Date: September
5, 2004 - TWENTY-THIRD SUNDAY OF THE YEAR
Readings
Wisdom
9:13-18b
Philemon
9-10,12-17
Luke
14:25-33
Today’s
readings remind me of a situation I encountered years ago teaching junior boys
in a Catholic high school. When I
brought up the topic of actually choosing the faith we profess, the boys
pointed out that they had no say in their becoming and remaining Catholic. Their parents had them baptized as
infants, sent them to Catholic grade and high school, and insisted they do what
their religion demanded. They not
only resented their lack of freedom in the process, they made it crystal clear
that, if they had their druthers, they certainly wouldn’t have signed up for my
religion course.
The
authors of today’s three Scripture passages can’t imagine such a
situation. They’re convinced that
faith isn’t really faith unless it’s freely chosen.
Our
Wisdom writer sets the biblical table by reminding us that faith alone takes us
beyond our human limits. “Who can
know God’s counsel,” he asks, “or who can conceive what Yahweh intends? For the deliberations of mortals are
timid, and unsure are our plans.”
Unless we freely choose to step beyond “our grasp” into the realm of
faith, we’ll never discover the “things (that) are in heaven.”
Hearing
Jesus’ demands in today’s gospel pericope, we realize no one can be forced to
become his disciple. He calls us
to “hate’ father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, and even
(our) own life . . . to carry (our) cross and come after him . . . and to
renounce all (our) possessions.”
It’s no accident that, after issuing such a call, Jesus immediately
talks about the necessity of planning and plotting for the future. The decision to follow him doesn’t come
naturally.
Today I
encourage lectors to put their lectionaries away, pull out their large-print
Bibles, and proclaim every word of Paul’s letter to Philemon. It’s only 25 verses. The homilist will probably take longer
to create the historical context for the 8 liturgical verses than for the
community to hear the other 17 verses which automatically provide that context.
Philemon,
Paul’s convert and friend, is a rich slave owner. Onesimus, one of Philemon’s slaves has escaped from his
estate (after trashing some of his property) and fled to Paul, offering to
become his servant. Paul welcomes
his proposal. But there’s a
problem: Philemon hasn’t voluntarily granted Onesimus his freedom.
So Paul
sends a letter to his old friend, requesting he now make Onesimus a free
man. “I did not want to do
anything without your consent,” he writes, “so that the good you do might not
be forced but voluntary.
But Paul
doesn’t stop there. Because he
believes a forced action – no matter how good and praiseworthy – is worthless,
he demands even more freedom from Onesimus than from Philemon. He doesn’t hire a special messenger to
deliver his letter. He sends it
with Onesimus!
Not only
does Paul expect Philemon freely to release Onesimus, he also expects Onesimus
freely to put himself back into Philemon’s power, and only then request his
freedom.
Psychologists
often remind us of the obvious: very few of our daily actions are freely
performed. Even many of the good
things we do are carried out only because we’re afraid to do something
bad. We perform them out of force
and fear.
At the
same time, moral theologians remind us that God only judges us on our free
actions. Nothing we’ve been forced
to do will count when God hands us our eternal zip code.
God
expects us to integrate as much freedom into our daily lives as possible. Not only do our free choices determine
how we live our Christian faith, they also make high school religion classes
much more enjoyable.