Homily for November 21st, 2019: Luke 19:41-44.
“As Jesus drew
near Jerusalem ,
he saw the city and wept over it,” we heard in the gospel. Just twice in the
four gospels do we read that that Jesus wept: at the tomb of his dear friend,
Lazarus; and in today’s gospel, following Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem . Jesus was
God’s Son, endowed with divine powers. But he was no Superman immune to human sorrow.
Whatever grief and sorrow we experience, Jesus experienced more. He
understands, and he is with us in all our own griefs and sorrows.
Today’s gospel
reading immediately follows Luke’s description of Jesus’ triumphal entry into
That is what
moved Jesus to tears. Like all devout Jews, he loved the holy city of Jerusalem . To see the
leaders of his people rejecting the Messiah, whose coming all the prophets had
promised, grieved the Lord deeply. Note that I said “leaders.” Many of Jesus’ people
did accept him. Most of them were
“little people,” as the world judges things: Mary and Joseph, the fishermen
Peter and his brother Andrew , James,
and John; and Matthew , an outcast
because he collected taxes for the hated government of occupation.
That remains
true today. Pope Benedict said often that most of today’s saints are “little
people”: St John Vianney (the Curé of Ars), Therese of Lisieux (the “Little
Flower”), our own Rose Philippine Duchesne, Maximilian Kolbe (who gave his life
in Auschwitz that another prisoner might live), the 20th century
Mexican martyr Miguel Pro, and Mother Teresa.
The greatest
people in the Church are not those with the impressive titles and fancy
clothes, but those who are closest to God. What better could we pray for in
this Mass, than that we may be among them?
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