The 26 th Sunday of Ordinary Time Year B Readings, Lectionary #138

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The 26 th Sunday of Ordinary Time Year B Readings, Lectionary #138 Begin in prayer Spend a few moments in prayer before reading the Scripture. Ask the Lord to let his Word speak to your heart. Your law, O Lord, is perfect. It refreshes my soul. May my homily inspire my parish to hear the cries of the poor and respond with generous hearts. Be with me now, Holy Spirit, as I prepare my homily for next weekend. Guide my words and my life to reflect the joy you bring. Amen. Liturgical Context Today s liturgy continues the slow movement toward the fulfillment of Jesus ministry that we will proclaim and manifest in the weeks ahead as the liturgical year winds down. Today s liturgy is an exhortation for us to be surprised about who God invites into his kingdom. It is also an invitation to be open to the Spirit s work the Spirit blows where the Spirit wills and invites whom the Spirit wills to invite. It is an invitation to see God s work even among non-believers. Approach the Text Read the Scripture for this Sunday several times. Let its words and phrases truly affect you. Use the Lectio Divina method (available from PastoralPlanning.com as part of this homily kit) to allow the Word to fill your heart and excite you about the homily you are preparing. Begin by reading through all the readings for this weekend.

FIRST READING: Numbers 11:25-29 "Eldad and Medad are prophesying in the camp!" Moses and the people journeyed as nomads through the desert. They periodically pitched tents and erected a meeting tent away from the village tents. God would appear to Moses in a cloud at the entrance of the meeting tent where he presented Moses with directions for leading the people. God told Moses to commission seventy elders to help him guide and lead the people of Israel. Moses celebrated a commissioning rite with the elders in which Moses called upon God s Spirit to rest upon the elders. The gathered elders were gifted with the gift of prophecy. Two elders were missing yet were later given the same gift. Medad and Eldad were not authorized members of the elders yet they still exercised the ministry they had no legitimacy to exercise. Joshua strongly advised Moses to make them cease and desist fearing that if he demonstrated deference toward them Moses would lose respect and his authority would be diminished. An eternal spiritual truth is realized in this event. The Spirit cannot be contained or controlled but moves where the Spirit wills. The Spirit s action is a type or a foreshadowing of the Spirit who would come and anoint all God s people to prophesy in God s name fulfilled on the day of Pentecost. God is in control of the religious offices created by human beings; such offices are under God s authority and by extension God s will. God works for the good of the community, not an exalted group or individual within that community. Everyone is exalted and no one is diminished when God s gifts are distributed to the entire community. For your reflection: Have you ever known a situation in which someone was doing something good or beneficial without the requisite authority to do so and was criticized for doing so? What does this reading teach us about that situation? SECOND READING: James 5:1-6 That corrosion will be a testimony against you. Today s reading is the fifth in a fiveweek series in which we will hear passages from the Letter of James in the liturgy. The focus of today s second reading is social justice. James, in today s pericope (segment), focuses his attention on the issue of social justice. James insists that God cares for the troubles of the poor and oppressed. When he insists that the cries of the lowly extend to the Lord of Hosts, James is echoing an Old Testament Preparing the Homily Mary Birmingham PastoralPlanning.com Page 2

reference to God of the Covenant (the Lord of Hosts) who promised to care for the poor and oppressed. Early Christians believed that Jesus would return soon. James was preparing them for his return. James insisted they focus their life in Christ rather than be distracted by earthly wealth. Following the tradition of the prophets and God himself, James upholds the rights and concerns of the poor among them. Insisting that such care is constitutive of the Gospel (as our social teaching affirms) James also challenged the rich. James proclaims justice to audiences ancient and contemporary. His word reaches all the way to the hallowed halls of the twenty-first century and is as convicting today as it was then. Attachment to riches is an obstacle to following the Christian Way both here and now and in the future the kingdom of God now and not yet. James speaks a word to wealthy people who are more concerned with amassing their fortunes than worrying about their life in Christ and their responsibility to God s people in the world. One inherent risk of wealth is to pay little attention to the needs of other people. Wealth is not evil unto itself. It becomes evil when access to it is limited and only a small number of people are able to enjoy the benefits of that wealth. When wealth is not used to care for starving people then it is evil. James criticizes the farmer who refused to pay a just wage and reminded him that another Harvester would come and he would garner all the payments due him in full. All will be judged by the way in which they care (or not) for the poor and oppressed in our world. For your reflection: What is James telling us our attitude toward the poor people should be? What are the consequences if we fail to care for poor people? What does it mean to you that social justice is constitutive of the Gospel? Do you possess any attitudes toward poor and marginalized people in need of conversion? GOSPEL: Mark 9:38-43, 45, 47-48 "Whoever is not against us is for us." People in antiquity believed in the presence of spirits who created chaos in their lives. A non-believer cast out a demon by the power of Jesus name. John was incredulous as well as intolerant. Even though the exorcist was not a disciple of Jesus he nevertheless recognized his power and called upon it to deliver the person from the demon. Jesus insisted that the man was not against him he was for him. The fruit of his action was enough evidence. Preparing the Homily Mary Birmingham PastoralPlanning.com Page 3

The man performed a great work by the power of Jesus name even though he was not a member of the Christian community. Jesus meaning is clear when a person accomplishes a great deed using the power of Jesus name they are already for him and not against him. In other words, a person is a member of Jesus community unless he or she intentionally chooses to separate and leave. John tried to erect obstacles to inclusion by his actions. Jesus acted decisively to quash John s attempt to cavalierly assert power and authority where he had no right to do so. John and his brother James displayed similar intolerance when they suggested that God should rain down fire on the Samaritans in Luke s Gospel. John understood exorcism to be the privileged purview of those in authority in their perceived hierarchy of Christian leadership. Once again the issue of who is least and who is greatest rears its ugly head. Jesus came down quickly and decisively upon John. The scenario is dripping with irony since John himself was unable to perform an exorcism in verses 14-29. The disciple s lack of tolerance was a direct assault on Jesus command to welcome and receive (v. 37). Jesus continues to drive home his message of inclusivity all are welcome. No one is excluded. Their childish bantering made it clear they felt that they alone were given the ability to call upon Jesus power and authority by virtue of their privileged association with him. The disciples primary complaint was that the exorcist was not one of them. In other words, he was not a follower. The disciples cared more about having people follow them than they did about following Jesus. Jesus used the situation to teach the disciples a much-needed lesson. First, anyone who used the power of Jesus name to perform a mighty work cannot at the same time speak ill of him. Second, whoever is not against him as he stated in the Gospel is for him; it is an obvious truth. That truth only makes the betrayal of Peter and the other disciples all the more bitter. They were the ones in the end who were against him. Mark loved to use irony to narrate the Christ event and this scene is, as stated earlier, dripping with it. Third, the most important reason, judging by the Amen saying attached to it and the use of the word Messiah, is that Jesus was ready and willing to embrace the hospitality of others even strangers and that the most basic gestures of compassion and generosity would have redemptive implications. John is interested in maintaining power and the status quo. Jesus, on the other hand, cared only about his appointed mission to establish a reign of peace, love, forgiveness, and compassion. Jesus extended an invitation of welcome to anyone who heralds God s benevolence, righteousness, and justice. Piggy-backing on the theme from last week s Gospel, Jesus continued to Preparing the Homily Mary Birmingham PastoralPlanning.com Page 4

insist that there is no room for selfrighteous, self-aggrandizing attitudes in the ministry to God s kingdom. John s thirst for power and the structures that go with that power have no place in Christian consciousness yet even today it is alive and well. Such is the nature of power structures. Official disciples are not the only people capable of spreading the Good News and acting in the power of Jesus name by healing and freeing people from the power of darkness. In other words, regardless of where the source of compassion and mercy and healing redemption comes from, Christians are to support those efforts as coming from Christ himself. The wonderful news of this Gospel is that anyone who offers mercy and compassion to a Christian will be rewarded for their efforts. For your reflection: How tuned in are you to the righteous actions of people in the secular world; do you see those actions as the hand of God working in and through such people? Do you have more of a tendency to see God working only within the confines of Church structures or do you see God working even through the non-believer? What does this situation teach us about God s relationship with all human beings in the world? What are the implications of this Gospel when it comes to non-believers and people from other faiths? What is Jesus telling us? Consider the statement: Theologian Karl Rahner spoke of the phenomenon of anonymous Christian. According to Rahner an anonymous Christian was a person who lived a righteous life that person s life would be judged by the way in which that person lived an upright, moral life. How do you feel about his assertion and what does it teach us about God s relationship with us? Once again Jesus insists that all are welcome in the community. What are some ways that our communities truly live this principle and what are some ways we fall short? The axiom, actions speak louder than words, aptly describes Jesus message in today s Gospel. Righteous practice not one s title, or authority or name will be the means by which righteous life in the kingdom will be judged. If you were to be charged with living a righteous life, would there be enough evidence to convict you? What is that evidence? Take an inward glance Think about how the call to holiness is embedded in this week s liturgy: * [Numbers] "Would that all the people of the Lord were prophets!" Who might be the prophets in your midst? How good are you at sharing the tasks of ministry? Who gets listened to in your parish? Whose prophecies go unheeded? Preparing the Homily Mary Birmingham PastoralPlanning.com Page 5

* [Psalm] "Cleanse me from my unknown faults." The prayer of every Christian minister: which of your unknown faults need to be cleansed? As you have grown in ministry, how have your faults changed? Which of them have deepened? Which faults have been cleansed already? * [James] "Come now, you rich." In what ways are you "richer" than your parishioners? What luxuries do you have that many in your parish do not? What have you done lately to assist those who cry out for justice in our society? What more can you do? * "We tried to prevent him." When have you been prevented from ministering as you see fit? In what ways is your ministry hampered--by the church? by those you are trying to serve? by your own faults? * "These little ones." Children are not the only "little ones"--the phrase can also refer to those who have small minds, thus reminding all Christian ministers that we must consider small-minded people as we go about our daily lives. In what ways do you try to be careful, lest you scandalize "these little ones"? * "If your eye causes you to sin." In what ways do you practice "custody of the eyes"? What are the situations in which your eyes cause you to sin? What can you begin doing today to remedy that? Take an outward glance Think about how the call to holiness is embedded in the daily experiences of the people to whom you will be speaking: * [Numbers] "Would that the Lord might bestow his spirit on them all!" Who in your parish believes that the spirit has been bestowed on them in some special way? How much of a role do the faithful have in parish decision-making? * [James] "The wages you withheld." How might those who have material wealth be encouraged to be better stewards? Do your brothers and sisters in the assembly have "home-grown" models of such stewardship? How might their parish ministers be better models for them? * "He does not follow us." What is the state of ecumenism in your liturgical assembly? In what ways are your parishioners encouraged to seek unity with our "separated" brothers and sisters? How do you welcome the spouses and family members who are not Catholic? * "Gehenna." How does your assembly think of hell? What do they hear from their homilist on this subject? Do they hear too much about it? Do they hear too little? Speaking of Scripture Preparing the 8-minute homily This week's preparation may have encouraged you to consider the Spirit's prodigal gifts, and how you and your parishioners may need to respond to the cries of the poor. Try to preach a homily this Sunday that encourages your assembly to Preparing the Homily Mary Birmingham PastoralPlanning.com Page 6

acknowledge the Spirit's promptings in their own lives. Seeing such promptings in you would be a great beginning. This may also be an excellent week in which to help your parishioners see the actions of their daily lives as holy and a contribution to the reign of God. When they care for an aging or sick family member, reach out to neighbors, tend to the ill, lonely, or imprisoned, they are carrying out their ministry to the world, even though it s not scheduled in the parish bulletin. Timing Homily notes Memo 30 seconds Greet everyone and say one thing to connect with what is on the mind of the community news, weather, sports, parish events, visitors, a special group which is present, or other. Humor is good here. God is sending his love through you to your listeners. 1-2 minutes Tell a story or provide an image that will fire the imagination of your listeners. Do not launch into a treatment of the readings. This image or story must be one that is easy to understand by everyone, young and old. Avoid using standard jokes here. Instead, as you prepare the homily, what comes to mind as illustrative of the message in the readings? 3-4 minutes Connect that image now to the message in today s readings. Again, avoid providing commentary on the readings or exegesis which is disconnected from your image. You want people to remember what you say and take it home. What hope does the message today offer to your listeners? 1-2 minutes Return to the liturgy. Gesture toward the altar and say, Let s come back here now to this liturgy You re setting the stage for what will follow. Make a quick connection between the message today and the Eucharist. 30 second Thank your listeners and end on a very positive note. Keep this very short. It takes any group of people a few seconds to get used to the sound of your voice in a room and this is a way to begin that will help your listeners hear you. Again, make sure this stays brief. The point of the homily is not you or your story but the Word of God and this image or story is a way to set the stage for that. Make two or three quick points here. Remember that the message must fit into the lives of the people in front of you. How will celebrating Eucharist and receiving communion change you and your listeners? How will it help them incorporate the message of today s readings into their daily lives? Sit down. Preparing the Homily Mary Birmingham PastoralPlanning.com Page 7

Conclude in prayer To conclude your preparation, think about the community for whom you ve just prepared to preach or teach, and spend a few moments in prayer. Your word, O Lord, is truth. Consecrate us in the truth. May we perform mighty deeds in your Name, I open myself to the wisdom you alone can give and I offer myself as the earthen vessel which will carry your Word to these people. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. Preparing the Homily Mary Birmingham PastoralPlanning.com Page 8