Preaching and Proclaiming with Christ the Good News of the Kingdom of God, 24th Friday (I), September 19, 2025

Fr. Roger J. Landry
National Assembly of the Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious
Basilica of the Old Cathedral of St. Louis, Saint Louis, Missouri
Friday of the 24th Week in Ordinary Time, Year I
September 19, 2025
1 Tim 6:2-12, Ps 49, Lk 8:1-3

To listen to an audio recording of today’s homily, please click below: 

 

The following text guided the homily: 

  • As we enter together more deeply in this National Assembly into the reality of our being pilgrims of hope and witnesses even now of the life of the world to come, and celebrate this special votive Mass for the Holy Year of Hope, we are providentially given today’s readings, which teach us three crucial lessons of this journey of hope together with Christ Jesus our hope (1 Tim 1:1).
  • The first lesson is about the initial proclamation of hope that Christ came into the world to give. In today’s short Gospel, we see Jesus’ peripatetic preaching, journeying from one town to another preaching and proclaiming the good news of the Kingdom. This was a snapshot of his ordinary life, what occupied most of his days. He was announcing the kingdom and inviting people to enter. In the midst of all of their sufferings, hardships and up-until-then centuries of unfilled hopes awaiting the Messiah, awaiting God’s saving interaction in history, he was proclaiming the good news of the Kingdom of God. He was helping them to see that Sacred Scripture was being fulfilled in their hearing, inviting them to strive to enter through the narrow gate, encouraging them to buy the treasure buried in a field and selling everything they have for the precious pearl of the kingdom. The Kingdom of God, as Pope Benedict loved to say, is God. It means that God is present and the ultimate criterion of life. And that God had taken our humanity and was journeying in their streets inviting them to come, follow him.
  • The second lesson is that he wasn’t preaching and proclaiming the Gospel alone. He was accompanied first by those whom he had chosen to be with him so that he might then send them out (Mk 3:14). These twelve disciples whom he named and formed as apostles, he had already bestowed his power and authority over all demons and to cure diseases and had sent them to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal the sick and they went out on their first missionary journey, journeying from village to village, proclaiming the good news and curing diseases everywhere. Today we see Jesus taking out these apostolic year novices on his own missionary journey.
  • But they were not the only ones with Jesus. St. Luke adds a very important detail. He said that some women were accompanying Jesus and the apostles, women who had received Jesus’ healing power — they had “been cured of evil spirits and infirmities” — and wanted to spend their life, with faith and constancy, assisting him to heal others and raise them up. Three get named — Mary Magdalene, Joanna, the wife of Herod Antipas’ epitropos or money man Chuza, and Susanna — but Luke also says “and many others,” who “provided for them out of their resources.” They couldn’t preach; that was unheard of in Judaism and Jewish culture, but rather that lament what they couldn’t do, they were doing all they can to make possible, and share in, the preaching and proclamation of the Kingdom of God. These women were the ones who, to some degree, were making possible Jesus’ and the apostles’ preaching, so that Jesus everyday wouldn’t have to multiply loaves and fish, so that they wouldn’t have to appall the hypersensitive Scribes and the Pharisees by plucking heads of grain while walking through the fields. Like the widow with her two lepta placed in the Temple treasury, these three-plus-many women were giving all they had to help Jesus and the apostles proclaim, manifest and bring the Kingdom of God that was at hand. They were the ones who were providing drink to lubricate Jesus’ and the apostles’ vocal cords. They were the ones who were making sure that they would have the necessary bread within their bodies to be able to preach that man doesn’t live on bread alone but on every word that comes from God’s mouth. This was not a group of bored do-gooders who figured that these wandering 13 men would be lost without their feminine genius and maternal practicality. Having received much from the mercy of Jesus, like the woman we met yesterday in Simon the Pharisee’s house, they loved much, and they wanted to give Jesus and his mission all the love, time and the material goods they could. They’re a model for all of us in making the choice to serve God rather than mammon and to use whatever resources we have for the building up of the kingdom. They are witnesses of the first beatitude, showing us true poverty in spirit, for theirs, their treasure, was the kingdom of God.
  • We are here in this historical Basilica of St. Louis, the first Cathedral west of the Mississippi, the seat of what was once known as the Rome of the West. In the 1700s, the French-Canadian Catholic settlers who had arrived with and after the great Jesuit missionary Father Jacques Marquette were part of the Diocese of Havana Cuba. After the American Revolution, Pope Pius VI established the Diocese of Louisiana and the Two Floridas, based in New Orleans, a vast jurisdiction that went from the Florida Keys all the way through the territory of what would become in 1803 the Louisiana Purchase to the Canadian border. For reasons of personal safety, the Bishop of the Diocese at the time, Bishop Louis Dubourg moved here for nine years from 1815-24. When he was given Bishop Joseph Rosati as an auxiliary, Dubourg moved back to Louisiana and kept Rosati here. Two years later, Pope Leo XII split the vast Diocese into two and made Rosati the first bishop of St. Louis. He then set out to build a Cathedral, the very Church that we’re in. And how did he do it? With the help of women, who, like those named in the Gospel, provided for the Church out of their resources. Most of the resources came from the Society of the Propagation of the Faith, which had just been founded by Blessed Pauline Jaricot in Lyons, France a few years before. Wanting to help the missions in Florida and China, she got together circles of ten women at a time, first in her father’s factory and then all over France, who would pray every day for the missions and contribute one sou or penny a week. As the circles expanded so did the support. The first contributions of the Society came to care for the Diocese of Louisiana and the Two Floridas and the Diocese of Bardstown, Kentucky. When Bishop Rosati wanted to build this Cathedral, he appealed to her and that solicitation did not go in vain. The women of the Society of the Propagation of the Faith generously donated from their weekly collection of sous the equivalent of a vast sum that made this building possible.
  • In every age the Church is built not just on the work of missionaries, and preachers, and bishops and priests, but on the sacrifices, contributions, the prayers and financial sacrifices of women like those in the Gospel. And so important for the growth of the Church in the United States and across the globe has been the inestimable contribution of religious women. During Bishop Dubourg’s brief stay here, he made the extremely consequential move of inviting the Society of the Sacred Heart in France to open schools here and soon thereafter St. Rose Philippine Duchesne arrived with other sisters and helped build the Church and make it strong. Later he invited the Sisters of Loreto. Rosati in his first day invited the Daughters of Charity. The Rome of the West wasn’t built in a day, but it grew strong and fast thanks to the total dedication to Christ and his kingdom of these heroic religious women. And that’s an image of the way of how the Church was built in the United States, through the dedicated labors of so many congregations of women religious, preaching and proclaiming the reality of the Kingdom of God in the school, college and university classrooms, at bedsides, in orphanages, in food pantries and more. The Church Christ established is not just grammatically feminine in every language that gives nouns a gender. It’s Marian before it’s Petrine. Before Jesus was able to say, “This is my Body given for you,” Mary said, “This is my body, given for you.” This Basilica is a living reminder of the sturdy feminine infrastructure of the Church, stretching back beyond the apostolic age to the scene we see in today’s Gospel. This Basilica has been since 1834 a station on the pilgrim Church’s journey, where generations of Catholics have been spiritually nourished and filled with hope as they’ve made their journey not just westward but simultaneously upward toward the heavenly Jerusalem.
  • The third lesson of hope from today’s readings is about teaching. St. Paul writes the young St. Timothy urging him at the beginning of today’s first reading, “Teach and urge these things.” He reminded him that there were many teaching “something different” that did “not agree with the sound words of our Lord Jesus Christ,” whose so-called “religious teaching” was “conceited, understanding nothing,” and led to “arguments, verbal disputes, envy, rivalry, insults, evil suspicions and mutual friction among people with corrupted minds … deprived of truth.” Among those were the religious mercenaries who “suppose[ed] religion to be a means of gain” who out of “love of money… strayed from the faith.” St. Paul was instructing his beloved spiritual son to “teach and urge” what Paul as of the first importance had passed on to him about all that Christ had taught, proclaimed and done. He encouraged him to fight the good fight of faith, to compete with “righteousness, devotion, faith, love, patience, and gentleness, … lay[ing] hold of eternal,” to which, Paul reminds him, “he was called when [he] made the noble confession of faith in the presence of many witnesses.” St. Timothy, as we know, continued to make that noble profession. He continued to teach and urge the things of the truth and to form others to know, live and share that truth.
  • In this Jubilee of Hope, we are marking with great joy the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea. Pope Leo this November will go to Turkey so that, together with Patriarch Bartholomew and Christian leaders from throughout the globe, they can renew the Symbol of Nicaea and Constantinople that was put together 17 centuries ago this summer. It was composed in response to the Alexandrian priest Arius who was teaching “something different” than the “sound words of our Lord Jesus Christ.” He was precisely denying the great source of Christian hope because he was denying the divinity of Jesus. If St. Paul would write the Ephesians that they before Gospel was brought to them were living “without hope” because they were “living without God in the world,” then hope means, as Pope Benedict suggested in Spe Salvi, “living with God in the world.” Arianism was extinguishing Christian hope by trying to water down the Gospel, by trying to change the deposit of faith and make it less challenging. The Council of Nicaea addressed it head on, condemned Arianism and proclaimed the faith especially by giving us this Symbol or Creed Christians have prayed ever since. This Creed, therefore, is not just a symbol of faith but of hope, proclaiming that God is with us: God the Father who loves us; God the Son, Light from Light, True God from true God, who for us and our salvation came down from heaven and by the power of the Holy Spirit was born of the Virgin Mary and became man, who died for us, rose, ascended and will return; God the Holy Spirit, the personal mutual love of the Father and the Son, the giver of life who continues to speak with tongues of fire, reminding us of everything Jesus has taught and leading us into all truth. The Creed similarly fills us hope because of the reality of the one, holy, Catholic and apostolic Church founded by Christ and led by the Holy Spirit. It fills us with hope because of the trust we place in the promises Jesus has made about meaning of our baptism, of the possibility of the forgiveness of our sins, of the resurrection of our aging bodies, and of life everlasting, our great hope. Today St. Paul does not just say to St. Timothy, “Teach and urge these things” but he urges us to teach and urge others to embrace the life changing truth of the Gospel, the reality of the Kingdom, and of the King, who is the Way, Truth, Resurrection and Life.
  • Today at Mass the same Jesus who journeyed from one town and village to another, preaching and proclaiming the good news of the Kingdom of God will come from heaven to Saint Louis to us. Accompanying him spiritually are 11 of the 12 apostles interceding for us, of we pray the women named in the Gospel and “many others” who are providing for the Church on earth out of the enormous resources of their prayers. Jesus comes to strengthen us in this historic parish or “hostel” along the journey of the Church’s pilgrimage on earth, as we commit ourselves to continue his mission of going from one town and village to another, preaching and proclaiming the good news of his Kingdom any and every way we can.

 

The readings for today’s Mass were: 

Reading 1

Beloved:
Teach and urge these things.
Whoever teaches something different
and does not agree with the sound words of our Lord Jesus Christ
and the religious teaching
is conceited, understanding nothing,
and has a morbid disposition for arguments and verbal disputes.
From these come envy, rivalry, insults, evil suspicions,
and mutual friction among people with corrupted minds,
who are deprived of the truth,
supposing religion to be a means of gain.
Indeed, religion with contentment is a great gain.
For we brought nothing into the world,
just as we shall not be able to take anything out of it.
If we have food and clothing, we shall be content with that.
Those who want to be rich are falling into temptation and into a trap
and into many foolish and harmful desires,
which plunge them into ruin and destruction.
For the love of money is the root of all evils,
and some people in their desire for it have strayed from the faith
and have pierced themselves with many pains.

But you, man of God, avoid all this.
Instead, pursue righteousness, devotion,
faith, love, patience, and gentleness.
Compete well for the faith.
Lay hold of eternal life,
to which you were called when you made the noble confession
in the presence of many witnesses.

R. Blessed the poor in spirit; the Kingdom of heaven is theirs!
Why should I fear in evil days
when my wicked ensnarers ring me round?
They trust in their wealth;
the abundance of their riches is their boast.
R. Blessed the poor in spirit; the Kingdom of heaven is theirs!
Yet in no way can a man redeem himself,
or pay his own ransom to God;
Too high is the price to redeem one’s life; he would never have enough
to remain alive always and not see destruction.
R. Blessed the poor in spirit; the Kingdom of heaven is theirs!
Fear not when a man grows rich,
when the wealth of his house becomes great,
For when he dies, he shall take none of it;
his wealth shall not follow him down.
R. Blessed the poor in spirit; the Kingdom of heaven is theirs!
Though in his lifetime he counted himself blessed,
“They will praise you for doing well for yourself,”
He shall join the circle of his forebears
who shall never more see light.
R. Blessed the poor in spirit; the Kingdom of heaven is theirs!

R. Alleluia, alleluia.
Blessed are you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth;
you have revealed to little ones the mysteries of the Kingdom.
R. Alleluia, alleluia.

Gospel

Jesus journeyed from one town and village to another,
preaching and proclaiming the good news of the Kingdom of God.
Accompanying him were the Twelve
and some women who had been cured of evil spirits and infirmities,
Mary, called Magdalene, from whom seven demons had gone out,
Joanna, the wife of Herod’s steward Chuza,
Susanna, and many others
who provided for them out of their resources.

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