Hearing our father’s words as God’s wisdom
06/15/2025
John 16:12-15 Jesus said to
his disciples: "I have much more to tell you, but you cannot bear it now.
But when he comes, the Spirit of truth, he will guide you to all truth. He will
not speak on his own, but he will speak what he hears, and will declare to you
the things that are coming. He will glorify me, because he will take from what
is mine and declare it to you. Everything that the Father has is mine; for this
reason I told you that he will take from what is mine and declare it to you."
This past Saturday I was talking
with Fr. Jason Sharbaugh and he off-handedly remarked: “This Sunday will be my
first Father’s Day without my dad.” His comment cut me to the quick because I
knew one day I would face that same dreaded day. And I felt a surge of gratitude
that I still had my dad. I felt bad for him, but very blessed for me. Still,
sooner or later everyone will face a Father’s Day without dad.
Today we begin our novena of Masses
for our dads, whether living or deceased: that’s what the bundle of envelopes
is on the altar. So, I hope you will reach out to your dad in some way today:
with a personal visit, or a phone call, or if he has passed, include him in our
novena. And I hope this is not your first Father’s Day without your dad, like
it is for Fr. Jason.
In the liturgy today we celebrate
the Most Holy Trinity, that even in God we find the fullness of Fatherhood. The
heavenly Father is the only perfect Father, and therefore, every earthly father
tries to emulate. And in the gospel Jesus says something that also made me
think of my own father. He said to his disciples: “I have much more to tell
you, but you cannot bear it now.”
My father is a man of few words –
like most men are – but every now-and-then, he lets some pearls of wisdom fall
from his lips. I sometimes wonder if my father, like Jesus, also has “much more
to tell me”, but his son is too self-absorbed and stubborn to listen and learn,
like the apostles were.
But I have picked up and practiced
some of my father’s wisdom that he has accumulated over 90 years of life. I am
so blessed that my dad will be 91 in October this year. And by the way, not
even the NSA knows how old my mom is. Today I would like to share three of
those pearls with you. And maybe these pearls will jog your memory of how your
human father has taught you the heavenly Father’s wisdom. That’s what fathers
are for.
My dad often says in Malayalam,
“innu njaan, naale nee” which means, “today me, tomorrow you.” As my father
gets older and moves slower, he’s telling me not to look down on his failing
health as I still enjoy my relative physical stamina. Today, I am weak, but
tomorrow it will be you.
To illustrate, he told me the
parable of the leaves. One day the green leaves were shaking in the wind and
laughing as the wind knocked the old brown leaf off the branch. As he was
falling, he looked up at the green leaves and said, “Innu njaan, naale nee”.
Why? Because in a few months the green leaves would suffer the same fate. How
many young people think they will always stay young and beautiful, and never
grow old and die? Today me, tomorrow you.
My father also repeats while
watching commercials: “Avar aalukale kaliyaa-kukayaanu”. That means, “They are
just playing with people.” In other words, don’t believe everything you see or
hear on T.V. I wish more people would heed his advice instead of freaking out
over someone who says some outlandish thing just to get your attention. Then of
course they feel compelled to respond and say silly things, too. People are
just playing with you and they made you play along. You foolishly bit on their
click bate.
Another holy habit my dad displays
is he will give me some of his food when we sit down for breakfast, lunch, or
dinner. As he gives me his portion, he says, “Have some food from my plate.”
And by the way, he only share when we have American food, never delicious
Indian curry. My dad is no dummy. It took me a long time to catch on to this
gesture of love.
And now I copy my father at Mass,
this holy meal with my family. How so? You have seen how the priest gets a
large Host and everyone else only a small Host. But I don’t eat that entire
Host Instead I break it in half and distribute it to others, sometimes to an
altar server, or a Communion minister. And I think in my mind: “Have some food from
my plate.”
And at a wedding Mass, I not only
give the bride and groom half of my large priest’s Host, but also let them sip
from the priest’s chalice. After all, at every wedding, the bride and groom are
the official ministries – in a sense, they are the priests – of their own
marriage. So I think not only: “Have some of my Eucharistic food,” but also
“have some of my priesthood.” My father has taught me to share deeply, even if
he still does not share his Indian curry.
My friends, we live in a culture that
has a very low regard for fatherhood. Have you noticed this in the media? Dads
are often depicted as the butt of jokes, or as inept and imbeciles. Why is
that? Well, in a culture that is becoming more atheistic and trying to get rid
of God, it is no surprise it wages war on fatherhood, on the earthly icons of
God the Father. Get rid of the evidence and people will think there is no proof
for the existence of God. So we need to cherish our fathers more than ever, and
stop making fun of them.
I don’t know if your father is
still with you, or he has passed, but I hope you too can remember some of the
life-lessons and pearls of wisdom he has taught you. Why? Well, because even
though our human fathers are far from perfect, they are nonetheless one of the
instruments – indeed icons – that the heavenly Father uses to communicate his
own eternal love and wisdom to his children.
And perhaps the greatest lesson
they can teach us is that even if this Sunday is the first Father’s Day without
your dad, it will never be a Father’s Day without your heavenly Father.
Praised be Jesus Christ!
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