(Homily 8th Sunday in
Ordinary Time, Yr. C)
It was one of the famous Greek
Philosophers; Socrates who opined that nature has given us two ears, two eyes
and only one tongue so that we should hear more than we speak. But nowadays the
reverse is the case, we tend to speak more and hear or listen less. The
contemporary man is prone to speaking and criticisms than to listening and
understanding. Today the word of God revolves around the correspondence of
words with actions, because for a Christian, “agitur seguitur esse”. The
Latin adage says: “ex ore tuo te judico”, that is “I judge you from your mouth”. Indeed,
our words reveal who we are. They (words) reveal our thoughts, values, internal
disposition, motivation and way of judging. Thanks to words for through them we
give significance to the ideas in our heart and mind. No doubt, words are wonderful when they are used in
good and edifying ways. More still, they are extraordinary and exceptional when
they correspond with the actions. Contrarily, when used in a negative way,
they not only reveal the negativity in the heart, also the vacuum between what
we say and what we do. Indeed, our words reveal the type of person we are, for our mouth is the window to our heart.
The first reading (Sir. 27:4-7) is a classical example of the wisdom literature of
the Old testament, where the author used three comparisons to teach us about
the internal congruence behind one’s comportment and attitude. He employed the
use of three images: sieve, kiln and tree to drive home his points. ●For the
sieve, when shaken it separates good grains from refuse, and the refuse remains.
And relating it to the human person, it entails that a man’s filth (dirt)
remains in his thought. ●As the kiln (furnace) with fire proves the value of
objects of clay artifacts, so is the proof of a just man, of a person’s worth
in times of tribulation. ●As regards the tree, the fruit of a tree reveals the
quality of the tree, so words reveal the internal sentiments of man. Our words
serve as a window to what is in our mind, this image will be re-proposed in the
Gospel by St. Luke.
In all, the last sentence of the passage
is replete with wisdom and it goes thus: “do not praise a man before he speaks”
(v.7). Therefore, this affirmation
suggests that the best way to know if a person will be praised or not is to
make him to speak, because at last his value system, internal disposition and
his or her real self will be revealed. Indeed, words reveal the internal ethical and spiritual congruence or
incongruence of a man.
And applying
this teaching to ourselves, it follows that Christians should reveal through
their words, their new way of being in Christ. Our life and actions have to
be congruent with our calling and being in Christ, who died and rose again in
order to open up for us a new way of living. Therefore, we need to interrogate
ourselves today with the following questions: do our words reveal our being “in Christ” or they reveal that we are
aligned and conformed to the world? The basic existential principle of a
Christian remains: “agitur seguitur esse”, that is, the correspondence of our
actions with our being in Christ, or better our being in Christ has to motivate
our actions.
Similarly, the Gospel passage (Lk. 6:39-45) is centered on “word”
uttered by man as a means of laying bare what lies hidden in his heart and on ethical cum spiritual congruence, as
exemplified by the good tree that bears good fruits, as opposed to the incongruence of a blind who wants to lead another
blind. In this passage, it does appear St. Luke gathered all the pronouncements
of Jesus in different occasions, with the problems that were present in the
first communities. The blind guide (v.39),
the false teachers (v.40), the
hypocrites (vv.41-42); these
categories of people would not have been the external enemies or the Pharisees,
even though many a times Jesus called them hypocrites, but it has to do with
members of the Christian communities, who pretend to be guide and leaders, but
do not portray the corresponding Christian values.
Interestingly,
the passage of St. Luke ends with the following words: “From the abundance of
the heart, the mouth speaks” (v.45),
that is, from the abundance of what a person has within. In St. Mathew’s
parlance, “Whatever comes out of the mouth comes from the heart” (Mt. 15:18a). And he (Luke) continued
thus: “Good people draw what is good from the store of goodness in their
hearts”, “bad people draw what is bad from the store of badness” (v.45). Good people draw good words and
teachings, while bad people draw wicked words and bad teachings. It all depends
on what one has in his heart, in the inside. The fact of speaking and acting are logical consequences, for they are
necessary avenues for revealing who a person is and what is in his or her
heart. In the preceding verses he opined that “Every tree is known by its
fruits” (v.44). Good tree produces
good fruits, while bad tree, bad fruits. In that bid, the criterion for knowing
and recognizing who a person is, is by his or her fruits, which in this case
could be words and comportment. A good man produces good fruit in words and
actions, and a bad man produces bad fruits in words and actions too. Therefore,
it is necessary to guide against false teachers and masters.
How
do we distinguish the good teaching from the bad one? It is not an easy
task. However, we need to use our
conscience and the values of the Christian education we have received as a tool
for discernment. Of a truth, sometimes these are not even sufficient,
because in our world today, where there are many currents of thoughts that
promote opinions and ideas that tend to destroy our value system, where the
several means of communication many a times create confusion on moral and
religious matters, where subjectivism and relativism are seen as the new credo,
it is really difficult. However, in the difficult task of distinguishing a good
teaching from a bad one, we have the word of God and the teachings of the
Church.
In fact, the first part of the Gospel
begins with a brief parable on the usage of words and good teaching; and the
pathetic question was raised: “Can one blind person guide another? Surely, both
will fall into a pit” (v.39). In
other to understand adequately the meaning of this parable, we have to connect
it to what Jesus said in the preceding verse: “Do not judge and you will not be
judged; do not condemn, and you will not be condemned; forgive and you will be
forgiven” (v.37). In essence, Jesus
says who doesn’t accept these teachings comports him or herself like the blind,
who pretends to lead another blind, for the two will fall into a pit.
Jesus further expressed that the “disciple
is not superior to his teacher” (v.40),
secondly, this has to be linked to the previous words of Jesus that the Most
High is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked (cf.v.35). As such, a man cannot impose himself as a severe judge
over his fellow men; he cannot be more exigent than the eternal Father. He who
judges others is a hypocrite, for he tends to hide his own faults. Jesus expressed this in a paradoxical
language with “splinter” and “log” (cf.v. 41). For it is only when one has
eliminated his “log” that he would be able to see better in order to remove the
“splinter” in another’s eye, and he will
be able to do it with comprehension, empathy, love and mercy.
Jesus
condemns the actions of those who are unaware of their shortcomings while they
decry the faults of others. Those in Jesus parlance who notice a tiny splinter
in others but are blind to the plank in their own eyes, and he calls them
hypocrites. They have the tendency of seeing “all black or all white”. The
underlying fact is that there are no perfect human beings, or those without
faults, an ideal man is utopic. We only have real persons. The major
spiritual deficiency of faultfinding is that it removes our focus from our
shortcomings and fragility, and plunges us into the temptation of
self-righteousness. Instead of criticizing others let us cultivate an
attitude of positive regard and care for them. Behold, it was
the Psalmist who captured earnestly the danger of self-righteousness when he
prayed: “Who can discern his own errors? Acquit me from hidden faults” (Ps. 19:12 ), in fact, the Christian
Standard Bible puts it in a more comprehensive manner thus: “Who perceives his
unintentional sins? Cleanse me from my hidden faults”.
Be that as it may, every authentic
disciple of Christ should avoid the presumption of being a judge of other’s
actions; before judging others, one has to examine him or herself, and try to
work and do away with his/her defects. If
there is need for a correction, he does it not with airs of superiority, but
with humility, positive regard and love. An authentic disciple of Christ is
one who tries to be a good tree, in order to produce good fruits in thoughts,
words and actions. He makes effort to
possess a good heart, such that from the “treasure of his hearts” he brings out
only good things (v.45).
Above all, the moral teachings of Jesus
even though they appear paradoxical, are
not mere generic prescriptions or exaggerations expressed in parabolic
forms basically to stimulate mere reflections. Instead, they have an
authoritative tone, accompanied at times with admonitions, in order to help his
listeners understand that they are to be taking serious. It is a radical
choice. The law of Christ is determined from within, his teachings shake the
conscience. And in our existential
struggle to overcome our defects and fragility, which St. Paul presented
imminently with the reality of death in the Second reading (1Cor. 15:54-58), we are overcomers, for God through his Son has
given us victory. It is upon this assurance of faith that St. Paul invites us
today “to remain firm and unmoved” in the faith, to continue to work for the
Lord, with the consciousness that our effort will never be in vain (v.58). May the Lord bless our effort
and give us the enabling grace to live the ethical and spiritual congruence
that our faith in Him comports. May His w(W)ord form us so that we may act and
speak in accordance with our being in Him. Amen!!!
(Fr.
Vitus M.C. Unegbu, SC)
https://nwachinwe.blogspot.com/2019/03/the-storehouse-of-goodness.html
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