Friday, July 6, 2012

God dines with us – Matt 9:9-13

Friday of the 13th week of Ordinary Time; St. Joseph Parish.

Who would you least like to have dinner with? 

I ask because we often have this romantic idea that Jesus really enjoyed dining with tax collectors and sinners, that he got more out of their company than the fuddy-duddy righteous legalistic types.  Really?  Maybe… but if we confess that Jesus walked to his cross for us, maybe we can also at least imagine him sometimes having dinner with someone he didn’t much like.  Certainly, when challenged on his choice of table companions he doesn’t excuse them or say, “I eat with them because they’re so much fun;” but: “They’re sick; I came to heal.”

James Madison wrote of something he observed in newly independent America, lamenting “A zeal for different opinions concerning religion, concerning government, and many other points that has divided humanity into parties, inflamed them with mutual animosity, and rendered them much more disposed to vex and oppress each other than to co-operate for their common good.

The common good has become something many popes have called us to work for over the last century.  Bl. Pope John XXIII revived the patristic term and Bl. Pope John Paul II ran with it, calling each member of the church to solidarity, which he defined as the “firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common good that is to say, to the good of all and of each individual, because we are all really responsible for all.”

All, including the people we wouldn’t want to sit at table with.  Jesus’ presence was healing.  Matthew, at least, becomes a disciple.  Sinless Jesus did not stand in need of conversion, but we do.  Can we commit ourselves to table fellowship with the sole purpose of bringing healing to our companions, but alive to the hope of experiencing it ourselves?

Here in this place, God sets a table, dines with us and sends us out. Let us be so nourished by this meal with and of God that we can dine with whoever we’d least like to, and hope for healing.

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