The 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time
August 25, 2013
Listen to this homily (mp3 file)
Have you noticed? We haven’t
exactly been getting light fare from Luke’s Gospel these summer Sundays.
And that’s a little surprising because, from the earliest days of the Church,
Luke has been known as the ‘scribe of the gentle Christ.’ Luke, more than
the other gospel writers, shows us the warm, human side of Jesus:
- the Jesus of the Bethlehem stable;
- the Jesus who didn’t shy away from touching the untouchable leper to
heal him;
- the Jesus whose heart broke when he saw a poor widow on the way to bury
her only son;
- the Jesus who took pity on the five-thousand and found a way to feed
them;
- who ate in the homes of sinners and got his feet bathed and anointed by
the town prostitute;
- the Jesus who gave us the parables of the Good Samaritan and the
Prodigal Son;
- the Jesus who asked his Father to forgive his executioners and who
comforted the repentant thief.
But the gentle Jesus of Luke’s gospel does have a
backbone. Recall how three Sundays ago he called the smug rich man who
kept building bigger barns for storing his wealth a “fool.” Two Sundays
ago he told us to sell our possessions and give to the poor; last Sunday he told
us he came not to bring peace, but division; and today he follows up with stern
words about entering by the narrow gate.
Can this be the same Jesus? Yes, it can.
It is! The Jesus of Luke’s gospel is not one-dimensional, nor can his
teaching be reduced to a few cozy or comforting stories. In fact, if you
sit down and read through Luke’s gospel (and I highly recommend that you do:
it’s a good read!), you’ll see that a good part of it is the story of a very
demanding journey which Jesus makes to Jerusalem. It is an uphill journey
geographically -- for Jerusalem sits high on a hilltop, and it is an uphill
journey psychologically -- for Jerusalem is the hilltop where Jesus died.
Today’s gospel, along with those of the last few Sundays, comes from what I
think of as the ‘uphill’ part of Luke’s Gospel: from the journey to Jerusalem
which begins in the ninth chapter.
“Strive to enter by the narrow gate,” Jesus tells us
today. The passport for entry will not be the names we can drop or the
company we have kept (“We ate and drank with you! You taught in our
streets!”) No, our passport will come down to one thing: did we make the
journey with Jesus to Jerusalem?
- Did we walk alongside the one who had no place to lay his head;
- who, once he put his hand to the plough, never looked back;
- who, when he prayed to his Father, asked only for this day’s bread, not
tomorrow’s;
- who said that forgiveness was to be offered, not seven times, but
seventy-times-seven times;
- who shocked people when he told them that a camel can more easily pass
through the eye of a needle than a rich person enter the kingdom of God;
- who entered Jerusalem on the back of a donkey and left it with a cross
on his back?
That, my friends, is the journey to Jerusalem.
The question is: are we making this journey with Jesus? If we are, we will
understand why the gate is so narrow. The gate is really only wide enough
for Jesus -- and for each person who accepts the call to follow him. Or let me
put it another way: the gate is only wide enough for those who accept the call
to become Jesus. For this Christian life we try so hard to live is all
about becoming Jesus, “putting on” Jesus, to use St. Paul’s wonderful
expression. Only when we put on Jesus do we begin to fit through the
narrow gate. It’s as simple as that, and as difficult.
But what of those who don’t know Jesus? What
of those we heard about in today’s first reading from the Prophet Isaiah, the
people of “all nations and tongues from the faraway coastlands?” What of
the people the gospel talks about from “the east and the west, the north and the
south,” who are not among the chosen people but who, Jesus says, will
nonetheless sit down to eat one day in the kingdom of God? How do they get
through if the gate is narrow? Is there a contradiction here? It
might seem so. But we would do well to remember that, though the gate is
narrow, the embrace of God is wide – wide beyond our imagining. God
embraces all peoples, calls all peoples to the kingdom, and even finds a way for
them to meet Jesus because everyone who sincerely seeks the truth and lives a
life where love and service of others come first meets Jesus – maybe not by
name, but in fact.
Don’t confuse the narrow gate, then,
with religious institutions or sectarian walls. God can break through
those and regularly does. Think of the narrow gate as that point where a
person makes a profound personal choice for truth, for God, for the other,
instead of for the self. Think of the narrow gate as the choice a person
makes to love unselfishly and without condition. Anyone who loves like
that meets Jesus, the “narrow gate” into the wideness of God’s mercy.
“Strive, then, to enter by the narrow gate.”
Father Michael G. Ryan