If you are looking at a particular sermon and it is removed it is because it has been updated.

For example Year C 2010 is being replaced week by week with Year C 2013, and so on.

Friday 14 October 2022

29th Sunday Year C 2022

 

 29th. Sunday, Year (C)

(Exodus 17:8-13; 2 Timothy 3:14 – 4:2; Luke 18:1-8)

 

 

As Moses was guiding Israel to the Promised Land, we heard that:

            Amalek came and attacked Israel at Rephidim.)

Now, it is important that we notice what followed, for Moses said to Joshua:

Pick men for us and march out tomorrow to fight against Amalek; and I shall stand on the hilltop with the staff of God in my hand.

Moses was not a bloodthirsty man, in fact, Scripture tells us (Numbers 12:3-4) that:

Moses was very humble, more so than any man on the face of the earth;  

and yet, as you heard, he went -- as leader, with the staff of God in his hand -- to intercede for the army of Israel fighting in battle at his behest.

Whenever Moses raised his hands Israel had the advantage, and when he lowered his hands, the advantage passed to Amalek. 

Ultimately, it was thanks to Moses' intercession that:

      Joshua defeated Amalek and put its people to the sword. 

And so, despite being the humblest of men, Moses led his people into war believing it to be in accordance with the will of the Lord.

Moses was also the holiest of men, for again, Scripture (Exodus 33:11) tells us that:

The Lord used to speak with Moses, face to face, as one man speaks to another.

The full significance of this is explained to us in the following words of the Lord:

If he were a prophet and nothing more, I would make Myself known to him in a vision, I would speak with him in a dream.  But My servant Moses is not such a prophet; of all My house he alone is faithful.  With him I speak face to face, openly and not in riddles.  He sees the very form of the Lord. (Numbers 12:6-8)

Because Moses was totally dedicated to God in his holiness and his humility, he could not be directly involved in the bloody struggle against Amalek taking place in the valley below him; nevertheless, for the sake of God's People, he would share in the battle, in the manner best suited to his particular calling and personal character, that is, by his prayers.  From this we can see that war is not, of itself, evil; but it can only become an acceptable weapon for the People of God, when used for a purpose, and exercised in a manner, acceptable to God.

Timothy was a man totally dedicated to God in his life, but, as with Moses, that did not mean that he could not, should not, fight.  His ministry was indeed to be a fight, and the words of St. Paul in the second reading were preparing and encouraging him to be a fighter in the best Christian sense, for God’s glory and for men's salvation:

All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.  Preach the word! Be ready in season and out of season. Convince, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching.

That is not at all like much modern use of Scripture to console, ‘cuddle and comfort’, souls!!

Worldly weapons of destruction are, almost inevitably, backed by worldly passions; and too often they result in hatred, violence, and ruthlessness being directed against our fellow men.   St. Paul, on the other hand, explains that the Christian fight is against the devil:

We do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places. (Ephesians 6:12)

Moreover, the Christian must learn to fight not only against evil in principalities and powers but also against the evil and malice, lust and luxuriousness, weakness and  ignorance, ensconced within many of society’s preferences, and in his very own heart and mind; and for such a campaign -- one that has to be faced-up to and fought throughout life -- only faith and prayer can enable him to endure and ultimately win the promised crown:

Take up the armour of God.  Stand fast; fasten on the belt of truth, for a breastplate put on integrity; let the shoes on your feet be the gospel of peace, to give you firm footing.  And with all these, take up the great shield of faith with which you will be able to quench all the burning arrows of the evil one.  Accept the sword which the Spirit gives you, the word of God.   Constantly ask God’s help, praying always in power of the Spirit.   (Ephesians 6:13-18)

In armed conflicts emotions naturally arise in the combatants; and being instinctive, they can easily develop, becoming so powerful and imperious as to be indeed, passions: forces we do not simply use, but which rather use us, and from which we suffer greatly: impulses blinding us to such an extent that they overwhelm our judgment and override our conscience.  From such indulged passions there can directly arise not only human tragedies and great suffering, but also retaliatory crimes of passion, spreading human misery over an ever-longer time and wider field.

The virtue of faith, on the other hand, can never become an overwhelming passion since it is a supernatural gift of God which only develops through our deliberate and persevering faithfulness and humility before God; moreover, faith exercises its power against all that provokes and promotes passions and their excesses, that is, against the multitude of irritations and antagonisms, injuries and vanities, lusts and longings -- not to mention anxieties and fears -- that can so easily fill the lives and vex the hearts and minds of men and women today. 

Therefore, our Gospel passage ended on a very sombre note:

When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?

Many Christian men and women still lead lives basically dedicated to God; but being involved in the world and living partly for worldly ends, their Christian faith can, at times, be weakened by the difficulties and trials they inevitably encounter, for there is no doubt that our Western civilization is that of a post-Christian era, indeed a post-religion era; and    although there still remain remnants of Christian teachings, examples of Christian attitudes and values, these are only very rarely able to tug at public heart-strings.  Moreover, since many of our contemporaries have thrown off all direct contact with the living Church, morals have not only deteriorated but, indeed, are no longer recognized in our society where individual freedom and personal preference triumph over all save criminal law.  In other words, sins are no longer admitted, only crimes punished.   Even ‘glorious’ reason and rationality itself, which might seem, as judged from our technological advances, to have been so wonderfully encouraged and empowered, has, in fact, been dreadfully distorted.  Originally given as a unique blessing to enable mankind to recognize and appreciate something of the glory of God in the wonder of creation, and find, in a rightly ordered human society, the way to true human fulfilment and happiness, the human intellect has increasingly been used by men to glorify themselves whilst seeking to deny any divine power over creation or divine influence in human affairs. 

And yet, because humankind is made for God, many continue to feel a need to be justified, to be at one with the ‘other’, who, if it not the transcendent God, must then be society itself.  And today, the solution of individual problems and general moral issues is so often sought exclusively at the bar of public opinion and common practice: whatever is popular must be right and acceptable, so that we regularly hear such phrases as: “I’m only doing what lots of others are doing”.  And there are yet others for whom it is sufficient to feel at one with their presumed personal fate, and these will frequently explain and excuse themselves by such words as, ‘There was no other option open to us; we could not have done otherwise.’.

When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?

To that end that Jesus told the parable in today’s Gospel to encourage us to pray continually and never lose heart.   Why, even a most unjust judge could be overcome by the very weakest of opponents – an elderly widow -- by her persistence:

While it is true that I neither fear God nor respect any human being, because this widow keeps bothering me, I shall deliver a just decision for her.

Will Jesus, when He comes again, find some persistent few still willing to seek a silence, a peace, within and without themselves, that they might listen for His voice, hear and willingly answer His call?  And if so, will He find among those chosen ones any prepared -- in accordance with His word -- to sacrifice themselves with Him, for His purposes, and for the glory of the God Who created us and the Father Who loves us?       

So, let us once more imbibe confidence from St. Paul’s personal experience of the truth and trustworthiness of Jesus’ words (Romans 8:38 – 9:1):

I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, nor height nor depth, not any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

And let us always remember that God alone is merciful, essentially merciful and true. Therefore, Divine Mercy cannot be separated from His commands: for His commands – infallibly known to us through Mother Church’s traditional teaching – are, as Jesus Himself said, eternal life, always deliberately willed as supreme expressions of God’s mercy towards weak and sinful human beings aspiring to walk, perseveringly, in the ways of His Son, as His own children.