Homilette for Monday, November 5, 2007

You will find homilettes for weekdays since October 29 below.

Monday, XXXI Week of Ordinary Time

(Romans 11:29-36)

In the reading from Romans today St. Paul speaks quite optimistically about good coming from evil. The disobedience committed by Jews and Gentiles, he says, is bound to end in salvation for both groups. We may wonder if all evil has such happy endings. Perhaps everyone has at one time or another witnessed the proverbial “cloud with a silver lining”– maybe meeting one’s future spouse while sick in a hospital bed. But what about monumental catastrophes like the 9/11 hijackings; has any commensurate benefit developed from those horrors?

We are pondering the mystery of suffering which, by definition, will not yield a completely satisfactory answer. One approach to understanding human suffering is to recognize that we often do not view reality from a sufficiently distant perspective to see what good comes forth. If we lived in 2107, we might notice much human advancement as a result of 9/11. Another approach, which seems closer to the mark, is to accept suffering as part of the mystery of God. Just as we cannot understand the purpose of all the suffering humans endure so God will always remain incomprehensible to us. It is precisely in accepting suffering and not railing against God as unfair or unendurable for allowing it that that we show our love for God.

Acknowledging that the mystery is suffering is part of the mystery of God, however, does not mean God is capricious or evil. He still loves us beyond reckoning and provides us all we need for eternal life. We only need to cultivate trust in Him by faithfully listening to His word and responding attentively in both prayer and action.

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