Saturday, January 9, 2021

15 January 2021 - homily for Friday of the first week in Ordinary Time - Hebrews 4: 1-5, 11

      Our reading from Hebrews talks about entering into the rest of God, a rest only God can give.  Rest has a deeper meaning beyond a physical rest.   The promise that God gave to the Israelites is a foreshadowing of that  promise given to Christians in Christ’s Good News.  The Israelites saw the Promised Land as the place of rest that God provided for his people.  For the Israelites, the Promised Land was a share in God’s own rest, which he enjoyed after he had finished his creative work as told in the book of Genesis. The author now relates the meaning of God’s rest to Psalm 95, which we heard yesterday: “Therefore I swore in my anger: ‘They shall never enter my rest.’” Our reading today tells us that we should take the opportunity of God’s rest when it is offered to us since the Israelites in the desert did not take that opportunity when it was given to them.  The Israelites doubted the word of God and thus were forced to wander in the desert for many years before they were able to enter the Promised Land.  We Christians are invited to a different promised land - to God’s kingdom and to the salvation that Christ offers to us.  Our hope is that one day we will gain entry to that perfect place of rest: eternal life with God.  And even now, we are called to a day of rest on Sundays, on the Sabbath, on the Lord’s day.  Do we accept that invitation? 




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