Tuesday, February 26, 2013

I thought this worthy of sharing...

 



Much ObligedGratitude without Entitlement 

Keynote Address Delivered by William J. Byron, S.J

The Alumni/Father-Son Communion Breakfast

St. Josephs Preparatory School, Phiiladelphia, PA
Sunday, February 24, 2013

Much obliged, Father Bur; many thanks to you, Al Zimmerman and your associates who honor me by an invitation to speak on this occasion. Much obliged St. Joes Prep; Im grateful for the education I received here and for the opportunity to speak today. Muck obliged, Prep alumni and all you fathers and sons who gathered an hour ago in the great Gesu church to remember the Lord in the breaking of the bread. We meet now, after Mass, at these tables to share both memories and a meal and celebrate the bonds of brotherhood that bind us to the Prep. Much obliged! 

You all know what much obliged--that expression from the old American vernacular--means. It says simply and directly, Thank You. Thats what we do every Sunday in the Eucharist. Thats what Eucharist meansthank youit is a thanks-saying, a thanksgiving, a liturgical thanks-doing, that brings us all before the Lord each week in gratitude as we express our thanks for the great gift of salvation in Jesus Christ. And for that, we are indeed much obliged. At the Last Supper Jesus said, in effect, to his disciples: This is how I want you to remember meas bread broken and passed around, as a cup poured out. And this is how I want you to relate to one anotheras bread broken for the nourishment of others, as a cup poured out in loving service. 

Thanksgiving Day is a great American tradition. It is a secular, not a religious feast day. Thanksgiving, of course, puts the accent where it should beon giving, saying, and doing thanks. Men and women of faith target God first and foremost for expressions of gratitude when they celebrate Thanksgiving Day; we Catholic Christians do this every day, particularly every Sunday of the year. We Christians know where to look when we want to give thanks! 

Once we put ourselves in the thanks-saying, thank-giving, thanks-doing mood, as we are right now, it is a good idea to pay attention to a rising sense of entitlement in America, especially among the young. And I would suggest to you today that ingratitude is the infrastructure of entitlement. 

Think about thatingratitude is the infrastructure of entitlement, and entitlement is our cultural condition of thinking we deserve everything we have. Entitlement prompts us to make demands, not to give thanks. 

Ignatius of Loyola once remarked that ingratitude is at the root of all sinfulness. He was on to something. When ingratitude takes over ones outlook, there is an erosion of a sense of obligation, including moral obligation. Much obliged is a way the old American vernacular had of saying thanks. If you have nothing to be thankful fori.e., if you consider yourself to be entitled to everything you have and might receiveyou are unencumbered by a sense of any obligation. You are free to be your selfish, solipsistic, narcissistic self. Sadly, we notice a lot of selfishness and narcissism surrounding us in America today. 

Total self-absorption is another word for sin. And remember, St. Ignatius of Loyola saw ingratitude at the root of all sinfulness, of all self-absorption. 

Fifteen or twenty years ago, I found myself describing students I was then meeting in the college classroom as characterized by a sense of entitlement. They thought they deserved good grades, good health, good jobs, and the best of everything the world had to offer. Cultural reinforcement for this attitude of entitlement came, and continues to come, through their entertainment and advertising, their words and music, their images and apparel. They have cures for all their ills, protections from all dangers, solutions for all their problems, answers (with or without the help of a search engine) to all their questions. It is all within reach. It is theirs for the taking. No need to say please. No need to say thanks.
 

This outlook has seeped down into high school and middle school mindsto the teens and tweens who never say thanks. Good for you if this is not typical of the way things are here at St. Joes Prep. The absence of a culture of entitlement hereif that indeed is the case--suggests the presence of a faith-based culture of gratitude. If, however, youany of you--are trapped in a culture of entitlement, you have work to do. 

Many years ago I pressed a child for a working definition of the word gift. It was Christmas Day, in fact, and she was my niece and we were gathered in the family room where gifts and their wrappings had been strewn around all over the place. Whats a gift? I asked. A gift is when somebody gives you something, this youngster said. And I responded: What if you had loaned me a dollar last week and now Im giving it back. Here, take this dollar. Is that a gift? It fits your definition; you told me that a gift is when somebody gives you something and, here, Im giving you a dollar. A moments pondering prompted the youngster to revise her definition and say, A gift is when you get something you dont deserve.
 
How true. How very appropriate for Communion Breakfast reflection. What a positive indicator that we, through an awareness of gratitude, have a way of protecting ourselves from the virus of entitlement. Life will be a good deal happier for all if we realize that the gifts we get are not only undeserved, but, in the Christian view of things, that they are symbols to remind us of the gift of salvation to which none of us has a claim, except through our faith in Christ Jesus the Lord. 

Christ has come. We are freed. All we can be is grateful. And because Christ has come and traced out for us by his own words, and by the example of his life, what we should value and how we should live, we can give a contemporary Christian meaning to the compelling command given so many centuries ago by the Lord through the prophet Michah: What is good  has been explained to you, O man [O woman]; this is what the Lord asks of you: only this, to act justly, to love tenderly, and to walk humbly with your God (Micah 6:8). 

So lets decide to be genuine men for others by acting justly in all our relationships; by loving tenderly our family members and friends and all those whom God puts within reach of our helping hand; and by walking humbly, not arrogantly, but humbly and gratefully with our GodEmmanuel, who is God with us, Christ Jesus our Lord. 

And lets look upon our so-called Sunday obligation in terms of gratitude. We gladly acknowledge ourselves to be much obliged to give praise and thanks to God every Sunday. Thats what Sunday Mass is all about. Not to do so would be to be an ingrate. And knowing how we personally dislike ingrates, lets resolve on this Communion Breakfast Sunday to avoid being ingrates by being the Catholic Christians weve been called to be. That means regarding ourselves as much obligedmuch obliged to give praise and thanks to God; much obliged to love one another as Christ loves us. 

And during the upcoming week--as next Sunday approaches--ask yourself: Am I an ingrate? Or do I really consider myself to be much obliged? If so, get out to Mass next Sunday, as you did today, and every Sundayto express your gratitude. 

So, once again, St. Joes Prep, Father Bur, Al Zimmerman, Alumni Association, Fathers and Sonsfriends all: Thanks you, gratias, much obliged, many thanks!