15th Sunday of Ordinary Time
July 14, 2019
Luke 10: 25-37St. Theresa, Bronx
On Sundays when I don't have a new homily to post, I often pull up an old one that I delivered at St. Theresa's Church in the Bronx in the 1990s. Today I was really there and offered the parishioners this new homily.
“Go and do likewise” (Luke 10: 37).
The
reading from Deuteronomy, the gospel story, and the Collect (what we used to
call the “opening prayer”) this morning all urge us to “heed the voice of the
Lord” (Deut 30:14), to keep to “the right path,” to “strive” for behavior that
honors “the name of Christ” (Collect), by loving God thru practical love of our
neighbor, loving our neighbor as ourselves—concretely and not just
theoretically.
Moses
tells the Israelites that God’s command is neither mysterious nor remote
(30:11); it’s near us, and we can recite it easily—we have only to do it
(30:14).
The
scholar of the law—also known as a scribe—who questions Jesus knew the right
words. In the words of the Collect, he
“professes the faith.” But Jesus places
on him, and on us, a command to live rightly, to walk on the right
path. It’s not necessarily an easy road. Sometimes loving our neighbor is hard. Answering the scribe, Jesus makes that point
thru one of his best known parables.
From the church of
St. Eutrope, Clermont,
France
|
We
have numerous gospel references to the hostility that governed relations
between Jews and Samaritans. One
commentary tells us that the Jews regarded the Samaritans as “half-breed
heretics,” as “stupid, uncouth, and lazy.”[1]
Yet
it’s this “heretic” who faithfully fulfills God’s command—at personal risk and
personal expense. Pausing to help the
wounded man on the notoriously dangerous road from Jerusalem to Jericho leaves the
Samaritan vulnerable to the robbers, too.
He has no idea whom he’s helping—a Jew, a Samaritan, an Arab, a
Roman—for the man has been stripped and beaten unconscious. He uses his own oil, wine, and bandages to
tend the victim, and his own money to lodge him at an inn.
Jesus
directs the scribe, and us, to “go and do likewise,” i.e., to care for our
neighbors in need without regard to their identity or even our own
convenience. We’re usually very ready to
do that. Americans are probably the most
generous people in the world, and certainly people of faith are the most
generous, when some natural disaster or great human tragedy strikes.
Yet
one of the terrible stories of our contemporary world is how unwelcome we—Americans,
Europeans, Australians—have made migrants and refugees. We seem to regard them as “heretics, stupid,
uncouth, and lazy,” as well as dangerous.
It’s
true that laws, including immigration laws, generally should be respected. It’s also true that our immigration laws—our
system—needs a major fix, one that responds to the real needs of real people,
as the Samaritan does in Jesus’ parable; a fix that makes laws deserving our
respect because they’re directed toward the common good and aren’t directed by
prejudice, fear, or our personal self-interest.
Closing
our borders to refugees from war, religious persecution, and ethnic cleansing
in the Middle East is a disgrace and is the direct opposite of Jesus’ command
to “go and do likewise.” Our attempts to
seal off our southern border, certainly some of the specific practices there,
likewise are disgraceful and contrary to Christ’s teaching. Our politicians’ refusal to compromise on
adjusting our immigration laws to today’s realities, instead of those of the
1980s, is unconscionable.
You
and I can’t change the laws, of course.
We can call upon our elected officials—whom we call public servants—to
change the laws, to find a balance between legitimate national security and
good order, and the needs of migrants and refugees. We can do our part to treat everyone as our
neighbor—with respect and concern, regardless of color, ethnicity, gender, age,
or other characteristics. So Jesus tells
us.
[For further reading: https://www.patheos.com/blogs/deaconsbench/2019/07/saint-john-paul-the-illegal-migrant-comes-before-us-like-that-stranger-in-whom-jesus-asks-to-be-recognized/]
[1] John P. Kealy, CSSp, Luke’s Gospel
Today (Denville, N.J.: Dimension, 1979), p. 279.
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