Here is the text of the homily I shared with the community gathered in prayer for the Twenty-second Sunday of Ordinary Time.
Come to the
banquet
During the upcoming week,
students in our elementary and secondary schools will begin another academic
year. At this point of new beginning, the
scripture passages we have heard today remind us that all of us, regardless of
our age, are students: all of us can learn something every day of our
lives. You see, learning starts with
facts and figures: we call this first stage the acquisition of knowledge, but
the second stage of learning comes when we discover the wisdom of knowing how
to use that which we have learned. There
are many teachers who can teach lessons of the first kind, but far fewer
teachers who are capable of seizing the hearts of their students and inspiring
them to be all that they can be. Yet, these are the ones who students will
always remember, who they will truly admire, even if may not understand or
appreciate the wisdom being imparted at the time.
Jesus was one such
teacher. He knew how to use every situation
as an opportunity to teach: sometimes with words, but more often through
example. When one of the leaders of the
Pharisees invited him to dine at his house, Jesus knew that the other guests
would be watching him, ready to judge him if he should say or do something that
wasn’t quite right. Have you ever found
yourself in a situation where you weren’t quite sure about the appropriate
protocol to be followed? It can be an
uncomfortable and awkward situation. In
times such as those, the best practice is often to remember that we all have
two eyes, two ears, and only one mouth.
Jesus watched the other guests
as they gathered for the meal. He paid
attention to the way they would have jostled for the places closest to the
host, for the positions which would get them noticed. Presumably, someone had invited him to speak,
and this opened the door for him to share his wisdom. How many times in our lives do we expend
great energy trying to get noticed? At
some level, we all seek the approval of our parents, our teachers, and our
peers. When we have it, there is a sense
of pride; the longer we don’t (or don’t think we do), the harder we’ll try.
The lesson that Jesus was
teaching that day was that true strength of character is revealed when we are
humble enough to own and admit our own poverty, our own weakness. Only then do we come to understand and to
appreciate the immeasurable goodness, kindness and love of God. Only then do we begin to grasp the depth of
the treasure that is offered to us, a treasure which is offered to all those
who are part of this family of faith. None of us is worthy of the places of
honour, not on our own merits, but all of us are invited to sit at this
table. All of us are invited to partake
in the banquet because all of us are deeply loved by the one Jesus called Abba – Father, daddy.
As we come to understand the
power of this love, we begin to grow more and more able to recognize our own
poverty, to embrace it not as an impediment which might impede us from being
recognized, but rather as an invitation to come closer to the one who already
knows us, cherishes us and loves us even more than we can possibly imagine.
The writer of the Letter to
the Hebrews seems to have understood this truth very well. He tells us that here in this place we have
already arrived in the city of the living
God, the heavenly Jerusalem. Our God
has invited us to partake in this banquet in company with an immeasurable number of angels who
have also gathered for this feast, and
with the assembly of the firstborn who
are already enrolled in heaven. If
only we could grasp just a bit of this understanding, perhaps we might truly
begin to appreciate how much we are loved, how much our God rejoices over us,
how deeply he believes in us … and if only we could come to believe this truth,
perhaps we too could go out to all the nations, teach them by our example and
by our words, inspire them by our kindness, our gentleness, our compassion, and
invite them to come to believe the good news.
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