HOMILY FOR SATURDAY, 1ST WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME – YEAR B

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HOMILY FOR MONDAY OF THE 3RD WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME - YEAR B

HOMILY FOR SATURDAY, 1ST WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME – YEAR B

THEME: HE LOVES EVEN SINNERS

BY: FR. KARABARI PAUL

“Why does he eat with the tax collectors and sinners?”

If we were given a portion of humanity, especially those of our immediate community to judge, we would probably know those that would never make heaven. Oftentimes, we act towards people as though final judgement belonged to us. We know people of our congregation and community who are simply going to hell. How wrong we are. Jesus sees in people what we may not see in them. The people who consider unrepentant sinners may be potential saints.

ALSO RECOMMENDED: HOMILY FOR SATURDAY OF THE 1ST WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME YEAR I. 

Levi in the Gospel of today (Mark 2:13-17) was a Jewish tax collector. He had turned coat to work for the Romans, taking his fellow-Jews’ money on behalf of their oppressors. In fact, tax collectors were renowned for their dishonesty. If they were not bad enough, they were also ritually unclean. They had business contacts with gentiles. Their clothings touched the unclean garments of the gentiles. The Pharisees claimed that if a person ate with sinners, that person became a sinner also.

Levi would have been completely hated. The old self-esteem might take a hit. But miraculously, beautifully, Jesus chose him. And he was brave enough to say ‘okay, I will follow you and your plan’, in spite of whatever he felt about himself, or what others thought.

God’s plans can be pretty nerve-wracking. One of the scariest things about living a life full of good, godly, actions, and choices is what others might think/do/say. We are human, and other people’s reactions do affect us, so we are not saying that it’s wrong to feel that. Definitely not. One dangerous way to live is certainly to live on people’s opinions. It is difficult to please God when you are only interested in what people will say or do. What we are saying, though, is that it is always so worth it to push past perceptions, whether they are your own or others’.

When our fear of other people’s perceptions makes an attempt to stop us following God, He can help us to get past it. Through Jesus, you are capable and equipped. Through Jesus, you have a calendar full of chances. God always has a heavenly reason for His plans, so He will make it possible and entirely worthwhile.

Remarkably, if God should look at us the way we see others, we would not see the light of the next day. Jesus said to Levi, “Follow me,” and Levi got up and followed him. Levi found righteousness in the Son of God. The Pharisees saw righteousness in themselves. He saw with his own eyes what the accusing Pharisees also saw but could not recognize. He saw what Paul described in his letter to the Romans: “In the gospel the righteousness of God is revealed, a righteousness that is by faith from first to last, just as it is written: ‘The righteous will live by faith.’” (Romans 1:17). Those who see righteousness in themselves judge others.

Levi made no assumptions. He saw, he listened, and he believed. He trusted the One sent from God because he trusted God. May we, too, live by faith, not by assumptions. When we see people the way God sees them, we will love them without prejudice. GOD IS STILL ON THE THRONE. May God bless and keep us all through Christ Our Lord Amen. Good morning.

 

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