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Saturday 19 August 2023

20th Sunday Year A, 2023

 

(Isaiah 56:1, 6-7; Romans 11:13-15, 29-32; Matthew 15:21-28)

 

People of God, today’s Gospel reading is provocative in that it can move us to face up to, and appreciate anew, our own Catholic awareness of, and attitude to, God; and to be more aware  of the role of religious belief in the context of today’s proudly pagan and indulgent, disbelieving and spiritually indolent, society.  Moreover, it offers us an opportunity to learn and appreciate more deeply the Personality of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour, Jesus.

The Gospel told us that Jesus had left Israel and was walking with His disciples through a Gentile region where, even today we hear, religious men and women in conservative areas  do not talk  to strangers of the opposite sex; indeed, rabbis do not even talk to female members of their own families in public.  Consequently, there was nothing strange in Jesus’ ignoring the cries of the Syrophoenician woman.

And yet, here at the very beginning of our consideration of today’s Gospel reading, the story has already, quite possibly, begun to reveal some of us to ourselves because,  very many people today would strongly assert that it was not ‘nice’ of Jesus to ignore that woman thus; after all, they would explain, is not religion supposed to be about ‘being nice, doing good, to people’?

The woman herself was well aware of the barrier of social propriety between her – a woman and a Gentile – thus publicly addressing Jesus, a man and a Jew, for she put on a smattering of Jewishness by calling out to Jesus as would a Jewish believer:

            Have pity on me, Lord, Son of David!

As she became more troublesome, however, His disciples said to Jesus:

            Send her away, for she keeps calling out after us.

Jesus’ reply shows us just how far the contemporary opinion, that religion is about being nice and doing ‘good’ to people, is from Jesus’ own Personal attitude:

            He said in reply, “I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.

Notice, Jesus was concerned only with doing the will of Him Who had sent Him:

            I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.

At this juncture I want you to recall how Jesus responded to His mother Mary’s surprising behaviour at the marriage feast in Cana when she told the servants, ‘Do whatever He tells you.’  Jesus was not thinking about doing anything at that moment; Mary’s behaviour had been rather unusual and had made things somewhat awkward for Jesus.  The Syrophoenician women was doing something like that here:

            (She) came and did Him homage, saying, “Lord, help me.”

Thus far, Jesus had adverted to the woman only by rejecting His disciples’ call for Him to do something about her.  However, that request by His disciples seems to have given the woman herself confidence enough to come forward quickly and throw herself at Jesus' feet asking for a miraculous cure for her daughter, and Jesus did then give her His own Personal attention by saying:

It is not right to take the food of the children and throw it to the dogs.

It is important for us to understand the mind of Jesus here.  St. John tells us (6:38) that Jesus once explained that He had not just come here on earth, He had been sent by His  Father, and He was here only to do His Father's will:

I have come down from heaven not to do My own will but the will of Him Who sent Me.

Notice also, People of God, Jesus did not say He had come among us to do good; He came to do His Father's will, and that was His whole purpose of His life on earth, because the Father alone is good, as Jesus once said:

Why do you call Me good? NO ONE IS GOOD EXCEPT GOD ALONE. (Mark 10:18)

There we have the key to most of our world's sufferings today.  There are so many people, often called do-gooders, the ‘woke’ ones who -- in society as a whole, in the government, in the European Union, at the European Court of Justice, the United Nations -- say they seek to do good, and probably not a few of them think they are sincere; but the good they seek is the good that they themselves approve of, in other words, their own idea of what is good for mankind.   Jesus, on the other hand, did not seek to do good as even He saw it; He sought to do the only real and true good for men-and-women-made-by-God-in-His- own-likeness, that is, the will of God, His Father's will for them.

So here, at this stage in our Gospel reading, we can recognize Jesus seeking to find what qualifications, so to speak, this woman had from His Father; for His Father had not sent Him to serve the pagan peoples around but only 'the lost sheep of the house of Israel'.  Therefore, He said to the woman:

It is not right to take the food of the children and throw it to the dogs.

How many women today would have stormed off in an upsurge of self-righteous indignation after words of that sort!!  This woman was not like that, however, and this is where we must start to learn about ourselves from her example, because she was deeply aware of the holiness both of Jesus and of the God from whom she was seeking a miracle; she was in no way preoccupied with any presumed worth or ‘rights’ of her own.  So many of those who decry or ignore God and the Church today are filled with imaginations of that sort: their human rights and their own social dignity and worth, while having little or no awareness of God and certainly no reverence or awe in their appreciation of His dignity.

The woman in the Gospel, answered Jesus in humility and truth, and speaking with a wisdom that was not her own she said:

Please, Lord, for even the dogs eat the scraps that fall from the table of their masters.

Unknown to herself she had, with those unstudied words, produced her credentials: for Jesus recognized at once that such wisdom could only have been given her by His Father.  And so, without further ado, He said:

O woman, great is your faith! Let it be done for you as you wish.

St. Matthew, recounting that event, was showing his converts, both Jewish and pagan -- and also telling us -- that in Jesus' estimation a miraculous cure -- like that of the daughter of the Canaanite woman -- is nothing more than a few crumbs in comparison with the heavenly banquet prepared in heaven for His disciples and for all those who will subsequently become children of God the Father through faith in Jesus.  We who are present at Mass, who offer the Eucharistic Sacrifice and share in the Eucharistic food, must recognize and appreciate that we are thereby sharing in and partaking of a treasure incomparably more stupendous and awe-inspiring than any miraculous cure!

We would, indeed, be thrilled if a miracle were to take place here in our midst. Why, therefore, are we not much more thrilled by the heavenly realities taking place in our Catholic worship. and at the beginnings of heavenly transformation being afforded us, as individual disciples of Jesus and children of God, through our faithful Christian and Catholic devotion to and love for Jesus, and our commitment to and service of His Church and His people! 

The reason is that we can only come to such an appreciation by an active faith: not just  mere believing, which accepts words without seeking to be caught up by, or involved in, their deeper meaning.   Dear People of God, an active faith, a burning, longing, and loving faith is essential for our Catholic growth and fulfilment; a faith which tries sincerely to appreciate and respond to God’s teaching and Jesus’ actions, a faith such as that of the Canaanite woman, of whom Jesus most approvingly said:

            O woman, great is your faith! Let it be done for you as you wish.

By nature we are sensitive, responsive, to physical blessings and worldly wonders.  By faith we must endeavour, strive, to make ourselves more aware of and responsive to the immeasurably more wonderful blessings and miracles of grace being offered to us in the sacramental and prayer life of Mother Church.  This, I believe, is the essential work incumbent upon us as Catholics today: we need to learn to live to the utmost of our human capabilities and potential, not only on the natural level but also on the spiritual, supernatural level, under the guidance of Christian teaching and Catholic faith, and by the power of the Spirit Jesus has given to Mother Church for our formation.  The Canaanite woman appreciated and loved her daughter by nature.  She had come to appreciate Jesus first of all from what she had heard of Him.  But then she did all she could to draw closer to Him, approaching Him above all with humility, aware of His majesty and her own need; she did not approach Him bloated with self-awareness and self-appreciation.  And yet, although she was so humble, she would not allow herself to be put-off from her desire to meet and speak personally with Jesus, neither would she allow herself to be drowned by her own self-pity on hearing words whose real purpose and meaning she could in no way understand.

People of God, we, each and every one of us, have to try to develop such a faith within us: a humble seeking, a persevering longing for God; and an ever more grateful and responsive faith in His Spirit at work in us who are children of Mother Church.  If not, at the very best, we will only be able to digest scraps from the table of the Lord; and that would indeed be tragic, because we have been called to the fullness of faith in Mother Church and are being prepared to participate in a banquet of heavenly proportions.  It is up to us.  We have been invited; Mother Church will not fail us on the way; and God’s most Holy Spirit guarantees us strength, comfort, and guidance for the journey; so let us commit ourselves and try to help each other, for, as St. Paul told us:

The  gifts and the call of God are irrevocable.