bg-image

26th Sunday in Ordinary Time – Compete well!

Amos 6:1a, 4-7; Ps. 146: 7-10; 1 Tim. 6:11-16; Lk.16:19-31

“But you, man of God…compete well for the faith”.   Man of God is for all mankind and throughout all stages of life from the young to the old.  There is a competition in this world between the forces of good and the forces of evil and the outcome determines the destiny of the soul for eternity.  It is enough to send a chill down the spine of those who see this truth and respond by competing well for the faith.  It is an active response to pursue righteousness with devotion and love.  Sadly, even among the faithful there is a presumption that life is to seek the pleasures of this world for our good and not to serve the good of others.  The story of the rich man and Lazarus is a clear reminder that God calls all to accountability for what we do or not do for the least we do unto him. 

The sin of a Christian is complacency as we hear in the first reading “woe to the complacent in Zion!”  Complacency is taking God for granted by not responding to the call we were given from God.  We live under the pretext that being a “good person” gets us to heaven but we don’t stop to ask ourselves what is “good” in the eyes of God.   God defines goodness and he clearly has provided us the prophets, the Word and his Son to make clear his will.  Here we fall short of the glory of God and the first step is this awareness that leads us to seek reconciliation and the mercy of God but also to take the right steps to be the person who God desires of us.  God’s desire is to seek his will and pray for the courage to complete well with his grace by our side. 

The consequence of the complacent is “exile”.  When we recall the exile of the Israelites it was a wandering in the desert not because the promise land was far from them but because their hearts were far from God.  The exile was a time of suffering to purify their hearts.  The same can be said of purgatory for the believers as an exile from the kingdom of God until our hearts are purified of its sin.  As the prophet Amos declares from the Lord, “Never will I forget a thing they have done” or failed to do out of complacency.   It was the message from last weeks readings and continues with focus on wealth and how we live our wealth and share our blessings. 

Riches are not a sin but they do contribute to complacency as we stretch comfortably “lying on our beds of ivory” and feed comfortably while forgetting the needs of others.  “Blessed is he who keeps faith” with a heart of justice for the oppressed.  We live in a country with tremendous opportunity to grow wealth through hard work and our God given talents.  Wealth creates the opportunity for freedom in how we manage our lives and our resources.  It also can create an illusion of power to control and to govern the lives of others through business, politics, and wealth.  This is vanity of vanities until the hour God says “enough” through loss, sickness, tragedy or death and we find ourselves in exile. 

The God of mercy who says take up your cross and follow me gives us the cross to bear not with a heart of persecution but with a heart of love to turn us back to him as the rich man now recognizes in his exile.  The rich man pleads for someone from the dead to go to his five brothers so they will repent. Abraham responds that if they will not listen to Moses and the prophets they will not be persuaded “if someone should rise from the dead”. 

We live in this time when someone did rise from the dead, our Lord Jesus Christ and yet there are few who are listening to his voice.  Jesus is speaking to the Pharisees because he wanted them to remember this story after he suffered and died for their sins that they may repent.  Some did repent but others went to their grave rejecting his teaching and persecuting the followers of Jesus.  Now is our time of repentance, to grow in holiness, to be good stewards of the gifts we are given by the way we live our lives and care for others.  Compete well as a good and faithful steward against complacency and the forces of evil, eternity depends on it. 

Tags
Shared this
Views

347 views


bg-image

26th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Am. 6:1a, 4-7; Ps. 146: 7-10; 1 Tim. 6:11-16; Lk. 16:19-31

“Lay hold of eternal life” and fight the good fight!  Jesus became poor in the flesh yet remained rich in his divinity to pour out riches to those who “pursue righteousness…Compete well for the faith” says the Lord.  We are born with a competitive drive in fact, we love a good fight to win just look at all the sports options to drive our competitive fire.  Friday night lights in every community are ready for the intensity of the game, the rush and the thrill of victory.  How well do we compete for our faith?  “Blessed he who keeps faith forever, secures justice for the oppressed, gives food to the hungry” and finishes the marathon of life.  May we be blessed to say “I have run the race and fought the good fight…it is finished”. 

We are reminded “Woe to the complacent in Zion!”  Complacency is more than taking our faith for granted.  It is depriving it of nourishment so that when the test comes, we find ourselves surrendering without a fight.  The first nourishment and line of defense is the sacraments of the church. These prepare us for the fight as the foundation of faith.  Through the sacraments Jesus pours out his riches in grace to provide us the weapons of virtue, knowledge, and wisdom.  This does not come to the complacent but to the those who seek through prayer, devotions, study, and fellowship. 

How much time do we spend in fellowship as a community?  Tis the season for church festivals uniting ourselves in support of our parish.  Study of our faith is power to be good in apologetics defending the faith.  We recently had Scott Hahn speak at our parish, a minor miracle given his international ministry and we were blessed to have a packed church.  Devotions both private and as a community like coming to Mass the first Friday of every month fill us with grace.  Prayer is God’s time we give to be open to the spiritual work God wants to do in us. 

Complacency says “not now God”, see in the intensity of life there is always something that is demanding attention, time, priority.  The intensity of the world becomes the normative way and it deprives us of our time to mature in faith and wisdom of God.  We judge ourselves as not complacent because we adhere to the intensity of worldly demands yet the spiritual life is dormant.  We carry the spiritual life of a child hoping for the best and fearing the worst. 

We are called to “Lay hold of eternal life” that is our mission statement.  We do this when “we give life to all things…with faith, love, patience, and gentleness”.  The rich man did not give life to all things, beginning with Lazarus “who would gladly have eaten his fill of the scraps that fell from the rich man’s table”.  The self-indulgence of the rich man landed him in the “netherworld, where he was in torment.”  There was no escape yet he begs for his five brothers to be warned.  Abraham prophetically tells him “If they did not listen to Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded if someone should rise from the dead.”  So true for Jesus came suffered died and rose from the dead and the world continues addicted to the sin of self-indulgence, they will not repent. 

To fight the good fight in the world the first battle to be won is internal.  It is the one that draws us to the intensity of sins of self-indulgence.  Like an addict we keep seeking the intensity of a new high or chasing the memory of a past experience because the current experience has created a vacuum.  The vacuum can only be filled by Christ.  The battle within cannot be won without the power from above, God’s mercy and love.  To lay hold of eternal life in this world is the victory for Christ and he shows us the way.  St. Augustine says, “Trust the past to God’s mercy, the present to God’s love and the future to God’s providence.” 

Tags
Shared this
Views

304 views