Homily for August 10th, 2020. 2 Corinthians
(9:6-10)
“God loves a
cheerful giver,” Paul writes in today’s first reading. Paul wrote his letters
in Greek. And the Greek word which Paul uses for cheerful is hilarios. That’s where we get our
English word “hilarious.” If we wanted to translate Paul’s words literally,
therefore, we would say: “God loves a hilarious giver.” Why? Because that is
how God gives: not sparingly, not grudgingly, “without sadness or compulsion”
(as Paul writes), but with overflowing joy.
“There is more happiness in giving
than in giving than in receiving,” Jesus says (Acts 20:35). Those words,
incidentally, are the only saying of Jesus that is preserved outside the
gospels. Paul speaks them to representatives of the Christian community at Ephesus , telling them to
remember a saying that they were already familiar with from the oral teaching
of Paul and other apostles. The New Testament did not yet exist: it hadn’t been
written. But already the Church was teaching the faith, and telling people what
Jesus had said and done. That is the answer to people who say they have a
religion of “the Bible only.” The Church’s faith is older than the Bible –
older, at least, than the New Testament.
People who have never experienced the
joy of giving that Jesus speaks about are poor, no matter how large their bank
accounts, investments, or other possessions. As a help to finding this joy, consider
this. God does not need anything. He is, the theologians say, “sufficient unto
himself.” Hence anything we give to God – or to people in need, or to good
causes – comes back to us. But it comes back to us changed, and enlarged. The
bread and wine we offer in the Mass come back to us transformed into the Body
and Blood of God’s divine Son. The same is true with all our gifts. That is why
Paul writes: “Whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows
bountifully will also reap bountifully.”
There are people here who have
already experienced that. They experience the joy of living with open hearts, and
open hands. If you’re not yet one of them, the Lord is inviting you to join our
happy company – today!
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