22nd. Sunday (Year C)
(Sirach 3:17-20, 28-29; Hebrews 12:18-19, 22-24; Luke 14:1, 7-14)
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Our reading from the book of Sirach was only short but replete with human
awareness and divine wisdom, and the opening lines struck me immediately:
My child, conduct your affairs with
humility, and you will be loved more than a giver of gifts.
I find those words to be both beautiful and humbling, but they are words
to be ‘tasted’ and delighted in when alone and at peace.
Now, it could well have been the case that not a few of the guests at
the table of our Gospel’s leading Pharisee knew those words, in the sense that
they were aware of them and had read them in their private reading or
Scriptural studies, for these guests seem to have been invited for one main
purpose: that they – regional/local fellow-Pharisees of the host -- might have
an opportunity to meet the increasingly well-known ‘rabbi’, Jesus of
Nazareth. That is why, I believe, we are told:
On a sabbath, Jesus went to dine at the
home of one of the leading Pharisees, and the people there were observing
Him carefully.
The point is, however, that those words from Sirach are not easily appreciated
and acted upon by those whose lives are fully engaged in the daily preoccupation
for prestige and position, and that is why Jesus, in His chosen parable for
this occasion, did not use any such traditional human words, but rather chose
to develop a sense of divine wisdom and
human accountability wrapped in the following simple words:
Humble yourself the more, the greater
you are, and you will find favour with God.
Although St. Luke only tells us that ‘the people’ were observing Jesus
closely, there can be no doubt that the ‘leading Pharisee’ himself was also
carefully watching Jesus not only to see whether his dinner was proving the success
for which he had hoped but most especially to see how his guests were ‘finding’
Jesus, relating or reacting to Him.
Above all, however, Jesus Himself was also carefully observing His
fellow guests, for the Gospel tells us:
Noticing how they were choosing the
places of honour at the table, Jesus told a parable for those who had been
invited.
The situation is reminiscent of Jesus’ initial meeting with the synagogue members in His home town of Nazareth: everyone here, as had been the case there, was watching and waiting for Him to say something. Jesus Himself knew just why He had been invited, and having accepted the invitation He intended to go along with His hosts’ hopes and expectations for the outcome of the dinner.
What a drama, where divine wisdom is to be packaged in words expressive of
human cunning and self-promotion!
When you are invited by someone to a
wedding banquet, do not recline at table in the place of honour. A more
distinguished guest than you may have been invited by him, and the host may
approach you and say, ‘Give your place to this man.’
Jesus pictures a wedding banquet, a most important occasion in Jewish
society where marriage was considered both as personal fulfilment and ‘national
service’, a time for dresses and dignitaries, for boasting and
gifts. On such occasions the still small voice of humility and
modesty would be almost totally inaudible even for Jews far better educated in
such matters than the pagans around; overwhelmingly
louder would be the ever-popular dictum of self-seekers: ‘if I do not take the
best place available for myself, someone else will certainly come along and
seize it to promote their prospects; I must make an immediate decision
otherwise the opportunity will be lost!’ Such urgent and imperious
considerations would rarely fail to convince even those allowing themselves an
instant to consider the situation.
This picturing of a wedding banquet would have lulled any suspicions of
Jesus’ table companions that they themselves were being ‘got at’. They
all knew the ‘goings-on’ at banquets on such occasions: mother of the daughter
and bride-to-be, mother of the son and husband-to-be, facing up to each other
in so many secret little ways with words, and mannerisms. Two fathers
carefully and anxiously(?) considering the financial costs involved. And
then the relatives and friends of both parties all waiting to seize their own
choice patch to enjoy the celebration and observe all going on there.
Now, all Jesus fellow-guests at this smaller, less colourful, and quite serious
dinner would have understood all the elbowing and whispering that went on among
those specially invited to such a wedding of which Jesus spoke, and they could
well have been rather amused at their own recollections of such
occasions. Nevertheless, they would also have been able to empathize quite
deeply with anyone being asked to , ‘Give your place to another man’, or, on
the other hand, with him asked to ‘move up to a higher position’; and so Jesus’
parable would, I think, have most certainly stirred their attention to the
extent that they were prepared to realize with mind and heart what was
to come.
And so, at the summit of that peaceful and absorbing general
appreciation of human nature in its amusing, selfish and vulnerable aspects,
Jesus added words that, for Jews with their background and training, suddenly
become directly personal and much more serious, having indeed divine
implications:
Everyone who exalts himself will be
humbled.
‘Will be humbled’ ... that is, by God, as no Pharisee or educated
Jew would fail to understand.
Now indeed the rabbi from Nazareth was beginning to show Himself to be
such as they had heard Him spoken of!
Teacher, we know that what you say and teach is correct, and you show no
partiality, but teach the way of God in accordance with the truth! (Luke20:21)
Notice Jesus’ method, dear People of
God. He shows His listeners first of all, both calmly and without blame,
that He knows them and theirs: the wedding banquet served to amusingly
highlight conduct they could recognize so easily in others but which had, at
first, seemed so far away from their own serious gathering here and now at the
home of one of their leading associates. Jesus’ words however, show that
He has observed what had been happening around their dinner table. He holds
back from Personally condemning anyone or anything in particular but the Word
of God He quotes is condemnatory, and a sensible tension begins to be felt among
those at table as a result. However, Jesus then continues quietly and
gives what those around had secretly come to hear from Him, that is, His own
human wisdom hopefully leading them to recognise and gently guiding them to embrace
the beauty of the God’s Word:
Everyone who exalts himself will be humbled! But the one who humbles
himself will be exalted.
Jesus next turned His attention to His host whom He had also been carefully observing.
When you hold a lunch or a dinner do not invite your friends or
brothers, or your relatives or wealthy neighbours, in case they invite you
back; rather invite the poor, the crippled, the blind. Blessed indeed
will you be because of their inability to repay you, for you will be repaid at
the resurrection of the righteous.
Jesus, I suggest, appreciated His host, and was aware that the present social occasion he had convened had been incumbent on him because of his prominence as a leading Pharisee and because he was known to have some special appreciation of the ‘untaught’ rabbi’s familiarity with and understanding of the Scriptures.
Notice, dear People of God, there was
no warning given to him by Jesus; rather, Jesus bestowed on him teaching
about the resurrection of the righteous, the surety of which teaching was Personal to
Jesus, over and above the Scriptures known by the Pharisee, for as yet the Jews
had not come to any consensus, let alone unanimity, about the right
understanding of the possible ‘resurrection’ passages of Scripture.
This statement of Jesus’ Personal divine wisdom and understanding was a
bounteous reward for His host’s present appreciation of Jesus and a spur for
his future intentions:
You will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous.
Dear People of God, we hear too often today those words, ‘Who am I to judge?’ Too often today the Word of God is kept hidden out of personal fear and embarrassment, false respect for other peoples’ supposed feelings. Notice most clearly Jesus’ Own behaviour and remember that we are all members of His priestly people: some of us are ordained priests of Jesus for Mother Church, all of us, however, are one to the extent that we all have a personal calling and varying obligations to proclaim the Word of God to our world in the name of Jesus. Jesus, as you have seen, Personally observed the situation in which He found Himself as Son sent by His Father, and He dutifully proclaimed the appropriate Word of God for that situation without fear.
Dear People of God, we hear too often today those words, ‘Who am I to judge?’ Too often today the Word of God is kept hidden out of personal fear and embarrassment, false respect for other peoples’ supposed feelings. Notice most clearly Jesus’ Own behaviour and remember that we are all members of His priestly people: some of us are ordained priests of Jesus for Mother Church, all of us, however, are one to the extent that we all have a personal calling and varying obligations to proclaim the Word of God to our world in the name of Jesus. Jesus, as you have seen, Personally observed the situation in which He found Himself as Son sent by His Father, and He dutifully proclaimed the appropriate Word of God for that situation without fear.
All ordained priests of Mother Church
and the priestly, catholic, People of God, are, by obligation and/or encouragement endowed to proclaim in Church and in public,
to witness in their homes and workplace, among friends and at leisure times, the appropriate and necessary
Word of God, in the power and virtue of the Holy Spirit. We, however, are
only called to judge (Who am I to judge?) when sin is involved, and then
to judge only the sin, not the sinful person involved. It is God Himself -- of His infinite majesty
and wisdom, goodness and mercy -- Who condemns, first of all by His Words
of Scripture, those who continue to ignore His Wisdom and defy His Goodness,
before His ultimately final and Personal condemnation at the Last
Judgement.
Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,
our Catholic faith is most beautiful and true and we all, each in our own way
and according to our personal calling should treasure and preserve it for the
generations to come as we have so gratefully received it and so graciously
learned to love it. That is our most
seriously binding duty as Catholic disciples of Jesus, to witness to
what we believe and love. The most Holy Spirit has come among us to
witness to Jesus Who said to His disciples, ‘He, the Spirit of Truth abides with
you (in Mother Church) and will be in you (personally). Dear People of God, if the Spirit is alive in
you, you must witness to your Christian and Catholic faith
otherwise you yourself are spiritually close to death.
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