Sunday, October 26, 2025

 

XXX Sunday in Ordinary Time 
(Sirach 35:12–14, 16–18; 2 Timothy 4:6–8, 16–18; Luke 18:9–14)

The parables in the Gospel according to Luke are like ballads on the radio: they often convey wisdom in an engaging way. In today’s gospel, Jesus offers yet another fascinating parable. This time he teaches us how to pray through the story of the Pharisee and the tax collector praying in the Temple. Both men lived under very different circumstances from ours, yet when we see ourselves reflected in each of them, we can draw great benefit from the lesson.

Although the Pharisees often appear as villains in the gospels, they actually saved Judaism from extinction. After the fall of the Temple, the Pharisees reorganized the religion around the Law of Moses. To ensure its observance, they developed customs known as the oral law. Jesus opposed this new law because it was overly concerned with details. He said that in trying to fulfill it, the Pharisees would forget the primacy of compassion. He accused them of burdening the poor with unnecessary practices.

Jesus had some Pharisees as friends, but for the most part, he regarded them as arrogant and unmerciful. That is why in today’s gospel he presents a Pharisee as an example of how not to pray. He portrays him with the faults that often afflict reformers: thinking himself better than others, harboring prejudice, lacking humility before God, and being overly concerned with appearances.

Even though we dislike the attitude of the Pharisees, it is not unusual for us to act like them. Like them, we practice our religion regularly — and there is nothing wrong with that. Yet, also like them, we tend to justify our faults. We are also inclined to think of ourselves as better than most people, and almost as good as the truly holy. We are slow to acknowledge our faults but quick to notice the faults of others. We want to be recognized as intelligent, attractive, hardworking, and generous — even when we are not — and so we sometimes fake those qualities.

Tax collectors worked for the Roman Empire. While most were Romans, some Jews were given the position. For collaborating with the oppressors, Jewish tax collectors earned the people’s resentment. Their position also gave them the opportunity to extort money, which caused even more hostility.

Jesus spent considerable time with tax collectors in his mission to proclaim God’s mercy. He may have found them more open to repentance than others. At least Zacchaeus, the chief tax collector, showed a sincere desire to repent when he met Jesus in the gospel we would have read next Sunday if it were not for All Souls Day.

Like the tax collectors, we too are inclined toward greed. We may even find ourselves participating in small deceptions for the sake of gain. Yet, like the tax collector in the parable, we strike our breast at Mass and ask the Lord’s forgiveness in the Sacrament of Reconciliation.

But asking for forgiveness is not enough to be justified. Sinners must reform their lives. In the case of the tax collector in this parable, reform is assumed. In the story of Zacchaeus, the chief tax collector promises to give half of his possessions to the poor before Jesus declares him saved.

On one Sunday this past summer we learned from Jesus that we are to serve others like the Good Samaritan. Then, the following Sunday, he taught us that it is better to listen to him like Mary than to serve like Martha. Jesus was not contradicting himself but inviting us to discern the proper times to listen and the proper times to act. In much the same way, the gospels of last Sunday and today are coordinated. We remember how he taught us last Sunday to pray persistently through the parable of the widow and the corrupt judge. Today he teaches us that constant prayer is not enough unless it is accompanied by humility before God.

Even though we are proud like the Pharisee and greedy like the tax collector, we are not lost. Through the humility of repentance and the prayer of a contrite heart, Jesus Christ will justify us. Without repentance, prayer becomes presumption; with repentance, prayer leads us to salvation.

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