Homily for Sept. 30th, 2017: Luke 9:43b-45.
“They were all
amazed at [Jesus’] every deed,” today’s brief gospel reading begins.
Immediately before this verse Luke has described Jesus’ healing of an epileptic
boy, the only son of his father (9:38). The man has already asked Jesus’
disciples for healing, without success. The youth has an epileptic fit even as
he is being brought to Jesus. The Lord heals the boy with a word and gives him
back to his father. “And all who saw it marveled at the greatness of God,” Luke
tells us (vs. 43a). The opening words of our gospel today follow immediately:
“All were amazed at [Jesus’] every deed.”
Jesus breaks
into the people’s amazement to tell them something he wants them to remember.
“Pay attention to what I am telling you” are the words we heard. What Luke
writes literally is: “lay up in your ears these words. The Son of Man is going
to be betrayed into the hands of men.” This is so jarring that the people do
not understand it. “They were afraid to ask him about this saying,” Luke tells
us.
This fear can
be understood if we reflect that the miracle of healing which the people have
just witnessed, indeed all Jesus’ miracles, kindled in them a desire for something
we all want: a success story. Being betrayed into the hands of men certainly
didn’t sound like success. No wonder the people were afraid to enquire too
deeply about Jesus’ meaning.
The day would
come, however, when people would understand.
After Jesus’ death and burial his women disciples, more faithful than the men,
visit his tomb as soon as the Sabbath rest is over, intending to do what had
been impossible Friday evening, when the Sabbath had already begun: anoint the
Lord’s body. The women find not Jesus’ body but “two men in dazzling garments”
(clearly angels) who ask them: “Why do you search for the Living One among the
dead? He is not here; he has been raised up.” And then, Luke tells us, the
angels tell the women: “Remember what he said to you while he was still in Galilee – that the Son of Man must be delivered into the
hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and on the third day rise again.” “With
this reminder,” Luke writes, “[Jesus’] words came back to them” (Lk 24:4-8).
We pray, then,
in this Mass: “Open our ears, Lord Jesus, to listen to your words. And when we do not understand, give us patience
to await the day when we shall
understand, the day when we see you face to face. Amen”
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