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Homily from Holy Thursday.
Jesus knew. And He still gave everything.
At the end of Lent, we realize that we have been called to give. To give our time and attention to God in prayer. To give up things in fasting. To give help to those in need. Jesus gives at the Last Supper. He gives everything...fully knowing the truth of the people for whom He gives everything.
John 13:1-15
Welcome to Sunday Homilies with me, Father Mike Schmitz.
I hope today's homily inspires and motivates you, and I also hope that it leaves you hungry
for the one who gave everything to feed you.
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God bless.
The Lord be with you.
And with your spirit.
Are you reading from the Holy Gospel according to John?
Glory to you, O Lord.
Chapter 13 verses 1 through 15.
Before the feast of Passover, Jesus knew that his hour had come to pass from this world
to the Father.
He loved his own in the world, and he loved them to the end.
The devil had already induced Judas son of Simon the Ascariot to hand him over.
So during supper, the fully aware that the Father had put everything in his power, and
that he had come from God and was returning to God.
He rose from supper and took off his outer garments.
He took a towel and tied it around his waist.
Then he poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples' feet and dry them
with the towel around his waist.
He came to Simon Peter who said to him, Master, are you going to wash my feet?
Jesus answered and said to him, what I am doing, you do not understand now, but you
will understand later.
Peter said to him, you will never wash my feet.
Jesus answered him, unless I wash you, you will have no inheritance with me.
Simon Peter said to him, Master, they are not only my feet, but my hands and my head
as well.
Jesus said to him, whoever has bathed, has no need except to have his feet washed, for
he is clean all over.
So you are clean, but not all.
For he knew who would betray him, for this reason he said, not all of you are clean.
So when he had washed their feet and put his garments back on and reclined at table again,
he said to them, do you realize what I have done for you?
You call me teacher and master and rightly so for indeed I am.
If I therefore the master and teacher have washed your feet, you ought to wash one another's
feet.
I have given you a model to follow so that as I have done for you, you should also
do.
The gospel of the Lord, praise to you, Lord Jesus Christ, may you have a seat.
So I remember the very first time I ever met a man in Kirk Cameron, I said, Kirk, I want
to tell you three things.
And I will get that back to that in a little bit.
Tonight is kind of a conclusion of Lent.
We continue it through the next few days, but tonight is the last day, marks this mass
right now, marks the last moments of Lent.
In all of Lent, what is Lent, all through Lent, the word is give, right?
The word is just give.
So prayer and fasting and almsgiving, it's all about giving.
So in prayer, we're giving God time, we're giving God attention.
In fasting, we're giving up something.
And then almsgiving, we're giving help, right?
It's all of the last 40 days have been meant to be marked by that one word give.
We give our time and attention in prayer.
We give up something and fasting.
We give help through almsgiving.
And I imagine that we might get to the end of our day like this, who we are on Holy
Thursday.
And we're like, yeah, I did it or I didn't do it, right?
It's kind of that sense of, okay, the last 40 days, I can look back and think, okay, did
it happen or did it not happen?
Did I check the box or did it not check the box?
Did I accomplish the task or did I not?
Did I do the thing or did I not do the thing?
And sometimes you miss the motive, right?
Sometimes we can say, yeah, I did it, but why did I do it?
Look over the last 40 days.
When you did it, maybe you didn't do it.
But what was your motive?
What was my motive?
I think it's really important we ask this question, not only for our own hearts, but also
because the whole point of life is to be like Jesus.
So here is Jesus.
On this night, especially, we see this so clearly, on this night, Jesus gives, he gives
everything.
In fact, if there's one thing that marks today is the fact that everything is given.
There's Jesus that the last supper and any strips himself of his garments normally would
have a washing of feet in your parish.
They'll have the bishop or your pastor, your priest will strip off the outer garments and
wash people's feet.
We won't do that here today, but they'll do that because why?
Because Jesus, he gave that.
He gave this service.
He gave it, he gave this humility, he gave it, he gave the dignity, stripped himself of
this.
He gave everything that he shared his priesthood with the apostles tonight.
Then he tells them, do this in memory of me, he establishes the priesthood.
Jesus, at the last supper, he gives the Eucharist.
And that is what?
The Eucharist is him, right?
It's his body, blood, soul, and divinity of Jesus.
And so we know this, that Jesus gives on this night, if there's anything to walk away
with, it's the fact that everything is given.
Everything is given.
Here's the question, why?
Why does Jesus give?
The fact I love this because in John's gospel, John give the answer.
He thinks it's so clear.
John even begins this section, this chapter 13, by saying exactly this, that Jesus knew
that his hour had come to pass from this world to the Father.
He loved his own in the world, and he loved them to the end.
The motive of Jesus, like why did he give?
Remember, everything is given.
Why did he give?
What was his motive?
His motive is, he loved his own in the world, and he loved them to the end.
The motive is love.
He'd look over the last 40 days and think, okay, I gave up X, Y, or Z, or I gave time
and attention to the Lord in prayer, or I gave help in some way to people who needed
help.
Why?
Our hearts need to match your actions, and our hearts need to match Jesus' heart.
He, on this night, everything is given.
Why?
He loved his own in the world, and he loved them to the end.
The motive was love.
The motive is love.
Even the very fact that God has given us this, the mash right now, why?
The motive is love.
Having loved his own in the world, he loved them to the end.
He loves you.
But there's something even deeper, that cares Christ's motive is love, and our motive
has to be love.
We also can ask the question, when did Jesus give?
Like you get, remember, remember, on tonight, everything is given.
When did he give?
And John makes it so clear.
He says it kind of twice.
He says, Jesus knew that his hour had come to pass from this world to the Father, and
then later on, he says, fully aware that the Father had put everything into his power
and that he had come from the God and was returning to God.
He took a towel, and that's when he washes their feet.
That's when he gives everything, that's when everything is given, when he was fully aware.
This is so important.
I think we could say like, okay, yeah, God loves me when I'm doing well.
God loves me when I'm good.
God loves me when I behave.
God loves me when I am without flaws, when I'm without faults.
God loves me when I haven't fallen down.
And yet here, it's so clear in the Scriptures, it's so clear in this moment that here is
Jesus, and everything is given, and it's why is it given?
It's because he loves.
And when does he love them?
He loves them.
When he knows all of their, he knows it all.
He knows that they're going to betray.
He knows they're going to run away.
He knows that they're going to fall asleep.
He knows that they're going to deny him in the midst of knowing everything, knowing that
they're going to fail him, knowing that these people, that he loves so much, will not
love him back.
That's the moment.
That's when everything is given.
And this is true for us, right?
I think again, sometimes I think we fall into this trap, set it before, but we fall into
this trap of thinking that our sins disqualify us from God's love, that we fall into this trap
of thinking that our sins surprise God or shock God, and we forget the reality and the
reality is he already knew it when he picked up his cross, on this night, when everything
is given.
Jesus already knew all of our sins, and he did it anyways.
Remember, Scripture says, fully aware, he knows all of it, and it's that moment.
It's that moment that everything is given.
God is, Jesus is under no illusions on this night that if I do this for them, they'll
be perfect.
We know as the truth, I'm doing this for them because they need it, not because they
deserve it.
Here we are.
God loves us because we need it, not because we deserve it.
And He loves us most powerfully and loves us most deeply in the moment we need Him the
most and deserve Him the least.
The moment, the moment we've even told Him we don't want Him, that's the moment when
everything is given.
So I don't know if you know who Kirk Cameron is, but Kirk Cameron was a teen actor, a young
actor, back when I was a kid, and he was on the movie Growing Pains, and it was a big deal,
and he didn't have a number of the Christian movies and whatnot.
He's a Christian.
He comments on things.
Anyways, we were at Pro Life Dinner at one point when I first met him, and we were sitting
at this table, and I said, Kirk Cameron, I want to tell you three things.
And I said, number one, I want to thank you because when I was a high schooler, as a Christian,
as a Catholic, you coming out as a Christian in Hollywood was just like so inspiring to
me.
Like, major actors, people who are really, really popular, who are Christians, and you
were so outspoken in your Christianity, it just really helped me as a high schooler to
know that other someone in Hollywood who also was a Christian, and I just want to thank
you for that.
He said, okay, cool.
I said, number two is my uncle, one of my own uncles, was a writer and a producer of
a TV show that his little sister was on.
His little sister is Candace Cameron, and she was on the TV show Full House, and my uncle
is one of the writers, and a producer is a Full House.
And so then Kirk's other sister was with him at the dinner, and she's like, oh my gosh,
I know your uncle Tom.
I'm like, no way, that's so cool.
It was great.
And I said, the third thing I need to tell you is, your movie Fireproof, he's like, yeah,
he's like, your movie Fireproof, I watch every good Friday during, during Holy Week.
And he's like, really?
So the movie Fireproof is this movie about, he's like, why?
I told him, I said, movie Fireproof is about a man, he's a firefighter, and he's buried
to his wife.
His name is Caleb, her name is Catherine.
Basically, the ultimate upshot of the story is, is a story of a husband who loves his wife
who doesn't love him back.
Like if you want to summarize it in one sentence, but that's the story.
And at first, you know, the story starts up with them having a pretty broken marriage.
Caleb is not great, Catherine is not doing great.
But the ultimate story is of a husband who loves his wife who doesn't love him back.
Part of Catherine's story, back story is, again, it's a cheesy Christian movie, so let's
just give that that out of the way it is.
But I'm telling you, if you watch it, you might be some, might be some tears.
But here's, here's Catherine, her mom has suffering from dementia, her mom has all these
massive medical bills and Caleb, Cameron's character, he can't be bothered to pay her bills
and stuff.
In fact, he's, he's got this private account, a separate account for himself, that he's
been saving up for years.
Basically, his entire working career, his entire life, he's been saving up to buy like
this pretty massive boat.
And this is kind of like his obsession, his like side quest of life.
The story goes on, you know, he's pursuing her, he's loving her, she's kind of flirting
with this doctor at her work.
At one point, she even tells him, I do not love you and it just crushes him.
If you don't, she's like, no, I don't.
There's a story unfolds towards the end, turns out there's an anonymous donor that paid
for all of Catherine's mom's medical bills.
And Catherine's thinking that was must be this wealthy doctor she's been flirting with.
And there's this moment, this dramatic moment where she realizes that it was actually her
husband Caleb who had done this anonymously, like without her knowing it.
He had taken all that he had saved up for his whole career, his whole life, all he had
saved up because he knew that it mattered to his wife's mom and to his wife.
He gave it for her and it'd tell her, but the climax is this.
The climax is the moment she realizes that he gave all that money, he gave everything
he had saved up.
Not only after she had told them, I do not love you, he gave it after she had served
him divorce papers.
After she had said, I want a life apart from you.
I don't want anything to do with you anymore.
That was the moment.
And he knew.
That was the moment that he gave everything.
That's the moment that everything was given.
That was the moment that touched your heart, realizing that he had done all of this, that
everything is given when he was fully aware that she did not love him back and she wanted
a life apart from him.
That was the moment that everything is given.
So I'm talking to Kirk Cameron at this dinner and saying, that's the reason why I watch
every good Friday because we recognize tonight, tonight, everything is given.
And it's given why?
It's given because of love.
It's given when Jesus knew the last thing.
When Jesus knew everything, you and I are ashamed of.
When Jesus knew everything, you and I are embarrassed by.
When Jesus knew everything, you and I hate about ourselves.
When Jesus knew everything about every detail of our lives, that's the moment that he
loved us the most.
When Jesus fully aware in knowing everything about your heart and my heart and your brokenness
and my brokenness, that is the moment when the God of love takes everything he's been
given and everything is given for you.
Sunday Homilies with Fr. Mike Schmitz



