When I was in eighth grade (1989/1990), I saw the movie The Shoes of the Fisherman for the first time; it has since become one of my favorites. The 1968 movie stars Anthony Quinn as a Ukrainian archbishop named Kiril Lakota who is imprisoned in a Siberian labor camp by the Soviet government. The movie begins with Lakota being brought to Moscow and face to face with Soviet Premier Kamenev, played by Sir Laurence Olivier. The crux of the meeting is that the Vatican has brokered a deal for Lakota’s freedom, but before Lakota finds this out, Kamenev asks Lakota if he has learned enough in his confinement to face freedom. Lakota responds that he has already been free for a long time, obviously referring to a spiritual freedom over physical freedom. True freedom is not about the things of this world, nor is true freedom something that this world can give us.
The Fourth Sunday of Easter is traditionally nicknamed “Good Shepherd Sunday” because, you guessed it, the Gospel for this Sunday always speaks of Jesus being the Good Shepherd. When I envision a shepherd, two main qualities come to mind: one who protects and one who leads. The Lord Jesus seeks to do both for us. He offers us grace upon grace to aid us in the struggle against evil, sin, and temptation. The challenge for us is to open up and direct our lives to receiving these graces from the Lord. When we do, not only will we have divine aid in our struggle against sin and temptation but we will also find ourselves being led more and more to detachment from the world, and detachment leads us to true freedom in Christ.
It is good for us to regularly ask ourselves how attached are we to the world and to those things that belong to it? Are the world and the things of it bad in and of themselves? No. However, if we seek to attach ourselves to the things of heaven and the life of grace then we will experience greater inner freedom in our lives, the freedom that Lakota knew in The Shoes of the Fisherman. Let us ask the Lord Jesus, our Good Shepherd, to lead us to greater detachment; the grace of detachment leads to greater happiness and peace. Should you achieve perfect detachment, please let me know how, because I am still trying.
Congratulations to Our Fully Initiated Students!
This past Tuesday our 3rd graders were confirmed by and received their First Holy Communion from Bishop Paprocki at our Cathedral. Please join me in praying that our Confirmati and First Communicants will always allow the Lord Jesus to draw them deeper and deeper into the mystery of His love for them. Next Sunday, May 7th, we will celebrate their full initiation with a Solemn Communion at the 10AM Mass.
Blessings to you and yours for the week ahead!
Father Chris House