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Dali's Sacrament of the Last Supper |
I would like to focus on a theme in Amos--relationships. And so let me begin with a movie titled "Babette's Feast," a 1987 Academy award winner from the book by Karen Blixen.
Babette, a Parisian chef, finds herself in a small Danish town where strict and puritanical religiosity makes people cold-hearted, wary of enjoying life. Babette wins a lottery and spends all her winnings to prepare a huge, delectable feast for the townspeople. As they begin to taste and enjoy the meal, they start to communicate good-naturedly. They even dance! The meal transformed themei into warm-hearted human beings.
Babette models self-giving, and elicits joy in people, a foretaste of heaven. The toast at the end captures, I think, why Pope Francis likes the film. Here's a paraphrase:
“There comes a time when your eyes are opened. And we come to realize…that mercy is infinite. We need only await it with confidence…and receive it with gratitude.”
As I thought about this movie, I began to ask about our own relationships, especially family relationships. Certain recipes nourish good relationships.
Happy families have a good sense of togetherness. They care for each other. They keep in touch; they’re hospitable and concerned. They celebrate special milestones. They set times to eat meals together and share good news as well as bad. They keep their word and thereby build trust. And importantly, they avoid negative name-calling and finger-pointing; that undermines a relationship. In the end, we may agree to disagree. That's OK.
St. Paul in his letter to the Ephesians asks us to be imitators of God, to live a life of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us. Paul gives us, in chapters 4 and 5 especially, at least five ingredients:
• Be authentic, speak the truth, try to live a life of honesty and integrity.
• Be passionate about what's right. Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., for example, had a passionate hatred against discrimination that led him to champion civil rights. Jesus had a righteous anger about the money changers in the temple. Anger should result in righting wrongs.
• Paul encourages the Ephesians to get an honest job so that they can help others. Work in itself is useful, as well as giving resources to help others.
• Watch the way we talk. Have a positive, can-do attitude. Be mentors and coaches. Words can build people up or tear them down. Use words for encouragement.
• Be gentle. Forgive one another as quickly as God forgives us. God's vision is a community of disciples welcoming all: especially people who need a place where forgiveness abounds. The church, to paraphrase Pope Francis, is a field hospital where wounds are healed.
With those ingredients, God can work wonders through us.