Celebrating our love for the Sacred Heart of Jesus
06/27/2025
Luke 15:3-7 Jesus addressed
this parable to the Pharisees and scribes: "What man among you having a
hundred sheep and losing one of them would not leave the ninety-nine in the
desert and go after the lost one until he finds it? And when he does find it,
he sets it on his shoulders with great joy and, upon his arrival home, he calls
together his friends and neighbors and says to them, 'Rejoice with me because I
have found my lost sheep.' I tell you, in just the same way there will be more
joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous
people who have no need of repentance."
Immaculate Conception parish is
absolutely obsessed with images of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Have you noticed
this? We have a painting of the Sacred Heart in the sacristy that I brought out
for your veneration this morning. Of course, we have placed the statue of the
Sacred Heart on an altar to highlight Jesus’ sacrificial love (altars are
always for sacrifice). In the sacristy there is also a stained glass window of
the Sacred Heart appearing to St. Margaret Mary Alocoque, a French nun who
promoted devotion to the Sacred Heart in the 1600’s.
In St. Anne’s Chapel the Sacred
Heart of Jesus greets visitors before they enter the doors. And still another
statue of Jesus’ Heart stands in a stately posture awaiting the visitor’s
veneration when they kneel to pray. And there are probably other images of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus hiding out here and there that I haven’t even noticed.
The Sacred Heart is ubiquitous in our parish and our love for Jesus should be
too.
The Solemnity of the Sacred Heart
always falls on the Friday after the Sunday of the Feast of Corpus Christi. And
that closeness is no coincidence. Many parishioners walked last Sunday in the
procession carrying Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament on his “sedia gestatoria”,
portable throne, through the streets of Fort Smith. Why? Well, it was
mid-summer and we were bored and couldn’t think of anything better to do that
walk outside in the sweltering heat for four hours.
No, we walked while carrying the
Blessed Sacrament, the Corpus Christi, or more precisely, the Sacred Heart of
Jesus. Corpus Christi is Latin for “the Body of Christ.” But what part of
Christ’s Body do you think is hidden in that Holy Bread? Is it his eye, or
maybe his tongue, or perhaps a foot, or maybe it’s his hand. Nope.
That Sacred Host contains no other
part of Christ’s Body than his most important member, namely, his Sacred Heart.
That is the connection between last Sunday and this Friday. And therefore, just
like images of the Sacred Heart are found in every nook and corner of our
church, so we took Jesus’ Heart to the streets so his glorious love could be
glimpsed by every citizen of our fair city.
That obsessive devotion to the
Sacred Heart is exactly why we built such an elaborate and expensive back altar
for the Blessed Sacrament. Yes, we could have saved a lot of money and erected
a simple table or niche that would have been adequate, or as we say, “good
enough for government work.” But such a meager effort would not have been “good
enough” for I.C. parishioners who are absolutely obsessed with the Sacred
Heart.
Now, there is also a very practical
side to devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, namely, our hearts must learn to
beat like his. That is, if his heart loves each of us unconditionally and
sacrificially – demonstrated beyond doubt on the cross – then we must love our
Lord in return in the same way. His Sacred Heart and our sinful hearts have to
eventually beat in sync.
And by the way, where do we learn
to love like that? Well, first and foremost in our marriage. That is the true
purpose of marriage: to train our hearts to love like Jesus’ Sacred Heart.
Every marriage, especially the troubled ones, are a school of the Sacred Heart,
where we learn the truly tough love called the cross. And our professor in this
school is our spouse, or as the Buddhists paradoxically put it: “My enemy, my
teacher.”
Let me conclude with a little
prayer to the Sacred Heart that sums up what I am saying: “O most holy heart of
Jesus, fountain of every blessing, I adore Thee, I love Thee, and with a lively
sorrow for my sins, I offer Thee this poor heart of mine. Make me humble,
patient, pure and wholly obedient to Thy will. Grant, good Jesus, that I may
live in Thee, and for Thee. Jesus, meek and humble of heart, make my heart like
unto Thine. Amen."
Praised be the Most
Sacred Heart of Jesus!