The Homily
Following the proclamation of the Gospel comes the Homily. The GIRM describes,
The Homily is part of the Liturgy and is highly recommended, for it is necessary for the nurturing of the Christian life. It should be an explanation of some aspect of the readings from Sacred Scripture or of another text from the Ordinary or the Proper of the Mass of the day and should take into account both the mystery being celebrated and the particular needs of the listeners.
A homily is differentiated from the “Sermon” in that the homily is to take into account the readings and/or the celebration of the day. A sermon was often about a particular topic, even if not related to the particular celebration. (This is exemplified by a tongue-in-cheek adage among priests that we now repeat, “Never let the scriptures get in the way of what you want to say.”) There was a time in, the now long past, that the Cleveland priests were sent a calendar of what their sermon topics were to be for each week of the year. The sermon was often seen as something adjunct to the Mass and not a part of it, thus many priests set the homily off with a sign of the cross at the beginning and end as ritualistic “parentheses”. Because it is an integral part of the Mass, the homily is reserved to the priest or bishop, usually the celebrant, and on occasion to the deacon.
The homily is to explain the readings, but not in just an academic way, but especially in “how does the stuff of this celebration impact the lives of the listener.” It is to bring the Word of God to the people and the people to the Word of God.
I will share some of the principles that guide my homily preparation:
Use the texts of the day, almost exclusively. It drives me crazy to hear one of my confreres preach about another scripture passage when there are perfectly good ones in front of him.
Stay on point. One of the worst comments that can be made about a homily is, “There were two or three good homilies there.” One is good, three are bad. I tell seminarians and newly ordained priests that they don’t have to say everything they ever wanted to say about these readings; you’ll see them again every three years!
Keep it short. This is not one of my homily preparation goals. I tell people that my homily is as long as it has to be for me to make my point (see above). No need to belabor it with more examples and stories. By nature, my writing is terse, I was known in the seminary for putting a lot of info in a few words. This saved my hand and time on essay tests! So, I am naturally brief, not intentionally.
It is not a standup routine. Jokes have their place—I’m not beyond throwing in a couple of quips—but I have experienced that people walk away from a homily remembering the joke, but not the message. If that happens the homilist has failed. If I use outright jokes, it is going to be tied into the message in such a way that one can’t recall the joke without recalling the message.
In the end, I am not in charge. There have been times that I just cannot think of what to say and think I am just punting. I think, “I can’t believe I just said that in public.” It has often been those that engender the responses of “Good homily,” or “I got a lot out of that homily.” The ones that I think are literary masterpieces with good images and important points, get a response of “Meh.” The Holy Spirt is ultimately in charge. It doesn’t mean I won’t try to do my best, but God is always going speak better than I will.