October 6,
2015
TUESDAY, Year I, week 27:
The Responsorial Psalm invites
us to recognize that we always have need to change things in our lives and society:
“If you, O Lord, laid bare our guilt, who
could endure it?” (Psalm 130).
In Jonah 3:1-10, when the people of Nineveh heard Jonah’s
proclamation, they believed him. But more than that, they expressed it in action.
They made immediate changes in their
lives: they began to fast and to wear clothes that said they were doing penance
— which means examining their lives, turning to God with willingness to change.
And the king of Nineveh ordered that the people should go beyond these symbolic
expressions of metanoia (a “change of
mind“) and make substantial changes in social policies and practices: changes
in family and social life, in business and politics. He specifically singled
out violence: “Every man shall turn from his evil ways and from the violence he has in hand.” It was the whole society of
Nineveh that God was threatening to destroy; so it was the whole society that
needed to accept and initiate changes.
The response the Church has us make to this reading is, “If you, O Lord, laid bare our guilt, who
could endure it?” If God actually made manifest all the policies and
practices of our country and in our country — business deals, the deals our
government makes behind closed doors, the decisions about domestic and foreign
policy that never make the news, or that make it but are reported with so much
“spin” that no one realizes what we are actually doing as a nation — if God
actually “laid bare our guilt, who
could endure it?” And if he does not lay bare our guilt — or we don’t — and we
do not change our ways, is there anyone who doubts that our society is headed
for destruction? To take just one example, how deep do we have to bury our
heads in the sand not to see that when there is such discrepancy between the rich
and the poor, both in our country and in others, and such a gap between people
in our country living in affluence, and whole populations in other countries
living in misery, it is just a matter of time before “whirlwinds of rebellion
shake all shores”? [1]
What will we do about it? As a steward
of the kingship of Christ, what are you doing about it? Are you hearing
Jonah’s voice here?
Luke 10: 38-42 shows us one thing we all
can do — not as a cop-out, but for starters. Like Mary, we can pray. We can
pray seriously, in private and in public. We can admit our guilt and ask God
for mercy and guidance. We can acknowledge that we have brought terrorism upon
ourselves and seek a solution in conversion rather than in violence.
Then see what God inspires us to do.
Initiative: Be Christ’s steward. Open
your eyes and help steer the boat.
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