THE BAD GUYS
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 11 Tuesday in Ordinary
Time is, “Ahab and Jezebel: The Bad Guys.”
Those of you who like novels and TV programs like
NCIS, know that the basic plot in many stories is Good vs. Evil - the Good Guys
vs. the Bad Guys.
Yesterday and today’s first reading from the First Book
of Kings feature Ahab as the Bad Guy along with his dangerous wife, Jezebel,
the Bad Gal.
Yesterday they had Naboth killed and they grabbed his
property.
Today’s first reading - 1 Kings 21: 17-29 - has Elijah
telling Ahab that Jezebel will be killed and dogs will lick her blood. That’s
what happens to her. She’s thrown out an upper window. Elijah tells Ahab the
same is going to happen to him and his descendents. Then near the end of today’s
reading, we hear that Ahab repents and
changes a bit - so Elijah the prophet then
says it’s only going to happen to your descendents.
It’s my opinion that the authors - the writers of the Books of
Kings - are writing and telling these
stories in hindsight. They take what
actually happened and then tailor the story to match the history.
THE REASON FOR A STORY
A story teller tells a story for a purpose - to get a
message across.
I would assume that the hearer and the reader hears the
story and looks at his or her life and sees where they are compared to the
characters in the story. I would assume that the moral of the story is that sin
is a boomerang - it comes back on you. Sin has a backlash. Sin has
consequences. Sin - evil has bad karma as some call it - and evil does show up
in future generations - bad example becomes us and family and others pick up on
our mistakes. That’s the bad news.
So too when good happens. That’s the good news.
THE SONG AND LITERATURE
These stories in the Bible show up in future stories down
through history as well.
I typed into Google last night the word Jezebel. Surprise
there was a 1938 movie with Bette Davis called Jezebel In this William
Wyler movie people could see on the screen and in the story a woman deal with
her life issues - including evil - but nothing as strong as Jezebel in the
Bible.
I also remember the Frankie Lane song, Jezebel. If
you are anywhere as old as I am, you know the song lines from that 1951 song
sung by Frankie Layne.
If ever the devil was born without a pair of
horns
It was you, Jezebel, it was you
If ever an angel fell, Jezebel, it was you
Jezebel, it was you
It was you, Jezebel, it was you
If ever an angel fell, Jezebel, it was you
Jezebel, it was you
If ever a pair of eyes promised paradise
Deceiving me, grieving me, leavin' me blue
Jezebel, it was you
Deceiving me, grieving me, leavin' me blue
Jezebel, it was you
If ever the devil's plan was made to torment
man
It was you, Jezebel, it was you
It was you, Jezebel, it was you
I’ve been on close to 40 retreats with our high school
kids. I noticed lots of kids listening to all kinds of music - much of which
doesn’t do anything for me. I wondered if listening to Frankie Lane’s song, did
that song Jezebel help any guy to
avoid Jezabel’s in their lives? Do the
songs people listen to challenge any listener to improve their lives?
Literature is filled with good and bad characters - the guy with the white hat and the guy with
the black hat - heroes and villains.
Or take the example of Herman Melville who wrote his
book, Moby Dick. Was his goal to subtly
get the reader to see if he or she was self destructing in any way. That book is mainly about Captain Ahab who
kills almost his whole crew. One has to survive to tell the story.
Sometimes we are our own worst enemy. Does anyone reading
Moby Dick see themselves as Ahab - both the guy in 1st Kings as well
as Moby Dick - and try to be a better person?
CONCLUSION
Let me conclude with a few questions.
Name a song that hits home?
Name a story - or a book or a good movie that changed
you? Who were the characters and why do
you see yourself in their skin?
* Picture on top: Death of Jezebel by Gustave Dore
* Picture on top: Death of Jezebel by Gustave Dore
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