Friday, 25 September 2020

OUR ‘YES’ TO GOD

                     HOMILY FOR THE 26TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR A)

Rev. Fr. Peter Onyekachi Ezekoka

Ezekiel 18:25-28        Philippians 2:1-11        Matthew 21:28-32

What is the best way to say ‘yes’ to God? Today’s readings clarify the relationships between what we say and what we do, and between what we promise God and what we actually do to carry out those promises. In the Gospel, Jesus used the parabolic story of a father and his two sons in order to teach about the importance of keeping promises made to God and to other people. Using the content to critique the religious leaders of His day, Jesus revealed that they were failing in their service to God while outwardly being perceived as carrying it out. The leaders weren’t listening to God, and consequently their faith was stagnant. Through the story, in which actions speak louder than words, Jesus underlined how worthless are empty promises made to God and man, and how vital it is that promises are kept.

One by one, the sons were instructed by their father to go out and work in his vineyard. The first son refused to do his father’s will, but changed his mind and complied. The second son agreed to do the father’s will, but reneged on his promise and didn’t go. Of the two, the first actually did the father’s will because he was the one that did the work. Had there been a third son in that story who promised to do the father’s will and fulfilled it, he would have been the ideal example of faith, because the models of the sons are both flawed. Neither of the sons brought their father complete joy. However, Christ only needed the examples of the two sons to remind the Jewish religious leaders of the greater readiness of those at the bottom of the heap to accept the message of repentance; ‘for tax-collectors and prostitutes are making their way into the kingdom of heaven before you.’  

Let’s take a closer look at the contrasting reactions of the two sons in the context of ‘change’ to see how a mixture of the personalities is evident in each one of us. Why did the first son change his mind and do what his father wanted? He did it because he made a positive change from verbal disobedience to active obedience. As sinners, we need to make a daily examination of conscience to discern when we have (mistakenly or deliberately) offended God, and if change is necessary in order to do His will. The second son changed his mind too, but he made a negative change from verbal obedience to active disobedience. That kind of change is to be studiously avoided. In the first reading, the Lord encourages positive change, and defends his ways as fair, condemning the virtuous person who turns from His ways towards iniquity, and forgiving the wicked person who turns to Him to do what is right: if he turns from the wickedness he has committed, and does what is right and just, then he shall preserve his life. He will live for having repented. Whenever we are going to make changes in life, they had better be positive ones.

Everyone who has a personal relationship with God ought to be someone who says yes and does yes. God’s Commandments ought to be observed and His Will carried out judiciously. The right thing to do is to ensure that promises made are promises kept: keep all the promises you make to God (Eccl 5:2). To make a promise is to make a commitment. Whatever your lips utter you must be sure to do, because you made your vow freely to the Lord your God with your own mouth (Deut 23:23). Each one of us is guilty at some time in life of making a promise and failing to keep it. Our sacramental life challenges us to keep the promises we make to God. Remember that our Baptismal promises are to be kept! Couples to be joined in Holy Matrimony have no problems in saying ‘yes’ to take each other ‘for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health’ on their wedding day, but may find it increasingly difficult to keep their promises to each other through the ups and downs of life. Priests have no problem with saying ‘yes’ to God at Ordination, but may find it increasingly challenging to observe the incessant demands of their vocation as the years roll by.

Living out the Christian life consistently well is admittedly a struggle. Broken promises lead to broken relationships. People are left with broken hearts when marriages fail and promises are broken. When promised prayers for people going through a hard time fail to be offered, heaven is not stormed. We all know people who have promised to walk alongside us through thick and thin, only to see them melt into the mist when we need a leg up. Equally, we all know that there have been times when we ourselves are guilty of having let people down. Those feelings of remorse should move us to start keeping our promises Big Time!

The trail of broken promises that we leave behind adversely affects both our personal relationship with God and our everyday dealings with one another. One of the major causes of making empty or unfulfilled promises is the lack of the virtue of self-control, and specifically the mastery of what comes out of our mouths: sin is unavoidable when there is much talk, but whoever seals his lips is wise (Prov 10:19). One way of ensuring that our promises are credible is to resolve to think through carefully what we mean to say before we speak, because it is better not to make promises than not to keep them (cf. Eccl 5:5). To achieve this end, we constantly require the gift of God’s grace to guide us. Let us pray for the grace of obedience to God in all things, and for the grace of discernment when it’s better to keep our own counsel than to speak. Amen. God bless you. 

Friday, 18 September 2020

HAVE I NO RIGHT TO DO WHAT I LIKE WITH MY OWN?

HOMILY FOR THE 25TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR A)

Rev. Fr. Peter Onyekachi Ezekoka

Isaiah 55:6-7         Philippians 1:20c-24.27a        Matthew 20:1-16

HOMILY FOR THE 25TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR A)

Rev. Fr. Peter Onyekachi Ezekoka

Isaiah 55:6-7         Philippians 1:20c-24.27a        Matthew 20:1-16

HAVE I NO RIGHT TO DO WHAT I LIKE WITH MY OWN?

Everything that we receive from God is gifted to us freely from the abundance of His grace, and is not earned or deserved by anything we can possibly do. Grace is the free gift of God which radiates His generosity and enfolds the recipient. It is impossible for anyone to merit the grace that God offers gratuitously. In earthly terms, we have to get a job in order to get paid and put food on the table, but in heavenly terms - out of God’s sheer generosity - we are favoured by His free gift of grace, and fed in the Holy Eucharist. The difference between ‘labour’ and ‘favour’ is highlighted in today’s Gospel reading. Labourers are paid according to the hours put in and the work done, for the labourer deserves his wages (Lk 10:7). Labourers can lay rightful claim to financial reward for their labour, but no one can lay rightful claim to God’s gratuitous gift of grace. Why not? Because God’s thinking is not restricted, as human thinking is: your ways are not my ways, says the Lord (Is 55:8).

In the parable of ‘the labourers in the vineyard’, Jesus identified three groups of labourers: the first was employed at daybreak, the second during the day, and the third in the late afternoon. When it came to payment time at the end of the working day, the landowner paid all of them the same amount. The first group grumbled over the level of pay they received, even though it was what they had agreed to work for. The landowner’s response was to tell one of them: I am not being unjust to you…have I no right to do what I like with my own? Even if those labourers who had toiled throughout the day perceived themselves as being done down, their payment for the day’s job was a proper day’s wage for a proper day’s work. Their first problem was that they focused only at the reward.

‘The first will be last’ if the Christian’s concern is rooted in getting a reward out of God at the end of earthly life, rather than in spending one’s life in devoted service of God for love of Him because of Who He Is. Now, consider this! In the parable, there was an agreement between the landowner (God) and the first group (the apostles) for payment of a denarius. A denarius was worth a full day’s pay. There was no agreement between the landowner and the second group about the actual amount they would be paid, but simply a word of trust that they would be given a fair wage. There was no contractual agreement between the landowner and the third group, nor was there any word of trust about what they would receive. Those in the second and third groups, who were engaged later, needed work and pay just as much as the first group, of course. That’s why they willingly left the landowner to fix the amount they would receive. Our primary concern in serving God on earth in His vineyard should not be the size of the reward we will receive from Him in eternity. ‘The first will be last’ would apply if the size of the reward were to become the sole aim of someone’s Christian service. Here we see a paradox, because earthly rewards make a person financially richer on earth, but demanding heavenly rewards of God (instead of appreciating the enormous, undeserved privilege of serving God and of loving Him for His own sake) makes their soul poorer.

The first group were envious of the other men because, in human terms, they saw men who had done a lot less work than them getting the same pay, the same reward. This is where their second problem lies: Envy. Their complaint emanated from envy, because the generous landowner had paid all the labourers the same: why be envious because I am generous? Envy is the fourth deadly sin, and can shut us out of the Kingdom of heaven. It causes the first to be last (cf. Mt 20:16). A credible way of fighting envy is to recognize the abundance in God who gratuitously offers people what they each deserve. We are each unique! And our God-given favours and blessings are all connected to our uniqueness. Our perfect beauty then blossoms when we each starts living with our own uniqueness. You now see why there’s then no need to be envious of another person’s uniqueness, for whatever you perceive as success sprouts from people’s uniqueness.

With regard to the landowner's method of payment, Labour Unions today are not going to adopt this parable as their charter or mission statement. They will reject, for instance, any move to make a level 16 (executive) worker earn same amount as a level 11 (shop floor) worker. Children would moan that it was “not fair” if their peers got the same pocket money as them without putting in the same effort to help out with household chores. Students would protest if every one of them were automatically given A-grades for their work, regardless of their efforts. Apply these examples to discerning the difference between human thinking and divine thinking, and you’ll see how radically God’s ways differ from our ways.

Here’s a more serious task for you: think about those critical moments and chains of events in life that prompt human beings to question the justice of God, as did the labourers who were called first. Those critical moments and chains of events remind us that in no way is God’s generous gift of grace confined to the bounds of the human mind. God is ‘the landowner’ in the parable, and everyone is invited to accept His offer to work for Him in His ‘vineyard’, on earth. He actively seeks out and calls people to work in His mission of love. The Son of Man has come to seek and to save what was lost (Lk 19:10). Isn’t that a marvellous gift of grace! Now, to paraphrase Isaiah’s message in the First Reading, that ‘His thoughts are not our thoughts, His ways are not our ways’, we have a warning here against expecting God to act in the same way as people do. And realistically, this warning could be made clearer in difficult times when we are faced with feelings of hopelessness.

Isaiah was preaching to a people struggling with feelings of hopelessness and darkness, as we ourselves can be. In the face of hopelessness and darkness, the prophet reassures the people that God is still to be found and still near and encourages the people of God to turn back to the Lord (Is 55:6). The Responsorial Psalm consoles us that, The Lord is close to those who call Him (Ps 145:18). Here we are faced with yet another paradox! At one moment, we sense that God is so close to us and His abundant graciousness towards us is so overwhelming, that we seem to be looking straight into the blinding light of the sun. The next moment, He is so close to us that it seems as though He has His hands over our eyes and we can see nothing but darkness. In such moments, we do not badger God with our petitions and requests; our thoughts are absorbed into the presence of God because they fade into insignificance in the experience of receiving the free gift of His grace. Rather, we simply rest in peace and wonder, loving God because of His glory. We pray for the grace of perseverance in the truth that God is truly near to us, even in those circumstances beyond our control Amen. God bless you.

 

Saturday, 12 September 2020

THE MORE YOU FORGIVE, THE STRONGER YOU BECOME.


HOMILY FOR THE 24TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR A)

Rev. Fr. Ezekoka Peter Onyekachi

Sirach 27:30 -28:7        Romans 14:7-9        Matthew 18:21-35

Forgiveness is the giving up of one’s right to return hurt for hurt, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth (Ex 21:24; cf. Mt 5:38-42). Today is Forgiveness Sunday. It was on May 13th 1981 that an assassination attempt was made on the life of Pope St. John Paul II (“the Great”) by Mehmet Ali Agca. As the Pope was entering St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City, Agca shot the Pope four times, causing him severe injury plus massive blood loss. The assassin was apprehended immediately and was sentenced to life imprisonment by an Italian court. Following the shooting, the Pope asked people to “pray for my brother...whom I have sincerely forgiven.” In 1983 Agca had a private audience with the Pope, who continued to keep in touch with Agca’s mother and brother, whom the Pope described as his brother. In June 2000, at the request of the Pope, Agca was pardoned by the Italian President, Carlo Ciampi. The Pope was strong; he was able to forgive.

In the parable in today’s Gospel, the king was similarly strong – strong enough to be able to forgive the servant the much he owed. His servant, however, was weak: he lacked the strength to be able to forgive his fellow servant even the little he owed. As a result, the first servant received a severe punishment from his master. It was Peter who asked Jesus how often an offender can be forgiven: As often as seven times? (Mt 18:21). Now, the thinking of the time was that God’s forgiveness did not extend beyond three offences, and that He would exact punishment for a fourth. Yahweh had spelled out a series of condemnations on nations whose transgressions numbered at least three (Amos 1:3-13; 2:1-6); as man could not be more gracious than God, it followed that forgiveness was necessarily limited. In that context, Peter probably assumed that Our Lord would commend him for being big-hearted in expanding the limit to ‘seven times’. To show that forgiveness ought, however, to be limitless, Jesus used hyperbole to extend the number to 77 times or (as some versions of the Bible have it) 70 x 7 times. In other words, heaven places no limits on love, forgiveness and mercy. Our Lord is from heaven, and He is speaking the language of heaven. He is preparing us for how we are to be in eternity. To drive home the point, Jesus told the parable of the unforgiving servant, beginning ‘the Kingdom of heaven may be compared to …’

In the parable, observe how the other servants were stricken by the action of the wicked servant. God’s true people are always stricken when they see people suffering, mistreated, abused, or downtrodden, because God saw that all things were good when He created them (Gen 1:3ff). Cruel and mean treatment always troubles the Christian because it is demonic. Satan and his minions are at work. It could be argued that the unforgiving servant was legally in the right in casting his fellow man into prison because he couldn’t pay his debt, but the question is whether he acted morally, having been forgiven his own unpayable debt. What he did was just, according to the law of the land, but it was not holy according to the law of heaven. The question of how we as Christians meet the demands of justice and holiness continues to confront us. Ignorance of the law is never accepted in court as an excuse for breaking the law. The same holds true in divine law. When faced with an issue with legal implications, it is necessary for us to ask ourselves, ‘what does the law of the land say about it?’ and then, ‘what does divine law say about it?’ If the answers differ, the law of the land may seriously bump up against Our Lord’s teaching (cf. Jer 29:11). Any act that is deemed to be just in secular law but sinful according to divine law is not going to be identified as a good moral act. Let’s have a look at how the other servants reacted to the wicked servant’s action. What they did was to take the matter higher; they took it to the king himself. They didn’t sit back quietly and let evil thrive. They did something about it. They didn’t allow legalism combined with oppression to destroy someone. They wanted mercy and compassion and moral justice to be shown. They gave us a model to follow.

In the end, the unforgiving servant ended up destroying himself. After he’d been pardoned, he failed to pardon someone else. He was thrown into prison until he fulfilled conditions impossible to meet – in other words, never. Not forgiving someone is comparable to drinking poison, and then hoping it will kill someone else! A heart that does not forgive, a heart that refuses to forgive, poisons itself.  Exhorting us to forgive, the Wisdom writer of the First Reading reminds us that God’s forgiveness and mercy are effected when we forgive one another’s sins. Forgiveness is an expression of holy love for the other person, because it indicates that the God-given humanity of the offender is far more important than their sinfulness. As a Christian, you know the value of the person to God. Judas valued Jesus at 30 pieces of silver, but God values each one of us because He created us in His own image (Gen 1:27), He never forgets us (Is 49:15), He loves us no matter what (Jer 31:3), He died for us while we were still sinners (Rom 5:8) and He redeemed us by His Blood (1Pet 1:18f).

What can you do whenever you find it hard to forgive someone? Here are some suggestions:

1) Be thankful: When someone has done something which you find hard to forgive, give thanks to God for the experience, because it has made you grow in grace. Oprah Winfrey said: ‘true forgiveness is when you can say, thank you for that experience.’

2) Wish them well: A sign that forgiveness has started in you is when you genuinely wish the person well for God’s sake, even when you are hurting from what they have done.

3) Work on your mind. Remember that the wicked servant intended to pay and begged for patience, as we do too whenever we say, “Forgive us our trespasses …”. Our Lord is the eternal Judge, and He is telling us: “vengeance is mine”.(Deut 32:35; Rom 12:17ff).

4) Move forward: Bearing a grudge holds you back. Don’t you want to move forward? The truth is that unless you deliberately let go, forgive the offender, forgive yourself, forgive the situation and accept that it’s over, you cannot move forward. It is only when we pass on God’s mercy to others that God’s mercy grows in us.

Here on earth, forgiveness is hard because it runs contrary to human nature. One strong reason why we must forgive one another is that when we forgive, we will have discovered that it brings us God’s peace and tranquillity. There is guilt in every heart, but God’s mercy is passed on when we imitate Him in holy love. We must be forgiving and merciful, not merely to fulfil a protocol, not merely to display good manners or to ‘be nice’, but to transform us as it transforms others.


We ought to apologize when we should, and forgive those who hurt us even when they have yet to ask for forgiveness. They may never do. Forgive them simply because it is holy to forgive. Forgiveness is an unfamiliar language because it comes from heaven. When we forgive, we discover that we have set two prisoners free, one of whom is ourself. May the Lord help us in our struggles to be instruments of His limitless compassion and forgiveness for all of us on earth. Amen. God bless you.




Friday, 4 September 2020

IF HE LISTENS… YOU HAVE WON BACK A BROTHER

 

HOMILY FOR THE 23RD SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR A)

Rev. Fr. Ezekoka Peter Onyekachi

Ezekiel 33:7-9        Romans 13:8-10        Matthew 18:15-20

Today’s readings are on the theme of reconciliation. The dictionary definition of ‘reconciliation’ is ‘the re-establishment of friendly relations’ with people. The function of reconciliation is to restore peace and harmony to a relationship. In the Gospel, Our Lord outlines a sequence for the Apostles (the leaders of the Church) to follow when tackling the thorny problem of fraternal correction. Is that sequence relevant for us today? Of course it is! In Our Lord’s sequence there are three logical steps:

1. Dare to Reconcile

2. Dare to Discipline

3. Dare to Pray

Dare to Reconcile

The first step in dealing with a perceived offence is to make a discreet step towards reconciliation. This is done by the person offended against going to see the offender about it on his own; if your brother does something wrong [the original text states here ’against you’], go and have it out with him alone, between your two selves (Mt 18:15). This initial step has to be taken gently. It precludes disclosing matters to others and publicly rebuking the offender when he has yet to be spoken to privately. Why? Because the offender is first and foremost our brother or sister in Christ. It is also essential to maintain confidentiality from the outset,  because people are sometimes unaware that they have done something that offends. If the attempt to effect reconciliation is made public at this stage, then the parties involved may take up entrenched positions: the Christian must not quarrel, but must be kind to all (2Tim 2:24).

It’s important to let the accused person have his say in order to discover the likelihood of his being innocent, guilty or the accusation not provable. He has to be given the opportunity to defend himself. If he isn’t allowed to give his side of the story, then the division between the parties will probably deepen. If the object of the dispute happens to be personal, then the chances of reconciliation may evaporate unless both accuser and accused watch what they say. Taking this initial step is in itself an act of charity, and is a prerequisite for making a material offering to God: if you are offering your gift at the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go: first be reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift (Mt 5:23f). The matter must not be left to fester.

If the first step fails, and an unwillingness on the part of the offender to reconcile remains, then the second step is for the person trying to effect reconciliation to make another attempt, this time accompanied by one or two witnesses. This is to make it clear that the one seeking reconciliation genuinely wants it, and that the one being approached to reconcile is a loved brother or sister in Christ who is wanted back in the fold, in the Church. The presence of witnesses is necessary to ensure that the matter under dispute is explored objectively rather than subjectively.

If the second step fails, then the third step is for the matter to be reported to the local Church community. Why? Because if the issue is so serious that it cannot be sorted out at ground level, then the community needs to be alerted in order to pray together to find a solution as a matter of urgency. Scandal-mongering needs to be prevented from happening among the faithful (who are not in possession of the full facts) and potentially from spreading into wider society. Our Lord’s purpose in setting out these three steps is to keep sin and division in check before they have the chance to wound the faith community, the Church. All three steps must be followed in love. St. Paul reminds us in the Second Reading that love is the one thing that cannot hurt our neighbour.

Dare to Discipline 

Disciplining (in the sense of imposing one or more sanctions) is only to be actioned when the three steps to reconciliation have been attempted and have failed. Jesus said: if he [the brother in Christ] refuses to listen to the Church, treat him as you would treat a Gentile or a tax collector (Mt 18:17). To understand what Our Lord meant, we need to know how Jews at the time of Jesus treated Gentiles and tax collectors. Although the Temple had a special court for Gentiles, Jews avoided contact and intermarriage with Gentiles. Tax collectors, whether Jew of Gentile, were reviled because of their financial exploitation of the people and their collaboration with the Roman occupation. The point of discipline is to separate out the unrepentant offender from the faithful, to quarantine him until he is willing to reconcile. He is not banished from the Church, and the door is left ajar for him to return. After all, Christ came to call sinners to repentance (Mt 9:13; Lk 5:32). It is not the healthy that need the doctor, but the sick (Mt 9:12 Lk 5:31).

 

The Church witnesses to the love and mercy of God. Just like the prophet Ezekiel, who was entrusted with the mission to call the people to repentance, the Church is tasked with preaching repentance to the world. With her arms always open wide to accept repentant sinners, the Church’s power to bind and loose is given by Our Lord in the context of reconciliation. It’s the duty of the faithful to act in love and mercy towards each other, and to be humble enough to be eager to reconcile.

Dare to pray

The prayer of the Church is powerful and enhances her unity. The power of the Church to effect reconciliation relies heavily upon her communal prayer: If two of you on earth agree to ask anything at all, it will be granted…for where two or three are gathered in My Name, I shall be there (Mt 18:20). If an acknowledged sinner refuses to accept and tackle his guilt in response to the humble request of the Church, then he is to be excluded until he is ready to repent and be reconciled. He is not to be abandoned but, rather, to continue to be lifted to God in prayer because heaven rejoices over one repentant sinner (Lk 15:10). Surely, Correction is not easy. It is always challenging, and usually a risk of losing what little friendship is left. As a community of faith, we have to do our best to correct, and so to save one another in love from falling into sin and error. This has to be done via strict observance of the procedure laid out by Our Lord. This procedure reveals that correction is not an exercise in proving the wrong to be wrong, and the right to be right. It is rather an exercise that seeks to motivate, to inspire, to love, and to find what seems to have been lost.  

Finally, how disheartening it is for us to be offended against. We can be tempted to walk away from someone because we do not want to be hurt again and again. If, on the other hand, we have hurt someone, whether wittingly or unwittingly, we can be tempted to tell ourselves that we are in the right and they are in the wrong, or that our sin isn’t as bad as they are making it out to be! When we are pushed by God’s grace to go to Confession and embrace reconciliation, how often the devil immediately swoops in to steal that grace. How often have you felt as though you are swimming along in peace and harmony, when all of a sudden you remember an ugly moment that plunges you into feelings of rejection and distress? It is then that you need to immerse yourself in prayer for healing and deliverance. Make an effort to give the peace of God another chance to come to you and fill you today. Never forget these comforting words: if you O Lord should mark our guilt, who would survive? (Ps 130:3). May the Holy Spirit continue to enliven your soul and spirit (cf. Heb 4:12) towards praying and working for harmony with others. Amen. God bless you.

 

Friday, 28 August 2020

IN LOSING IT, WE GAIN IT!

 HOMILY FOR THE 22ND SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR A)

Rev. Fr. Ezekoka Peter Onyekachi

 Jeremiah 20:7-9        Romans 12:1-2        Matthew 16:21-27

Fraser and Hamish were walking side by side with one another, bearing heavy crosses. As they walked along, the burden of Hamish’s cross weighed heavily upon him. Sore and sweating, eventually he cried out: Dear God, this cross is so heavy for me. Please will you cut a bit off the vertical beam? God obliged him and did what he asked. Going a little further, and still feeling the cross weighing heavily upon him, Hamish begged God a second time for help. Dear God, this cross is so heavy for me. Please will you cut a bit off the left-hand side of the horizontal beam? God obliged him and did what he asked. Hamish was still struggling, so he begged God a third time for help, and the right-hand side of the horizontal beam was reduced as well. Eventually, Fraser and Hamish reached a deep gorge where it was impossible for them to go on unless they slid their crosses across a narrow gap and used them as bridges. Fraser simply slipped his cross over the gorge and got to the other side. Hamish, however, was stuck. His cross has been so foreshortened that it was unable to bridge the gap. This time Hamish yelled to God: Dear God, Please help me. Give me back those parts of my cross that were chopped off, so that I can bridge the gap with my original cross and get to the other side with Fraser. Well, he wanted to have had his cake and eat it. In His kindness, God gave him another chance. The condition was that Hamish should go back to where the chopped-off pieces lay, pick them up and nail them on again, and come back to cross the gorge. Hamish wept with regret: Had I known that all those pieces were needed, I wouldn’t have complained. Hamish realized that he would have to expend more time and more energy fixing and bearing the cross, than he would have done had he borne the whole burden from the start. The cross each one of us has to bear for Christ’s sake is necessary, indeed essential, to enable us to cross over safely to eternal life with God. Yes, what doesn’t kill us makes us stronger.

In the Gospel, Our Lord revealed to His disciples the condition for discipleship. This happened after the confession of Peter at Caesarea Philippi when Jesus explained to His disciples how the Son of Man will suffer grievously, be killed, and be raised on the third day. As the spokesman of the disciples and as the first Pope, Peter took Jesus aside and declared that the disciples would not allow suffering and dying to happen to Him. Peter was not aware that the Cross of Christ was the weapon to effect our crossover from sin to grace, from damnation to salvation, from hatred to love, from strife to peace, from slavery to freedom, from tears to joy, and from sorrow to gladness. But Peter hadn’t listened to the rest of Jesus’ words, had he? He’d missed the bit about Jesus being raised from the dead! Where the Holy Spirit had inspired Peter to confess Jesus as the Christ, the Son of the living God just moments previously, Satan immediately stepped in to delude Peter about the purpose of Jesus’ mission. It was Satan whom Jesus rebuked strongly: ύπαγε όπισω μον, σατανα. Jesus didn’t say “Get behind me, Peter”; He said, “Get behind me, Satan!” Our Lord then said to His disciples: whoever wishes to come after me must deny himself, take up his cross and follow Me. Everybody has a cross, not just us. When we deny ourselves, we look to Christ and accept the realities of existence. It is in giving our all for Him, in expending our blood, sweat and tears, that we actually grow in the Christian life. Christ was perfected through suffering (Heb 2:10). Following the Lord, carrying our crosses and helping others to bear theirs, is the route that leads us to the glory of heaven.

In the First Reading, Jeremiah’s prophetic ministry foreshadows the burden of the cross. He felt wounded by the derision his message of repentance evoked, and he complained that he was an object of laughter. He also acknowledged, however, that: you have seduced me Lord and I have allowed myself to be seduced. God had overpowered him with His overwhelming love for him, and the message that Jeremiah proclaimed was a cross he was called by God to bear. As St. Paul declares in the Second Reading, the message of the cross enables us to offer our bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God.

Like us, St Peter and the Prophet Jeremiah without realizing at their various moments of encounter with the Lord how earthly pain would ultimately lead them to heavenly glory felt the common, human urge to argue with God. Don’t we occasionally feel like arguing with the Lord? Don’t we sometimes feel like upbraiding God about how He has permitted a particular situation to develop in our lives? Don’t we feel tempted to ask God where He is when bad stuff happens to us? Feelings can be unreliable, though, can’t they? The temptation to quiz God on His motives will come, but it can be overcome by reminding ourselves of these words of Our Lord: anyone who loses his life for My sake will find it. That cross you bear for the sake of Christ - the one that is causing you excruciating pain in your life - is actually the bridge to victory over death and glory in heaven. Remember that what we selfishly hold onto, we lose, but what we give away, we preserve. Nothing is safe until it is in the hands of God, and nothing lasts unless it is preserved by God. May God continue to help us to grow in grace and lead us ultimately to heaven. Amen. God bless you.

Friday, 21 August 2020

YOU ARE THE CHRIST!

 

                        HOMILY FOR THE 21ST SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR A)

Rev. Fr. Ezekoka Peter Onyekachi

Isaiah 22:19-23        Romans 11:33-36        Matthew 16:13-20

Jesus and the disciples were in the region of Caesarea Philippi in the Golan Heights. Caesarea Philippi (also known as Tiberias) overlooks a large rock which the Greeks called “the Gate of Hell”. As Christ’s followers, the knowledge that we have been invited to become members of His Church built upon a solid foundation, upon “the rock of Peter”, gives us great strength.  

The Jews believed in the One-ness of God (Deut 6:4) and awaited the salvific Messiah, but what they didn’t know was that the Messiah would be simultaneously fully God and fully Man. There existed a far deeper mystery than they thought. Through the maieutic method of teaching that Plato and Socrates used, Jesus led His disciples to a proper understanding of His identity. Jesus questioned His disciples about who people were saying He was. Then He questioned His disciples about who they were saying He is. That led Simon Peter to make the key declaration of faith: you are the Christ, the son of the living God. Peter’s confession of faith was all the more remarkable because for Jews, it was-and-is impossible for the One-ness of God to include a second Person. Immediately following Peter’s confession of faith, Christ - the logos made flesh - empowered Peter – petros, the “rock” - as the primary leader of the Church. Looking out over the rock of “the Gate of Hell” at Caesarea Philippi, Jesus – the Gate of Heaven - established Peter as “the rock” on which the Church would be built and structured. In empowering him, Our Lord made four promises: that (1) on this rock my Church will be built, (2) the gates of hell shall not prevail against it, (3) the keys of heaven I give you, and (4) whatever you bind on earth is bound in heaven. 

Now, along with St. Peter, we share in the grace of the Church’s empowerment through her being built on strong foundations, and in being empowered over evil. Through Peter’s answer, inspired by the Holy Spirit, the disciples from the Twelve down to the present day are graced for mission. In the First Reading, Eliakim, as master of the palace with the keys of the house of David, has the authority to act in the name of the King, just as Peter has the authority to act in the Name of Christ on behalf of the whole Church. The Lord today empowers us, as He empowered Eliakim in Jerusalem, to fight against sin and corruption. He empowers us to act on behalf of the Kingdom of righteousness, peace and joy brought by the Holy Spirit. Strong in our loyalty to the Lord, to the Church and to the Successors of Peter, we are empowered to contribute effectively towards the coming of the Kingdom on earth. But the question arises: have we ourselves genuinely made a firm decision for Him, declaring Him to the world through our words and our example?

The region of Caesarea Philippi was as far North as Jesus and the disciples ever went. The city was in pagan territory and was replete with shrines to pagan gods. Its original name was Paneas, named after Pan, the god (small ‘g’) of nature. Herod the Great erected a white marble temple here. Later on, his son Philip enriched the temple and changed the name of the city from Paneas (‘Pan’s area’) to Caesarea Philippi (‘Philip’s city dedicated to Caesar’). Why was it, then, that Caesarea Philippi of all places - a place adorned with pagan altars, idols, temples to Syrian gods and to Caesar – was chosen by Christ as the place to ask His disciples those questions about Who He Is?

It could be argued that Christ, the Son of the Living God, deliberately set Himself against a background of many gods and their purported splendour, and questioned His followers in that context so as to lead them to identify Him correctly. It could also be argued that Christ, the King of the universe, deliberately set himself alongside Caesar’s image and his purported political power, and questioned His disciples in that context so as to lead them to identify the real King of all that is. If both those arguments are correct, then Our Lord implicitly challenges His disciples to decide for themselves whom they will love and serve….choose this day whom you will serve (Josh 24:15). St. Paul, in the Second Reading, pointed out that everything that exists comes from the Lord. That’s why it is both correct and essential to serve Him.

Christ leads us too, step by step, to encounter Him, because He understands that we live in a world where distractions abound, distractions that have the capacity to distance us from His love, if we let them. Jesus invites us today to make a firm resolution for Him… a resolution born out of His gift of free will, a resolution to recognize His power working in us, a resolution to remain with Him and to follow Him faithfully. We sincerely need to accept that invitation. Do it today. Amen. God bless you. 

Friday, 14 August 2020

THE INSIDER VERSUS THE OUTSIDER

HOMILY FOR THE 20TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (YEAR A)

Rev. Fr. Ezekoka Peter Onyekachi

Isaiah 56:1.6-7        Romans 11:13-15, 29-32        Matthew 15:21-28

Inclusiveness is the watchword of the culture of faith. Faith is neither constricted nor confined by boundaries. The availability of salvation, mercy and the justice of the Lord is not reserved to the few, but is open to all. It is not reserved to a particular people, culture or race. In Isaiah’s time, foreigners living within Judah were granted limited rights and protection (cf. Ex 22:20; Deut 10:19). In the First Reading, Isaiah clarifies that God accepts foreigners who have attached themselves to the Lord. The message of Isaiah was ground-breaking, since it extended full privileges not only to “foreigners” – guests and immigrants resident in Judah - but also to nocrées  (those in distant lands) and to nekàr (those of different races). In other words,  Isaiah’s message was-and-is a message of salvation to all of us ‘foreigners on earth’ (Heb 11:13, cf. 1 Chron 29:14ff), and that means universally, to all the peoples on the earth, to every one of us.

In the Gospel, this message is reinforced in a lively exchange between Jesus and a Canaanite woman of great faith. She was in pain because her daughter was tormented: the poor girl was possessed by a devil. Convinced that Jesus would be able to exorcize her daughter, she went to Him, knelt down and cried out on behalf of her daughter: take pity on me, son of David. The disciples got fed up with her behaviour and, unable to cope with her loud cries of desperation any longer, advised Jesus to give in and give her what she wanted.

At first sight, it seems that Jesus purposely kept her at arm’s length. Why would He do that? Of course He knew what was going to happen, because He is God, in which case we can deduce that He wanted to use the situation to teach us an important point of faith. At the time, the disciples probably surmised that He wasn’t jumping in to help her because His mission was primarily to the Jews, and she was a Canaanite. Canaan had a long history of hostility to the Jews, which went as far back as the conquest of Canaan by the forces of Joshua (cf. Num 13:1-33; Josh 10:28-12; 11:10-15), which had ensued over the acquisition and possession of land.  

The Canaanite woman, however, persisted in her quest and refused to take ‘no’ for an answer. She realized that sometimes a ‘NO’ can mean ‘Next Opportunity’! Her humility was further manifested when – far from claiming a right to His help - she pointed out the truism that pet dogs get to enjoy the scraps that happen to fall from their master’s table. The underlying message we can glean from her retort is that the good things God grants us because He loves us so much come to us as generous favours rather than as rights. It follows that while we can claim no right to be members of God’s family, our membership of the family is afforded to us as a generous gift, as an open-handed favour bestowed on us by God. Of course, this overwhelming and unmerited gift to us must be received in humility. We are to live out our time here as foreigners in reverent awe (1Pet 1:17).

Imagine how many of us would have our needs met by God if we were to intercede for one another as this woman did for her daughter. Jesus did not perceive her nationality - her non-Jewish status - as an obstacle to His favour. He put her faith to the test, and went on to grant her request because she demonstrated such great trust and faith in Him. God has no favourites (Rom 2:11). The mission of Christ is to break down boundaries and to destroy every wall of division and prejudice between peoples, between insiders and outsiders. Everyone has equal access to the Kingdom of God available to them. No-one is excluded from the offer.

Now, let’s consider the ascent of faith of this woman. Her faith in God ratcheted up during her encounter with Jesus. The episode opened with her calling Jesus ‘Son of David’, a Jewish royal and political title which accorded Him respect in terms of earthly glory and power. The episode ended with her acknowledging Jesus as Lord, a spiritual title which accorded Him respect in terms of His supra-natural (“above-natural”) and divine nature. In her ascent of faith, she was resolute, persistent and patient even in her troubled state. Along with the Centurion (Mt 8:10), this woman was one of the two Gentiles whose faith Jesus commended as “great”. This woman shows us that great faith can manifest as a desperate cry of need (Mt 15:22), a persistence that will not quit (Mt 15:23-24), a spirit that worships Jesus as Lord (Mt 15:25), a spirit of humility and surrender to the Lord (Mt 15:26-27); and it also shows us that such faith prompts a favourable outcome to its request (Mt 15:28).

How many times have we, either in word or deed, erected barriers intended to insulate ourselves from others? How many times have we branded others in adverse terms, so as to exclude them or to emphasise their current exclusion? St. Paul, in the Second Reading, makes the point that God has no favourites: the gifts of mercy and grace dependent upon obedience are fully capable of being transferable to benefit communities other than our own if we reject these gifts. Ouch! This confirms that even those who have made themselves outsiders to the Christian community by rejecting the truth that Jesus is God (for Paul, this was his own people, the Jews; for us, it is the people around us) still have the opportunity to come into the Church through obedience. The door remains open, and is never closed against anyone until after the end of this life. Heaven has no seat reservations. In God, there is no Captain’s Table. God does not discriminate against unrepentant evil-doers until after death, in the hope that they might repent; we, however, can be thoroughly confident that He welcomes in the immediate moment each and every one of those who accept Him, who genuinely believe in Him, who worship Him, who place their trust in Him and who beg for His mercy. In human society, acceptance tends to be based on how physically attractive or unattractive someone is, rather than how attractive or unattractive they are on the inside. People tend to make time for those they like, while cutting short or avoiding those they don’t like. The good news is that God accepts you and He accepts me: He has time for everybody because He is Love. Our task, if we will accept it, is to bask in God’s love for us and to mirror it joyfully to others so that they have the opportunity to accept Him too. Amen. God bless you.

 

Welcome!!! We are here for your joy and wellbeing. Fr. Ezekoka prays for you.

EMBRACNG THE OPPORTUNITY OFFERED BY PENTECOST

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