Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Tuesday of the Thirty-first Week in Ordinary Time

(Romans 12:5-16ab; Luke 14:15-24)

In “Revelation” Flannery O’Connor presents a proud woman who shows contempt on others. Mrs. Turpin is especially disdainful of the poor and racial minorities.  She believes that she and people like her will enter heaven but is at least doubtful of the rest of humanity.  Then a girl, not coincidently named “Mary Grace,” calls Mrs. Turpin an “old wart hog” from hell.  The name knocks the woman from her high horse.  While washing her pigs, Mrs. Turpin has a vision of the people she has disdained entering heaven while she is left on earth.  The story recalls today’s gospel parable.

Jesus tells his own short story about people who refuse the offer of participating in the heavenly banquet.  They have excuses, for sure, and not necessarily limp ones.  They have to make money or to spend time with the family.  The point is, however, that the Kingdom must be one’s top priority.  Even the poor are not granted entrance into the Kingdom because they are poor.  Rather they will experience the fullness of life because they have placed God first.

We may find ourselves looking down on the poor as lazy or unprincipled.  We better take care of such an attitude.  It may mean that we have given lower priority to the Kingdom than to worldly success.  In place of disdain, we might try to help or at least to pray for those in need.  As indicated often in the gospels, this kind of concern is a true Kingdom value.