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30th Sunday in Ordinary Time – “O God, be merciful!”

Sir. 35:12-14, 16-18; Ps. 34:2-3, 17-19, 23; 2 Tim. 4:6-8, 16-18; Lk.18:9-14

“O God, be merciful to me a sinner.”  This is the cry of the poor for by our sin we are all poor and in need of God’s mercy.  We are oppressed by our sins and the temptation to sin.  Born with concupiscence our fallen nature is in need forgiveness and the power of the Holy Spirit through baptism.  Baptism prepares the soul to grow in holiness with the virtues to face the enemy both from within and from without.  Our God is merciful to those who seek him in our sorrow, suffering, and petition. 

“The Lord redeems the lives of his servants”.  St. Paul claims to be the Lord’s servant but so does the Pharisee yet Jesus makes a clear distinction between the two.  What separates the two in the eyes of Jesus and who do we resemble the most? St. Paul who claims “the crown of righteousness” or the Pharisee who exalted himself in his view of righteousness?

St. Paul’s famous line “I have competed well; I have finished the race; I have kept the faith” is his claim to righteousness.  This servant of the Lord did what the Lord called him to do and “poured” himself out like a “libation” meaning he sacrificed himself out of love of God.  He did not deny God what was asked of him.  The Pharisee took the position of legalism having check off the boxes of compliance he now felt entitled and exalted himself.  The Pharisee did not stop to ask God what did God desire of him.  St. Paul was filled with the love of God while the Pharisee was filled with the love of self. 

Have we stopped to ask God what he desires of us?  In our daily life God is active providing opportunities to respond as his servant, do his will, and be the hand of God that offers his love.  Our godly call is to be in imitation of Jesus.  Jesus’ incarnation brought his divinity to our humanity that we may imitate his divinity in our frail human weakness through the power of the Holy Spirit.  If our life is simply to serve our humanity by our own desires of life then “religion” becomes a self-righteous practice of self-justification reflected in the comments of the Pharisee. 

Religion, that is the church is a gift of God to raise our humanity to God’s divinity.  It is the means to an end and not an end in itself.  The end in itself is God who provides us the means.  Through the sacraments, the word, and the testimony of the Holy Spirit, Jesus left us the path to true righteousness and to heaven. 

Today we are reminded that “the Lord is a God of justice who knows no favorites”.  God reconciles both his love and his justice in Jesus.  Jesus is the sacrifice that is to live within us that we may make up what is still lacking and waiting to be fulfilled through us.  Our God is merciful to the soul that receives Jesus and responds in the same spirit of Mary’s fiat “let it be done to me according to thy word”.  As Jesus entered the womb of Mary, he also enters into our soul to be united as one in truth waiting only for our response to his will.  This is what is lacking, our response to do his will.  If today you hear his voice, say “yes Lord, I come to do your will”. 

“O Lord be merciful to me a sinner” is the prayer of a soul that reflects God’s righteousness and not our own claim to truth.  If today we find ourselves broken, trust in the Lord by continuing to serve God willingly for our prayer is being answered justly with the goal that is meant to lead us to heaven.  It is not the years on this earth that determine our destiny but our surrender to God and in his mercy our guilt is washed clean.  The Lord is our refuge in good times and in bad, in joy and in suffering, in temptation from the desires of the flesh and in the attack from the evil one.  Keep the faith and we will have competed well and the crown of righteousness is at the finish line. 

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30th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Sir. 35:12-14, 16-18; Ps. 34: 2-3, 17-19, 23; 2 Tim. 4:6-8, 16-18; Lk. 18:9-14

“The Lord hears the cry of the poor”.  We are justified by God’s mercy.  The one who exalted himself in his own righteousness denies their sinfulness and thus by doing so denies God.  God is truth and the tax collector recognized God’s truth as he “beat his breast and prayed ‘O God, be merciful to me a sinner.”

We live in dark times where the denial of absolute truth is common practice.  One way to justify “our truth” is by faith in our conscience thinking.  If our conscience says, “I see no harm (fill in the blank) with abortion, euthanasia, same sex marriage, unlimited gender identity, etc. because my conscience sees no harm after all who can deny a person’s individual rights?”  Our conscience has determined our individual rights are ours alone, total entitlement without responsibility to “other”.  God is other and we cannot say we belong to God without being responsible and accountable to the God who set limits on our rights and calls us to obedience. 

Genesis 1:27 says, “So God created human beings in his own image…male and female he created them.”  Today some want to identify as “they” with the freedom to change their identity tomorrow if their conscience determines this is who they “feel they are” and societal norms must approve their truth.  Conscience is not a feeling.  Conscience is an informed thought process supported by natural law, the gifts of the Holy Spirit and by God himself in the Word made flesh.  It requires faith, reason and trust to achieve truth. 

In the gospel today, the tax collector turns to God for mercy and trusted in him.  The Pharisee trusted in himself, his conscience to be self-justified and in his pride “will be humbled”.  In the 2nd Letter to Timothy, Paul makes a bold statement based on both his humanity meaning his conscience and through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit when he says, “From now on the crown of righteousness awaits me; which the Lord, the just judge will award to me on that day…”.  How is Paul so bold as to make this claim and sound like the Pharisee?  The difference is the Pharisee is a minimalist doing what on the outside appears compliant to the law to be self-justified.  Paul is a “libation” for Christ meaning he has made of himself an offering totally living for the glory of God. 

If we ask ourselves where am I on the spectrum between the Pharisee on one end of minimalism and Paul on the other end as a “libation” in our daily worship, sacrifice, obedience, and love of God?   In our honest conscience appraisal, we find ourselves somewhere between the two.  Confirmation is a sacrament to propel us forward as warriors for Christ, to compete well and run the race of faith to the end being the best God created us to be not the least.  Paul’s “departure is at hand” his days are numbered and his is looking back now and in faith proclaims God “will bring me safe to his heavenly kingdom.”  Most of us look forward to a long life not so much back at our race or how well we have competed in our faith.  If we did, we might be headed to confession beating our breast in prayer, “O God, be merciful to me a sinner.” 

The Lord “knows no favorites…not unduly partial toward the weak yet he hears the cry of the oppressed.”  As we look around at the world scene there are many oppressed who suffer in ways some have never experienced in this country from war, terrorism, extreme hunger, disease and genocide.  Still even here we have the poor, homeless, unemployed, widow, orphan, and the sick.  The Lord hears the cry of the “one who serves God willingly…his petitions reaches to heavens.”  Not all the suffering serves God willingly.  It is the prayer of the humbled who is exalted with no sense of entitlement.  In the heart there is no claim “I deserve better”.  It is the “prayer of the lowly…it does not rest till it reaches its goal…judges justly and affirms the right, and the Lord will not delay.”

 Paul lived an informed conscience by the Holy Spirit. Looking back the race was finished and the hour had come to receive the crown of righteousness from the just judge.  What will be our prayer at the last hour if we are blessed to recognize our hour has come?  What is the perfect prayer Jesus gives us?  The first thought might be the Lord’s Prayer he gave the disciples.  Others may simply say all of Jesus prayers are perfect prayers.  One prayer however stands out as Jesus recognizes his hour had come.  It is called the “high priestly prayer” or “The Prayer of Jesus” in John 17:1-26.  Paul’s prayer mirrors this high priestly prayer as a libation of surrender to God. 

Reflect on just a few of these words from the heart of Jesus in this priestly prayer, “When Jesus had said this, he raised his eyes to heaven and said, ‘Father, the hour has come.  Give glory to your son, so that your son may glorify you…I glorified you on earth by accomplishing the work that you gave me to do.  Now glorify me, Father, with you,…I have revealed your name to those who you gave me…Now they know that everything you gave me is from you…I pray for them…because they are yours and everything of mine is yours…But now I am coming to you…I pray…so that they may all be one, as you Father, are in me and I in you.”  Could this be our prayer? 

Today we receive the word and the body and blood of Jesus to be incarnated in us.  In this we run our race to the end and persevere as an offering of ourselves not just in all we do but in who we are.  It will rescue us “from the lion’s mouth”.  Claim our crown in righteousness of love poured out for God. 

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