Over this last year there has been a pilgrimage of hope that has seen millions of pilgrims pass through the Holy Doors that have been opened for this jubilee. In the city of Rome, there are four major basilicas each of which opened a holy door for the Jubilee of Hope. These are the basilicas of St Mary Major, St Paul outside the walls, St Peter’s Basilica and Archbasilica Cathedral of the Most Holy Saviour of Saint John the Baptist and John the Evangelist, also called St John Lateran for short, it is oldest and is the mother Church of Rome and the whole world.
As we honour the mother Church of the whole world, we are
called to ponder the importance of a Church building that is dedicated to the
worship of God. It is the Pope’s cathedral and was dedicated in 324. We are
called to prayer for how these sacred places shape us into places where we
encounter God in a profound way.
Yet it is the liminal space where we stand at the lintel of
these holy places that we are called to notice the transition that takes place.
We move from the outside to the inside and are often stunned by the beauty that
has been preserved over the years. Yet do we notice the beauty that we
encounter within ourselves. Any pilgrimage is more than taking photos or record
experiences it looks to what lasts rather than what is transitional. As people return
home from entering these four buildings and praying there what remains of the
experience that is foundational for our Christian life.
St Paul hints at this when he says, “you are God’s building”.
Building on the foundation of Christ we are called to discover the sacredness
not just of Churches but of people who gather in them. The building in its
essence helps us to discover how the Spirit of God is living among us. As he
says the temple of God is sacred and you are that temple.
I think this is what provokes Jesus into a rage where he
overturns tables, scatters coins and drives out animals. It is trying to block
the person’s encounter with the sacred through trading in spiritual goods. We
should always have this in our consciousness of how we make it easier for
people to develop the sacred space within them.
Ezekiel when he points to how a stream of water flows eastward
from the temple. This water seeks to make the sea wholesome. It also allows
fruit trees to flourish, produce fruit and leaves that are medicinal. The
essence is that what flows into the temple also flows out into the world.
We are called to be people who have the mind of Christ and
look at what helps people to thrive. To allow people space to discover holiness
and listen to how God is moving in their lives. This is a slow patient process
that allows them to be nurtured and watered with life giving water. We are called
to become people who proclaim a jubilee of hope.
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