you to do all that you have
been told with no faults or failures, until the appearing of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
A blueprint for ministry, it is a succinct description of what is necessary
to be an effective and enriched shepherd of God's people. Rooted in
the profession of faith, our lives are to be directed towards the ultimate
goal - eternal life. In living in this world we must have our eyes towards
the next. It doesn't mean that we renege on our duties and responsibilities
but we need to put them into context. This world is not the be-all and
end-all. It is the journey to the God who is the source of all life.
When we profess our faith we launch ourselves fully on that journey.
In acknowledging God we begin the adventure of faith, the exploration
of the life given to us to live. Our profession of faith was made on
our behalf by our parents and godparents at our Baptism; we renewed
it ourselves at Confirmation - these are the two major sacramental moments
of dedication to the Father, Son and Spirit, public proclamations that
God means something to us and we wish to respond to his revelation.
However, every time we say the creed we make that profession of faith
as well and it is done in a public setting on Sunday during the celebration
of the Eucharist. If this is truly a profession of faith then we must
reflect on what it says. We must know what it is we are professing.
And more importantly, knowing what we are expressing, what we are stating
has to lead to action. It has to be real; otherwise, it is only a collection
of words and not a true profession. If it is a true profession then
it will bolster us, focus us on being upright, filled with faith and
love persevering and gentle - mirroring the God we believe in. To say
'I believe in God, the Father Almighty ..and in Jesus Christ his only
Son our Lord ..and in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the Giver of Life'
and then not follow the precepts of the Lord, see Jesus as the model
and inspiration of right living and recognise that the Spirit dwells
within us, making us sacred is to miss the point of the profession of
faith.
More space than this would be needed to tease out the ramifications
of the creedal statements. They are rich with meaning and deserve to
be reflected upon. When we reflect on what we profess and allow it to
sink in we create the foundation for those attributes proposed by Paul
for good living. Such reflection would help to engage us is dialogue
with Jesus himself and focusing on God and his love for us.