Tuesday, October 26, 2021

 Tuesday of the Thirtieth Week in Ordinary Time

(Romans 8:18-25; Luke 13:18-21)

Back in the 1960s there were a number of folk songs that expressed the futility of creation.  Peter, Paul and Mary sang of the “Great Mandala” which keeps rotating through cycles of war and peace.  The Kingston Trio popularized “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?” which asks when will humanity learn to end war.  In today first reading St. Paul tells Christians not to give up hope for lasting peace.  He expresses this peace as the redemption of our bodies from death.

Paul begins by noting how the world suffers.  Not just humans, he says, but all creation.  Yet Christians have the Holy Spirit which allows them to prefigure the new creation.  The palpable kindness, love, and joy that are found in Christian communities assure that full redemption is on the way.  Meanwhile, Christians carry on in hope that the day of redemption will come soon.  Alternatively, hope assures Christians that if the waiting continues, they will survive the trials.

Paul probably expected the coming of Christ and full redemption long before the two thousand years it has taken so far.  But this time – the “meantime” – has proven to be more than tolerable, even enjoyable for many of us.  It is the Spirit moving us to help one another that allows us to rejoice in the midst of suffering.