Sunday, January 23, 2021

 

THE THIRD SUNDAY IN ORDINARY

(Nehemiah 82-4.5-6.8-10; I Corinthians 12:12-30; Luke 1:1-4.4:14-21)

Forty years ago Walter Cronkite was perhaps the most credible person in America. Mr. Cronkite reported the news on TV every day. His serious yet kind manner won the trust of most of the people. He was so respectable that we felt like we had a friend in our homes. We have a similar feeling of the speaker in the gospel today.

We call the author of the gospel “Saint Luke”, but he does not leave us his name in writing. Not so with the recipient of the work. He is called “Theophilus”. Theophilus may be a particular man. However, he can also be all the readers of the gospel. For in Greek Theophilus means "lover of God". Don't we all love God? Although brief, this introduction to the gospel reveals much more than this.

It says that "many have undertaken to complete a narrative" about Jesus Christ. As far as we can discern, of the three other official gospels Luke only knew of the Gospel according to Saint Mark. Then the other stories of Jesus that Luke refers to here were lost over the years. There is no need to mourn the loss. Perhaps they were like the erroneous gospels of the following centuries. Twenty years ago another Jesus story gained fame. The Da Vinci Code caused great disturbance among the faithful. But because it did not correspond to the four official gospels of the Church, it is now just a bad memory.

Luke writes of his own intentions for his gospel. He has researched the stories of Jesus meticulously. He now wants to leave a correct and orderly testimony of Jesus’ life. The insufficiency of other accounts can be seen even in the Gospel according to Saint Mark. Saint Mark says nothing about the birth of Jesus and little about his resurrection. Luke's work has its literary flaws. But it is better structured and has much more material than Mark.

The second part of today's reading presents us with Luke's perspective on Jesus. For him Jesus is the champion of the poor. Jesus says in his first gospel speech that he has come to bring relief to the poor and needy. Jesus certainly has beggars and laborers in mind. But he doesn't want to leave the professionals and the rich out of his mission. All of us have to recognize ourselves as poor and needy. We may own a car, but we lack humility. We may have a Ph.D. but lack love of neighbor.

In the second reading, St. Paul shows how we need one another to be the Church. It is like that in any social group. In the Church we need committed religious and laity as well as bishops, priests and deacons. In industry we need managers, workers, accountants, and salespersons. In the family we need the contribution of each member. Some think that the child with Down syndrome is not useful at all. How do we need them? Families with a child with the syndrome always say that he or she is a source of love and cohesion.  We need them to show us how to love.

If we were to ask ourselves our favorite gospel, we would no doubt respond in a variety of ways. Some would say the Gospel according to Saint John because it has the discourse of the Bread of Life. Others would answer the Gospel according to Saint Matthew for the teachings of Jesus on the Church. But most would say the Gospel according to Saint Luke for different reasons. It tells us about the birth of Jesus in a manger as a poor person. It relates to us the most about the Virgin Mary. And it presents us with the most affectionate parables of Jesus because we are lovers of him.