Homily for 8th Sunday of Ordinary Time Year C 2022
Sirach 27:5-8; 1 Corinthians 15:54-58; Luke 6:39-45
Introduction
We have just heard Jesus narrate three
short parables or riddles.
1. The first about a blind person leading another blind person.
2. The second about taking a log out of one’s eye before attempting to remove a speck in another's eye.
3. The third about a good tree bearing good fruit while a rotten tree bearing rotten fruit.
So what is the overall message of these
seemingly different parables?
Scripture and Theology
For our homily today, I would like to suggest
that we reflect on these parables through the lens of the sins of the tongue. That
Jesus here is talking about how we should use our speech is suggested by the
setting of these parables:
1.
First, these parables follow
immediately upon where we left off last Sunday, when Jesus said: “Stop judging and you will not be judged.
Stop condemning and you will not be condemned," a clear injunction not
to use our speech unfairly and incorrectly against another.
2.
Second, today's gospel ends
with the words "from the fullness of
the heart the mouth speaks."
And so in way, our short three parables are sandwiched at both ends by a
clear instruction about using speech, and we can see them as ways of
elaborating on that message.
Jesus gives the first parable in form of a
rhetorical question: "Can a blind
person guide a blind person?"
Of course not, since both will fall into a pit, perhaps one of those
abandoned water wells found in Palestine.
Obviously, the person who is physically blind lacks the ability to see
potential obstacles and dangers and will not only harm themselves but also
those others who are depending on them.
But much worse is spiritual blindness, to
which this image of physical blindness points; the failure to know God's will
for us similarly leads to spiritual harm.
That is why Jesus goes on to explain that the disciple must not presume
to know more than his teacher, at least until he has been trained like his
teacher. A disciple who presumes such
knowledge can be said to be spiritually blind; and when he or she leads others it
is often into the pit of spiritual destruction.
How often today people mislead others
because they themselves don't know what they are talking about! You see this all-over social media, when
people write and post on social media all kinds of things that are not based in
the truth. As someone put it well, on
social media we argue about things we don’t know, and with people we don’t
know. But even in the traditional media
of talking on the phone, or shooting the breeze as they say, we can peddle such
blind guidance. Such falsehoods are
fairly innocuous if they are dealing with pictures of cats, one's favourite
dishes or even one's favourite sports team.
But they are particularly dangerous if they deal with matters of the
spiritual life and of the moral life, with our relationship with God and with
fellow man. The message of this first
parable, therefore is this: "Have you used your tongue to mislead
because you yourself are spiritually blind?"
Jesus also begins the second parable with a
rhetorical question: "Why do you
notice the splinter in your brother's eye, but do not perceive the wooden beam
in your own?" Of course the
answer is that you shouldn't. Instead:
"Remove the wooden beam from your
eye first; then you will see clearly to remove the splinter in your brother's
eye." Perhaps more clearly than
the first parable, this absurd image of the log in one's eye shows once again
how a lack of self-knowledge is a very dangerous thing. Here we are not only talking about inability
to see, but we are also talking about hypocrisy of the highest level. Such hypocrisy often occurs when we claim to
see the faults of others, but cannot see our own much greater faults. And like Jesus warned, we are often very fast
to express judgement and condemnation when we see the splinter of sin in the
other.
Now let us be clear that Jesus is not
saying we cannot point out the sins of others unless we are completely squeaky
clean ourselves; for nobody is without sin, except Jesus and the Blessed
Mother. No, what he is asking is that we
do both, but start with our own sinfulness.
In fact, it is by dealing with our own sinfulness first, that we can
more easily see the sins of others, and perhaps even understand why they do
what they do, and offer them the most effective help to repent and return to
righteousness. Some of the greatest saints like St. Paul and St. Augustine were
able to speak so clearly about sin, only because they had reflected on their
own sinfulness, rejected it and gained better insight, thanks to the light of
God. And so, the message of this second
parable is this: "Before speaking about the sins of others, something
which we must often do, especially to help them repent, have we looked at our
own condition before God?"
We should be familiar with the third
parable about good trees and good fruit, since we say that the apple does not
fall far from the tree. But while we use
this image to speak about a son taking after his father, or a daughter after
her mother, Jesus uses the image to teach about the relationship between inner
virtue and external witness. He says:
"For every tree is known by its own
fruit. For people do not pick figs from
thornbushes, [but certainly from a fig tree] nor do they gather grapes from
brambles [but from a vine shrub]."
So if we are the tree and our words and actions are the fruit, then only
a good person will produce good words and actions; a an evil person, will
produce evil words and actions.
Returning to our theme of speech, our
speech can only reflect what is going on in our hearts. Unless we cultivate hearts and minds that are
filled with virtue and truth, our words cannot but lack truth and virtue. That is probably why Jesus said of the
disciple earlier, that they need training, so that they can teach the truth
like their teacher. And so the question
for us from this third parable is this: "Do we take the trouble to form
ourselves in virtue, goodness and truth, so that our words come from hearts
that are virtuous like good fruit comes from good trees?"
Christian Life and Conclusion
James Melton (via Msgr. Pope) offers a list
of ten ways of sinning with the tongue, sins which Jesus in today's gospel, instructs
us to avoid.
1.
The Lying Tongue that speaks falsehoods
to intentionally mislead others.
2.
The Flattering Tongue that overstates
the good qualities of others so as to win their favour, through lying and
brown-nosing.
3.
The Proud Tongue that overstates the
good qualities about oneself, so as to seem more than they actually are, again
through lying.
4.
The Overused Tongue that speaks too
much, too often, about everything, even about things they know little or
nothing about.
5.
The Swift Tongue that draws conclusions
from scanty information or none.
6.
The Backbiting Tongue that talks about
others behind their backs, harming their reputation by calumny, that is by lying
about them, or by detraction, that is, by drawing attention to their faults.
7.
The Tale-bearing Tongue that spreads
information about others, information that should not be shared.
8.
The Cursing Tongue that wishes others harm
and damnation.
9.
The Piercing Tongue that speaks with
needless harshness and severity, vitriol and nastiness.
10. The Silent Tongue that does not speak up when it should, especially to warn people
about sin, as well as to speak up for others.
May our tongues never speak from blindness,
or with a log in our eyes, but always be the fruit of a tree that is steeped in
virtue and truth.
No comments:
Post a Comment