Wednesday, October 16, 2019

27 October 2019 - 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time - Cycle C - Luke 18:9-14


    When I was working as as a lay missionary in Ecuador, prior to coming to Mississippi, I hosted a group of high school students from Cincinnati, Ohio for a two week long mission experience.  In this jungle province of Ecuador, there were more than 100 missionaries doing all kinds of work. We were working not just in ministry in parishes, but also running schools, health clinics, orphanages, and community outreach projects.  I had arranged for a canoe to bring the youth and their leaders to a village where I did a lot of work as a missionary.  The canoe ride was about 4 hours away from the mission site where I lived.  As the canoe was speeding down the huge river with the immense rain forest jungle all around us, one of the students in the canoe turned to me and said: “I feel like we’ve been transported to the pages in National Geographic Magazine.”  A lot of people see this mission field in that way: as an exotic location thousands of miles away from us in the United States. However, in recent years, our Church has been trying to educate the faithful with the reality that whole world is a mission field, that all of us are called to be missionary in spirit as disciples of Christ.  
     We have been celebrating Extraordinary Missionary Month all during October. Since 1926, our Church has celebrated the world missions during the month of October as first declared by Pope Pius XI and the Pontifical Society for the Propagation for the Faith.  How the mission world has changed since that year.  Back in 1926, many of the priests in our diocese in Mississippi, which at the time was the named the Diocese of Natchez, came from Ireland.  Now, with no more priests coming from Ireland, we have priests in our Diocese from India, Vietnam, Nigeria, Colombia, and Mexico, places that used to be thought of as the mission field.  We are working hard to cultivate home-grown priests from the parishes within Mississippi to provide the priests we need. 
     Humility is the common theme in our readings today.  And humility plays an important role in how we pray to God, in how we live out our life of discipleship, in how we bring the message of Jesus Christ to the world as missionaries of his Good News.  We hear of a Pharisee who is praying to God in today’s parable.  In actuality, what the self-righteous Pharisee said is not really a prayer to God, but rather a means to brag about himself. In fact, he really says this prayer to himself.  The Pharisee looks down at others, labeling them “sinners”.  The Pharisee actually does a lot of good things in his life, but he is arrogant and proud.  God calls us to humility and compassion toward our brothers and sisters, very different from the attitude this Pharisee embraces. 
     The tax collector’s prayer is very different from the prayer of the Pharisee.  The tax collector stands at the back of the Temple, rather than assuming a position of honor up in front.  The tax collector is so humble that he won’t even lift up his eyes to God.  He confesses his sins and asks for forgiveness, praying out of the deep recesses of his heart.  The tax collector has done many bad things in his life, but he possesses the virtue of humility, which leads him to repent and to ask forgiveness from God, the merciful Father.  The Pharisee prays without recognizing his need for God’s forgiveness, but the tax collector prays knows that he needs forgiveness, and so he receives that forgiveness from God.   
       How do we approach prayer in our lives? Out of our pride, power, and self-righteousness?  Or out of our humility and obedience?  According to the 19th century existentialist philosopher Soren Kierkegaard, “Prayer does not change God, but (prayer) changes him who prays.”  In addition, according to scripture scholar Raymond Brown from University of Notre Dame, “If no change occurs (in a person) as a result of prayer, then one has not really prayed.” Out of our humility and repentance, like that shown by the tax collector in today’s Gospel, our prayer life can open us to transformation and change.  The tax collector surrenders himself to God’s grace in his humility and openness. But, the Pharisee thinks he had all the answers; God’s grace has no room in his life.  The spirit of today’s Gospel, of humility, repentance, and faith, can be found in the prayers in the Chaplet of the Divine Mercy: “Eternal Father, I offer You the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity, of Your dearly beloved Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ, in atonement for our sins and those of the whole world.  For the sake of His sorrowful Passion, have mercy on us, and on the whole world.”
     We here in the Diocese of Jackson are a missionary diocese. We reflect the missionary nature of our universal Church, our desire to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus throughout the world, and to share our Catholic faith with others.  Two weeks ago, we had a continuing education workshop in our Diocese on spiritual direction.  Priests, sisters, and lay people, all working as pastors or lay ecclesial ministers or pastoral associates in our Diocese came together.  Some came from the Jackson area, while drove almost 5 hours.  Many came from the rural communities where most of our parishes are located.   In our Diocese, many of us in pastoral ministry try our best to work together, to help each other out.  It is not always easy. It is sometimes frustrating and exhausting.  But our collaboration in the missionary spirit of our Church is what we are called to as brothers and sisters in Christ.  As we celebrate the universal call we have to be missionary, we acknowledge how that call begins on the parish level.  We want all of you to be a part of our mission here at St Jude.  As we reach out to our fellow parishioners, our children, and our youth, as we reach out to the community and beyond, all of us can be a part of this missionary mandate.  That is one of goals here at St Jude - to fulfill this call to be a missionaries in the world. 

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