The Evolution of the Temple
Homily for the Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica in Rome

Douglas McManaman
November 6, 2025
Reproduced with Permission

In the first reading, Ezekiel has a vision of the temple of Jerusalem, where water was flowing from below the threshold toward the east, from the right side. The water gives life to whatever it touches. But we know from the gospel reading that the temple of Jerusalem foreshadows the true temple, which is the temple of Jesus' body, from whose right side water flowed as a result of the open wound caused by the centurion's lance. And that water from his side symbolizes baptism, which brings to life all who are immersed therein.

And so we've gone from the temple made of stone to the living temple of Christ's body. But the second reading from Paul's First Letter to the Corinthians takes this even further. He says: "Do you not know that you are God's temple and that God's Spirit dwells in you?" (3, 16). You and I are temples of the Holy Spirit because we have put on Christ, as Paul says in Galatians: "For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ" (3, 27).

And so we've gone from the temple of Jerusalem, made of stone, which will eventually be destroyed, to the temple of Christ's body, which was destroyed but restored in his resurrection, to the faithful, each one of whom is the temple of the Holy Spirit. But, it does not stop there. Jesus not only houses himself in the baptized, he houses himself in all those who suffer, as we read in the Parable of the Last Judgment: I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, thirsty and you gave me something to drink, lonely and in prison and you visited me. When did we see you this way? As long as you did this to the least of my brethren, you did it to me (Mt 25, 31-46).

As Mother Teresa never tired of saying, Jesus disguises himself in the poor and suffering. They house Christ without their knowing it necessarily, and they are all around us. And not everyone who belongs to Christ is explicitly aware of the fact, and not everyone who explicitly belongs to the visible Church actually does so, for Christ said it himself: "Did we not prophecy in your name, cast out demons in your name? ...go away from me, I never knew you; I do not know where you come from" (See Mt 7, 21-23; Lk 13, 27).

Desecration of the temple incensed Jesus because desecration was rooted in a failure to discern the sacred, and that spiritual blindness was caused by the greed of the money changers. And what angers Jesus today is the same failure to see and discern the sacred (himself) in the suffering, the struggling, ordinary human persons who have lost their social standing. We don't have to take "poor", "thirsty", and "in prison" literally. These terms include the sick who are poor in health, and all those oppressed at work by an emotionally abusive boss or a toxic workplace environment, or those oppressed by a mental illness, or a lonely elderly person virtually abandoned by his or her family, or a teenager who feels alienated and estranged from parents going through a divorce, or alienated by an alcoholic father or mother, and so on. Christ is housed by the suffering of this world because he identifies with them, and that's what love does. And if this is true, it follows that a hospital room, for example, is holy ground.

I know of one priest who was so convinced of this that he would take off his shoes when visiting the sick in hospital. A classroom of young students is holy ground as well; a prison cell is holy ground, and so too a street shelter. Wherever we encounter suffering human beings, we have found Christ. A Carmelite biblical scholar recently mentioned to me that when he was in the city, he gave some money to a person living on the street, who responded by calling out to him: "God bless you". This priest is emphatic that this man's blessing has greater significance than if it were a blessing from the Pope himself.

Speaking of which, Pope Leo XIV, in a recent homily, said that "we must dream of and build a more humble Church; a Church that does not stand upright like the Pharisee, triumphant and inflated with pride, but bends down to wash the feet of humanity; a Church that does not judge as the Pharisee does the tax collector, but becomes a welcoming place for all; a Church that does not close in on itself, but remains attentive to God so that it can similarly listen to everyone. Let us commit ourselves to building a Church that is entirely synodal, ministerial and attracted to Christ and therefore committed to serving the world" (30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, 26 October, 2025). Amen.

Top