SOUNDS GOOD ON PAPER!
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 17 Saturday in Ordinary Time is, “Forgiveness! Sounds Good on Paper!”
Today’s first reading from Leviticus 25: 1, 8-17 sounds good on paper.
The book of Leviticus
announces a Jubilee. Every 50 years the horn - the trumpet - shall sound, shall
resound, shall echo and re-echo through the land of Israel.
It’s a time of Jubilee - a Day of
Atonement - when everyone can get their land back - for a different price or a cheaper
price than assumed - so too the cost of food - so too the cost of everything.
Slaves are to be freed. Debts are to be forgiven.
QUESTION
Does everyone need a time of forgiveness - when the slates
are cleaned - when sins are erased - when hurts are loaded on barges and
shipped out to the deepest part of the ocean and dumped - with rocks tied to
them - so they will sink to the bottom of the ocean?
A JUBILEE YEAR FOR CATHOLICS
From time to time in the Catholic Church there have been
Jubilee years. You might remember that the year 2000 - was called a Year of
Jubilee - when doors in Rome
were opened - that had been sealed.
Jubilee years and jubilee celebrations were pretty much
forgotten in the Catholic Church till Pope Boniface VIII called for the year
1300 to be a year of Jubilee. Indulgences were given. Forgiveness was stressed.
Pilgrimages to Rome
were called for.
They pretty much were called for at different times after that - sometimes
every 50 years, sometimes 25 years. Pope Urban VI called for one every 33 years
to make it like the length of Christ’s life.
What would it be like if the Catholic Church announced
forgiveness of all sins - without having to go to confession - just get to Mass
- and thank God for the forgiveness? Years back when churches announced “General
Absolution” - churches were filled - till that was squelched.
I remember reading an “Uh oh!” suggestion for the Jubilee Year of 2000: what
would it be like if all those divorced - didn’t have to go through an annulment
practice - just from this day on - you’re forgiven?
What would it be like to get a spiritual “Get out of Jail” free card?
Speaking of jails, because of costs and no money, I
understand California
is going to simply release lots of prisoners - soon.
SOUNDS GOOD ON PAPER
All this might sound good on paper for some, but the devil
is in the details - and the implications.
Next - any of us who
have made serious mistakes - and have been forgiven - know how hard it is to
actually be forgiven - in the reality of the heart?
As I was reading up on the Jubilee year - as mentioned in
today’s reading from Leviticus, I
noticed that different scholars have said that there is no evidence that this really
ever happened - especially regarding land.
What would it be like to have someone knocking on our door and saying, “We’re moving back -
like right now.”
What would be like if farmers and merchants had to deal with
giving the land a break - no planting and pruning for this year? It’s a jubilee
year. Sounds good on paper?
CONCLUSION: THEN THERE’S REALITY
All of us know the reality of making a mistake - saying,
“I’m sorry!” - hearing “You’re forgiven” and then a year or twenty years later the
other brings back a past mistake - in a argument or discussion or conversation.
All of us know the reality of making a mistake and we’re the
one who can’t forgive ourselves - like our whole lifetime.
Looking at today’s gospel - Matthew 14: 1-12, what would it be like to have been Herodias and
her daughter - and Herod in today’s gospel who have John the Baptist killed -
beheaded - and have his blood on their hands for the rest of their lives?
We go through life with our scars and our reminders of our
mistakes. At some point we have to learn to let the blood of Christ heal us.
Forgiveness sounds good from the pulpit. Forgiveness sounds
good on paper.