Homily Sixth Sunday Year A The wisdom of God
Homily:
Sixth Sunday Year A
Reading
1: This first reading sets the tone for the other two readings. God gives us
free will to choose between life and death, good and evil, lasting fire (symbol
of eternal separation from God) or soothing water (symbol of the life with
God). Our choice will be based on self-gratification or love of God, trusting
in our self or trusting in the Lord. He doesn’t causes us to act unjustly or
gives us license to sin. Instead, he gives us the grace to know right from
wrong, which is his wisdom.
If
we choose God’s ways because of his grace, God will confirm our choice. This is
eternal life with him. If we choose to satisfy ourselves in spite of God’s
commands, in spite of his grace, God will confirm our choice. This is the
second death, eternal alienation from the Good which is himself.
Many
people feel that freedom equates license to do anything they want. Rather, true
freedom is to choose that which will be beneficial to our eternal happiness.
Our eternal happiness is to be in relationship with God. Our eternal
unhappiness will be not to be in relationship with God. So choose life or
choose death.
Gospel:
Jesus gives us examples of human wisdom and the wisdom of God. The wisdom of
God is found in the Commandments, which he has come to fulfill. How? In the
words of Pope Francis, through a higher justice and a more authentic
observance.
Human
wisdom concerning the commandments came from the interpretation of the scribes
and Pharisees. They emphasized rote observance and outward conduct. Jesus said
our way of life must exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees.
This
is how we are to fulfill the commandments, by going to the root which focuses
on the intention of the human heart. In other words, human wisdom just goes through
the motions and does the actions, without necessarily believing or caring. On
the other hand, the wisdom of God says that the fulfillment of the commandments
come from the act of love. This is how the commandment is acted on and
embraced.
I
have heard often in confession: I didn’t kill anyone. But Jesus says” you can
violate the command of God without physically taking another’s life. We can
kill in our speech and in other actions.
Human
wisdom asks: how can you forgive someone who has hurt you deeply? The wisdom of
God says: be reconciled first before you come to offer sacrifice to the Lord
through worship.
Are
we motivated by authentic love of God and love of others in our thoughts, words
and deeds? Then we are fulfilling the commands of God. If not, then we are only
going through the motion but our heart is far from God. Are we following the
wisdom of the world or the wisdom of God? Are we asking God regularly to give
us his wisdom: to see how he sees things or are we listening to the wisdom of society
and present culture?
Reading
2: The first reading said “Vast is the wisdom of the Lord; he is almighty and
all-seeing.” We have a natural gift of wisdom and spiritual gift of wisdom. It
is this spiritual wisdom that Paul refers to. Human wisdom may tell us to look
to our own interest above others. Human wisdom and the world’s wisdom may tell
us that we have a right to happiness at all costs. If something makes you
happy, if it gives you pleasure, if it enhances you even if others suffer, you
should feel free to do it. Human wisdom says might makes right.
But
there is another type of wisdom, which comes from God. This wisdom is one of
the gifts of the Holy Spirit, given by God to us in Baptism and renewed in
Confirmation. What is this wisdom? Paul says the Spirit reveals to us the
depths of everything, even the depth of God. This gift of wisdom enables us to
know and to see things as God does; in other words, we are able to know in a
given situation the will of God.
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