Homily for March 5th: Matthew 7:7-12.
I received an
e-mail recently about a man who complained that God had not answered his
months-long prayer that he would win the lottery. God answered the complaint by
telling him: ‘Give me some help, will you? Buy a ticket.’ Jesus tells us
something similar when he says: “Ask and you will receive.” The very act of
asking is an expression of faith. But why ask when God knows our needs already?
Doing so reminds us of our dependence on God. When things are going well for us
and the sun is shining, it is easy to forget that we still need the Lord.
Asking also strengthens our desire, much as regular exercise strengthens the
heart, muscles, and lungs. St. Gregory the Great, who was pope from 590 to 604,
wrote: “All holy desires grow by delay. And if they do not grow, they were
never holy desires.”
Jesus also says, “Seek and you will
find.” The Trappist monk who helped me over the threshold of the Catholic
Church sixty years ago wrote: “To fall in love with God is the greatest of all
romances; to seek him the greatest human adventure; to find him the highest
human achievement.”
Jesus tells: “Knock and the door will
be opened to you.” If we know that a house, or a room, is empty, we don’t bother
to knock. So knocking too is an expression of faith – that there is someone there
to open the door.
To strengthen our faith, Jesus asks
two rhetorical questions: “Would you give your son a stone if he asked for bread,
or a snake if he asked for fish?” Our Pope Francis asks simple, challenging questions
like that. If his hearers don’t answer the question, he will repeat it until
they do. You are certainly not saints, Jesus says; yet you know how to give
gifts to your children. Do you suppose, then, that your heavenly Father will be
less generous than you are? That is a “how much more” question, and Jesus uses
it often. “How much more will your heavenly Father give good things to those
who ask him.”
Today’s gospel reading closes with
the Golden Rule: “Do to others whatever you would have them do to you.” That is
not unique to Christianity. We find it, in some form, in all the great
religions of the world. Treat others, the rule says, as you would like them to
treat you.
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