Homily for Tuesday
16th Week of Ordinary Time
July 23, 2024
Mic 7: 14-15, 18-20
Ps 85: 2-8
Matt 12: 46-50
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.
“Let them feed in
Bashan and Gilead, as in the days of old” (Mic 7: 14).
Micah, a
contemporary of Isaiah, refers to lands east of the Jordan renowned for their
rich pastures, once occupied by some of the tribes of Israel. He pleads with God for a restoration, a
deliverance based on Israel’s admission of their sins and his forgiveness. The prophet’s confident that the Lord “will
cast into the depths of the sea all our sins” (7:19). That’s our own confidence every time we go to
confession, isn’t it? And indeed every
time we begin Mass.The hills of Gilead
(Wikipedia)
Only if people
confess and repent can God save. In Psalm
85 Israel acknowledges their guilt and credits God with bringing them home from
exile in Babylon: “You have favored your
land; you have brought back the captives of Jacob. You have forgiven the guilt of your people;
you have covered all their sins” (vv. 2-3).
Yet they pray for a complete restoration—for prosperity and
contentedness on the land, which can follow only from God’s good pleasure.
Jesus doesn’t talk
about restoration, but he does talk about pleasing God; a restoration is
implied. “Whoever does the will of my
heavenly Father is my brother, sister, and mother” (Matt 12:50). Doing the Father’s will, of course, means
turning from our sins toward God. The
restoration, then, is to a warm family relationship with God thru his Son, a
relationship of brotherhood with the Son.
That’s why we’re brothers to one another—and have been made at the same
time sons of God. We’re restored to the
divine image in which we God created us.
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