Homily for Oct. 14th, 2019:
Luke 11:29-32.
“This
generation seeks a sign,” Jesus says. He is referring to the repeated demand of
his contemporaries for a miracle so dramatic that it will force them to
believe. But belief cannot be forced any more than love can be forced. Jesus’
miracles confirm the faith of those
who already believe. They do not compel
belief on those who hearts and minds are closed to him and his message.
Jesus then
mentions two such confirming signs: Jonah, and the so-called queen of the
south, Sheba .
Jonah’s sign was not his survival in the belly of the great fish. The book
Jonah is fiction, not history. Like much great fiction, notably Jesus’ parables
and Shakespeare’s plays, Jonah is the vehicle for important truth about God, humanity,
and life. The sign of Jonah which Jesus refers to is the immediate repentance
of the people of Nineveh
– Gentiles without the gift of God’s law – in response to Jonah’s preaching.
Jesus contrasts the response of the Ninevites with the failure of so many of
his own people to respond to his message.
The sign of
Queen
Are we responding? “I have come,” Jesus
says in John’s gospel, “that they may have life, and have it to the full”
(10:10). Are we embracing Jesus’ offer of life to the full? Or do we think of
our faith as observing enough of the Church’s complicated rules and regulations
to be able, on Judgment Day, to squeeze our way into heaven?
Think
about it!
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