The Church today needs a refuge and strength.  There may not be  earthquakes or volcanoes in the city of Rome, but there is ever-present  danger for the Church, the Body of          Christ.  In celebrating the dedication of the Lateran Basilica,  the mother church of the Latin Rite, we honor all the dwelling places of  the Most High.  The Holy Spirit is the          divine stream whose runlets gladden the city of God, the holy  dwelling of the Most High.  The LORD God is in the midst of his people  who gather in all the churches throughout the          world, east and west.  He will help us at the break of every  day.  He is with us as our true dwelling place and lasting stronghold.   At the summons of the God of Jacob, we stand          here and behold how his mighty deeds are told and retold.  Again  and again, the things the LORD has wrought on earth astound us.
The prophet Ezekiel is caught up in a vision of the majesty  of the LORD overflowing from his temple out into the whole world.  The  water flowing out from the beneath the          threshold of the temple flows out as a blessing into the sea,  the salt waters, which it makes fresh.  This river floods the earth with  life and not destruction.  Abundant life is          born from the refreshing waters of the Holy Spirit.  All life  upon the earth finds its origin and support from the abundance of the  LORD's self-gift.  Every living creature,          abundant fish, and trees of every kind grow and bear fruit, a  fruit that will last.  Month after month, these trees bear fresh fruit  because they are watered by the flow from the          sanctuary.  Their fruit shall serve as food for all God's  people, and their leaves will bring healing.  Such is the vision of  Ezekiel; this prophet opens wide the eyes of all          who hear the Lord's Word.  Now, we can see what we never saw  before.  Now, we notice the living waters that spring up within Christ,  the Living Temple of God.  At last, we who          are washed clean in the blood of the Lamb and refreshed with the  Holy Spirit behold the glory that is ours, as we share in the very life  of the Living God.
With eyes opened by the prophet Ezekiel, we can now share in  the vision of Saint Paul in his letter to the beloved brothers and  sisters in Corinth.  The same Holy Spirit who          gives refreshment and life in abundance has inspired Saint Paul  to see the truth of our identity.  We are God’s building; we are the  true temple of God; we are the Body of Christ.           By the grace of God, Saint Paul sees himself as a wise master  builder who has laid the foundation upon which others now build by  preaching and service.  He goes on to warn all who          build upon this foundation to never forget that Christ is the  only sure foundation upon which the faith of God’s people can be built.   This wise counsel is directed to the ministers          of the Gospel who have inherited this divine building project  from Saint Paul and all the Apostles.  Never can their work be used to  build up their own self-importance.  Church          is never about the personal projects of human ego.  The ordained  servants of the new temple must never get in God’s way.  They must pray  as did Mother Theresa of Calcutta, "Lord,          help me stay out of your way."  In the same way, Saint Paul  warns all earthly powers, all human authorities, to take heed of the  LORD's sovereign majesty when he          writes, "If anyone destroys God's temple, God will destroy that  person; for the temple of God, which you are, is holy."   This is the  sure refuge in which we live and          move and have our being; we have nothing to fear.
Early in the Gospel of Saint John, the Lord Jesus takes on  the similar men of authority in the temple that Saint Paul took on in  his letter to the Corinthians.  A prophetic and          zealous Christ cried out, "Take these out of here, and stop  making my Father's house a marketplace."  He challenged the leaders of  the Jews and drove out the merchants          from the temple.  Like the first disciples, we remember these  words of the Lord Jesus, and we come to believe the Scripture and the  word Jesus had spoken.  After the Lord has died          and risen from the dead, his words inspire our own prophetic and  zealous nature.  We, too, must drive out of our Father's house all  those who use religion for their own gain and          seek profit from the faith of God's Holy Ones.  Such a mandate  does not make us reckless or violent, but it cannot be ignored.  We must  be vigilant and faithful, so that all          people find in our churches a place of welcome and peace in the  midst of this world's threats and subtle attempts to trivialize faith.   Without this kind of zeal, we will have          nothing to offer those who search for truth and love throughout  the world.  Indeed, we who gather here again and again reveal the  Father's desire to gather all his children into          the Body of Christ, the Living Temple.



 
 
 
