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Homilies | Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Who you are tomorrow depends on how you live today

Archbishop Wenski's homily at Baccalaureate Mass for high school class of 2020

Archbishop Thomas Wenski celebrates a baccalaureate Mass for all members of the Archdiocese of Miami's high school graduating class of 2020. The Mass was celebrated May 19, 2020 and livestreamed on the Archdiocese of Miami's website and Facebook page. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, only the superintendent of schools, Kim Pryzbylski, and the associate superintendent, Donald Edwards, were present.

Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC

Archbishop Thomas Wenski celebrates a baccalaureate Mass for all members of the Archdiocese of Miami's high school graduating class of 2020. The Mass was celebrated May 19, 2020 and livestreamed on the Archdiocese of Miami's website and Facebook page. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, only the superintendent of schools, Kim Pryzbylski, and the associate superintendent, Donald Edwards, were present.

Archbishop Thomas Wenski preached this homily during the Baccalaureate Mass he celebrated for the graduating class of 2020 from all the Catholic high schools in the archdiocese. The Mass was livestreamed from St. Mary Cathedral in Miami, May 19, 2020.

Donald Edwards, associate superintendent of archdiocesan schools, proclaims the first reading during Archbishop Thomas Wenski's celebration of a baccalaureate Mass for all members of the Archdiocese of Miami's high school graduating class of 2020. The Mass was celebrated May 19, 2020 in St. Mary Cathedral.

Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC

Donald Edwards, associate superintendent of archdiocesan schools, proclaims the first reading during Archbishop Thomas Wenski's celebration of a baccalaureate Mass for all members of the Archdiocese of Miami's high school graduating class of 2020. The Mass was celebrated May 19, 2020 in St. Mary Cathedral.

Archbishop Thomas Wenski greets graduates at the start of a baccalaureate Mass for all members of the Archdiocese of Miami's high school graduating class of 2020. The Mass was celebrated May 19, 2020 and livestreamed on the Archdiocese of Miami's website and Facebook page. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, only the superintendent of schools, Kim Pryzbylski, and the associate superintendent, Donald Edwards, were present.

Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC

Archbishop Thomas Wenski greets graduates at the start of a baccalaureate Mass for all members of the Archdiocese of Miami's high school graduating class of 2020. The Mass was celebrated May 19, 2020 and livestreamed on the Archdiocese of Miami's website and Facebook page. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, only the superintendent of schools, Kim Pryzbylski, and the associate superintendent, Donald Edwards, were present.

Graduation ceremonies are called “commencements” – they are not just about the end of something; they are about new beginnings, new commencements. And so, at this Baccalaureate Mass, unusual because it is livestreamed and includes all the graduation seniors from across the archdiocese, we not only give God thanks for the past four years you have spent in high school; but at the same time, we invoke God’s help and guidance for the future that opens before you.

I am sure that many people have told you that with a good education, opportunity will knock at your door. And that is true, but in these days of the coronavirus that has kept us in our homes, that knocking you heard at the door is probably the guy from Uber Eats.

Because you are young, most of your life’s journey still lies before you. You leave high school – and many of you will leave home as well to pursue higher education in different cities. In fact, I would wager a bet that if we added up all the scholarship money awarded to the classes of 2020 and then we added up the cost of your four years of tuition, the total amount of the scholarship money would be more than the total of the four years of tuition. Of course, it is not divided evenly among you – but it proves the point that your parents, in sending you to a Catholic high school, made a great investment that in the future will pay great dividends. When somebody says: How can you afford to send a kid to a Catholic high school? I would answer: How can you afford not to?

This year, when we celebrated Catholic Schools Week, the theme was simply: Catholic schools: Faith, Excellence, Service.

At any rate, one chapter in your life’s story comes to an end and a new one will soon begin. As Americans – even in this time of a global pandemic and a troubling economic crisis – you have many opportunities to develop your talents and you have been raised with a great sense of generosity, service and fairness. That is not to deny that there are difficulties: We find in our path activities and mindsets that stifle hope, and there are false pathways that seem to lead to happiness and fulfillment but in fact end only in confusion and fear.

But with four years of Catholic secondary education behind you, our prayer is that these years have helped shape and formed you so that you leave high school committed to walk in the Lord’s footsteps even when your path takes you through twists and turns, through the joys and trials of ordinary life. And being a Catholic Christian means simply that: to commit yourselves to walk in the Lord’s footsteps. With the Holy Spirit to strengthen and guide you along the way, your own lives then become a journey of hope.

Father Jean Jadotte, chaplain at Archbishop McCarthy High School in Southwest Ranches, represented the school at the baccalaureate Mass for the entire archdiocesan class of 2020, which Archbishop Thomas Wenski celebrated May 19, 2020.

Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC

Father Jean Jadotte, chaplain at Archbishop McCarthy High School in Southwest Ranches, represented the school at the baccalaureate Mass for the entire archdiocesan class of 2020, which Archbishop Thomas Wenski celebrated May 19, 2020.

Kim Pryzbylski, archdiocesan superintendent of schools, addresses members of the entire archdiocesan high school class of 2020 at the conclusion of the Mass celebrated May 19, 2020 by Archbishop Thomas Wenski.

Photographer: ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO | FC

Kim Pryzbylski, archdiocesan superintendent of schools, addresses members of the entire archdiocesan high school class of 2020 at the conclusion of the Mass celebrated May 19, 2020 by Archbishop Thomas Wenski.

As we journey through life, we must remember that God is our origin and our destination – and Jesus is our way. Jesus is the Way to God, our ultimate destination; his selfless way of love allows us to find meaning for our lives through whatever career path the future may reveal to us.

As I said on other occasions, other schools may teach the test; in Catholic schools we teach the “yes”. The goal of Catholic education – and what makes Catholic education “good news” – is the development of the whole person. And in pursuing this integral formation which aims to prepare our students for life – both this life and the life to come – we are convinced that all human values find their fulfillment and unity in Christ. It is in Christ that the fullness of truth concerning man is to be found.

You have received an education based on Catholic values – an education that presents a worldview that God matters – and that because God matters, so does the work of his hands, especially that work made in his own image and likeness, the human person.

A solid Catholic education is not just meant to prepare you to make a good living, to do well; a Catholic education is to help you learn the ways of being good and living well.

Our lives are a gift from God, but in a real way our lives are a task entrusted to us by God. We acknowledge the gifts, the many gifts of God’s providence; but at the same time, we must recognize that our lives will be, in great measure, what we make of them.

Life is eternal – but at the same time, we must apply ourselves if we are to reach eternity. Who you are tomorrow depends much on how you live today.

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