15th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Readings of the day: Deuteronomy 30:10-14; Psalm 69:13, 17, 30-31, 33-34, 36, 37; Colossians 1:15-20; Luke 10:25-37
This homily was given at St. Joseph's College of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Mercy: Is there a word more popular among Catholics; among Christians today, especially the many of us who admire and attentively follow Pope Francis? Our pope has mercy built into his motto as a bishop, Miserando atque eligendo, which means roughly, “by having mercy and by choosing.” In an interview a few months after his election as pope, Francis showed his deep sense of God’s mercy as essential to his life and ministry: “I am a sinner whom the Lord has looked upon”; chosen by God’s mercy as the Bishop of Rome to lead our Church. Mercy is one of the most common words in Pope Francis’ writings; his speech; his homilies. In April 2015, when Pope Francis proclaimed this Jubilee Year of Mercy we will be celebrating until December, he spoke of mercy as “the beating heart of the Gospel.”
But, as often as we; as Pope Francis speaks of mercy, how well do we actually understand and live out mercy? Is mercy not still one of the most mysterious and even scary words, even to the most faithful Christian? Should it not be?
Today we encounter in Luke’s Gospel a lawyer, literally a scholar of the law. I am not about to make any cheap jokes here about lawyers. I have a few personal friends who are lawyers, and there may be lawyers among us here this morning. Besides, I do not really want to follow Jesus in nearly being thrown off a cliff (as he does near the beginning of his public ministry in this same Gospel of Luke; it was a tough first attempt at preaching for Jesus)! In fact, the lawyer in today’s Gospel reading gets a bad rap, undeservedly at least at first. His motives are right, I think, as he asks Jesus: “Teacher… What must I do to inherit eternal life”? Who among us here does not want eternal life? If anybody here does not, I might question why you are here.
But the lawyer’s question is only a starting point. It takes this question, “What must I do to inherit eternal life,” for Jesus to begin the process of conversion of this lawyer; of us, from experts of religious law to experts of mercy; into people fully able and willing to live out God’s gift of mercy. How, then, does Jesus begin the process of the lawyer’s conversion from expert of law to expert of mercy? Jesus begins by meeting the lawyer where he is; by asking him basic first year law school questions: “What is written in the law? What do you read there”?
And the brilliant lawyer passes the test with flying colours; he even gets all the available bonus marks! He quotes from the heart of the Jewish Law, from a prayer that all observant Jews pray morning and night to this day and that is in our Bible in the Books of Deuteronomy and Leviticus: “Hear, O Israel… You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbour as yourself.”
But then the poor lawyer gets scared. Jesus announces with joy to the lawyer that he has just aced the graduate-level law course that sends most every student cowering. “Great work”! Now, “do this and you will live.” Next up is Mercy 101, which will last the rest of your life, not in the class or courtroom but in practice. You will die, unsure of having passed Mercy 101 until you are raised up and received into heaven by God with mercy beyond the comprehension of the best of students and even of the experts.
The lawyer sputters with fear: “And who is my neighbour”? Jesus could and maybe should have failed the lawyer on the spot. Clearly he is not ready for Mercy 101. Instead, Jesus uses this ideal teaching moment; a “mercy moment,” to give us the story of the Good Samaritan.
We all know the story of the Good Samaritan, right? A man on the road “from Jerusalem to Jericho” is beaten and left “half dead.” A priest and then a Levite, people in a position to help the wounded man, instead cross over to “the other side” of the road and continue on their way. A Samaritan becomes the unlikely hero. I say unlikely because the Samaritans were the enemies; the greatest misfits in Israel in Jesus’ time: Too pagan to be Jewish and too Jewish to be pagan. And yet this Samaritan binds up the man’s wounds, cares for him, and then entrusts him to an innkeeper, promising to pay any extra expenses, until the man is healed.
We know the story of the Good Samaritan well. Or do we? What if I were to suggest that the story of the Good Samaritan is taking place here and now? I suggest this not only because in our world, in our nation, within our families, even within our Church there continue to be people excluded; laughingstocks; enemies, although this is, sadly, part of our story. We would not experience Orlando; Istanbul and Baghdad; St. Paul and Baton Rouge; Dallas; countless tragedies met with silence, were the dignity of all human life honoured regardless of race, sexual orientation, religious or political beliefs, wealth, age, occupation, whether we are born or unborn, and so on… We would not need to wait for unlikely heroes; the Good Samaritans of our time (among them let me propose Oscar Romero, Dorothy Day, Martin Luther King, Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini) to stand with the excluded; those, literally or figuratively, left “half-dead” on the roadside or worse, because there would be nobody excluded; no “other”; no enemy, but each of us a neighbour.
“Do this and you will live,” Jesus says to the lawyer; to us. “Who is my neighbour?” the lawyer asks and then answers his own question; our question: “The one who showed… mercy.”
Mercy: This reason we live, this “beating heart of the Gospel,” perhaps scares us. We cannot fully comprehend mercy before we experience it in heaven. Yet in this world we are given many tastes; many previews of this fullness of mercy. Our world itself, creation, is a work of God’s mercy. Our Church gives us Christ, mercy really present in our Eucharist under the appearance of bread and wine; mercy really present in her other sacraments; mercy really present in one another and waiting to be worked in our world.
Mercy is present; spoken of in the Word of God. Moses speaks today in Deuteronomy: Mercy, God’s greatest law and gift, is neither “too hard” for us nor “too far away”; neither confined to the distant heavens nor “beyond the sea” but “in [our mouths] and in [our hearts] for [us] to observe.” We plead with the Psalmist to our God of “steadfast love… According to your abundant mercy, turn to me.” For “those who love [God’s] name,” Mercy, “will live in it.”
And the great hymn from Colossians speaks of Christ, God’s greatest act of mercy yet, as the one in whom “all things hold together,” from God’s creation of the world of which Christ is “firstborn” to our “peace through the blood of his cross”; from act of mercy to act of mercy.
God’s mercy is so great as to be overwhelming; often scary. Yet we are called to imitate this mercy as neighbours; without exclusion. And who is our neighbour? Who are we but the ones who show mercy?
“Go and do likewise”… “Do this and [we] will live.”
Readings of the day: Deuteronomy 30:10-14; Psalm 69:13, 17, 30-31, 33-34, 36, 37; Colossians 1:15-20; Luke 10:25-37
This homily was given at St. Joseph's College of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Mercy: Is there a word more popular among Catholics; among Christians today, especially the many of us who admire and attentively follow Pope Francis? Our pope has mercy built into his motto as a bishop, Miserando atque eligendo, which means roughly, “by having mercy and by choosing.” In an interview a few months after his election as pope, Francis showed his deep sense of God’s mercy as essential to his life and ministry: “I am a sinner whom the Lord has looked upon”; chosen by God’s mercy as the Bishop of Rome to lead our Church. Mercy is one of the most common words in Pope Francis’ writings; his speech; his homilies. In April 2015, when Pope Francis proclaimed this Jubilee Year of Mercy we will be celebrating until December, he spoke of mercy as “the beating heart of the Gospel.”
But, as often as we; as Pope Francis speaks of mercy, how well do we actually understand and live out mercy? Is mercy not still one of the most mysterious and even scary words, even to the most faithful Christian? Should it not be?
Today we encounter in Luke’s Gospel a lawyer, literally a scholar of the law. I am not about to make any cheap jokes here about lawyers. I have a few personal friends who are lawyers, and there may be lawyers among us here this morning. Besides, I do not really want to follow Jesus in nearly being thrown off a cliff (as he does near the beginning of his public ministry in this same Gospel of Luke; it was a tough first attempt at preaching for Jesus)! In fact, the lawyer in today’s Gospel reading gets a bad rap, undeservedly at least at first. His motives are right, I think, as he asks Jesus: “Teacher… What must I do to inherit eternal life”? Who among us here does not want eternal life? If anybody here does not, I might question why you are here.
But the lawyer’s question is only a starting point. It takes this question, “What must I do to inherit eternal life,” for Jesus to begin the process of conversion of this lawyer; of us, from experts of religious law to experts of mercy; into people fully able and willing to live out God’s gift of mercy. How, then, does Jesus begin the process of the lawyer’s conversion from expert of law to expert of mercy? Jesus begins by meeting the lawyer where he is; by asking him basic first year law school questions: “What is written in the law? What do you read there”?
And the brilliant lawyer passes the test with flying colours; he even gets all the available bonus marks! He quotes from the heart of the Jewish Law, from a prayer that all observant Jews pray morning and night to this day and that is in our Bible in the Books of Deuteronomy and Leviticus: “Hear, O Israel… You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbour as yourself.”
But then the poor lawyer gets scared. Jesus announces with joy to the lawyer that he has just aced the graduate-level law course that sends most every student cowering. “Great work”! Now, “do this and you will live.” Next up is Mercy 101, which will last the rest of your life, not in the class or courtroom but in practice. You will die, unsure of having passed Mercy 101 until you are raised up and received into heaven by God with mercy beyond the comprehension of the best of students and even of the experts.
The lawyer sputters with fear: “And who is my neighbour”? Jesus could and maybe should have failed the lawyer on the spot. Clearly he is not ready for Mercy 101. Instead, Jesus uses this ideal teaching moment; a “mercy moment,” to give us the story of the Good Samaritan.
We all know the story of the Good Samaritan, right? A man on the road “from Jerusalem to Jericho” is beaten and left “half dead.” A priest and then a Levite, people in a position to help the wounded man, instead cross over to “the other side” of the road and continue on their way. A Samaritan becomes the unlikely hero. I say unlikely because the Samaritans were the enemies; the greatest misfits in Israel in Jesus’ time: Too pagan to be Jewish and too Jewish to be pagan. And yet this Samaritan binds up the man’s wounds, cares for him, and then entrusts him to an innkeeper, promising to pay any extra expenses, until the man is healed.
We know the story of the Good Samaritan well. Or do we? What if I were to suggest that the story of the Good Samaritan is taking place here and now? I suggest this not only because in our world, in our nation, within our families, even within our Church there continue to be people excluded; laughingstocks; enemies, although this is, sadly, part of our story. We would not experience Orlando; Istanbul and Baghdad; St. Paul and Baton Rouge; Dallas; countless tragedies met with silence, were the dignity of all human life honoured regardless of race, sexual orientation, religious or political beliefs, wealth, age, occupation, whether we are born or unborn, and so on… We would not need to wait for unlikely heroes; the Good Samaritans of our time (among them let me propose Oscar Romero, Dorothy Day, Martin Luther King, Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini) to stand with the excluded; those, literally or figuratively, left “half-dead” on the roadside or worse, because there would be nobody excluded; no “other”; no enemy, but each of us a neighbour.
“Do this and you will live,” Jesus says to the lawyer; to us. “Who is my neighbour?” the lawyer asks and then answers his own question; our question: “The one who showed… mercy.”
Mercy: This reason we live, this “beating heart of the Gospel,” perhaps scares us. We cannot fully comprehend mercy before we experience it in heaven. Yet in this world we are given many tastes; many previews of this fullness of mercy. Our world itself, creation, is a work of God’s mercy. Our Church gives us Christ, mercy really present in our Eucharist under the appearance of bread and wine; mercy really present in her other sacraments; mercy really present in one another and waiting to be worked in our world.
Mercy is present; spoken of in the Word of God. Moses speaks today in Deuteronomy: Mercy, God’s greatest law and gift, is neither “too hard” for us nor “too far away”; neither confined to the distant heavens nor “beyond the sea” but “in [our mouths] and in [our hearts] for [us] to observe.” We plead with the Psalmist to our God of “steadfast love… According to your abundant mercy, turn to me.” For “those who love [God’s] name,” Mercy, “will live in it.”
And the great hymn from Colossians speaks of Christ, God’s greatest act of mercy yet, as the one in whom “all things hold together,” from God’s creation of the world of which Christ is “firstborn” to our “peace through the blood of his cross”; from act of mercy to act of mercy.
God’s mercy is so great as to be overwhelming; often scary. Yet we are called to imitate this mercy as neighbours; without exclusion. And who is our neighbour? Who are we but the ones who show mercy?
“Go and do likewise”… “Do this and [we] will live.”
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