In today’s gospel from Matthew, Mathew the Tax Collector,
is sitting there at his custom’s post and Jesus passes by. He stops. He spots
Matthew. He calls Matthew! Matthew stands up. Matthew followsJesus. Just like that.
GESTURES
If you want, take your hand and hold up your index finger
towards the ceiling.Now point it
towards your chest and say, “Who me?”Try that!
Next take that same finger - make out you’re Jesus - and
point that finger towards Matthew and once more say, “You! Follow me.”
“Who me?”
The key message from this gospel and from this reading is
this: “God calls the one who is a sinner.”
At the end of today’s gospelwe hear that Jesus has come to call the
sinner.
There it is: the central message, thecentral point of Christ.Jesus came to bring mercy - forgiveness -
understanding - acceptance - love for each of us.
CARAVAGGIO
In 2014 I went to
Rome on a trip with people from the parish I was in. We went with a group on a
bus tripto Rome. The plan was take
different tours or side trips around Rome. Since I once spent 5 weeks in Rome, my plan
was to go to the Redemptorst Headquarters and see some Redemptorists there that
I knew.
However,I spotted
two old ladies who were on our tour. They were by themselves. I knew them from
other trips. I asked them what they were going to do. They said, “Oh, just walk
around.” Hearing that, I dropped my
plans and asked if they wanted company. “Gladly!” One was 77 and the other was
82.I figured that would be the thing to
do.
We saw St. Peter’s and then started walking.I had been with them on other tours and if they
saw a Victoria’s Secret - they had to go in. So I waited outside. They came out
laughing and laughing - without buying anything. Next,we
found ourselves in the Piazza Navonne - where they have three fountains -
including the enormous Neptune statue.
Surprise I see a church over the water sprays of the
fountain and I said, “Let’s check that church.”
It was the French church - San Luigi dei Francesi - St.
Louis of the French. It was a baroque church from the 1500’s. Surprise - I
didn’t know this - but it had 3 famous painting of St. Mathew.A Cardinal - with the name of Matthew wanted
paintings of St. Matthew.They got an
artist but he dropped out, so someone picked Caravaggio.
By total accident I saw 3 Caravaggios that day: The Call of Matthew, The Inspiration of St. Matthew and the Martyrdom of Matthew ....
I liked The Call of
Matthew the best.
There was Matthew - the sinner - in a tavern with Christ
pointing towards him.There was Matthew
pointing his finger towards himself - seeming to say, “Who me?”
He’s at table with 4 others counting money. Christ calls
Matthew the sinner.
Seeing that I had a future sermon.
Today I’m finally using it. Caravvagio the sinner painted
great big paintings - with light and shadow. He understood calls from God or Christ. He was so good he
had many offers and commissions.
Caravvagio knew grace, call, love, sin, light darkness.
He was a pimp, a murderer, being chased by police, escaping from prison -
probably murdered himself at 38.
We bought the book - the guide book from that church -
with the 3 paintings of Matthew.
CONCLUSION: HOMEWORK
If you use google - type into the search box, “Caravaggio;
the Call of Matthew.”
Study the painting in the context of today’s gospel
reading: Matthew 9:9-13.
Then check out the various YouTube short videos on
Caravaggio and Matthew.
If Caravaggio becomes an interest for you - or even an
addiction - go for it.
What I’m saying is this: there are lots of paintings by
Caravaggio. Study them all. Connect them to the Bible text they are depicting
and you’ll have some great spiritual reading and picturing.
Or if you get to Rome get to see this painting by
Caravaggio: the Call of Matthew. Pope Francis loved this painting and told people
going to Rome, to make sure you spent time at this painting. Amen.
September 21, 2019
HOW TOUCHING
When sitting there in buses, banks,
doctor’s offices, church or airports,
spot the human touches - hands,
shoulders, arms, dandruff flicking,
unconscious when an old song plays
on the radio - or when a sermon makes
sense or a slight touch when pouring milk
in another’s coffee cup - giving a hug after a kid finishes a game she lost. "I just want to
to reassure you, you’re not alone. You got me. You have me. I'm with you through it all …."
Thought for today: “The marriage knot should be tied tight enough to prevent easy loosening but not tight enough to
feel like a noose.”
Anonymous
Thursday, September 19, 2019
QUESTIONS: ONE MORE WAY
OF READING THE SCRIPTURES
INTRODUCTION
There are different ways of reading, studying, praying
with or opening up a Bible. One can start with Page 1 and go to the end like
any book - or one can do an individual book in the Bible one at a time -
meaning starting anywhere.
A new way hit me last night when sitting down to come up
with a short homily for this morning. It’s this. Take a Mass reading - the first or the Gospel
- on the middle one from a Sunday Mass. Read it. Then jot down questions about
the reading that hit you.Like, “When
was this document written?”
So that’s the idea that hit me last night - as I was preparing
this homily for the 24th Thursday in Ordinary Time.
So that’s whyI
came up with the title of this homily: “Questions: One More Way of Reading the Scriptures.”
BETSY ROSS - TOMATOES
I remember hearing a program on NPR - National Public
Radio- about the writing of a biography
about Betsy Ross.
First of all, the author being interviewed for PBS figured
out there was no significant biography about Betsy Ross. So he or she decided
to go there.
Betsy Ross - as you know - was in the story of how we came
up with the American flag. In the
research she found out there are questions about who should get the credit etc.
However, what hit me while listening to that PBS program - was the question of
tomatoes. The biographer found out that Betsy Ross was interested in tomatoes -
so she ended up spending a year doing research especially about the state of
tomatoes in 1777.
That’s unique. That’s interesting. That’s something I remembered.
To write non-fiction, one ought to be an exact writer -
and deal with all the questions a researcher might ask. Research. Research!
Questions. Questions.
So that’s why I thought of questions as a way to do Bible
reading and Bible research.
SO TOO THE SCRIPTURES
So in this homily, I’m suggesting reading a reading and
come up with various questions that might hityou.
So Luke 7: 36 to 50 talks about perfume - or ointment.
What do we know about perfume in Palestine in the time of
Christ?
Do we have any idea what triggered the Pharisee in today’s
gospel to invite Jesus to his house for
dinner?
Did Jesus ever turn down an invitation of a dinner?
Does this woman have a name?
At the end of this gospel it says that others were also
at the dinner.
What did they think when they saw this woman come into
Simon the Pharisee’s house - stand behind Jesus - start crying - started weeping and washing Jesus’ feet with her hair. Then she anointed
his feet with the ointment. What was the scent like? What were their thoughts
besides the one question stated at the end of today’s gospel: “Who is this who
even forgives sins?”
As Father Dennis said Tuesday morning - women were second
class and backroom people. Here was this woman becoming center stage?
It’s a great story that would trigger lots of questions.
In today’s gospel, Jesus tells a parable about two people
in debt - one owing 500 days wages and the other owing 50 days wages.
Commentators say that people in Palestine at the time of Jesus had big time
debt problems. Where would they get information to say that. In the Judean War
of A.D. 66-73 rebels got into the debt archives and burnt the debt records.
I hear these candidates for president saying they will
cancel student college debts.What would
that be like?
Have we ever been in debt?What was that like?
Have we ever been forgiven big time for some big mistake
we made? Have you ever been near a confession and we heard some person go,
“Phew! Wow!”
CONCLUSION
So that’s my homily and my idea for a homily thought.
Read today’s readings again and pick out one good
question that hits you.
Like: who am I more like, Simon or the woman who washed
and anointed Jesus’ feet?
Or take the first
reading for today. It says, “Do not neglect the gift you have?”What would be the most important gift I have
and on a scale of 1 to 10, how welldo I
use it? Amen.