“Tax
collectors and prostitutes are entering the kingdom of God before you.” What would be your reaction to that? Imagine you’re a chief priest, you’re
standing in the Temple, your home base, the place you feel most grounded in the
presence of the God who called you into his service, into leadership in his service,
and this odd, homeless, wandering preaching who had just shown up in Jerusalem
to great acclaim from the people has the nerve to say to you: “Tax collectors
and prostitutes are entering the kingdom of God before you.” I’m sure we can imagine various responses,
and, knowing how the story ends, we know that their reaction culminated in
plotting to have this wandering preacher killed. But, I’d submit there’s one proper response:
gratitude. Gratitude followed by
conversion of heart.
Sunday, September 28, 2014
God extends mercy to guide us to the kingdom – Matt 21:28-32
Twenty-sixth Sunday of Ordinary Time; South Bend TV Mass, and Holy Cross parish.
Sunday, September 21, 2014
God invites all to join the work and receive the reward – Matt 20:1-16
Twenty-fifth Sunday of Ordinary Time; Holy Cross parish.
We don’t
know why those men were standing around the market place at the eleventh hour,
about five o’clock in the afternoon. The
vineyard owner doesn’t know either, so he asks them, and they give almost a
non-response, “because no-one has hired us.”
I call it almost a non-response, because it’s patently obvious: if
anyone had hired them, they’d be at work in someone’s field or someone’s barn
and not standing around a market place!
Maybe a more probing question might have been, “and why has
no-one hired you?” But the master doesn’t
ask this, and so we can’t get to know.
We don’t know if they were seen as too old to be able to labor, or too
young to know what they were doing, or too odd to be able to get on with the
other workers, or if they looked sickly, or threatening, or if they slept in
and showed up to the market place late, or if they were just unlucky. All we know is that the master called, and
they followed.
Sunday, September 14, 2014
God gives all to let the light in – Jn 3:13-17, Phi 3:6-11
Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross; Holy Cross - St. Stan's.
Imagine
a boy born in captivity, born in a cellar, trapped. Imagine this boy has never seen
sunlight. He has only seen his murky
world clinically and coldly illumined by artificial, ill-colored electric
bulbs. His mother has told him of
sunlight, has told him of how wonderful it feels upon the skin, of how the
clouds flow past it leaving their shapes behind, of how it fills a space with
warmth and beauty, of how it’s like the lights he’s seen, but so much more, so
much better, that with it, he’d be able to see colors as they really are, that
he’d be able to distinguish blue from black (which yellow electric light can
never allow) and see the beauty. Slowly,
she comes to realize that the blacked out window in the basement is low enough
that she could break it. It’s too small
for either of them to be able to get out, but she could break it. Who knows what her captors would do to her in
response to this outrage against their control?
But she has to risk it. Whatever
it would cost, she’d dare to risk it, to let her boy see the sun, to show him
that there is an outside, there is a force invisible to him more ancient and
more powerful than the walls that confine them, a force able to truly illumine
them, that need not be overcome and shut out by walls, a force that could
pierce through that window that she would give all if needed to open, and let
in the light that would delight, that would warm, that might just excite her
son enough to turn to it, and seek the freedom it promised.
Sunday, September 7, 2014
God appoints us as watchmen to bring us forgiveness – Ezek 33:7-9, Matt 18:15-20, Rom 13:8-10
Twenty-third Sunday of Ordinary Time; Holy Cross church.
Ezekiel
was an exile, a displaced person. He was
an Israelite living in Babylon, because the Babylonians had come to Jerusalem,
destroyed it, destroyed God’s house, the Temple, in its midst and forced them
on the long march East to Babylon. The
people were bereft of the only ways they’d known God: the Temple, the kingship,
the Land. But, God did not desert
them. The people would discover that in
their exile, God was in their midst too.
Just as, centuries later, the Church, bereft of Christ’s humane
presence, would discover that wherever two or three gathered in his name, he
was there. But, I’m getting ahead of
myself. God did not desert his
people. God continued to send prophets,
to call them back to covenant living, even when living in a strange land.
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