The Sixteenth
Sunday in Ordinary Time (C)
Dear
brothers and sisters,
Saint
Paul presents to us today the goal and purpose of presenting to God the Father
everyone perfect in Christ (cf. Colossians 1:28). If you have been watching the
sidewalks these past few days, you have no doubt noticed a greater number of
people walking about than usual. Have you taken notice of them? Have you
wondered how you can help them attain perfection in Christ?
I
have noticed them as I looked out my windows for a brief break in the tedious process
of unpacking. What is perhaps most unusual about the increased pedestrian
traffic in various stages of perfection in Christ is that most of these people are
walking about in groups, looking intently together at their smart phones.
Something of a group activity has surprisingly and suddenly taken these United
States by storm. This activity, of course, is the recently released game,
Pokémon Go.
I
first became familiar – albeit only loosely – with Pokémon some twenty years
ago when I worked in a toy store in my hometown. Children came into the store
with some frequency to buy Pokémon cards, always looking for a new monster to
collect and trade with their friends. These children are young adults today,
and are now wandering about our parks and sidewalks collecting digital Pokémon
because, as the motto of the game says, they’ve “gotta catch ‘em all!”
Not
only has Pokémon Go gotten people of all ages walking around with their family
and friends and talking with one another and with strangers, it has also gotten
some people to go to places they have not visited in rather a long time. One
young man in New York, Calvin, who seems to live a life rather contrary to the Gospel,
wrote on his Twitter account, “Pokémon Go is the first thing that’s willingly
got me to go into a church in about 10 years.”[1] Calvin is not alone in this
because many churches are, for the purposes of the game, PokeStops, places
where players can collect points and items for the game. Here at St. Agnes, we
have two PokeStops, one at the bell tower and one at the sign along Amos
Avenue; the Catholic Pastoral Center, just down the street, is a PokeGym where
the monsters collected by players can be trained for combat. Why do I bring all
of this up today? What does this have to do with the Gospel of Jesus Christ?
Though
the answer may be a bit surprising to some, it is really quite simple. When
Pope Saint Gregory I the Great sent Saint Augustine of Canterbury to evangelize
the English people, he told him to “baptize” what was good in their pagan
culture and use it in his attempt to convert the English to Christianity, that
is, to bring them to perfection in Christ. Though many now criticize some of
the foolish ways people are playing Pokémon Go and the consequences of a lack
of due attention on the part of some, we should look instead to see what is
good in it, to “baptize” it, and to use it in the service of the Gospel.
In
one of his dreams, Saint John Bosco saw one of his first students appear to
him. The student told Don Bosco that something was missing in the way his
priests and bothers related to the boys under their charge. The former student
told the saintly patron of youth ministry, “It is not enough that they boys
should be loved: they themselves must know they are loved.” To this, Saint John
asked, “But haven’t they eyes in their heads? Haven’t they intelligence? Do
they not see that all that is done for them is done for love of them?” The
student, in effect, told him no. When Don Bosco asked how the boys would know
they were loved, the former student answered him with great simplicity and
profundity: “Let them love what the boys like, and the boys will come to love
what the Superiors like.”[2]
What
is it, then, that the Church should love about Pokémon Go? What good is there
in the game that can be “baptized”? The answer to both questions, I dare say,
is found in the game’s motto: “Gotta catch ‘em all!” In this motto is found a
purpose, a goal, an ambition: the players set out in search of Pokémon they
have not yet caught. Pokémon players strive to catch all of the Pokémon, the monsters. We, dear brothers and sisters,
are also called to “catch ‘em all,” though we are not called to catch all of
the Pokemon, but the Pokémon players; we must set out to catch them all and to help
bring them to perfection in Christ.
Did
our Lord not say, “I will make you fishers of men” (Matthew 4:19; Mark 1:17;
cf. Luke 5:10)? Did he not command us, “Go therefore and make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you” (Matthew28:19-20)? Is it not our Lord’s will “that all men be saved and come to the
knowledge of the truth” (I Timothy 2:4)? How will they come to the knowledge of
the truth, how will they come to know Jesus, unless we talk with them about him?
How, then, can we watch people catching Pokémon at our churches without
striving to catch the catchers? To simply watch them walk by would be absurd
and contrary to our mission as baptized members of the Body of Christ.
Echoing
what Saint John Bosco learned in his dream, Blessed Pope Paul VI explained the
mission of evangelization as
bringing the Good
News into all the strata of humanity, and through its influence transforming
humanity from within and making it new… But there is no new humanity if there
are not first of all new persons renewed by Baptism and by lives lived
according to the Gospel. The purpose of evangelization is therefore precisely
this interior change, and if it had to be expressed in one sentence the best
way of stating it would be to say that the Church evangelizes when she seeks to
convert, solely through the divine power of the message she proclaims, both the
personal and collective consciences of people, the activities in which they
engage, and the lives and concrete milieu which are theirs.[3]
This
task does not belong solely to clergy and religious; rather, it belongs to everyone
who has been baptized into Christ because “all Christ’s faithful have the
obligation and the right to strive so that the divine message of salvation may
more and more reach all people of all times and all places” (c. 211). We must,
then, be engaged in the lives of those around us, of our family, friends, and
neighbors, so that we might lead them ever deeper into the mystery of him who
is “the way and the truth and the life,” but how do we do this (John 14:6)?
First,
we must love what they love, even a game on a smart phone. The Apostle Paul
says, “I have become all things to all men, that I might by all means save
some. I do it all for the sake of the gospel, that I may share in its
blessings” (I Corinthians 9:22-23). We must make these words our own by
befriending them with a friendship that can lead to perfection in Christ. We
must be willing to say to them, as His Excellency the Most Reverend David
Ricken, Bishop of Green Bay, tweeted, “You might never find a Pikachu, but I
promise you this – Search for Jesus, and you’ll find Him every time.”[4]
Second,
we must be bold. When was the last time you asked someone, “Why aren’t you
Catholic?” Of course, before asking this question we must each have an answer
ourselves. When did you last invite someone to join you at Mass? When was the
last time you offered to pray for someone? This is what disciples of the Lord
Jesus do.
We
are often afraid to talk about Jesus with others because we fear what they will
think of us, but how many times does Jesus tell us not to be afraid? Those who,
like Mary, sit at the feet of the Master and choose the better part will
understand this (cf. Luke 10:42) Those who follow Mary’s example will be filled
with peace, a peace the world cannot give (cf. John 14:27). Those who sit at
the feet of Jesus will receive a generous heart filled with the love of God and
of neighbor; they will keep Jesus’ word and share it with others, bringing
about a great harvest through their perseverance in proclaiming the Gospel of
love and mercy (cf. Luke 8:15). They will rejoice in whatever sufferings they
endure because of their speaking about Jesus’ love (cf. Colossians 1:24).
Our
heavenly patron, Saint Agnes, did not fear what others thought of her faith and
of her fidelity to Christ. Rather, she spoke courageously and confidently of
her love for Jesus and refused to renounce him even on pain of death. Because
we “gotta catch ‘em all,” let us implore her intercession so that by the
assistance of her prayers we might imitate her faith and so present to God the
Father everyone perfect in Christ. Amen.
[1] Calvin (@aurosan), 10 July 2016.
Quoted by Mary Reznac in “Pokemon Go app draws people everywhere, including
into church,” Crux.com, 12 July 2016. Accessed 15 July 2016. Available at
https://cruxnow.com/cna/2016/07/12/pokemon-go-app-draws-people-everywhere-including-church/
[2] Saint John Bosco, Biographical Memoirs, Vol. XVII, Ch.
III. In Forty Dreams of St. John Bosco:
From Saint John Bosco’s Biographical Memoirs (Charlotte, North Carolina:
TAN Books, 1996).
[3]
Blessed Pope Paul VI, Evangelii Nuntiandi,
18.
[4] Bishop David Ricken, Tweet at 7:59
p.m. on 11 July 2016. Accessed 15 July 2016. Available at
https://twitter.com/BpDavidRicken/status/752668702743621632
Good homily, Father! You've made me think, given me something to chew on.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Steve!
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