26th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Oct. 1, 2017
Ps 25: 4-8
Nativity, Washington, D.C.
On Friday afternoon,
I got an email that was perhaps a bit desperate. Our old parish in D.C.,
Nativity, needed a priest for the Saturday vigil Mass. Would a Salesian be
available? We have Cooperators in the parish, and I’ve already helped with some
weekday Masses, so it wasn’t that Salesians were on the bottom of the pastor’s
list. Not at all. And the parishioners tell me they miss “their” Salesians
very, very much—and they name some of their favorites: the late Fr. Steve
Schenck, Fr. Paul Grauls, Fr. George Hanna, Bro. Tom Sweeney.
Herewith, my 1st
Sunday homily since moving to Maryland in June!
“The sins of my youth and my frailties
remember not; in your kindness remember me, because of your goodness, O Lord” (Ps
25: 7).
Teenage Girls (Pixabay) |
Hip-hop (Pixabay) |
I suppose most of us have fond memories of
our youth. I also suppose most of us
remember some pretty dumb things we did when we were young—too young to know
much better; or old enuf to know better but not knowing better because we
thought our parents were the dumb ones, and our “knowledge” was sharper than
their old-fashioned experience; or when we were young adults—maybe in college,
maybe just running around with a bunch of “cool” people. And now we remember words and deeds we
wouldn’t want our children or grandchildren to know about.
In the Responsorial Psalm we beg the Lord not
to remember those regrettable sins or indiscretions or foolishness of our
youth. When the Lord forgets something,
it no longer exists.
The psalm also asks the Lord not to remember
our frailties. We’re not talking here
about the frailties of age, all too familiar to many of us—like stiff joints,
shuffling walks, wider girth, memory loss.
No, we’re talking about our spiritual frailties—our weak faith, perhaps,
or our weak convictions, or our fears.
We’re talking about our moral frailty, our sinfulness, our constant
inclinations toward the dark side of our human nature, our very specific
sins: our impatience, our anger, our
gossiping, our lust, our reluctance to forgive, our rash judgments, our lies,
our envy. These, too, we beg the Lord
not to remember, to consign to oblivion, to non-existence.
The psalm continues: “in your kindness remember me, because of
your goodness, O Lord.” If the Lord
remembers us kindly, he takes us to himself.
The goodness of the Lord overwhelms all our badness, if we humble
ourselves by confessing that badness; if we humble ourselves, as St. Paul says
today that Jesus our Lord did: “he
emptied himself, taking the form of a slave” (Phil 2:7)—humbled himself not in
the sense of confessing moral guilt, for he had none, but in the sense of
descending from the purest heights of heaven to live with us sinners and to
offer himself as a sacrifice of atonement for our sins.
When’s the last time you humbly confessed
your sins in the sacrament of Reconciliation?
When’s the last time you brought your sins and your frailties and your
moral foolishness to our Lord Jesus?
By Giuseppe Molteni |
In the 1st reading, we heard that the Lord
receives the wicked person who changes behavior. In the interpretation of Jesus’ parable, we
heard that God is pleased when the tax collectors and prostitutes respond to
Jesus’ preaching and seek forgiveness and moral renewal; and Jesus is harsh
toward those who talk about God and his commandments but don’t own up to their
sins, especially their self-centeredness, their unwillingness to humble
themselves by coming to Jesus. For our
part, both Ezekiel and Jesus call for action, not just an exercise of the
mind. The wicked who repent, in
Ezekiel’s prophecy, change their behavior.
In Jesus’ parable, the son who said, “No,” not only changed his mind but
actually went to work in the vineyard.
Confession is the 1st action step we have to
take toward renewing our lives with God.
If you haven’t been to confession for quite a while, what’s holding you
back? Not the goodness of the Lord,
surely! Not the compassion of the Lord,
which is from of old (Ps 25:6)—which has such a long history in the lives of
sinners, from Abraham and King David to Simon Peter and St. Paul to St.
Augustine and St. Ignatius and the Servant of God Dorothy Day.
“Good and upright is the Lord; thus he shows
sinners the way,” the psalm proclaims (25:8).
The Collect (or opening prayer) extolled the Lord for using his
“almighty power above all” to pardon and show mercy, to bestow his grace
“abundantly upon us.” How much “gooder”
toward us could the Lord be? He is eager
to forgive us. He longs to forgive us. He is
waiting for us to come to him and say simply and humbly, “Bless me, Father, for
I have sinned,” so that his priest can comfort us with forgiveness and the
assurance of his everlasting love—and can cast our sins into oblivion, where he
will never remember them again.
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