Sunday, July 23, 2023

Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time


Florida is called “The Sunshine State,” but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t rain. “Let a smile be your umbrella on a rainy day.” That’s a good line to tide us over.  

You may have heard about the fellow in a bar staring at his drink when a guy swiped the drink and gulped it down.

The fellow turned and cried to the troublemaker, “This is the worst day of my life. I was fired. My car was stolen. I lost my wallet. I came here to put an end to it all. I put a capsule in my drink and you drank it! But, enough about me, how’s your day?” Uh oh.

The word of God first takes us back to the Wisdom literature attributed to Solomon. Today’s word was written to inspire people undergoing hardships to persevere in fidelity to God’s Covenant. God, the author says, is mighty and powerful, the source of all good, and a patient judge. And for such a mighty and caring and forgiving God, we should be grateful. 

Don't we wish we always had the wisdom to distinguish what's really important? Our ultimate purpose is to live in relationship with God forever. The Bible gives many splendid images of God. A walking companion. As tender as a mother. The Good Shepherd. With the last judgment, we finally assess ourselves and see God. All these images cannot capture the inexhaustible reality of God. 

Theologian Reinhold Niebuhr captured a nugget of wisdom in his well-known prayer: “God, give us the grace to accept with serenity the things that cannot be changed, courage to change the things which should be changed, and the wisdom to distinguish the one from the other. Living one day at a time...trusting that You, God, will make all things right, if I surrender to Your will.”

St. Paul in his letter to the Christian community at Rome speaks about the Spirit or energy of God dwelling within us. When we pray “Come, Holy Spirit,” we are praying for a deeper sense of that presence. God is everywhere. Paul asks us to remember we are “living temples of God.” We might pray, as Paul and Barnabas did in Acts chapter 13, that God will give us the courage to live the “good news” boldly.

In the Gospel, Jesus tells the parable of the wheat and the weeds. Good and evil, vice and virtue, live together. And yes, God is patient. But we know the harvest will come, and we will be accountable for our attitudes and behavior. In that judgment, we will see clearly our true self. Jesus proclaims loudly that good will triumph.

One big obstacle to faith is the suffering of the innocent. If God loves us, why so much injustice and violence in the world? The Book of Job grappled with this. There are no easy answers. Yet God meets us in the midst of our struggles. People who have gone through great suffering often have strong faith. They testify to the presence of God within, strengthening and comforting them. 

In her book The Hiding Place, Corrie ten Boom describes how her sister, dying in a concentration camp, said, “We must tell them that there is no pit so deep that God is not deeper still. They will listen to us, Corrie, because we have been there.” These sisters trusted in God despite the ugliness they witnessed.

The biblical psalmist trusted that God ultimately will put things right; God’s got the whole world in his hands! It is a blessing to have a system of justice. It is a terrible ordeal to live under a corrupt system. Ultimately, God will call us to account. In the meantime we are called to do all we can to right wrongs.

At times we face major challenges to our faith. St. Paul, for example, was shipwrecked three times. In one scenario, a life-threatening storm appeared. Luke writes that they gave up hope of being saved. Yet, Paul kept on trusting in God, telling those on board that God was still in charge. Extraordinarily, the imprisoned Paul stops the sailors from jumping ship.

The crisis gave Paul an opportunity to speak about his faith. He knew God wanted the best for him, as he does for us. Paul assured them. And, “he took bread, gave thanks to God in front of them all, broke it, and began to eat...and they took some food themselves.” Miraculously, all safely reached shore. 

Paul surely must have prayed: Lord, thank you that you protect me even when disaster strikes. Help me not to fear but rather to keep up my courage and to have faith in you.

Whatever challenges we face, let’s put our trust in God, believe that God will be with us in whatever God asks us to do. I close with a few lines from a favorite prayer of Thomas Merton:

My Lord God…I trust you always

Though I may seem to be lost and in the shadow of death.

I will not fear, for you are ever with me,

and you will never leave me to face my perils alone.