First Reading – Genesis 18:1-10 ©
Responsorial Psalm – Psalm 14(15):2-5
©
Second Reading – Colossians 1:24-28 ©
Gospel Acclamation – Acts 16:14
Alternative Acclamation – Luke 8:15
The Gospel According to Luke – 10:38 -
42 ©
(NJB)
Listen!
God, the creator of the universe, is not a God of flesh and blood; neither does the divine spirit eat flesh, drink milk, eat bread or drink water.
This narrative from Genesis is a metaphor, as is all of the mythology pertaining to the patriarchs, they represent a continuous appeal to uphold the ancient and international laws of hospitality, to treat the strangers who come to the land as if they themselves were God, and so to treat them as you would if Jesus himself appeared at your door, to treat them well, treat them kindly, honor them as if they were your closest friends and dearest family. The scriptures ask us to honor the strangers among us as if they were God, and to do so in recognition of the reality that God in fact dwells within them.
Be mindful.
God has made each of us and the whole of creation free, the future is not set. God, who created the universe is the author of law and all-good-order. God does not interfere or intervene in the lives of God’s children…God did not cause Sarah to become pregnant, nor did God restore her barren womb. There is another story being told here…pray, that you may discern it.
Read every Psalm with the knowledge of this in your heart:
All of God’s children are welcomed home; God forgets no-one and loves us all…God loves each and every one of us and has a plan for our salvation; our salvation is not of this world, and God will not fail.
God dwells in the heart of every person, and where God is present God is present fully…a just life is its own reward.
Know this!
The just and the unjust are loved by God in equal measure.
If we become the servant of one another out of love, if through a great undertaking, such as the organization of a charity, a mission or a church, and because of our efforts we find that we must endure some suffering, as regrettable as it might be, this is type of suffering is not a bad thing.
If we are persecuted, or beaten for speaking the truth, it is not a bad thing; it is a sad thing, but it redounds to the good…it is good to stand for the rights and dignity of others, even if you are persecuted for doing so.
Consider the teaching of the apostle knowing that we should not seek out suffering for its own sake, neither our suffering or the suffering of others should be desired as a stratagem for the advancement of a specific end; suffering is not good in itself and God does not desire it, even though it is laudable when endured for the sake of the good.
If you are persecuted for following the way, if you are taken advantage of for doing something good, be comforted by the fact that you have done a good thing and the way is intact…there is a blessing in that.
Be mindful.
God dwells in the heart of every person; God is with you, and God listens; God whispers to us there: seek justice, love mercy, speak the truth and be good, be kind to people and patient no matter who you are dealing with.
Do unto others what you would have them do unto you; love God with all your strength and all your heart and all your mind, to love your neighbor as yourself…this is the whole of the law.
Remember!
We all have work to do. Every day there is work to do, to maintain a business or a household there is cooking, there is cleaning, there are chores and tasks that never end. In the midst of our work we are confronted with the reality of who we are, of who we are as individual people with individual needs. We discover that our personal needs are multi-valanced; there are material needs, there are emotional needs, there are intellectual needs and there are spiritual needs.
The particularities of our needs are unique to us as individuals, though there are few of them that we can meet on our own; we are intended to meet them in relationship to one another.
Most of us can meet our material needs: food, clothing, shelter; these abilities are dialed in (again, for most of us). Our intellectual needs can be met in conversation, or reading a book. Meeting our emotional needs can be a little more difficult, because it requires that we have other people around us whom we trust and relate to, but the most difficult help to encounter is that of a genuine spiritual teacher.
Be mindful.
Our spiritual life is directly linked to every other aspect of our life; it is possible to find spiritual satisfaction in a meal, a conversation or an emotional connection.
Our spiritual life may be exploited through these interconnections by ritual and dogma in such a way that it may inure us to our actual spiritual state. If we are so fortunate as to find ourselves in the presence of a true spiritual teacher, this is a time to receive illumination through their understanding circumstance you share; it requires mindfulness, self-cognizance and perception to recognize when you are there…the teacher may be anyone.
In order to benefit from the wisdom that flows from them, you must have intention, the will and determination to act; it requires humility, being open to failure, a willingness to forgive and be forgiven, the desire to be loved.
First Reading – Genesis 18:1-10 ©
'Next Year Your Wife Sarah Will Have
a Son'
The
Lord appeared to Abraham at the Oak of Mamre while he was sitting by the
entrance of the tent during the hottest part of the day. He looked up, and
there he saw three men standing near him. As soon as he saw them he ran from
the entrance of the tent to meet them, and bowed to the ground. ‘My lord,’ he
said ‘I beg you, if I find favour with you, kindly do not pass your servant by.
A little water shall be brought; you shall wash your feet and lie down under
the tree. Let me fetch a little bread and you shall refresh yourselves before
going further. That is why you have come in your servant’s direction.’ They
replied, ‘Do as you say.’
Abraham
hastened to the tent to find Sarah.’ ‘Hurry,’ he said ‘knead three bushels of
flour and make loaves.’ Then running to the cattle Abraham took a fine and
tender calf and gave it to the servant, who hurried to prepare it. Then taking
cream, milk and the calf he had prepared, he laid all before them, and they ate
while he remained standing near them under the tree.
‘Where
is your wife Sarah?’ they asked him. ‘She is in the tent’ he replied. Then his
guest said, ‘I shall visit you again next year without fail, and your wife will
then have a son.’
Responsorial Psalm – Psalm 14(15):2-5
©
The just will live in the presence of
the Lord.
Lord,
who shall dwell on your holy mountain?
He
who walks without fault;
he
who acts with justice
and
speaks the truth from his heart;
he
who does not slander with his tongue.
The just will live in the presence of
the Lord.
He
who does no wrong to his brother,
who
casts no slur on his neighbour,
who
holds the godless in disdain,
but
honours those who fear the Lord.
The just will live in the presence of
the Lord.
He
who keeps his pledge, come what may;
who
takes no interest on a loan
and
accepts no bribes against the innocent.
Such
a man will stand firm for ever.
The just will live in the presence of
the Lord.
Second Reading – Colossians 1:24-28 ©
A Mystery Hidden for Generations has Been
Revealed to God's Saints
It
makes me happy to suffer for you, as I am suffering now, and in my own body to
do what I can to make up all that has still to be undergone by Christ for the
sake of his body, the Church. I became the servant of the Church when God made
me responsible for delivering God’s message to you, the message which was a
mystery hidden for generations and centuries and has now been revealed to his
saints. It was God’s purpose to reveal it to them and to show all the rich
glory of this mystery to pagans. The mystery is Christ among you, your hope of
glory: this is the Christ we proclaim, this is the wisdom in which we
thoroughly train everyone and instruct everyone, to make them all perfect in
Christ.
Gospel Acclamation – Acts 16:14
Alleluia, alleluia!
Open
our heart, O Lord, to accept the words of your Son.
Alleluia!
Alternative Acclamation – Luke 8:15
Alleluia, alleluia!
Blessed
are those who, with a noble and generous heart, take the word of God to
themselves
and
yield a harvest through their perseverance.
Alleluia!
The Gospel According to Luke – 10:38
- 42 ©
Martha Works; Mary
Listens
Jesus
came to a village, and a woman named Martha welcomed him into her house. She
had a sister called Mary, who sat down at the Lord’s feet and listened to him
speaking. Now Martha who was distracted with all the serving said, ‘Lord, do
you not care that my sister is leaving me to do the serving all by myself?
Please tell her to help me.’ But the Lord answered: ‘Martha, Martha,’ he said
‘you worry and fret about so many things, and yet few are needed, indeed only
one. It is Mary who has chosen the better part; it is not to be taken from
her.’
A Homily – The Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary
Time (Year C)