
Introduction
Ephphetha--the spittle rite
In the old rite of baptism the rubrics (the red print in the ritual books) directed that “With his thumb the priest shall take saliva from his mouth and touch the ears and the mouth of the infant, saying, “Ephphetha,” “Be thou opened.” I performed that spittle rite for decades and didn’t feel squeamish about it at all. I even liked it. Today in this antiseptic (but filthy) age of ours, the rubrics now direct that the spittle part of the rite may be omitted “at the discretion of the celebrant.” But he is still directed to touch with his thumb the ears and the mouth of the infant and command that he be opened.
In the first reading the
prophet Isaiah announces good news that the Lord God will come to open the eyes of the blind, the ears of the
deaf and the mouths of the mute (Is 35:4-6).
Jesus came and commanded “Ephphetha,” “Be thou opened”, and the eyes of the
blind men from Bethsaida and Jericho began to see for the first time the
glories of sunrise and sunset (Mk 8:22-25; 10:46-52). He commanded “Ephphetha,”
and the ears of the deaf heard for the first time the voice of the turtle dove
riding the breezes of spring. He commanded
“Ephphetha,” and the tongues of mutes started to sing aloud the praises of the
Lord (Mk
We the baptized are ephphethized people. We are commanded
to open our eyes to see what should be seen, but there are always things we don’t want to see, and so, by gum, we don’t
see them. We’re commanded to open
our ears to hear what should be heard, but there are always things we don’t want to hear, and so, by gum, we don’t
hear them. We are commanded to open
our mouths to speak what should be spoken, but there are always things we’re afraid to say, and so, by
gum, we don’t say them.
A man superbly ephphetized
On
When Emmet Judge grew up, he joined the Order of
St. Francis and took the name of Mychal and was ordained a priest. Then he
launched into a remarkable journey of life on which he would become not only a
compassionate champion of the needy and forgotten of that great metropolis but
also a beloved chaplain for its fire department. It would be especially a spiritual
journey on which he would have to wrestle with private demons of alcoholism and
sexuality. It’s the age-old journey of all of us, filled with human frailty and
divine goodness, with human disobedience and godly obedience.
The
disobedience of Fr. Mycal
Everybody
knew Fr. Mychal’s disobedience. They knew he was a recovering alcoholic. They
knew, too, he was very earthy and streetwise, and that he lined up well with
the characters and chaos of
Everybody
knew Fr. Mychal’s disobedience. People also knew that he was gay. He opened the
doors of the well-known
The obedience of
Fr. Mychal
But everybody except
those, of course, who were incapable of spiritual insight also knew Fr.
Mychal’s obedience. Those who knew him were amazed at his encyclopedic memory for people’s names,
birthdays and passions. He knew everyone from the homeless to Mayor Giuliani.
And though he was a true New Yorker, born and raised in
9/11--the end of his journey
That life filled with human frailty and
divine goodness, peaked on
His funeral Mass was covered in its
entirety by the media. When a memorial service was later held for him, an
endless flow of priests, nuns, lawyers, cops, firefighters, homeless people,
recovering alcoholics, HIV victims, rock-and-rollers, local politicians and middle age couples from the suburbs
streamed into Good Shepherd Chapel on Ninth Avenue, an Anglican church,
to do a memorial for a Roman Catholic priest. All of them knew the disobedience of Fr. Mychal, but none of them
was fooled by it.
The canonized and un-canonized Saint of
9/11
The events of his funeral
Mass and memorial service were tantamount to a canonization of Mychal not by a
lengthy and expensive process on the part of the church but by a spontaneous
and inexpensive acclamation on the part of the people of God. In
Conclusion
That they might live
The word "martyr" has been twisted out
of shape in this 21st century. Islamist suicide bombers now reap the crown of
martyrdom by giving their lives so that 3000 unbelievers might die. Fr Mychal Judge, the joyful friar of New York
City and the saint of 9/11, reminds us
of the stuff of which true martyrs are made: they give their lives so that others might not die but live.