Tuesday 26 July 2016

18th Sunday in Ordinary Time

"Vanity of vanities, says the Teacher, vanity of vanity, all is vanity." The First Reading today points out the futility of working long and hard for the fruits of our labours only for them to be enjoyed by others after our deaths. Working so hard that our lives are filled with worry and stress that we get no sleep - this, too, is foolishness. In the Gospel reading Jesus attacks greed and accumulation of wealth, again, vanity. If all of this, which is so valued by the world, is vanity what counts? What is it that really matters? In the Sermon on the Mount Jesus declared: "Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust consume and where thieves break in and steal; but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven where neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." (Mtt 6: 19-21) The question I can ask myself is where, indeed, is my treasure? If I am working hard or accumulating wealth what is the purpose of it all? If my relatives and friends came to pack up my things and account for my assets after my sudden death what will they find? Will they read thank you cards given to acknowledge my generosity and encounter the tears of those bereaved by my passing or will they find a pile of useless trinkets and unspent money to be picked over by others like vultures tearing apart a carcass? 

Monday 18 July 2016

17th Week in Ordinary Time

Today's Gospel reading invites us to trust God. Whenever we pray we should have underpinning our prayer the conviction that God wants our happiness and will answer any petition with the loving diposition of the best of parents. In the developmental psychology of Erik Erikson Trust/Mistrust is the first stage of our development as human beings. Coming from the womb we need first to trust that our parents will be there for us. We also need to mistrust that which is wrong or dangerous to us. In this way we are enabled to start our journey of development on a sound footing. Not only that, once I have navigated my way through the other stages: Autonomy, Industry, Identity, Intimacy, Generativity and Integrity, Trust/Mistrust is also the last stage. The questions that arise in my mind are: do I trust God?; have I bonded with God and accepted him as the one to guide me in my life and watch over me?; do I have an adequate aversion of those things I need to avoid that are damaging to me?; am I fundamentally optimistic about myself and life in general?; do I let anxiety and fear dominate me?; how ready am I to die and what will I have to say to the Lord when I meet him face to face? All of these questions are valid for us at any stage of life yet every time we say the Our Father we give an answer to them. We place our trust in the Father, acknowledging him to be holy, just and forgiving and pray that he "give us this day our daily bread." 


Monday 11 July 2016

16th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Jesus tells Martha today that she is "distracted by many things" (Lk 10: 41). One of those things, it seems was the relationship she has with her sister Mary and the pressure that she puts on herself to get things right. Maybe she was a perfectionist?. Her expectation is that Mary will see the same same priorities as herself. On this occasion I think we can justly infer that the things she was thinking about were to do with providing what Martha thought was suffciently hospitality for Jesus. The question arises, I think, what did Jesus want? What was the one thing needed? Jesus, I suspect, tired after his travel on the road and the burdens of his mission, really needed people he could talk too. Mary was able to discern this and met his needs by sitting at his feet and listening to what he had to say. Martha, for all of her concern, had not stopped to see what Jesus needed in that moment rather she was impelled by her own expectations. Jesus did not cause this. It came about through Martha's upbringing and all of the influences in her life that combined to generate expectations as to what she should do with lots of "coulds" and "shoulds." On this occasion they blind her to the thing that really matters which is to listen to Jesus. What about me? Do I respond genuinely to the needs of others or am I pushed by expections about what is socially, religiously or culturally appropriate? Am I trying to be a superwoman or superman? Can I stop and listen to the Lord? If I did I may well hear him say: "Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light." (Mtt 11: 28-30)

Tuesday 5 July 2016

Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

The parable in today's gospel, commonly referred to as "The Good Samaritan," is well known to most practising Christians. It is curious, however, that in the media when someone is saved by a stranger or a passerby that the rescuer is called a good samaritan. This misses the point of the story because the passerby usually has no animus or prejudice against the person rescued. This, precisely, is the factor that gives the parable its force. Why did Jesus not refer to a good Gentile (non-Jew)? Rather, he uses the example of a Samaritan who would have been a particular object of prejudice and suspicion. The Samaritans, geographically neighbours to the Jews, were in fact related to them. Nevertheless, due to accidents of history, whereby the Samaritans had intermarried with non-Jews as well as  the practise of Samaritan worship on Mt Gerezim, distrust and racial prejudice had arisen. The hypothetical Jew would expect help more from a Gentile than from a Samaritan! When we apply the parable to ourselves we are encouraged to realise and appropriate for ourselves the attitude of mercy which originates not from human categories but from the heart of God. It is an attitude that overcomes prejudice and animosity and is evident in the teaching and personal example of Pope Francis. Sometimes I need to realise that the neighbour I am called to love is not someone I do not know rather it is someone I have a grudge or prejudice against. This malady needs to be cured throught the application of the salve of mercy.