XXIII Sunday in OT:[A]: Ez 33: 7-9;
Rom 13: 8-10; Mt 18: 15-20
Introduction: In
today’s Gospel, Jesus teaches that true Christian charity obliges a
Christian not only to assist his neighbors in their temporal and spiritual
needs with material help and prayer, but also with correction and counsel for
an erring brother or sister who has injured if his or her sins are public. If
the erring one refuses a one-on-one loving correction by the offended party,
then the Christian is to try to involve more people: first, "one or two others,” and eventually "the Church." Finally, Jesus
mentions the efficacy of community prayer in solving such problems, for Christ
is present in the praying Christian community.
The danger we come across is that we never realize
that there is a log in our eyes. We always go to take out the beam from other’s eyes. That’s not
helping. That’s not becoming, rather discouraging or distracting. "You hypocrite, first take the log
out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of
your brother's eye”. (Mathew 7:5)
A
brief story from the book titled: “The Little, Brown Book of Anecdotes”
(p. 28), edited by Clifton Fadiman goes thus. A Roman nobleman died, leaving
enormous debts that he had successfully concealed during his lifetime. When the
estate was put up for auction, Caesar Augustus instructed his agent to buy the
man’s pillow. When some expressed surprise at the order, he explained: “That
pillow must be particularly conducive to sleep, if its late owner, in spite of
all his debts, could sleep on it”. Debt creates pressure and no one likes
pressure. However, there is one debt that we will always owe and never be able
to pay off fully: “The debt of love to one another.” In today’s second reading, St. Paul
points out that the love we should have for one another should be our only
reason for admonishing the sinner. Love seeks the good of the one who is
loved. Therefore, we should admonish one another so that we all may repent and
grow in holiness.
Joke: There was an
85year old lady who found her husband in bed with another woman. She was so enraged that she dragged him to
the balcony of their Miami
high-rise and pushed him off, and he fell to his death. She was arrested, of course, and when she
appeared before the judge he asked if she had anything to say in her own
defense. “Well, your honor,” she said,
“I figured if he were able to be unfaithful to his wife at the age of 92, he
surely would be able to fly.” [Readers Digest, Laughter, the Best Medicine,
pg.365)
Practical Applications: 1) Be welcoming to different perspectives. Listening
to somebody’s ideas may broaden our narrow mind. May be we will even change our
stand point. Correcting others is easy, but being corrected is hardly
acceptable. Be instructors is easy, but being instructed is difficult to
accept. It is human nature. Jesus wants us to be receptive, to be listeners, to
be divine.
2) We are our brother’s/sister’s keeper. Modern believers tend to think that they have no right to
intervene in the private lives of their fellow believers. While others evade
the issue saying, “As a sinner, I don’t have the moral courage or the right to
correct anyone.” But Jesus emphatically affirms that we are our brothers'
keepers, and we have the serious obligation to correct others. We have our
culture working against us. Christianity
has often had to be counter-cultural.
3) Pray
for the conversion of sinners or evil doers: Saint Monica, a patron saint for mothers and wives, prayed for
Augustine’s conversion, to be devoid of sinful life. Result is Saint Augustine. We all have at least a low
cost, low energy method of correction, prayer.
Twenty Third Sunday in OT:
Introduction
Message: May our hearts not be hardened, but may we turn from
our sin. In our love for one another, we
may be called to confront our brother and sister for the wrong they may be
doing.
Saints and Events I this week: 8 – Eighth –
Monday – The Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary; 9 – Ninth – Tuesday – Saint
Peter Claver, priest (USA);
12 – Twelfth – Friday – The Most Holy Name of the Blessed Virgin Mary; 13 –
Thirteenth –Saturday – Saint John Chrysostom, bishop, doctor of the Church; 14
– Fourteenth – Sunday – Exaltation of the Cross;