Today we celebrate the feast, the memorial, of St. John Chrysostum, Bishop and Doctor of our Holy Church. The word Chrysostum comes from the word Chrysostomos, "golden-mouthed." St. John was so called because of his eloquence. I pray that some of his eloquence may be mine this afternoon, as I meditate on the sacred scripture we have just read, and our tradition.
There is one particular verse from St. John’s many homilies that I have read and has stayed with me, which I would like to share with you.
God has no need of golden vessels but of golden hearts. I am not saying you should not give golden altar vessels and so on, but I am insisting that nothing can take the place of almsgiving. The Lord will not refuse to accept the first kind of gift but he prefers the second, and quite naturally, because in the first case only the donor benefits, in the second case the poor gets the benefit. The gift of a chalice may be ostentatious; almsgiving is pure benevolence.
My dear brothers and sisters, we – especially we in India – are not unfamiliar with the suggestion that we must first take care of the poor, and that we should not spend money on ritual ostentation. And St. John seems to be saying the same thing! But is he? I don’t think so, because you see, the Catholic way is not one way or the other, but often both. And so, listen to this sentence from St. John again:
I am not saying you should not give golden altar vessels and so on, but I am insisting that nothing can take the place of almsgiving.
In other words, almsgiving is fundamental, but golden altar vessels are also important. In other words, my dear brothers and sisters in Christ, we must start taking the liturgy seriously. What are the objects we use for worship? Are they worthy of being present before God, or not? One often sees cheap synthetic materials on the altar, steel vessels, instead of silks, cottons, linens, silver and gold. Surprisingly, however, our own bodies have no such aversion to simplicity!
In fact, a desire for a noble liturgy, could well be a form of almsgiving! The crafting of fine products for worship, must often rely not on simply going to a shop and picking up something. Rather, it involves creating a relationship between a designer, a patron, and at least one artisan. Through investing our liturgy with riches, as was done in the old days, we – especially those of us in India – may well be aiding the livelihoods of artisans in need of support.
The liturgy, my dear brothers and sisters, should be the most important thing for a Catholic, for it resolves around the Eucharist, the source and summit of the Christian life. Make our lives liturgically centered, and we will start rearticulating our entire lives! We will treat people with the same respect that we use for the Eucharist, recognizing in them the unseen Christ.
Speaking of the unseen Christ, you should know that Our Lord manifested Himself in this very space. This church of the Holy Cross is so-called because of a miracle where Our Lord appeared on a cross, which caused the cross to grow! In the Cathedral of this Archdiocese we celebrate a Triduum of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross to venerate the Holy Cross of Christ which is now in the cathedral. Brothers and sisters in Christ, Our Lord calls you, not just to take up your cross and to follow Him, but to proclaim His cross with your lips and your actions! St. John Chrysostum, whose feast we celebrate today, was called golden-mouthed because of his eloquence. I pray that the cross of Our Lord Jesus Christ may similarly shine on your lips, and the members of your bodies, and that the radiance of the Cross, through you, may draw more to Christ.
St. John Chrysostom, pray for us.
(This homily was preached on Saturday 13th Sept. 2025 at the Church of the Cruz dos Milagres, Old Goa.)
(image reference:Crucifixion, anonymous author, mid 13th cent., Monastery of St. Catherine, Sinai.)