Homily for Tuesday
23d Week of Ordinary Time
Sept.
10, 2024
1
Cor 6: 1-11
Christian
Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.
“You were
sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and in the
Spirit of our God” (1 Cor 6: 11).
Baptism image (St. Callistus Catacombs)
St. Paul recalls
the pre-conversion history of his disciples in Corinth and laments that some of
them mistreat one another yet. Then he
reminds them that they’ve been washed clean and made holy, implying that they
ought to live in the holiness bestowed upon them by the Spirit of God.
All of us come to
religious life with a history, and we make more history in our
communities—trying to live as brothers “in the name of the Lord Jesus
Christ.” Sometimes by God’s grace we’ve
been good brothers, touched by the power that comes forth from Jesus, as we
hear in today’s gospel (Luke 6:19); and sometimes we haven’t been such good
brothers. “You inflict injustice and
cheat, and this to brothers” (1 Cor 6:8), Paul writes.
But the one who
has sanctified us and justified us doesn’t leave us. The Spirit of the Lord Jesus remains and
continues his work. Jesus “called his
disciples to himself” (Luke 6:13). He
called us to himself—that we might praise God “in the assembly of the faithful”
(Ps 149:1) and that we might love our brothers and assist them in our common pursuit
of life in Jesus Christ.
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