REAP THE WHIRLWIND
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 14th Tuesday
in Ordinary Time is, “Sow the Wind, Reap the Whirlwind.”
We’ve heard that saying from today’s first reading. We
get it, or we think we get it, but we don’t really think about it. Words can be
like the car in the other lane - flying by us or we are flying by them. It’s
there. It’s gone.
It’s a saying that shows up here in Hosea 8: 7.
We’ll also hear it again in Proverbs 22: 8 - “the one who sows injustice reaps disaster.”
Then there is Galatians 6:7, “Don’t delude yourself into
thinking God can be cheated: where a man sows, there he reaps: if he sows in
the field of self-indulgence he will get a harvest of corruption out of it; if
he sows in the field of the Spirit he will bet from it a harvest of eternal life.”
Great quotes. I believe each clarifies the saying that
much better.
You reap what you sow.
Spoil your kids, you spoiled your empty nest years.
What goes around, comes around.
Do nothing - expect nothing.
Do dumb things - expect dumb results.
Those who live by the sword, die by the sword.
HOSEA
Hosea the prophet reads the riot act to the kings and
princes and tribes of Israel. He tells them, “You’re flirting with danger. When
you pray to silver and gold idols, don’t expect the real God to show up when
you need him.”
Sow the wind, expect the whirlwind.
You’re planting grain that has no ears - so don’t expect
flour.
POLITICS AND
THE PULPIT
Take the example of politicking from the pulpit. Now that’s
a tricky topic.
It’s a fact that the scriptures - especially the prophets
- and then the Books of Kings, Samuel and Chronicles bring in history and
politics and what have you.
The other day I heard someone say that they want us
priests to speak up about the current political drama that’s going on. Yet I also know that if one does, one gets
complaints about politics from the pulpit.
Basically, I let America
Magazine speak up on these issues. There is a chance to write letters to the
Editor or to cancel one’s subscription - if one disagrees with an editorial or
an article and one has time to study it.
I know that I slip at times and let my bias, my
positions, my political perceptions slip out - and every time I pay for it - by
a comment someone makes to or at me on the way out of Mass. When will I ever
learn?
I’ve heard people say: “Don’t make the church pulpit a
bully pulpit - unless people have a chance to speak up.” If they can’t speak up in church when they
disagree with the preacher, they will be speaking up in the parking lot or on
their cell phones or Facebook.
So what’s your take on November coming? I’ve noticed that names come up in every
conversation or coffee break that goes longer than 15 minutes.
STEP BACK AND
WATCH
Perhaps the wisest stance is the stepping back and
watching stance - that is - if one is able to keep calm, cool and recollected.
Statistics scream out that negative campaigning in the
short run gives a candidate more bang for his or her dollar - or rant or rave
or scream or scheme.
However, In the long run, the truth will win out. There
are video tapes. There are ways to check sources. There will be biographies
about each candidate coming out in 10 years.
CONCLUSION: TIME
WILL TELL
In the meanwhile, we’ll keep on hearing the ancient
proverb in various forms: “When they sow the wind, they shall reap the
whirlwind.”
Hot air is hot air. Balloons burst. The air dissipates
and disappears and we discover there is nothing inside.
And Dorothy wakes up - at home - in Kansas.