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Overcoming Fear - A Titanic Hero (Homily for Second Sunday of Easter)

4/7/2013

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Today's readings concern overcoming fear. The first reading tells about people who see the wonders the apostles perform, but do not "dare to join them."  In the reading from Revelation the sight of Jesus causes John to fall down "as  though dead." But Jesus touches him, saying, "Do not be afraid." And in the  Gospel the apostles keep the door locked out of fear and then experience an even  greater fright: Jesus appears to them. He first words, however, are,
"Peace be  with you." Jesus wants to help us overcome fear. 

I would like to tell you about a man who overcame fear in a remarkable way:   Thomas  Byles, the oldest son of a nineteenth
century Congregational minister.  Inspired by his father, the young man began a serious study of the Bible and  early Christian writers. The more he read the  more he became convinced that  Jesus founded the Catholic Church. You can imagine the fear he had to overcome  to tell his family he was becoming a  Catholic, but not only that - God was  calling him to the priesthood! 

Ordained in 1902 the bishop assigned him to a rural parish in Essex, England. 
There he dedicated himself to youth. During Lent 1912 he told the altars
servers  that he would be gone for several weeks after Easter. He was going to
America to  do his brother's wedding. He mentioned that he was travelling on
White Star  Lines. One of the servers said, "Isn't that the Titanic? I hear it
is so strong  even God couldn't sink it." 

The priest smiled and mildly scolded the boy: "Nothing is greater than God. 
But I am not going on the Titanic, but on the Olympic."
 
As things happened, his brother sent a ticket for the maiden voyage of the 
Titanic. He boarded as a second class passenger on Wednesday, April 10. 
Passenger from all classes - and a variety of nationalities - came to him for 
confession during the first four days. On Sunday, April 14, Fr. Byles
celebrated  the same Mass we have today - the Second Sunday of Easter. Speaking
in French  and English, he warned about "spiritual shipwreck" - that is, falling
into  temptation. We need the sacraments and prayer, he said, like a life belt
to not  drown in the turbulent sea of this life. 

Close to midnight, Fr. Byles was on the deck praying his breviary when he
  felt a sudden jolt. Realizing something serious had happened, he went to third
  class to help passengers - especially the ill and mothers with small children.*
  They were the first placed in life boats. Fr. Byles blessed each one, making
the  sign of the cross on their foreheads. 

He began giving general absolution and praying with those on board. Twice
  they offered Fr. Byles a place in a life boat. He replied that a shepherd does
  not abandon a flock in danger. Many survivors remembered seeing the outline of
a  priest in his cassock with people huddle around him. As the Titanic began
  tilting upward he led them in the rosary - Catholics, Protestants, Jews and
  non-believers all joined in the prayer. 

Fr. Thomas Byles' body was never recovered from the icy Atlantic.** A
  remarkable man. A man who by Jesus' grace overcame fear. A man who heard Jesus'
  word, "Do not be afraid." 

This Sunday we celebrate the Divine Mercy. It an invitation to overcome the
  fear that separates us from God. Yes, God is like an immense ocean -
mysterious,  greater than anything we can imagine. But that ocean can take our
sins - no  matter what you or I have done. When we turn to Christ our sins
disappear like  drops of water in the immense sea. 

Jesus gives that assurance today. Receive the Holy Spirit - whose sins you
  shall forgive are forgiven them. Like Fr. Byles - in Jesus we can overcome
fear.  "Do not be afraid," he says, "Once I was dead, but now I live forever and
ever."  Amen.
************

*A survivor recalled: "We saw before us, coming down the passageway,  with
his hand uplifted, Fr. Byles. We knew him because he had visited us several
  times on board and celebrated Mass for us that very morning. 'Be calm, my good
  people,' he said, and then he went about the steerage giving absolutions and
  blessings." See FR.  BYLES AND THE "SHIP OF DREAMS" by Mark
Fellows. 

**Much of the data regarding Fr. Byles, I drew from "A Titanic  Hero: Thomas Byles" by Cady Crosby.
This remarkable young lady put together  a compelling account of the priest's
life. Besides the written version, Cady  recorded an audio CD of her book.




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