INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this Friday in the first week
in Ordinary Time is, “Regrets and Recovery.”
R and R
That should take care of today’s two readings.
FIRST READING
It sounds to me that today’s first reading from 1st
Samuel is loaded with regrets. [Cf. 1st Samuel 8: 4-7, 10-22a.] It’s also loaded with hindsight. Hindsight
with negative consequences.
Of course parts of scriptures are written in the present
tense - but in reality they are looking back.
A group in Israel comes to Samuel and tell him they want
to have a king.
Samuel responds by telling them all that having a king will
entail. It will mean you might lose your sons - your land - heavy duty taxing
from you - tithing - big time tithing, etc. etc. etc.
In other words there are consequences. And they are
consequences that will cost you and you will regret your decision in wanting to
have a king.
It could be switching a job - a moving to a new house -
getting a divorce - what have you.
The title of my homily is, “Regrets and Recovery.”
Part one could also be entitled, “Cost and Consequences.”
It could also have the title, “Foresight and Hindsight”.
That would be another reflective twosome for a homily.
RECOVERY;
TODAY’S GOSPEL
Today’s gospel - Mark 2: 1-12 is a great text for
reflection.
We can’t see them
- but I have a theory every person on the planet is carrying a back pack
on their back. You’ve seen kids going down the street coming home or going into
school with back packs.
Well everyone has their back pack.
Question as in the Capital One Advertisements: “What’s in
your pack?”
People carry their sins, their mistakes, their
consequences, their regrets, their
story, their autobiography, on their backs.
And our past can paralyze us a bit. Obviously, some more than others.
This guy in today’s gospel is paralyzed and his four
friends carry him to Jesus.
They can’t worm their way through the crowd. Wait your
turn.
So they go up on the roof and then through the roof.
And they lower him in front of Jesus - and Jesus heals
the man - starting with forgiveness of his sins.
And the man gets those consequences of his sins - off his
back and he stands up straight healed and all are astounded and glorify God
saying, “We have never seen anything like this.”
Let Jesus heal you.
CONCLUSION
The title of my homily is, “Regrets and Recovery.”
Take some time to check what’s in your pack - the stuff
that might be wearing you our and wearing you down.