Fr. Roger J. Landry
Columbia Catholic Ministry, Notre Dame Church, Manhattan
Twenty-Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year C
September 11, 2022
Ex 32:7-11.13-14, Ps 51, 1 Tim 1:12-17, Lk 15:1-32
To listen to the homily for today’s Mass, please click below:
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/catholicpreaching/9.11.22_Homily_CCM_1.mp3
The following text guided the homily:
* Late in his pontificate, St. John Paul II was asked what was the greatest problem facing the world. He didn’t say the threat of nuclear mutually-assured destruction, global warming, endemic poverty, terrorism, scandals in the Church, or the impact of particular sins that continuously cry out to heaven — even though he took all of those problems seriously. How would you respond to the question? St. John Paul II said, to the surprise of almost everyone, that the greatest problem was “unexpiated guilt.” He recognized that after two World Wars and the Cold War, the Holocaust, the genocides in Armenia, the Ukraine, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur, after so many atrocities from tyrannical governments, after the waterfalls of blood flowing from more than two billion abortions worldwide, after the sins that have destroyed so many families, after so much physical and sexual abuse, after lengthy crime logs in newspapers every day, after the scourge of terrorism like the terrible events of 9/11 we prayerfully remember today, after so much hurt and pain, the terrible weight of collective guilt crushes not only individuals but burdens structures and whole societies. The modern world is like one big Lady Macbeth, compulsively washing our hands to remove the blood from them, but there is no earthly detergent powerful enough to take the blemishes away. We can converse with psychiatrists and psychologists, but their words and prescriptions can only help us deal with our guilt, not eliminate it. We can confess our sins to bartenders, but they can only dispense Absolut vodka, not absolution, and inebriation never brings expiation. We can escape reality through distractions and addictions — drugs, sports, entertainment, materialism, food, power, lust, and others — but none can adequately anaesthetize the pain in our soul from the suffering we’ve caused, endured or witnessed. Whether we admit it, whether we realize it, we’re longing for redemption. We’re yearning for a second, third or seventy-times-seventh chance. We’re pining for forgiveness, reconciliation, and a restoration of goodness. We’re hankering for a giant reset button for ourselves and for the world. And if we can’t have that personal and collective do over, then at least we ache for liberation from the past and, like the diminutive tax-collector Zacchaeus in the Gospel or Charles Dickens’ Ebenezer Scrooge, for a chance make up for has been done. We want, need and pant for atonement. And in response to that urgent and ever new need, God responds with his mercy. Where sin abounds, grace superabounds. And so St. John Paul II emphasized, and Pope Francis has continued to emphasize, that we are now living in a “kairos of mercy,” from the Greek word that means “favorable time or occasion” for God’s forgiving love.
* Today’s readings put that consoling truth in big bold letters.
* In his First Letter to Timothy, St. Paul tells us very clearly Jesus’ purpose in entering the world: “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.” That explains why he took on our human nature, why he suffered, died, and rose. In the Alleluia verse, St. Paul builds on this truth, telling us, “God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation.” Jesus, after having come to save us, wants to send us out with his message and mission of reconciliation,