“Rebuild My
House” (Haggai 1:1-8)
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by Father Raniero Cantalamessa
Father Raniero
Cantalamessa, Preacher to the Papal
Household, delivered a sermon to the
General Synod of the Church of England
on November 24, 2015 in Westminster
Abbey during a service to mark the
inauguration of the 10th
five-year-term of the Church of
England's General Synod.
The
Word of God remains
forever alive
Few prophetic oracles in the Old Testament can
be dated so precisely as that of Haggai, which
we have just heard in the first reading. We
can place it between August and December in
the year 520 BC. The exiles, after the
deportation to Babylon, have come back to
rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem. They set to
work, but soon grow discouraged, each
preferring to work on his own house instead.
Into this situation comes the prophet Haggai,
sent by God with the message we have heard [reading from Haggai 1:1-8].
The Word of God, once it is proclaimed,
remains forever alive; it transcends
situations and centuries, each time casting
new light. The situation deplored by the
prophet is renewed in history each time we are
so absorbed in the problems and interests of
our own parish, diocese, community – and even
of our particular Christian denomination -
that we lose sight of the one house of God,
which is the Church.
The prophecy of Haggai begins with a reproof,
but ends, as we heard, with an exhortation and
a grandiose promise: “Go up into the hills,
fetch timber and rebuild the House, and I
shall take pleasure in it and manifest my
glory there” - says the Lord” (Haggai 1:8).
Fifth
centenary of the Protestant Reformation
One circumstance makes this point particularly
relevant. The Christian world is preparing to
celebrate the fifth centenary of the
Protestant Reformation. It is vital for the
whole Church that this opportunity is not
wasted by people remaining prisoners of the
past, trying to establish each other’s rights
and wrongs. Rather, let us take a qualitative
leap forward, like what happens when the
sluice gates of a river or a canal enable
ships to continue to navigate at a higher
water level.
The situation has dramatically changed since
then. We need to start again with the person
of Jesus, humbly helping our contemporaries to
experience a personal encounter with Him. “All
things were created through him and for him”;
Christ is the light of the world, the one who
gives meaning and hope to every human life –
and the majority of people around us live and
die as if He had never existed! How can we be
unconcerned, and each remain “in the comfort
of our own panelled houses”? We should never
allow a moral issue like that of sexuality
divide us more than love for Jesus Christ
unites us.
“We
preach Christ crucified”
We need to go back to the time of the
Apostles: they faced a pre-Christian world,
and we are facing a largely post-Christian
world. When Paul wants to summarise the
essence of the Christian message in one
sentence, he does not say, “I proclaim this or
that doctrine to you.” He says, “We preach
Christ crucified” (1 Cor 1:23), and “We preach
. . . Jesus Christ as Lord” (2 Cor 4:5). This
is the real “articulus stantis et cadentis
Ecclesiae”, the article by which the Church
stands or falls.
This does not mean ignoring the great
theological and spiritual enrichment that came
from the Reformation or desiring to go back to
the time before it. It means instead allowing
all of Christianity to benefit from its
achievements, once they are freed from certain
distortions due to the heated atmosphere of
the time and of later controversies.
Justification
by faith versus self-justification!
Justification by faith, for example,
ought to be preached by the whole Church—and
with more vigour than ever. Not in opposition
to good works – the issue is already settled -
but rather in opposition to the claim of
people today that they can save themselves
thanks to their science, technology or their
man-made spirituality, without the need for a
redeemer coming from outside humanity.
Self-justification! I am convinced that if
they were alive today this is the way Martin
Luther and Thomas Cranmer would preach
justification through faith!
Unity is not a simple matter. One has to start
with the big Churches, those that are well
structured, putting together that which unites
them, which is vastly more important than what
divides them; not imposing uniformity but
aiming at what pope Francis calls “reconciled
diversities”. Nothing is more important than
to fulfill Christ’s heart desire for unity
expressed in today’s gospel. In many parts of
the world people are killed and churches
burned not because they are Catholic, or
Anglican, or Pentecostals, but because they
are Christians. In their eyes we are already
one! Let us be one also in our eyes and in the
eyes of God.
The Anglican Church has a special role in all
of this. It has often defined itself as a “via
media” (a Middle Way) between Roman
Catholicism and Reformed Christianity. From
being a “via media” in a static sense, it must
now become more and more a via media in a
dynamic sense, exercising an active function
as a bridge between the Churches. The presence
among you of a priest of the Catholic Church,
in circumstances of such special significance,
is a sign that something of the kind is
already happening.
Take
courage now – the Lord is with you
Let us conclude by returning to the text of
Haggai. After the people of Israel, in
obedience to the prophet’s invitation, had
returned with renewed fervour to the task of
rebuilding the temple, God sent His prophet
again, this time with a message full of hope
and consolation:
“But take courage now, Zerubbabel –
it is the Lord who speaks, courage, Joshua,
son of Jehozadak, high priest; courage, all
you people of the country – it is the Lord who
speaks. To work! I am with you, the Lord of
hosts declares; and my Spirit is present among
you. Do not be afraid!” (Haggai 2, 4-5).
Zerubbabel was the political
leader at the time, and Joshua the religious
leader. I believe that the Lord wanted me to
be among you today, above all to tell you that
He is addressing this same message to you, at
the inauguration of your Synod and also in
view of the meeting planned for next January
between the leaders of the entire Anglican
communion: “Take courage, Your Majesty,
Sovereign of this nation, courage, Justin,
Archbishop of Canterbury, courage Sentamu,
Archbishop of York, courage, you bishops,
clergy and laity of the Church of England! To
work, because I am with you. Says the Lord!”
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Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa,
O.F.M. Cap. (born July 22, 1934) is
an Italian Catholic priest in the
Order of Friars Minor Capuchin. He
has devoted his ministry to
preaching and writing. He is a
Scripture scholar, theologian, and
noted author of numerous books.
Since 1980 he has served as the
Preacher to the Papal Household
under Pope John Paul II, Pope
Benedict XVI, and Pope Francis. He
is a noted ecumenist and frequent
worldwide speaker, and a member of
the Catholic Delegation for the
Dialogue with the Pentecostal
Churches.
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