The Faithful and Unfaithful Disciple, 19th Sunday in Ordinary Time (C), August 8, 2010

Fr. Roger J. Landry
St. Anthony of Padua Church, New Bedford, MA
Nineteenth Sunday in OT, Year C
August 8, 2010
Wis 18:6-9; Heb 11:1-2, 8-19; Lk 12:32-48

The following text guided today’s homily:

  • Once in St. Luke’s Gospel, Jesus asked aloud the harrowing question, “When the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?” (Lk 18:8). That question is ever present and ever personal. The Lord says in today’s Gospel that the “Son of Man is coming at an unexpected hour.” When he comes at that unforeseen time, he will judge us on the basis of our faith “working through love” (Gal 5:6).
  • If the Lord were to come right now, what faith would he find? Would he be able to say to you or to me, “Great is your faith!,” like he said to the Syro-Phoenician woman in the Gospel (Mt 15:28)? Or would he say, “O you of little faith?” (Mt 6:30; 8:26, 14:31, 16:8, 17:20). Would he state about all of us together, “You are the ones who have stood by me faithfully in my trials” (Lk 22:28-29) or, rather, “This is a faithless and perverse generation” (Mt 17:17)? The Son of Man is indeed coming and what he wants to find — what he hopes to find — is FAITH. In today’s Gospel, Jesus describes both the FAITHFUL and the UNFAITHFUL way a person prepares for his coming.
  • Jesus says that the person with faith will be alert for the manifestation of his presence. He will not be afraid, but trust in the Father’s promise of a kingdom. For that reason, he will be working to build up an “unfailing treasure in heaven” and have his heart always “lifted up to the Lord,” who is his treasure. The lamp of his heart will be burning in love.  He will be “dressed for action,” ready to respond immediately to the Lord whenever he makes his presence felt and knocks on the door of his life. He will guard his heart, lest any intruders break in. He will be always found “at work,” being a trustworthy steward of the Lord’s gifts. This faithful disciple will be acting in the Lord’s supposed absence just as he would if the Lord were present. Jesus promises that all such servants will be “blessed.”
  • The unfaithful servant, on the other hand, will convince himself that the Lord is “delayed in coming” and that he can therefore do whatever he wants in the meantime. He will think he can get away with hurting others, with getting drunk and living for his pleasures alone. He will deem he’ll always have time to change his behavior “later,” to tidy things up, to get his act together before he has to render an accounting. Such a steward is, plainly, unfaithful, just as unfaithful as a husband or wife would be if they cheated on a spouse in that spouse’s absence. Eventually that unfaithful servant will be caught off-guard, not because the Master wants to ambush him or catch him “red-handed,” but because the more one gets used to thinking the return won’t occur today, the less ready one will be on that day the master does come.
  • Our second reading from the letter to the Hebrews describes for us in greater detail this distinction between faith and the lack of it. It says, “faith is the assurance of what is hoped for and the conviction of things not seen.” The faithful person is one who is SURE that the promises made by the Lord will be fulfilled (cf: Lk 1:45). The faithful person is one who is ABSOLUTELY CONVINCED in the reality of a world that extends far beyond the visible, the reality where the Invisible God lives, where heaven is, where grace abides. When confronted with a choice between the tangible, visible, here-and-now material world, and the world of God and trust in his promises, the faithful man or woman always chooses God. To return to the images of the Gospel, the faithful one is assured of the promise of the Lord’s return and is convinced of his presence, whereas the unfaithful person doubts the Lord’s promises and the Lord’s immanence.
  • The Bible does not often use definitions, as the Letter to the Hebrews does about faith. It most often describes truths by illustration (like Jesus does by his use of parables). That’s why the Letter to the Hebrews immediately turns to those who show us what true faith is. We see it embodied in Abraham, who has always been called “our father in faith.” As we read in today’s second reading, Abraham was so sure in the Lord’s promises, so convinced in the reality of who God is and therefore in the content of what God promised him, that, at 75 years old, he packed up his entire livelihood and moved to a far away land that God had vowed to show him eventually. Ten years later, when God promised him a son, he believed again, even though he was 85 and his wife 91 and they had not been able to conceive a child on their own. When given a choice between his common sense and the laws of biology on the one hand, and trusting in God’s promise on the other, Abraham chose to put his faith in God’s word. Thirteen years after that, when it seemed to him that God wanted him to sacrifice that son, Isaac, through whom he was going to become the “father of many nations,” Abraham trusted in God and was prepared to carry out that oblation until the angel of God stopped him. He did so, again, believing that if God wanted him to sacrifice Isaac, the son of the promise, it must be, as Hebrews says, so that God could raise Isaac from the dead (v. 19). These episodes show us what truth faith is. It is a TRUST in God above all other things and, therefore, a trust in WHAT GOD SAYS as a result of a trust in God. To use theological terms, there is first an “act of faith,” by which we trust in a person, and then a belief in some “content” on the basis of the trust in the person who affirms it.
  • As Catholics, the Lord wishes us to follow the example of Abraham, our “father” in the faith. The Lord calls us to trust in Him as he did, and to trust in what he has said to us, because of our trust in God. The “act of faith” for a Catholic is a trust in God the Father, who sent His Son to take on our nature, live and die for us to save us from our sins, who founded a Church on Peter and the Apostles and promised with the Father to send the Holy Spirit to guide that Church “into all truth” (Jn 16:13) and to prevent that Church from ever making a mistake — even ONCE — in something relative to what we need to believe (faith) or do (morals) to please God and enter into the fullness of his life in this world or in the next. That’s quite a sentence! But it’s an important one. We believe in what the Church teaches definitively about faith and morals not because we think a particular pope is smarter or holier than we are, but because we believe and trust in God who founded the Church and still guides her. A Catholic act of faith is one that accepts everything that God teaches us — directly or through the Church he founded — on account of our trust in God.
  • We see an illustration of this type of faith in the dramatic episode in Capernaum when Jesus announced that we would have to gnaw on his flesh and drink his blood (cf. Jn 6). After he announced this, many of his disciples — those whom Jesus had labored so hard to bring to the truth over the previous two years — thought Jesus was a lunatic and possibly even a cannibal. They said, “This is a hard teaching. Who can endure it?” And they abandoned Jesus. It was easy for them to be his followers when he was curing the sick, casting out demons, feeding the multitudes with a few fish and loaves of bread, walking on water, preaching with authority unlike their scribes and pharisees, and so much more. But when Jesus announced something that they found hard to believe, off they went, because they didn’t really believe in Jesus in the first place. After they left, Jesus turned to his closest followers, the twelve, and asked them, “Do you, too, wish to go away?” His question was really, “Do you, too, have no faith in me?” That’s when St. Peter stood up and showed what real faith is. He said, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of everlasting life. We have come to believe and know that you are the Holy One of God.” In other words, Peter was saying, “Lord, we have no clue about what you’re talking about and how we are going to eat your flesh and drink your blood. [Peter and the others would only discover this one year later during the Last Supper, when Jesus would take bread and wine, turn them into his body and blood, and give his body and blood to them under these non-sickening appearances]. But because we trust in you, Jesus, who have the words of eternal life, we will trust in what you say, even when it makes little sense.”
  • One great litmus test to determine if we have the type of true trust in God that constitutes the Catholic act of faith is to see whether we have faith when we find a teaching “difficult” or “hard to endure” like many of Jesus’ first disciples found his teaching on the Eucharist. When the teaching of Jesus or the Church he founded conflicts with our own ideas or those of popular culture, do we trust in God working through the Church he founded to proclaim the truth in every age, or do we trust more in ourselves and in human opinions? We can take a few modern issues and try to see whether, if Christ were to come unexpectedly right now, whether he would find true faith in us.
  1. Do we believe in what Jesus and the Church he founded teach us about prayer and the sacraments? Do we believe Jesus when he tells us it is his body and blood in the Eucharist and that unless we eat his flesh and drink his blood we have no life in us? Do we live off of Jesus in the Eucharist or do we come, like 76% of Catholics, only now and then, when nothing “more important” comes up? Do we have in faith in him in the Sacrament of Penance, which he established on Easter Sunday evening giving his apostles the power to forgive and retain sins in his name? Do we come to receive the gift of his mercy in the way he established it, or do we not trust in what he said and did and think that either we don’t need his mercy or that we’ll receive it in some way we determine rather than he determined? Do we believe in his teachings when he tells us to pray always lest we fall under temptation, when he describes for us the way to pray well, when he himself asks us to come away with him for a while to pray? Is prayer the sustenance of our life or do we pray only when we need something?
  2. In terms of certain controversial moral issues, do we believe in what Jesus taught us about love, marriage, sex and family in God’s divine plan — that marriage is the union of one man and one woman, is a covenant that lasts until death, that becoming one flesh with another person is morally reserved only to those whom God has joined in one flesh through the bond of marriage, and that in marriage, every act of love is supposed to be open to cooperation with the plan of the Lord and giver of life? — or do we put more credence in Hollywood’s support for casual sex, multiple divorce-and-remarriage, and same-sex unions? Simply put, do we believe that God and the Church he founded are right in these areas or wrong?
  3. We heard a presentation about vocations at the beginning of Mass. Do we believe that God calls everyone to serve Him and others and calls some men to serve him as priests? Do we think that the priesthood, the continuation of the mission of forming the apostles that Jesus began, is worth leaving behind the great gifts of marriage and family in order to be anxious about the affairs of the Lord, or do we think that the priesthood is a waste, that we’d rather have our own kids raising up children of their own and grandchildren rather than building up explicitly the Lord’s kingdom?
  • It’s clear in the example of Abraham that God never promised that believing in Him would be easy. After all, for us Christians, we are called to believe that someone who looked similar to other Jewish men 2000 years ago was really the eternal Son of God. We are called to believe that he was conceived in and born of a virgin by the overshadowing of the Holy Spirit, that he rose from the dead three days after a bloody, public execution and ascended into heaven, where he sits at the right hand of God the Father and says, “Come, follow me!” Compared to believing these truths, believing what the Church Jesus founded teaches about a particular moral or doctrinal issue is easy!
  • But like the disciples in the Gospel, we will need to say often to the Lord, “Increase our faith!” (Lk 17:5). The Lord will hear that prayer, not by eliminating or watering down the aspects of the faith that are most challenging, but by giving us more trust in Him so that we might see in those aspects of the faith his, at times, inscrutable wisdom. Our faith is challenging, because we are called in faith, like Abraham, to leave our own comfortable homeland and be led by God to a place he’ll show us, often being asked to sacrifice what may be dear to us and to believe in promises that exceed our human imagination. But we, like Abraham, do this “desiring a better country, that is, a heavenly one” (second reading). This is the only path to the eternal promised land.
  • “When the Lord comes, will he find faith on earth?” That is the question. Will he find us trusting in him and therefore trusting in his teaching and in his promises with conviction and certainty? The Lord promises that when he comes, if he finds his servants “watchful and ready” he will “have them sit down to eat and … come to serve them.” We have come here today out of faith, and the Lord does not let this faith go unrewarded. He himself comes to meet us without delay, “girds himself with an apron” as he did during the Last Supper, and feeds us with the food of everlasting life. May this celebration of the Eucharist increase our faith in God’s words and in his Word-made-flesh, so that we may always grasp on to his promises and come through faith to their eternal fulfillment.

The readings for today’s Mass were: 

Reading 1 WIS 18:6-9

The night of the passover was known beforehand to our fathers,
that, with sure knowledge of the oaths in which they put their faith,
they might have courage.
Your people awaited the salvation of the just
and the destruction of their foes.
For when you punished our adversaries,
in this you glorified us whom you had summoned.
For in secret the holy children of the good were offering sacrifice
and putting into effect with one accord the divine institution.

Responsorial Psalm PS 33:1, 12, 18-19, 20-22

R. (12b) Blessed the people the Lord has chosen to be his own.
Exult, you just, in the LORD;
praise from the upright is fitting.
Blessed the nation whose God is the LORD,
the people he has chosen for his own inheritance.
R. Blessed the people the Lord has chosen to be his own.
See, the eyes of the LORD are upon those who fear him,
upon those who hope for his kindness,
To deliver them from death
and preserve them in spite of famine.
R. Blessed the people the Lord has chosen to be his own.
Our soul waits for the LORD,
who is our help and our shield.
May your kindness, O LORD, be upon us
who have put our hope in you.
R. Blessed the people the Lord has chosen to be his own.

Reading 2 HEB 11:1-2, 8-19

Brothers and sisters:
Faith is the realization of what is hoped for
and evidence of things not seen.
Because of it the ancients were well attested.

By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to a place
that he was to receive as an inheritance;
he went out, not knowing where he was to go.
By faith he sojourned in the promised land as in a foreign country,
dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, heirs of the same promise;
for he was looking forward to the city with foundations,
whose architect and maker is God.
By faith he received power to generate,
even though he was past the normal age
—and Sarah herself was sterile—
for he thought that the one who had made the promise was
trustworthy.
So it was that there came forth from one man,
himself as good as dead,
descendants as numerous as the stars in the sky
and as countless as the sands on the seashore.

All these died in faith.
They did not receive what had been promised
but saw it and greeted it from afar
and acknowledged themselves to be strangers and aliens on earth,
for those who speak thus show that they are seeking a homeland.
If they had been thinking of the land from which they had come,
they would have had opportunity to return.
But now they desire a better homeland, a heavenly one.
Therefore, God is not ashamed to be called their God,
for he has prepared a city for them.

By faith Abraham, when put to the test, offered up Isaac,
and he who had received the promises was ready to offer his only son,
of whom it was said,
“Through Isaac descendants shall bear your name.”
He reasoned that God was able to raise even from the dead,
and he received Isaac back as a symbol.

Gospel LK 12:32-48
Jesus said to his disciples:
“Do not be afraid any longer, little flock,
for your Father is pleased to give you the kingdom.
Sell your belongings and give alms.
Provide money bags for yourselves that do not wear out,
an inexhaustible treasure in heaven
that no thief can reach nor moth destroy.
For where your treasure is, there also will your heart be.

“Gird your loins and light your lamps
and be like servants who await their master’s return from a wedding,
ready to open immediately when he comes and knocks.
Blessed are those servants
whom the master finds vigilant on his arrival.
Amen, I say to you, he will gird himself,
have them recline at table, and proceed to wait on them.
And should he come in the second or third watch
and find them prepared in this way,
blessed are those servants.
Be sure of this:
if the master of the house had known the hour
when the thief was coming,
he would not have let his house be broken into.
You also must be prepared, for at an hour you do not expect,
the Son of Man will come.”

Then Peter said,
“Lord, is this parable meant for us or for everyone?”
And the Lord replied,
“Who, then, is the faithful and prudent steward
whom the master will put in charge of his servants
to distribute the food allowance at the proper time?
Blessed is that servant whom his master on arrival finds doing so.
Truly, I say to you, the master will put the servant
in charge of all his property.
But if that servant says to himself,
‘My master is delayed in coming,’
and begins to beat the menservants and the maidservants,
to eat and drink and get drunk,
then that servant’s master will come
on an unexpected day and at an unknown hour
and will punish the servant severely
and assign him a place with the unfaithful.
That servant who knew his master’s will
but did not make preparations nor act in accord with his will
shall be beaten severely;
and the servant who was ignorant of his master’s will
but acted in a way deserving of a severe beating
shall be beaten only lightly.
Much will be required of the person entrusted with much,
and still more will be demanded of the person entrusted with more.”

Share:FacebookX