Sunday, November 9, 2025

Reflection on the Readings for the Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica (November 9, 2025)

Reflection on the Readings for the Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica (November 9, 2025)

Today, the Church celebrates the Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica in Rome, often called the "Mother and Mistress of all churches." This feast interrupts the usual Sunday cycle (which would be the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C) to remind us of our unity as the universal Church, rooted in the see of Peter. The readings invite us to contemplate the temple—not merely as a building of stone, but as a living source of grace, a community of believers, and ultimately, the Body of Christ Himself.

In the First Reading from Ezekiel (47:1-2, 8-9, 12), we see a visionary temple from which life-giving water flows eastward, refreshing the Dead Sea, bringing abundance of fish, and nourishing trees whose fruit provides food and leaves offer healing. This prophetic image symbolizes God's sanctuary as the origin of renewal and vitality. The water represents the Holy Spirit, pouring forth to heal what is barren and sustain eternal life. On this feast, it points to the Church as the new temple, where the waters of Baptism flow out to transform the world, making the "salt waters" of sin fresh and fruitful.

The Responsorial Psalm (46) echoes this joy: "The waters of the river gladden the city of God, the holy dwelling of the Most High!" God is our refuge amid chaos—earthquakes, mountains plunging into the sea—yet His presence in the "holy dwelling" remains unshaken. The Church, like the city of God, is fortified by divine protection, a place where we find strength and peace.

St. Paul drives this home in the Second Reading (1 Corinthians 3:9c-11, 16-17): "You are God's building... Do you not know that you are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwells in you?" We are not passive stones but living members of Christ's Body, built on the foundation of Jesus Christ. Paul warns that this temple is holy; to destroy it through division or sin invites divine judgment. Yet, this also fills us with awe: the same Spirit who animated the prophets now dwells in us, individually and communally. The Lateran Basilica, as the Pope's cathedral, symbolizes this truth for the whole Church—we are sacred space, called to holiness.

The Gospel (John 2:13-22) brings us to Jesus cleansing the Jerusalem Temple, driving out merchants with a whip of cords and declaring, "Stop making my Father's house a marketplace!" His zeal consumes Him, recalling Psalm 69. When challenged, Jesus says, "Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up"—speaking not of Herod's stone edifice (built over 46 years) but of His own Body. After the Resurrection, the disciples understood: Jesus is the true Temple, the meeting place of God and humanity. His risen Body is the Church, where sacrifice is no longer animals but the Eucharist, and worship is in spirit and truth.

These readings weave a profound message: The physical basilica in Rome points beyond itself to the spiritual reality of the Church. Just as water flows from Ezekiel's temple to heal the earth, grace flows from Christ's pierced side—through the sacraments—to heal us. We are that temple, enlivened by the Spirit, but we must guard against "marketplace" distractions: commercialization of faith, internal divisions, or personal sins that profane what is holy.

John 2:13-22 – The Whip Still Echoes

When Jesus entered the temple courts, He did not find quiet prayer; He found a marketplace. Coins clattered, animals bleated, and the house of His Father had become a den of commerce. With cords twisted into a whip, He overturned tables and drove out the merchants, crying, “Stop making my Father’s house a marketplace!” His disciples remembered the Scripture: “Zeal for your house will consume me.”

Two thousand years later, the echo of that whip still stings. The Church has never been immune to the love of money. When Constantine’s edict turned persecution into privilege, basilicas rose alongside bank accounts. Tithes that once fed widows were redirected to marble floors and silk vestments. Indulgences were sold, cathedrals became cash registers, and the poor were told their pennies purchased paradise while prelates purchased palaces.

Nothing has changed in essence—only the packaging. I grew up in the Bronx, where Sunday Mass at St. Dominic’s was routinely interrupted so the priest could wave white envelopes for the Cardinal’s Appeal. One year—the Year of St. Joseph—I printed hundreds of prayer cards honoring the silent carpenter who protected the Child Jesus. I asked Fr. Robert, the Idente pastor, if they could be placed in the vestibule. He refused. “We have to push the Cardinal’s Appeal first,” he said. St. Joseph, foster father of the Savior, took second place or no place to a fundraising quota.

In other parishes, the lights dim, a glossy video rolls, and the same scripted voice pleads for “sacrificial giving.” Yet the churches crumble. St. Dominic’s ceiling leaks into plastic buckets, no bell in the bell tower, the school next door is now a public charter, and the tuition that once educated immigrant children now pays rent to the Board of Education. Where does the money go? The question hangs in the air like incense no one dares to wave away. This is the case in many other parishes in the Archdiocese of New York.  Where is the money going? Why are parishes and schools being shut down?  They take money from the poor Catholics in the Bronx to then shut down their parishes and schools.  What is Cardinal Dolan doing with the appeal funds?

Jesus did not negotiate with the money-changers; He drove them out. The temple must be cleansed again—not with new campaigns or slicker videos, but with poverty willingly embraced. Pope Francis keeps repeating it: “How I wish for a poor Church, for the poor!” Pope Leo XIV recently echoed the same plea. A Church that chooses bare feet over red leather slippers, patched roofs over golden mitres, and the cry of the poor over the ring of collection baskets.

Until the tables are overturned once more—until envelopes yield to Gospel, quotas to quiet prayer, and prestige to humility—the whip of Christ’s zeal will keep cracking above our heads. The Temple still needs cleansing. May we have the courage to let Him swing.

On this feast, let us renew our commitment to the Church as Christ's Body. Visit a church if possible, or simply pray in the "temple" of your heart. Ask: How can I let the living water flow through me to others? How can my life reflect zeal for God's house? In a world often barren like the Dead Sea, we are called to be sources of life, fruit-bearing trees along the river of grace.

May the dedication of the Lateran inspire us to dedicate ourselves anew to Christ, the cornerstone, so that one day we may enter the eternal temple not made by hands. Amen.

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