20th Sunday of Ordinary Time
“Watch carefully how you live … because
the days are evil” writes St Paul to the Ephesians in today’s second reading. Given what we have heard and read of the
abuse that some priests, bishops, and even cardinals have done to children,
young people, and even their younger brother priests, we agree with St Paul and
say that these days, our days, are evil too.
We struggle with feelings of anger,
betrayal, confusion, and disgust. We don’t
hear enough words of outrage or promises of change, justice and
repentance from our bishops. Instead we are chastised
because some chose to withhold financial support from the church. And saddest of all, some of us have decided
already that they have had enough and will not be back to church, perhaps ever
again. These are indeed evil days and,
as St Paul said, we have to be careful then how we live.
In today’s first reading, wisdom is
personified as a lovely Lady who has prepared a meal, compete with choice meat
and wine. She has sent out her maidens
inviting all to the feast, especially those who are simple and lack
understanding. She asks us to “forsake
foolishness” that we may live and “advance in the way of understanding.”
This is a poetic representation of the
Lord God as a beautiful woman who has only good things to offer us to eat and
drink, as well as the most helpful gifts of wisdom and understanding. Perhaps we might hear in it a call to seek a
sense of tranquility and being cared for in the middle of the painful and pitiful
situation that threatens to overwhelm us. God’s word reminds us that God is
still very much with us, even in all of this, and God offers us what we most
need.
Likewise, in today’s gospel, as we continue to hear Jesus in the Bread of
Life discourse from John 6, the Lord promises us himself, his flesh and blood,
that is given for the life of the world. When we eat his flesh and drink his
blood, we remain in him and he remains in us.
We will have life and will live forever.
It is times like this when we need to
hold on and believe that God is with us and that evil will not be the final
word. No doubt there are still more
painful days ahead as yet more deeds of darkness are brought into the light. But
with God’s help and presence, we will still be standing when the storm of sin
is through.
In the meantime, we need to “advance
in the way of understanding” as the book of Proverbs promise. We need also, to try to understand God’s will
in all of this, as St. Paul exhorts us.
But most importantly, we need to cling to the Lord in the Eucharist, for
Jesus with his flesh and blood can care for us there in ways that will sustain
us from now into eternal life.
In Matthew 16:18, Jesus promised that
the powers of death will not prevail against the church. In these evil days, we
need to remember that and cling to those words as well. God is with us. Jesus remains the center of the church and he
and those of us who remain with him will prevail, despite the sins and
sufferings that surround us.
Bravo!
ReplyDeleteThank you for this. The message really resonates with my feelings right now.
ReplyDelete