21st. Sunday (Year 
B)
(Joshua 24:1-2, 15-18; Ephesians 
5:21-32; John 6:60-69)
In our readings today we are 
reminded of the fact that in the course of our lives decisions -- both difficult 
and definitive – may sometimes have to be made: 
If it does not 
please you to serve the LORD, decide today whom you will serve, the gods which 
your fathers served beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose 
country you are now dwelling.    As for 
me and my household, we will serve the LORD.
Many of 
(Jesus’) disciples returned to their former way of life and no longer 
accompanied Him.  Then Jesus said to the 
Twelve, "Do you also want to leave?" 
This is because God the Father made 
such a decision when He willed that His only-begotten Son should take human 
flesh to free us from the tyranny of sin and death, thereby obliging us who will 
to be Christians to make a reciprocal decision in acceptance of His offer of 
salvation.  With God, His decision is 
sublime and final; we, however, are weak human beings hindered by our native 
ignorance and personal sinfulness, with the result that any seriously binding 
decision of ours has to be repeatedly renewed and personally re-affirmed if we 
are to live it out to fulfilment.  Any 
such decision can be sincerely made only on the basis of right-love motivating 
the choice, and persevering-commitment enabling us ultimately fulfil our 
original decision.
Now, such love and commitment are 
the two qualities St. Paul had in mind when giving his converts guidance with 
regard to the Christian institution of marriage:
Be subordinate 
to one another out of reverence for Christ. 
Words which he then develops for his 
immediate purposes by emphasising the predominant failing each of them needs to 
face: 
Wives should 
be subordinate to their husbands as to the Lord, for the husband is head of his 
wife just as Christ is head of the church, He Himself the saviour of the 
body.   As the church is subordinate to 
Christ, so wives should be subordinate to their husbands in everything. 
Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ loved the church and handed himself 
over for her. 
Jesus seriously requires such 
subordination, such commitment, on the part of His disciples, as you heard in 
the Gospel reading:
It is the 
spirit that gives life, while the flesh is of no avail. The words I have spoken 
to you are spirit and life.  But there 
are some of you who do not believe.” Jesus knew from the beginning the ones who 
would not believe and the one who would betray Him.   As a result of this, many (of) His disciples 
returned to their former way of life and no longer accompanied Him. Jesus then 
said to the Twelve, “Do you also want to leave?” 
Jesus would have none of those 
disciples who claim the right to re-negotiate, so to speak, their allegiance to 
Him if any unforeseen difficulty should arise to trouble them as a result of His 
teaching or in the course of His leading.  
Their commitment had to be total:
Simon Peter 
answered him, “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal 
life.   We have come to believe and are 
convinced that You are the Holy One of God.”   
For His part, as St. John tells 
us:
Jesus knew, 
before the feast of Passover, that His hour had come to pass from this world to 
the Father. He loved His own in the world and He loved them to the end. 
(John 13:1) 
Such was the commitment and love St. 
Paul also expressly recommended to his converts entering marriage by those 
words:
Be subordinate 
to one another out of reverence for Christ.  
How sad is it not that these days an 
alternative, shortened, second reading is offered, needs to be offered, today 
for some who want to give only a limited, personally approved, hearing to Gospel 
teaching? Yes, St. Paul was a truly selfless and totally committed -- mind and 
heart, body and soul -- disciple of Christ; and his writings are a loving 
presentation of His Lord’s Gospel to the proud and pagan world whose descendants 
are still with us and, in a certain measure, still among us!
Of course, those who choose to flee 
all binding commitments, be they religious or personal, say that we do not know 
what the future will bring; and how therefore, can we, at any given time, 
reasonably commit ourselves to some way of life or mode of conduct by 
accepting now responsibilities that later on may bring unwanted pressures.  They argue that no one can reasonably 
be expected to pledge themselves to some present relationship that will not 
allow them to take advantage of future opportunities that may arise.  We need to be able to avoid, or at least free 
ourselves from, future difficulties, and take full advantage of future 
possibilities.
To all that worldly selfishness and 
revolutionary rationality, the Catholic proclaims: I live by Faith in Jesus Christ the only-begotten 
Son of God become, for us men and by the power of the Holy Spirit, Son of Man; 
in His one and holy Body, which is Mother Church on earth, I live and love by 
His Gift of her teaching and sacraments.
The future is not, for us 
Christians, something totally dark, hidden, and unknowable.  We believe in God, a God Who is good, and has 
created us -- personally and individually -- for a purpose and with a 
future.  We believe that human beings, 
made in the image and likeness of God, are called to guide their lives towards a 
goal being offered them by God; a goal promised most surely, and revealed -- 
though darkly as yet, and as in a mirror -- to all believers in Jesus; for whom, 
indeed, it is a goal even now being gradually effected and brought to fulfilment 
in us, with us, and for us, by the Holy Spirit.  
In other  words, we Christians and 
Catholics believe that the future is more than sufficiently knowable, it is 
supremely desirable, and ultimately attainable for all who believe in Jesus and 
are willing to commit themselves in faith and trust to His promises and to the 
guidance of the Spirit He has bequeathed us in the Church He has given us.  And this attitude of self-commitment is so 
essential to Christianity that we believers have been given, as our mother, she 
of who it was said:
Blessed is she 
who believed, for there will be a fulfilment of those things which were told her 
from the Lord.  (Luke 1:45)
In our Gospel reading we heard that 
when the Jews rejected Jesus’ teaching on the Eucharist, He then, as if to 
confirm His teaching, went on to say:
What then if 
you should see the Son of Man ascend where He was before? 
There we can see how sure is the 
foundation on which our faith, our love and our commitment, is based.  Jesus is able to speak of the future, of the 
heavenly future prepared for and awaiting us, because He himself originally came 
from there, and has, as His words foreshadowed, ascended back again to receive 
as Son of Man that glory which already belonged to Him as Son of God living for 
all eternity in the presence of His heavenly Father.  His words, therefore, are not to be assessed 
as are the words of ordinary men who do not, indeed cannot, know what the future 
holds: they speak of a future which is ahead of them in time …. a future 
of as yet some unknown number of days, months, or years ahead of them but which 
will find them, and perhaps surprise them, still firmly rooted in this earthly 
state … they speak of an earthly future only.
We Catholics and Christian disciples 
of Jesus, however, believe that such an earthly and temporary future is but a 
preparation for the real future which is on offer to mankind and is promised to 
the believers in Jesus’ Good News, a future not without earthly consequences, 
but one that will ultimately bear full fruit in an eternity of Heavenly 
fulfilment or a Hell of loss and punishment according  to our preferences and 
choices made on earth.
Since Jesus has ascended to heaven 
in the glory of the Spirit, His words, which are still living and life-giving 
among us, are, consequently, no ordinary words but spiritual words:
It is the 
spirit that gives life, while the flesh is of no avail. The words I have spoken 
to you are spirit and life. 
People of God, in the first reading 
Joshua put clearly before the Israelites a choice they had to make; and we are 
in a like situation today.  For, in our 
society, Christianity can easily be subjected to public derision, while the 
Catholic Church is, not infrequently, hated.  
We are urged to choose a life more commonly acceptable, one which, 
because of some retained Christian aspects, is regarded as a good and 
praiseworthy life: for example, a life lived for personal family and friends, 
for children and the poor, even for the world’s underprivileged.    However, such a sort of life can remain 
deeply selfish, answering to no higher authority than ‘sincere self’, envisaging 
no eternal future or hopes for eternal blessedness with One greater than 
self.  Consequently, it can be a life 
weakened and disfigured by lack of commitment to any values that might obstruct 
its steady course towards present success, accompanied by public approbation 
and, perhaps above all, self-approval; a life which, more frequently 
these days, may be sealed by nothing better than a personally chosen  ‘shuffling off this mortal coil’ in 
suicide.
Our Christian faith and Mother 
Church, on the other hand, call us to a life of  greater personal commitment: a life of willing 
subjection of self initially to one other than self, in view of One infinitely 
greater than self; a subjection, a commitment, a devotion, recognizing and 
answering to the God Who is present and to be found in all and yet transcends 
all; and ultimately a commitment of self to God Himself in and through His Son, 
Jesus of Nazareth, the Christ Who now lives eternally with His  Father in heaven and -- by His Spirit -- with 
us and for us in His Church to the end of time.   Our Christian faith and Mother Church urge us 
to a life of commitment, to a selflessness before our God and Saviour, which, by 
a process of spiritual osmosis, will inevitably show itself in the ordinary 
things of our everyday lives: in marital love and commitment, sincere and 
lasting friendship, unfeigned neighbourliness, and penetrating down even to our 
most mundane social obligations, such as doing an honest day’s work and living 
as good and responsible citizens.
In making life’s choices, we must 
never forget the truth expressed in the words of Joshua:
If it does not 
please you to serve the Lord, decide today whom you will serve, the gods which 
your fathers served beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose 
country you are now dwelling.    As for 
me and my household, we will serve the Lord.
Whatever we choose, we will always 
be servants, because that is our nature.  
If, however, we make the right choice, we can serve the Lord Who is so 
good that He intends, after our faithful service here on earth, to give us a 
share with Him in His heavenly lordship and glory.   His word is true, His promise is sure, and 
His Way is straight; in all our needs His Spirit will be with us, and for all 
our endeavours the Father Who now awaits us will embrace and reward us as His 
adopted children in Christ Jesus our Lord.  
