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Saturday, September 21, 2024

Homily for 25th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Homily for the
25th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Sept. 22, 2024
Mark 9: 30-37
The Fountains, Tuckahoe, N.Y.


From your humble blogger:  at my 2 Bronx parishes, I gave the 2d homily in the sequence on the Creed (see Sept. 15); each week I rotate between the 8:00 and noon Masses.

“If anyone wishes to be first, he shall be the last of all and the servant of all” (Mark 9: 35).

Let the Children Come to Me (Vogelstein)

Last week’s gospel included Jesus’ 1st prediction of his passion, death, and resurrection.  Today we heard his 2d prediction.  There’s a 3d one, but it doesn’t come up in our Sunday readings.

Last week’s prediction was followed 1st by Peter’s rejection of it, Jesus’ rebuke of Peter for thinking like a human being and not like God, and then by Jesus’ teaching that the cross is an inescapable part of our following him.

This week’s prediction is followed by another example of the apostles’ thickheadedness:  “they had been discussing among themselves on the way who was the greatest” (9:34).  There’s an irony there:  “on the way” conjures up Jesus’ journey toward Jerusalem and the fulfillment of his destiny; early Christianity became known as “the Way,” i.e., the path of following Jesus, including the cross.  The apostles are on that way, that path, and are oblivious to it.

This time Jesus doesn’t warn them that they, too, will have to bear his cross.  At least not in so many words.  Instead, he proposes another form of self-denial:  they must become the least in society; they must become servants (Mark uses the word diakonos, which tells us what ordained ministers are supposed to be).

Jesus drives his point home by placing a child in front of the 12.  In the ancient world, children might have been loved within the family, but socially they were utterly powerless, fragile, and unimportant; mortality rates among children in cultures around the world up till early modern times ran from 40 to more than 50%.[1]

Jesus tells his apostles they have to be like children.  Their focus isn’t to be greatness, importance, or power, but dependence and weakness; they are to have regard for society’s weak, fragile, and unimportant people.  They are to be “the servants of all.”

On Friday Pope Francis addressed the department of the Roman Curia that deals with human dignity and development.[2]  He told Card. Czerny, its prefect, and the staff that everyone has the right to land, shelter, and work, and therefore Christians must work for social justice.  When people’s basic needs aren’t met, conflict results.  “Inequality is the root of social ills,” he said.  He blamed the greed of the rich for the plight of the poor.  He said, “Blind competition for more and more money is not a creative force, but an unhealthy attitude and a path to hell.  Such irresponsible, immoral, and irrational behavior is destroying creation and dividing peoples.”

St. James says the same thing:  “Where do the wars and the conflicts among you come from?  Is it not from your passions….  You kill and envy but you can’t obtain; you fight and wage war” (4:1-2).

Doesn’t that sound like what we see on the news every day?  Is the Pope right?  Is St. James right?

Pope Francis emphasizes:  “The poor are at the center of the Gospel.  It’s not the Pope but Jesus who puts them in that place.  It’s a matter of our faith that can’t be negotiated.”

What Pope Francis says is another way of saying that if we want to receive Jesus and the one who sent Jesus, we must receive children, i.e., the little, the helpless, the weak, the least in society.  We must be servants.

As we prepare to vote, this is a principle we must keep in mind.  Closer to home—here, in this little community—how can we serve or be attentive to those in need?  We could start by listening to our companions; everyone wants to be heard, no?  We ought not cut them off or put down what they have to say.  We could offer everyone a smile, maybe accompanied by a compliment.  Perhaps someone needs help moving to the dining room or to the vehicle that will take you on an outing.  Such simple ways of serving one another and not considering ourselves the most important, the center of attention….

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