Homily for November 7th, 2017: Luke 14:15-24.
Some
Scripture commentators suggest that the host in the parable we have just heard
was a tax collector. His party is an attempt to break into society by inviting
the leading citizens of the town and providing lavish entertainment. His guests
have all told him, in the offhand way that people do, that they’d be happy to come to his house. “Any time,” they’ve all said. When the invitations
arrive, however, it turns out that these acceptances were insincere. The
excuses offered are so flimsy as to be almost pathetic.
Jesus’
hearers would have smiled as they heard of the frustration of the host’s plans.
He thought he was going to make a big splash. Now all his guests have stood him
up. The man’s growing anger enhances the humor of the situation. He resolves to
repay the insults of his intended guests with an insult of his own. He will
give a party for people whom those originally invited hold in contempt. That
will show them!
The
parable, like many others, contains a warning — but also good news. The warning
is the exclusion of those first invited. They represent Jesus’ critics: people
confident that the best seats at the banquet were reserved for them. They
assume that there will be other opportunities, other invitations. Too late,
they discover that this was their final chance.
The parable’s good news is contained in the
description of the
substitute guests. They are a portrait of Luke’s own Christian
community: “the poor, the blind, the crippled, the lame.” The parable’s good
news is its assurance that God welcomes not just the fit and strong, people
whose good moral character makes them role models and leaders. The Lord who was
reproached in his earthly life for welcoming sinners and eating with them continues
to do the same today. To claim a place at his table we need to show him not our
successes but our failures; not our strength but our weakness; not health but
sickness.
Preaching
on this parable back in 2006, Pope Benedict XVI told about bishops from Western
countries, Europe especially, telling him on their visits to Rome about how people refuse the Lord’s
invitation to his banquet. Yet at the same time, the Pope said, “I also hear
this, precisely from the Third World: that people listen, that they come, that
even today the message spreads along the roads to the very ends of the earth,
and that people crowd into God’s hall for the banquet.”
Are
you among them?
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