Homily or October 3rd, 2017:
Luke 9:51-56.
In
Jesus’ day the enmity between Jews and Samaritans was proverbial. We might
compare it to the enmity between Sunni and Shia Moslems today. Samaritans were
especially resentful of Jews passing through their territory on pilgrimage to
the holy city of Jerusalem .
This explains why the Samaritan villagers mentioned in today’s gospel reading
“would not welcome” Jesus and his friends. Because there were twelve of them,
thirteen with Jesus, Jesus had sent messengers ahead to let the villagers know
he was coming, and wanted accommodation for the night.
Mark’s
gospel tells us that the brothers, James and John, sons of the fisherman
Zebedee, were given the name “Boanerges,” or Sons of Thunder (Mk. 3:17). Their
hot-tempered anger at the refusal of hospitality by these Samaritan villagers helps
explain the reason for their nickname. The two brothers’ desire to “call down
fire from heaven,” reminds us of what the Old Testament prophet Elijah had
twice done to destroy his enemies (2 Kings 1:10 & 12). It was the biblical
equivalent of the modern slogan: “Don’t get mad, get even.”
Luke
has already given us Jesus’ rejection of such revenge. “Love your enemies,”
Jesus says in the sixth chapter of Luke’s gospel. “Do good to those who hate
you; bless those who curse you and pray for those who maltreat you” (6:27f.)
Acting in that way is never easy. But those who, with the Lord’s help, overcome
the longing for revenge which comes naturally not only to us adults, but even
to little children, are calling down a different fire upon those who maltreat
them. It is the fire not of destruction but of love, which alone can overcome
and burn out hatred. And so we pray in this Mass: “Lord, pour out into my heart
the all-consuming fire of your love, that I may share that love with others.”
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