Homily for Mission Sunday
Oct.
20, 2024
Matt
22: 1-10
The
Fountains, Tuckahoe, N.Y.
“Go out
into the main roads and invite to the feast whomever you find” (Matt 22: 9).
For Mission Sunday today,
Pope Francis published a 4-page message, based on the gospel parable that we
just read, the parable of the wedding feast.
Parable of the Wedding Feast
(Paolo Veronese)
In his message, the
Holy Father makes 3 points: 1) “Go and
invite”—mission is a tireless going out to invite others to the Lord’s
banquet. 2) “To the marriage feast”—the
mission of Christ and the Church points to the Eucharist and to heaven. 3) “Everyone”—Christ wants every man and
woman invited and welcomed at his feast, in the Church and in eternity.
1. Jesus sent his
followers to make disciples of all nations, bringing his Good News to the ends
of the earth until the end of time. As
we pray in the 3d Eucharistic Prayer, “from the rising of the sun to its
setting,” God wants a “pure sacrifice offered” to his name. Pope Francis reminds us that every disciple
of Jesus is a missionary. All of us have
a mission to go into the main roads, at least figuratively, to invite people to
come to the Lord’s wedding feast.
You, of course,
aren’t going to go out to Africa, Asia, or the Pacific islands to preach the
Gospel. You are to preach it here at The
Fountains—by the example of your lives, by being honest, kind, generous,
respectful; and perhaps by inviting someone to come to church with you. The Pope says, “with closeness, compassion,
and tenderness, and in this way reflecting God’s own way of being and acting.”
2. A banquet is an
image of heaven. The prophet Isaiah tells
of “the Lord of hosts providing for all peoples a feast of rich food and choice
wines” on his holy mountain, at Jerusalem, sign of God’s kingdom (25:6). Jesus uses the wedding banquet image in the
parable we heard and also speaks of the master who seats his faithful servants
to dinner and waits on them (Luke 12:37).
The Eucharist is our foretaste of the banquet to which Jesus invites us
in God’s kingdom; it’s the feast set for us every week while we’re pilgrims on
our way to eternity, until “all of us will be with Christ at his wedding feast
in the kingdom of God,” Francis writes.
The Eucharist now is already “the marriage feast of the Lamb of God”
(Rev 19:9), which we acclaim just before Holy Communion: “Blessed are those called to the supper of
the Lamb.”
3. Christ invites
everyone to his marriage feast. The Holy
Father quotes St. Paul’s 1st Letter to Timothy:
“God our Savior wills that everyone be saved and come to knowledge of
the truth” (2:4). Thru Christ and thru
missionary disciples, God invites everyone to share in his grace. His call doesn’t depend on our worthiness; in
the parable, “the servants went out into the streets and gathered all they
found, bad and good alike, and the hall was filled with guests” (Matt 22:10). God has even invited us! His grace, his mercy, his forgiveness
transform us. So, let’s celebrate the
wedding of the King’s Son, our Lord Jesus, and lets encourage others to come to
the feast.
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