God’s Unrelenting Mercy
Last Sunday on the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ (Corpus Christi), we heard from the Book of Deuteronomy in the first reading. There, at the end of his life, Moses instructed the Chosen People to remember all that God had done for them so that they would remain faithful to the Lord. This Sunday’s first reading from the Book of Exodus is at the heart of what the people were called to remember. This section of Exodus lays out God’s desire for a covenant with His people and how He gives them the law as a way to safeguard them in keeping that covenant. Again, it is God, not the people, who seeks the covenant. Just the same, it is God who is always seeking us.
In the second reading, St. Paul extols the greatness of God’s love for us in that, though we are sinners, Jesus Christ still gave his live for us out of compassion for our sinfulness which Paul understands as a perpetual weakness or flaw in our human condition: the result of original sin. It is clear in Paul’s writings that right relationship with God is only achieved through the reconciliation won for us in Jesus; it cannot be achieved in any way on the part of humanity. Again, knowing our weakness and our need, God does not fail to act for our good.
What is our response to be to the goodness of God? Our answer to the question is found in this Sunday’s Gospel passage from Matthew. Matthew records for us that Jesus sees the crowd, knows their brokenness, and that he is moved by the experience. He sends his Apostles out to further his work of reconciliation. This commission that the Apostles received is for us too. We are called to be agents of the Lord’s love, mercy, compassion, and reconciliation. The commission is stated plainly by the Lord at the end of this Sunday’s Gospel: “without cost you have received; without cost you are to give.” If we have truly come to know that goodness and mercy of God in our lives, we must then allow the Holy Spirit to use us as agents of reconciliation in the world.
Father’s Day
A happy Father’s Day to all those men who fulfill the role of a father in someone’s life. Fulfilling that role is a special vocation from God; may all who have received it, in the many varied ways in which is comes, have the needed grace from the Lord to fulfill that sacred duty. May all those fathers who have gone before us in faith know the goodness and mercy of God in heaven.
Blessings to you and yours for the week ahead!
Father Chris House