SUNDAY HOMILY: 16TH SUNDAY IN THE ORDINARY TIME – YEAR A




SUNDAY HOMILY: 16TH SUNDAY IN THE ORDINARY TIME – YEAR A

HOMILY Theme: EXERCISING PATIENCE

By: Fr. Gerald Musa

 

Homily for Sunday.

Often we pray for the gift of wisdom, but we forget that wisdom is the companion of patience. These two cannot be separated. A proverb defines patience as the ability to put up with people; you’ll like to put down. There is much to learn from the patience of missionaries who went to distant lands and met people whose lifestyle contradicted the message of the Gospel. In West Africa, it took 14 years before the missionaries received a single convert into the Church; In East Africa, 10 years, and in New Zealand 9 years. The missionaries refused to be discouraged; they waited wisely and patiently for the right time and today in these places there are millions of people who have been baptised. Lack of patience is dangerous and leads people into mistakes, prejudice

In the parable of the Wheat Farmer, Jesus tells us how God in his infinite wisdom and patience (Matthew 13:24-30). The wheat farmer sowed good seed (wheat) and while he went away the enemy came to sow weeds among the wheat. The plant grew and the weeds grew as well. The slaves of the householder were unhappy to see weeds around the beautiful wheat that the farmer planted. They asked the master if they should pull out the weeds, but the master replied:

‘No, if you pull up the weeds you might uproot the wheat along with them. Let them grow together until harvest; then at harvest time I will say to the harvesters, “First collect the weeds and tie them in bundles for burning; but gather the wheat into my barn.’
The farmer was very right to stop the slaves from pulling the weeds out. Wheat and weeds are so similar in the farm that it takes an experienced farmer to differentiate between them. It is more so when both are still growing, but when the wheat and weeds come to maturity it is easy to separate them because the wheat plant has grains and the weeds are ‘grainless’.

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The parable explains how God patiently allows a sinner and a saint to live side by side and to pray and worship together. It refers to the mother Church that welcomes everyone, good and wicked alike. The parable presents a God who allows good and evil to co-exist and letting his sun shine on both sinners and saints. Psalm 86 speaks beautifully of this God who is good and forgiving and who is merciful and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in kindness and fidelity.”

The book of wisdom further explains the mercy and patience of God (See Wisdom 12:13, 16-19). This Wisdom passage proclaims God as Master of might, who judges with clemency, and governs with much lenience. Secondly, this same passage speaks about a God who offers his children a second chance by accepting those who repent. Thirdly, the passage declares that human beings have something to learn from the nature of God: that those who are just must be kind.

We have a tendency to be unlike God by our judgmental attitude. Often we judge other people without sufficient evidence and we are quick to condemn others without exercising patience or even without offering a second chance to the people we dislike. The scale of measurement we use for judging others is quite different from the yardstick God uses. Man looks at appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart (1 Samuel 16:7). It is not within our human power to judge anyone, since God is the righteous and ultimate judge who does not make a rash judgment but waits until the end of time.

But wait a minute! If God is so merciful, does he exercise any sense of justice? In as much as God is a merciful God, he is also a God of justice. Scriptures asserts that God is just (Deuteronomy 32:4; Zephaniah 3:5). The later part of the parable of the wheat farmer demonstrates a God who also has the power to wield the big stick in the final judgment. Judges in law courts imitate God’s sense of justice when they hit the hammer-shaped gavel on the desk to stamp their authority.

A loving father does not train his son on the wings of mercy alone. If he does so, he would produce a spoilt child. This is why C.S. Lewis says: “Mercy, detached from Justice, grows unmerciful.” Mercy is relevant when it is mixed with the right dose of tough love, which is justice. Thus, in the parable Jesus speaks about the final judgment when God grants eternal rewards to the good and condemns unrepentant perpetrators of evil. God is merciful when he treats people with great patience and he is just when, at the end of time, he gives each one what his conduct deserves.
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