TWENTY-NINTH SUNDAY OF THE YEAR "C"
Cycle “C”: Ex 17, 8 –13; 2Tim 3.14-4,2; Lk
18, 1 – 8.
Introduction:
The first reading of today’s liturgy describes how the Israelites defeated the
Amalekites in battle: but for that ultimate victory, Moses had top stand with
his arms outstretched in prayer. When his arms became heavy, two members of the
community helped keep them extended till sunset when victory was achieved.
Look at Jesus with his arms extended on the
cross, praying for all including his executioners. His final prayer was,
“Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.”
United with Our Lord, we commit ourselves
to the Father in order to adore, praise. and thank him, begging his mercy and
for all that we need for ourselves and loved ones.
THE HOMILY:
We find people irritating for all sorts of reasons. One reason is that they are
always talking about themselves and don’t know when to keep quiet. But it also
possible to be irritated with someone for another reason: because they are
right and you are wrong, and deep down you know it. Just like the judge in the
Gospel story.
The judge is an unsympathetic man, who has
no time for God and doesn’t care two shekels what people think of him. So when
the poor widow stands up and says, “Give me justice”, he simply ignores her.
“Next case, please.” So he thought that was that. Except that this woman was
not prepared to be fobbed off so easily. Every time the judge appeared in
court, she stood up and made a nuisance of herself. Eventually, with his nerve
shot, he said to himself, (we presume), “I may not care a shekel for god or
man, but this woman is driving me stark raving naked mad. So let’s give her
what she wants and I’ll see the back of her.” So he ends up by doing what is
right, though for the wrong reasons, i.e. to rid himself of a splitting
feminine headache.
Now there’s something we have to be careful
about. You see, so often we picture God as a judge. So we assume that today’s
gospel parable is depicting God as being like the judge in the story. This is
disastrous! Yes, some people do think of God as needing to be badgered and
pestered into doing things. But Jesus was not one of them. Jesus didn’t badger
and pester his Father. Indeed, the real point of the story is exactly the
opposite. The lesson Jesus teaches here is simple: if a hard-hearted human
judge could be moved to act by the widow’s persistence, how much more
will God, who is loving and gracious, hear his people’s cry for help?
There are two other lessons: One is that we
Christians have to learn to be people who will not accept defeat, who do not
know when to stop, when the cause is just and right. A good many of the
problems of human society have only been solved by people who made a thorough
nuisance of themselves because they knew that they were right.
One example. In December 1955, in the town
of Montgomery, Alabama, US, a black American woman after a day’s work boarded a
bus and took a seat. She was ordered to give up her seat in favour of a white
man who had just got on. But she refused and sat where she was, and got
arrested. While she was in prison, a Baptist minister, called Martin Luther
King, came to her defence and organised a yearlong boycott of the busses by the
black population of Montgomery, Alabama. The authorities gave in. Thus was born
the American Civil Rights Movement. In 1974 the Civil Rights Bill was
eventually passed by the US Congress.
The other lesson coming out of today’s
gospel story is that unlike an unjust human judge, our dear God knows the needs
of his children even before they ask. It teaches us something about trust. We
have only to look at the life of Jesus to know where his source of strength
came from. In that power, that inner strength, he faced hostility and
opposition, went to the cross and passed through death into a transcendent
life.
If we are going to leave this world a
little better than we found it, if we are going to serve with love and without
cynicism, self-interest and pride, we have to share in the power of the only
one who has succeeded in doing those things and doing them right: Jesus our
Lord. Such motivation and such inner strength are ours for the asking.
It was Alfred Lord Tennyson who said, in a
phrase that has now become famous, “More things are wrought by prayer than this
world dreams of.” But it was a greater person than Tennyson who said, “Ask and
it will be given you. Seek and you will find.”
PRAYER: Lord
Jesus, you are portrayed as a man of prayer, and we rejoice to follow in your
footsteps. You prayed at your baptism (Lk 3,21), you prayed the entire night
before selecting your 12 apostles (6,12), you prayed as you resolutely took the
road for Jerusalem (9,28), and in Gethsemane before offering the supreme
sacrifice (22,41), and, with open arms on the cross you prayed for all,
including your executioners. And your final prayer was “Father, into your hands
I commit my spirit"(24,46).
We beseech you, Lord Jesus, enable us to
reproduce your prayer life in our own lives so that your prayer to the Father
may come true for us, namely, “Father, I pray that where I am they also may
be.”
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