THERE ARE MEETINGS
AND THERE ARE MEETINGS
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 27 Tuesday in Ordinary Time is,
“There Are Meetings and There Are Meetings.”
Today’s two readings talk about significant meetings.
The Gospel talks about the meeting of Christ with Martha and
Mary.
The first reading from Galatians
talks about a meeting between Paul and Peter.
TWO QUESTIONS
Two questions for the sake of a homily: What have been the
most significant meetings in our life? What has been the most significant
meeting in our life?
To get the answer to the second
question, I would think the first step would be to just brain storm and come up
with significant or special or key meetings we’ve had in our life: Meeting one’s spouse. Seeing a doctor about cancer.
Meeting the pope. Being called in to see a boss and we’re told we’re no longer
working there.
It’s a great conversation starter and ice breaker to ask
people whom they have met. The answers are often quite surprising.
When my mom worked as a maid in the Boston area she met Charles Lindbergh a few
times. The daughter of the family she worked for was a college friend of Ann
Morrow - who married Lindbergh. People tell you about the time they met John Fitzgerald
Kennedy or Johnny Unitas or Mother Teresa or Elvis Presley or their aunt or a
college professor
So in this homily I would suggest making a list of significant meetings that changed our
life and then pick the most significant one.
MARTHA AND MARY, PAUL AND PETER
When Jesus told Martha that Mary had chosen the better part,
did Martha get over that - and accept Jesus’ verdict on the differences between
his meetings and his experiences with the two sisters?
Another question, “Looking at our life, was there a meeting
we had where we got burnt or told off or we felt we were not treated fairly or
we were ridiculed? Whenever I read the
Martha-Mary story - I side with Martha every time. Maybe she was making Jesus a
great lunch with delicious bread and wine. Sometimes a hurtful meeting or a painful
or a nasty meeting is the most significant moment in one’s life.
Today’s Letter from Paul to the Galatians has Paul saying that after 3 years he went up to Jerusalem to confer with
Cephas. To me that is one of the most mysterious and interesting comments in
the scriptures. It took Paul 3 years before he met Peter? What happened at that first meeting
that took 15 days? Tomorrow we’re going to hear that the next visit - at least
according to Galatians - took 14 years
before they met again. That sounds strange to me!
We find out in tomorrow’s first reading from Galatians that
Paul challenged Peter when he seemed to be two-faced - in giving different
answers to the same question - depending whether the listener was a Gentile
Christian or a Jewish Christian. [Cf. Galatians 2:11-14.] We find out in the Second Letter of Peter 3: 16 a criticism of Paul that he is hard to
understand at times. So I don’t know about these two - and the times they met.
CONCLUSION
The title of my homily is, “There Are Meetings and There Are
Meetings.”
It’s important to meet with each other - and talk with each
other - and surprise - some of these meetings are profound. If we never meet,
we’ll never have significant meetings.
It’s important to pray with Christ - because if we never do
that - we’ll never have a profound meeting with Christ - like Paul had on the
road to Damascus
and Mary had with Christ at their home.
So we come to Mass and go to the Eucharistic Chapel - and
take prayer walks when the weather is decent and we meet with each other and
surprise some of those moments make our list. One might become the most
significant meeting and moment of our life - the key that opened so many other
doors.
1 comment:
The most significant meeting for me was meeting my first child in the delivery room and the other 6 babies after that.
Seeing your child's face for the first time is amazing !
That's life changing .
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