A Homily for the 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, 2009-B

A few years ago, I was writing a series on my blog explaining the various parts of the Mass. I cannot remember exactly how the issue came up, but one of the people who left a comment to one of the postings asked, “Father, how much of the Mass can I miss and it still count for fulfilling my obligation.” I replied that the Mass really should be seen as an integral whole, that begins with the Entrance Hymn and ends with the Recessional Hymn, so we really should be there for the whole thing. WOW! Did that open up a lot of vigorous discussion on my blog. Quite a few people said that they were told that as long as they were there for the Gospel, they had fulfilled their obligation. So I asked them, “So, if you miss the first word of the Gospel, are you there for the Gospel? If so, how much of the Gospel reading can you miss for you to still be there for the Gospel?” I will admit, several people got annoyed at my response, but I was trying to point out that they had a very Pharisaical approach to the celebration of Mass.
This seems to be the major theme of this week’s readings, namely following God’s rules. In today’s first reading from the Book of Deuteronomy, Moses tells the Israelites that they are to obey the statues and decrees which he had taught them, so that they might live. Moses assures them that these statues and decrees, these rules, have been give to them by God, and they are not to add to them nor subtract from them. In fact, their following of these rules from God will be evidence to the other nations of their wisdom and intelligence.
In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus responds harshly to the Pharisees who have been criticizing His disciples for not following the traditional purification and washing rituals which had become part of their custom. Jesus calls them hypocrites, and quotes Isaiah, “This people honors me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me; in vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines human precepts.”
At first glance it might appear that these two readings oppose each other. So why would the Church give us both of these readings to reflect on at the same time? Basically the Church is inviting us to make a serious reflection on the place of God’s law in our lives.
The most important thing for us to remember is that God LOVES us! God does not give us statues and decrees to burden us, but rather in order to set us free. In revealing His commandments to us, God is rescuing us from our own inadequate ideas, so that we “may live, and may enter in and take possession of the land which the LORD . . . is giving you.” The physical Promise Land given to the Israelites is a sign that points to a more important, infinite reality – Heaven, which is our true home.
There are two main ways in which we can misuse God’s law. One is legal minimalism, and the other is maximalism. The example that I gave from my blog a few years ago is an example of minimalism. “Father, is this a sin?” “Father, does the hour fast before Communion mean an hour before Mass or an hour before when we think we will actually receive Communion?” “Father, how far away does the nearest Catholic Church have to be to excuse us from going to Sunday Mass?” You might think these are made up questions, but I assure you they are not.
People who are minimalizers are really asking how little can they do and still keep on the right side of God. What’s the least I can do to make sure I don’t go to hell? Minimalizers are often the ones sneaking in late for Mass and leaving as soon as they receive Holy Communion; why? To avoid the crowd in the parking lot. Minimalizers think they know all the bare minimums for being a “good” Catholic. What they really do not know, however, is JOY. If your first concern is to find out how little you need to give God and His Church, you will experience these minimums as heavy burdens. Why?
Basically minimalizers are trying to live with God on the fringe of their lives; and as long as they try to keep God on the fringe, He will always be a threat to them. God will always be trying to move into the center of their lives. The only people who find joy in religion are those who live with God already at the center of their lives. They have discovered that religion is not all about law, rather it is all about LOVE!
This is how Jesus lived, and it is how He calls us to live. Jesus never worried about fulfilling the minimum obligations of the Law, because He did them automatically. He never asked, “How little do I have to do for God?” Instead Jesus always asked, “How much can I do for God?” Jesus lived passionately His love for His Father. People in love never ask how little can they do for their beloved, but always want to do the most for their beloved. Love is expressed through generosity and self-sacrifice.
The other extreme are the maximalizers, who think that they are putting God in the center of their lives. They take religious practices and devotions to extremes, and they make sure that people know it. I am not talking about pious people here, but rather pietistic people. Like the minimalizers, the maximalizers are also being self-centered. They think that by going to the extreme in their pietistic practices they can establish a claim on God that He will be bound to honor. This is what Jesus is criticizing in today’s Gospel. The hypocrisy of the Pharisees laid not in their obeying the law that God had given them through Moses. Rather it was in supposing that this obedience gave them a claim on God. We NEVER have a claim on God. God has an absolute claim on us, but we do not have a claim on God. God’s love and our salvation are not things that we can earn; they are absolutely free gifts from God because of His love for us. God does not love us and save us because WE are good enough. Rather it is because HE is so good to that He wants to share His love with with us. God’s law is not a list of obligations that we must first fulfill before God will love us and bless us. Rather, God’s law is the description of our grateful response to the love and blessing God gives us out of pure generosity. God wants us to be happy, to live in freedom and to have that life to the full.
So, what are we? Minimalizers? Maximalizers? Or grateful, loving children of God?




