Sermons

Summary: St. Luke

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Since COVID-19 gripped the world, the first responders such as paramedics, doctors, nurses, law enforcement officers and emergency department personnel have been hailed as heroes and heroines. Indeed, they are.

Last Tuesday, I also became somewhat of a first responder when I was called out to administer the Last Rites to a Catholic elderly gentleman at a nursing home. His name was Jack. We first met at the South Morang Leisure Centre and have been friends for about five years. Whenever we met at the pool, we discussed something related to faith, and jokingly, Jack would always tell me, "Father, you must be the priest who must give my Last Rites when I die."

It happened that he had been informed in a nursing home just 400 meters away from our home in Epping (Melbourne, Australia). About three weeks ago, he had a few serious health issues and had given my name and contact details to the staff to contact me if he were to die. As Jack had wished, this is what happened. In the last hour Jack had in this life, a doctor and I, assisted by a Personal Care Assistant, attended to him as first responders.

Yes, I know: Last Rites (officially called the Viaticum, the sacrament of the dying) is predominantly practised in Catholicism. It involves a priest administering Holy Communion to a dying person. A layperson designated a Eucharist Minister can also offer the Viaticum.

I have administered the Last Rites many times in my ministry over the last 30 years, but it was pretty different this time. Usually, the Last Rites are given in a hospital or nursing home. In that case, the medical personnel are not present at the time of the administration. If there are any, only family members are present.

In Jack's case, I witnessed something entirely different. The female doctor who had been called out for Jack stood by me and offered to read the Bible and help me administer Holy Communion. Amazingly, the doctor knew the Apostles Creed (recited after the Confession in the Rite), recited it with Jack, then said the Our Father, and assisted me in giving Jack Holy Communion.

While the Rite was being administered, I did not notice anything unusual. Still, soon after it was over and Jack had died, I realised how amazing it was for a doctor not only to be present and assist with the administration of the sacrament but to know the Rite by heart and be a genuine participant in administering the sacrament.

Before the end of this message, I will tell you how the doctor helped me administer the Rite.

I wanted to share this story with you because today is St. Luke's Day, and the church remembers St. Luke and thanks God for all healthcare workers, doctors and surgeons.

So, today, I want to tell you about Luke and his witness to Jesus. In speaking about Luke, I also want to share the medical signature he left when telling us about Jesus in his gospel.

Although Luke is only mentioned by name three times in the Bible (Col. 4:14; Philemon 1:24; 2 Tim. 4:11), he is hinted at on several other occasions. He was a native of Antioch in Syria (today in south-central Turkey), and today, we might call him a Turk. Although a Gentile, he was a "God-fearer" who followed the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

How do we know that he was from Antioch in Syria? We know this because in the Acts of the Apostles, he mentions this city several times and gives details of it and shows some "civic pride" (Acts 11:19-30; 13:1; 14:26-28; 15:22, 30-35; 18:22). Interestingly when he wrote about the six deacons in Jerusalem who were waiting on tables, he mentioned them by name. But he adds extra information for Nicolas by identifying his countryman and saying he was from Antioch (Acts 6:5).

Luke is the author of the Gospel of Luke. Although he had not met Jesus in person, he tells us that everything he wrote in the gospel was what he had heard about the events in Jesus's life from other eyewitnesses (Luke 1:2). He is also the author of Acts of the Apostles.

In Acts, Luke also tells us something we may not necessarily have considered as Christians. Luke tells us that the followers of Jesus were first called "Christians" at Antioch (Acts 11:26). At that time, it was a derogatory nickname given to the followers of Jesus.

Luke was humble and did not want to call attention to himself or his family. Instead, he had wanted to point people to the person of Jesus Christ and the work of the Holy Spirit in His Church.

When he wrote his gospel and the book of Acts, he did not mention his name (Luke 1:1-2 & Acts 1:1), nor did he say his brother. His brother was Titus, the person to whom St. Paul wrote one of his Epistles – the Epistle of Titus. Paul had Luke in mind when he wrote 2 Cor. 8:18, in which he spoke of "sending along with him (Titus) the brother whose fame in the things of the gospel has spread through all the churches."

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