Homilette for Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Wednesday, XXVIII Week of Ordinary Time, Memorial of Saint Ignatius of Antioch, bishop and martyr

(Luke 11:42-46)

It sometimes seems that Jesus had a running battle with Pharisees. He always seems to be criticizing them. So it is important to note that in today’s gospel Jesus is at dinner in the home of a Pharisee as he has been before and will be again in Luke’s gospel. Obviously, Jesus has some differences of outlook, but he also shared much in common with Pharisees. We may profitably suppose that some of the harsh criticism of the gospels is not Jesus’ for the Pharisees of his time but the evangelists’ for Pharisee-like Christians a generation later.

Christians today, including Catholics, like the Pharisees of Jesus’ time, may pay too much attention to details and too little to the gospel message. Some go to church checking to see if the flowers there are actually freshly cut or artificial. (In order to prevent cheap imitations Church rubrics have called for fresh flowers by the altar.) Others might report the profanities used by a minister of the Church without realizing that they might be committing a graver sin of detraction.

Jesus compares the nit-picking Pharisees to “unseen graves.” He means to say that they are already dead because they do not have the love of God which gives life. Jesus with perfect judgment did not condemn all Pharisees, and we should be that much less given to criticism. Rather, we should make every effort to display the love of God that fills our hearts with the Holy Spirit.

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