ON HEARING THE “BOOS!”
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this Monday in the Second Week of
Lent is, “On Hearing the Boos!”
Do umpires and referees hear the boos?
We’ve all been to a basketball, football or baseball game
and the referee or umpire was booed. Bummer!
We hear phrases like, “Throw the bum out!” “Horrible call ump!” “You’re blind!” “Get a pair of glasses!” and phrases we can’t repeat.
Nobody likes to be booed.
ARMANDO GALARRAGA - NO HITTER
On June 2, 2010 in Detroit
- Armando Galarraga was pitching a perfect game for the Tigers - no runs, no
walks, no errors. 26 batters - 26 outs - in a row. One batter to go. Up comes Cleveland ’s Jason Donald who hits a ground
ball which would be the final out. The umpire calls him safe at first base. The
crowd screams, “No way!” Etc. Etc. Etc.
Shortly afterwards - but too late - the umpire, Jim Joyce, said he made a mistake
and apologized to the pitcher. The baseball commissioner, Bud Selig, would not reverse the call and say it was a
no-hitter. Detroit
won the game 3-0 - but Armando Galarraga does not go down in history for
pitching a no hitter and a perfect game.
TODAY’S GOSPEL
In today’s gospel from the 6th chapter of Luke,
Jesus speaks about one of his key themes: not judging. [Luke
6: 36-38]
Jesus tells us to be merciful as his heavenly father is
merciful.
Jesus tell us to “Stop judging and you will not be judged.”
Jesus tell us to “Stop
condemning and you will not be condemned.”
Jesus tells us to “Forgive and you will be forgiven.”
Jesus tells us “For the measure with which you measure will in return be measured out to you.”
Jesus tells us “For the measure with which you measure will in return be measured out to you.”
Evidently Jesus spotted a lot of judging going on.
BOOS
BOOS
The title of my homily is, “On Hearing the Boos!”
Life’s a game!
There are plenty of players on the field as we sit here in
the stands judging the plays.
We all do a lot of umpiring - refereeing, officiating - on
how our brothers and sisters are behaving.
Too bad we didn’t hear God booing us!
Last night was the so called, “Woman’s Super Bowl” the Oscars.
I didn’t watch it. However, I read in the papers various articles that voiced complaints
about the Oscar voting for last night - before and afterwards.
There was that big call at the end of the Raven’s Super Bowl
game. If the ref called “holding” the
Ravens might not have won that game - but then there were those other calls
that went against the Ravens.
If our movie or team doesn’t win or get the call, then we
boo.
But we don’t hear any boos for our judgments about how we
see people behave, how people dress, what people wear in church or on stage, where people sit
in church, or what have you. I know I’ve made lots of bad calls.
CONCLUSION
The title of this short homily is “On hearing the Boos.” I wanted to examine our calls - our judgments - on others.
We haven’t walked in our neighbor’s shoes. And when we make a bad call on someone, maybe we should have the courage to say, “I blew the call! I made a mistake!”
And surprise, the more forgiving we become, the less judgmental we become, the more we
become like God.
Ooops! I would also suspect - how unGodlike of me to be suspicious - that some people would boo me for saying that. Yet I suspect - if we become that forgiving - that God like - others will knock the heck out of us. Hey they judged Jesus and threw him out of the game by crucifying him. Expect as much.
Ooops! I would also suspect - how unGodlike of me to be suspicious - that some people would boo me for saying that. Yet I suspect - if we become that forgiving - that God like - others will knock the heck out of us. Hey they judged Jesus and threw him out of the game by crucifying him. Expect as much.