Sermon Notes – September 11, 2022 – “God Loves Them More Than You Do”

“God Loves Them More Than You Do”

Father Peter Fitzgibbons

 September 10 – 11, 2022

Gospel:  Luke 15: 1-32

The other day I was making my rounds at the VA hospital, and one of the nurses told me that there was a new addition to Hospice.  I said “Okay” and I went in to the patient’s room.  He didn’t look good at all and won’t make it through the weekend Although they gave him two years in the original diagnosis, his doctors helped him get six years beyond that.  He got eight years when he was supposed to have two.  That shows you how well medicine works.  But now he was on his way to see the Savior.  I was talking to his wife and his sister-in-law was also there.  Very nice and sweet people.  I told them that I needed to ask them some questions because I have to do a Chaplain’s Spiritual Assessment for every patient who comes in.  Mostly, it’s creative writing on my part.  One of the questions is “Do you have any end-of-life issues?”   So how long have you had this chaplain gig?  End-of-life issue means end of life.  Yeah, I’ve got a real issue with that!  Are you crazy?   But they want something in the file, so I create a narrative of what’s happening with the patient to make the hospital happy.  If they don’t see it, they get a little antsy.   So, I asked his wife if he had any particular religion.  She said no.   Did he go to church when he was able?”   No.  He was a very interesting man, and I wish I had met him before he became so ill.  I may have crossed paths with him in the first Gulf War.  His job was explosive ordinance disposal and he disassembled mines and bombs.  He wasn’t exactly the nervous type before that – maybe afterward – but not before.  He was pretty good at his job because he survived it.  And he was blessed because he got a disease – none of us know when we will contract one – and he lived well beyond the original diagnosis.  You never know.  I told him and his family that I would come back to visit on my afternoon rounds.   So, I continued my rounds, visiting other patients.  I ran into the nurse practitioner for Hospice, and she asked me if I had seen the new Hospice patient and given him Last Rites.  I said, “No, he’s not Catholic.  His wife said he is Christian.”    She said, “Well, according to our records, he’s Catholic.”   Okay.  So, after lunch I went on my afternoon rounds, and the wife and sister-in-law were not in the room.  I looked around to make sure the coast was clear and gave the man the Last Rites.  And just as I was finishing, his wife and sister-in-law walked in.  Whew!  I snuck that one in!  I accomplished the mission. . .by any means necessary.  I told the nurse manager what I did, but it was never written down because we didn’t want to cause any more problems.  I’m a real certified weasel, but I’m a weasel for Christ.   

This is how much God loves us.  I have people come up to me all the time, and rightly so, asking for prayers for family members, loved one, needs, worries, fears, and all sorts of troubles we are prone to.  I’m happy to pray for them, but I try to tell them, if I remember, that no matter how much you love this person, God loves him or her much more.  That’s why God created them in His image and likeness.  That’s why He suffered and died for them.  That’s why He is constantly running after them to beg them to embrace Him and His love.  God never gives up.  Read the “Hounds of Heaven,” a poem by Francis Thompson.  God is always running after us, so much is His great love, that even at the moment of death if we say we are sorry for our sins just because we are afraid of dying and the eternal fires of hell and not because we are particularly sorry for them, God forgives us.  That is sufficient and God will forgive us.  Remember the 6th prayer from the Cross: “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.”  One of the greatest experiences of God’s love is His mercy.

Saint John Vianney, known as the Curé d’Ars, is the patron saint for parish priests.  God’s gift to him was that he could read souls.  One day, he was walking along a road in France in an area where his parish was located.  A woman approached him and said, “Curé, you know my husband died.”  Father Vianney said, “Yes.” The woman said, “He fell off a bridge and drowned.  He’s in hell, isn’t he?”  Saint Vianney said, “I don’t know.”   The woman yelled, “You can read souls!  Why don’t you know?  He beat me, he drank, he gambled. . .“  She had a whole laundry list of how bad her husband had been.  “So, he’s in hell, isn’t he?”  Saint Vianney replied, “I don’t know.  There’s a long time from when he left the bridge and when he hit the water.”

Even in that short span of time, he could have said, “I’m sorry,” and that would have been sufficient.  Perfect contrition is if you say “I’m sorry” because you love God.   Imperfect contrition is if you said it because you don’t want to go to hell.  Even so, that is sufficient to receive God’s forgiveness.  So much does He love us.   He sees all our trials, worries, and concerns about those who are near and dear to us.  But remember, God loves them more than you do, and He will never, ever give up on them as long as they have a breath in them.

Father’s Afterthoughts. . .
My day is never dull.  There is always something interesting going on here.  Today, I had a wedding, and the bride came up in a carriage drawn by horses.  I got to pet the horses.  I love horses!  I’m still six years old.  Quoting Sir Winston Churchill, Doctor Eddins, a local physician, said, “There is something about the outside of a horse that is good for the inside of a man.”

How will you apply this message to your life?  ________________________________________

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You can read all of Father Fitzgibbons’ sermons by going to annunciationcatholicalbemarle.com and clicking on “Blog” then “Categories” then “Sermon Notes.”  On a cell phone: click on “Blog” then “Menu” and then “Categories”


Sermon Notes – September 4, 2022 – “Three Points”

“Three Points”

Father Peter Fitzgibbons

 September 3 – 4, 2022

Gospel:  Luke 14:25-33

Great crowds were traveling with Jesus, and He turned and addressed them, “If anyone
comes to me without hating his father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, and even his own life, he cannot be My disciple.  Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple.  Which of you wishing to construct a tower does not first sit down and calculate the cost to see if there is enough for its completion?  Otherwise, after laying the foundation and finding himself unable to finish the work the onlookers should laugh at him and say, ‘This one began to build but did not have the resources to finish.’  Or what king marching into battle would not first sit down and decide whether with ten thousand troops he can successfully oppose another king advancing upon him with twenty thousand troops?  But if not, while he is still far away, he will send a delegation to ask for peace terms.  In the same way, anyone of you who does not renounce all his possessions cannot be My disciple.”

In our preaching course at seminary, we were told that we should have at least three major points in our sermons, or what they call “homilies” these days.  My first point is that if a man cannot renounce all of his possession, he cannot be Christ’s disciple.  What is our greatest possession?  Ourselves.  When we renounce ourselves, instead of just living for self, we live for God.  Our greatest purpose is to live in this world and to love and serve Him and reign with Him in the next.  So, all of this “stuff” we have from our hard work, efforts, and studies, we can enjoy because it is a principle of self-ownership and fulfillment. We are supposed to enjoy our possessions especially on Sunday according to Church tradition.   But we should use the stuff that God has given us for our own work.  What work?  The works of justice.  First of all, providing for ourselves, providing for our families, and providing for those in need.  We have an obligation to give to others that which is above and beyond our needs.

The second point is that this past week the Church marked the martyrdom of Saint John the Baptist.  Saint Bede the Venerable wrote about the martyrdom and said that Herod did not want John to deny Christ.  He just wanted John to stop talking about the reign of God which would have been the same as denying Christ.   Now, if you haven’t noticed, the World wants us to do that too.  It does not want the Church to proclaim the truth.  Some may say, “Well it’s  not the most loving thing to do.”  Well, it is because our Savior said it.  Are you saying that our Savior didn’t tell us what the most loving thing to do is?   We are to proclaim the truth and live the truth.  We cannot stop proclaiming the truth, otherwise we would be denying our Faith.   

Remember, last week I told you last about Saint Francis who said to preach the Gospel, whether in-season or out-of-season, convenient or inconvenient, and to use words if necessary.  You are constantly preaching by your good works because people will see them.  And as Peter said, He will see your good works and give praise and thanks to the Father.  This is the evangelization we are all called to do.   Sometimes when we do, we will get a rather harsh reaction from people.  This has happened to me several times.   People will say, “Are you a Catholic priest?”  Yeah. . . I’m not Johnny Cash with a funny collar.  Others say, “I used to be Catholic.”  Really?  They don’t know how insulting that is.  In response, I’ll say, “Well, I still am.. . what happened to you?”  I don’t take that garbage from anybody.  Apparently, they don’t know my background.  My next question to them is one that I’m not expecting an answer to because they aren’t going to give me one.  But I ask them, “What have you done or what has been done to you?”  They hurt from their sins or what has been done to them.    

When I’m sick, eventually I will go to the doctor.  Or the people around me will make me go to the doctor like what happened when I got Covid.  But people are angry at and afraid of the source of all healing, and they rebel against it.   They run from the One who can bring peace to their soul which is Jesus Christ.  It is not a bad thing if we have sinned. . .yes, it’s not the best thing, and we’d rather not have sin, but the worse thing is to stay away from the Savior who can heal it.  He will heal and fulfill our souls and give us peace no matter what we have done or what has been done to us.  He can bring peace to a troubled soul.  Usually, people are happy to hear the message – even non-Catholics because they can see that scandal is from the sins they have committed and the sins of others committed against them.  But if Catholics are poor teachers, they may drive them away from the source of all love and healing.

The third and final point is that I heard this week about mothers taking their kids to school and leading them by the hand.  Some of the kids were going very much against their will, because school is strange and disturbing to them, and they would rather be at home.   It made me think of another situation in which a woman was hastening to another place.  One night I was at the house of a woman who had cancer and who was rapidly leaving this world.  I gave her the Last Rites, and she said, “Father, I say my rosary all the time.”  And I said to her, “That’s wonderful.  Keep it up as long as you can.  And you know what will happen?  Soon, the Blessed Mother will come take you by the hand and lead you to her Son.”

How will you apply this message to your life?  ____________________________________

You can read all of Father Fitzgibbons’ sermons by going to annunciationcatholicalbemarle.com and clicking on “Blog” then “Categories” then “Sermon Notes.”  On a cell phone: click on “Blog” then “Menu” and then “Categories”


Minute Meditation – Bridges of Love

Compassion requires a depth of soul, a connectedness of soul to earth, an earthiness of person to person, and a flow of love from heart to heart. To evolve toward the fullness of Christ we must be able to love the weak, the unlovable, the fragile, and lame. The Body of Christ becomes one when we ourselves create bridges of love. The compassionate person walks across the bridge into the life of another saying along the way, “you are not alone, I am with you.”

—from the book Compassion: Living in the Spirit of St. Francis
by Ilia Delio, OSF