Twenty-eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time 2014 A
By Rev. Joe McCloskey, SJ
On that day it will be said: "Behold our God, to
whom we looked to save us! This is the
LORD for whom we looked; let us rejoice and be glad that he has saved us!" For the hand of the LORD will rest on this
mountain. Isaiah 25:9-10A
But when the king came in to meet the guests, he saw a
man there not dressed in a wedding garment. The king said to him, 'My
friend, how is it that you came in here without a wedding garment?' But he was reduced to silence. Then the king said to his attendants, 'Bind
his hands and feet, and cast him into the darkness outside, where there will be
wailing and grinding of teeth.’ Many are
invited, but few are chosen." Matthew 22:11-14
Piety
Prayer, fasting and good
works are the garments for the feast of the Lord. Our piety takes on the textures of the good
things we have done for one another. It
is God who sent his son into our lives that we might know the best way to serve
God. God loved us so much that he wanted
to be one with us in his son. The son is
the way, the truth and the life of our piety.
We might seem to struggle to put on Christ but the willingness of Christ
to embrace us with his love from the cross is how the heart transplant takes
its beginnings. We still have to come to
the feast. Every Eucharist is a return
not only to the last supper, but all the more a return to the actual dying of
Christ on his Cross. Our Eucharist
celebration is the actual dying of Christ.
And every time we celebrate the Eucharist we are reliving the dying of
Christ by our presence and our participation in Eucharist.
Study
Our invitation to the
banquet of the Lord is wide open. We can
be part of the bridal party by how we dress up our lives by our imitation of
Christ that gradually becomes the reliving of Christ in our time and age by the
way we have put on the spirit of Christ.
How many ways our lives speak the love of God for all of us is seen in
the very giving of our lives to the needs of the time we live in. We are called to be updates of Christ. If we die with Christ, we rise with him. Our study of how Christ announced the love of
God by giving his life leads us to offer our lives in reaching out to the needy
of our world. Our freedom to protect our
comfort and ourselves gradually loses its attraction in the realization that
Christ died for us and that we likewise can die for him in what we do for one
another.
Action
We can do all things in
him who strengthens us. The best action
of our lives is seen in going to Eucharist as often as we can. Sometimes our duties and our obligations keep
us from making a daily Eucharist, but we are all able to give at least one day
to the Lord each week and Eucharist is the mainstay of growing in Christ. Even as we become what we eat, Christ grows
in us both by our frequenting Eucharist and the ways we give our lives for the
sake of each other. The glorious riches
in Christ Jesus are ours in each Mass. Christ
is the glorious meal that Isaiah talks about that God has prepared for us on
the mountain of the Lord. We climb the
mountain of Christ’s life to find in our climb all the love God has for us in
his Son. Our love for Christ gives us
the happiness God has waiting for us.
No comments:
Post a Comment