10th Week: June 1-6:
June 1 Monday: St, Justin,
Martyr: Mk 12:1-12:
The context: Told by Jesus during Passover
week, the parable of the wicked tenants is actually an allegorical “parable
of judgment,” accusing the Pharisees of not producing the fruits of
repentance and renewal of life which God expected from them as leaders of His
Chosen people. “I expected my vineyard to yield good grapes. Why did it
yield sour ones instead?” The parable also explains the necessity of
our bearing fruit in our Christian life and the punishment for sterility and
wickedness.
The meaning of the parable: As an
allegory, this parable has different meanings. Like the Jews, the second- and
third-generation Christians also understood God as the landlord. The servants
sent by the landowner represented the prophets of the Old Testament. They were
to see that God’s chosen people produced fruits of justice, love, and
righteousness. But the people refused to listen to the prophets and produced
the bitter grapes of injustice, immorality, and idolatry. Further, they
persecuted and killed the prophets. As a final attempt, the landowner sent his
son, (Jesus), to collect the rent (fruits of righteousness), from the wicked
tenants (the Jews). But they crucified him and continued to lead lives of
disloyalty and disobedience. Hence, God’s vineyard was to be taken away from
His Chosen People and given to a people (Gentile Christians), who would then be
expected to produce the fruit of righteousness. The parable warns us that if we
refuse to reform our lives and to become productive, we also could be replaced
as the old Israel was replaced by the “new” Israel.
Life messages: 1) We need to be good
fruit-producers in the vineyard of the Church. Jesus has given the Church
everything necessary to make Christians fruit-bearing: a) the Bible to know the
will of God; b) the priesthood to bring us the Sacraments, and to lead the
people in God’s ways; c) the Sacrament of Reconciliation for the remission of
sins; d) the Holy Eucharist as our spiritual food with the Sacrament of Holy
Orders to continue the Priesthood of Jesus on earth until the end of
time; e) the Sacrament of Confirmation for a dynamic life of Faith; f) the
Sacrament of Matrimony for the sharing of love in families, the fundamental
unit of the Church, and g) the Sacrament of Anointing to bring healing to the
soul, and sometimes to the body if God wills. We are expected to make use of
these gifts and so to produce fruits for God.
2) We need to be good fruit-producers
in the vineyard of our family. By mutually sharing our blessings, by
sacrificing time, treasure, and talents for the welfare of all the members, by
humbly and lovingly serving others in the family, by recognizing and encouraging
each other and by honoring and gracefully obeying our parents, we become
producers of “good fruit” or good vine-branches in our
families. (Fr. Tony)
June 2 Tuesday: Sts
Marcellinus and Peter, Martyrs : Mk 12: 13-17:
The context: Today’s Gospel describes how
Jesus ingeniously escaped from a trap set for him by the Pharisees. The
tax issue: The Jews were forced to pay three separate taxes to the
Roman emperor: the ground tax, the income tax, and the census tax. Here, the
question concerned the census tax. If Jesus said that it was unlawful to pay
the tax, the pro-Rome Herodians and their allies would report him to the Roman
officials who would then arrest him as a revolutionary. If Jesus said that it
was lawful to pay the tax, the insurgents and their supporters would turn
against him, and he would be discredited in the eyes of the people who were
against paying taxes to a pagan emperor on religious grounds.
The defense goes on the offensive. Jesus
defeated their scheme by asking his challengers to show him “the coin
of tribute” – the coin they would give to the tax-gatherer. Rather
than answering their question directly, Jesus asked them a question, thus
turning their trap inside out and upside down: “Whose image [eikon in
Greek] and inscription are these?” “Caesar’s,” they
said. Jesus then said, “Give back to Caesar what belongs to Caesar —
and to God what belongs to God.” In other words, we give to the
emperor the coin because his image is on it, and we give to God our own selves
because we are created in the image of God (Gn 1:26). By this answer Jesus
reminds his questioners that if they are so concerned and careful about paying
taxes to the state, they should be much more concerned and careful about their
direct service of, and obligations to, God, their Creator and Lord.
Life messages: The episode teaches us the nature
of our obligations to God and to our country, and it shows us how, with God’s
help, we can be ideal citizens of both earth and Heaven. 1) Since everything is
God’s, we must give ourselves to Him 100%, not just 10% on Sundays. 2) We
should be generous in fulfilling our Sunday obligations and find time every day
for prayer and worship in the family, for the reading of the Bible and the
proper training of our children in Faith and morals. 3) As citizens of a
country, it is the duty of Christians to pay for the services and the
privileges that government provides, like paved roads, police and fire
departments, banks and other necessities. 4) Another way of giving to Caesar
what is Caesar’s is to participate actively in the running of the government,
electing the most suitable candidates and influencing them through frequent
contacts. Tony (https://frtonyshomilies.com/)
June 3 Wednesday: St Charles
Lwanga and companions, Martyrs
Mk 12:18-27: The context: Jesus reached Jerusalem for his
final Passover feast. As part of a well-planned plot to trap Jesus, the chief
priests, the scribes and the Pharisees met him with controversial questions.
When Jesus ingeniously escaped from the first two traps, the Sadducees asked a
question concerning the marital state after the resurrection. The challenge to
Jesus was clear: do you believe in the written Torah which is
silent on the resurrection or do you side with the Pharisees, accepting their
belief in the resurrection, based on oral traditions and
interpretations, and thus subjecting Moses to ridicule?
The trap: Sadducees did not believe in
resurrection of the dead because they claimed that Moses wrote nothing about
it. Hence, in their hypothetical question (which strongly recalls the Book of
Tobit and the plight of Sarah
— the woman Tobias later married —
seven times widowed and still childless), they asked Jesus to tell them who, in
Heaven, would be the husband of the woman who, widowed and childless, had then
been married, in succession, to her six brothers–in-law (levires),
and had finally died childless.
Jesus goes on the offensive as Défense:
First, Jesus provided positive Biblical proof for the reality of resurrected
existence. Jesus is presuming that Yahweh’s burning bush statement about being
the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob was in the present tense. This would prove
these three patriarchs were still alive at the time of Moses, 600 years after
their deaths. Thus, Jesus uses the Sadducees’ sacred text of the Torah to
refute their anti-resurrection belief. Since God declared Himself
to be God of the patriarchs, He must somehow still
be sustaining the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, thereby
granting them resurrection and eternal life. Thus, Jesus proved the
resurrection of the body from the Torah itself. Second, Jesus explained that
the afterlife would not be just an eternal replay of this life. Things would be
different after death. Normal human relations, including marriage, would be
transformed. Then Jesus told the Sadducees that those to whom God granted
resurrection and Heavenly life with Him would be immortal, like the angels and,
hence, “children of God.”
Life message: 1) We need to live
the lives of resurrection people: That is, we are not to lie
buried in the tomb of our sins and evil habits. Instead, we are to live joyful
and peaceful lives, constantly experiencing the real presence of the Risen Lord
Who gives us the assurance that our bodies also will be raisedThe salutary
thought of our own resurrection and eternal glory should also inspire us to
honor our bodies, keeping them holy, pure and free from evil
habits and to respect those with whom we come in contact,
rendering them loving and humble service. Tony (https://frtonyshomilies.com/)
June 4 Thursday: Mk 12:28-34:
The context: A scribe who believed in both
the written Law and the oral tradition was pleased to see how Jesus had
defeated the Sadducee who had tried to humiliate him with the hypothetical case
of a woman who had married and been widowed by seven husbands in succession.
Out of admiration, the scribe challenged Jesus to summarize the most important
of the Mosaic Laws in one sentence. In the Judaism of Jesus’ day, there
was a double tendency: to expand the Mosaic Law into hundreds of rules and
regulations and to condense the 613 precepts of the Torah into a single
sentence or few sentences.
Jesus’ novel contribution: Jesus gave a straightforward answer, quoting
directly from the Law itself and startling all with his profound simplicity and
mastery of the Law of God and its purpose. He combined the first sentence
of the Jewish Shema prayer from Deuteronomy 6:5: … Therefore,
you shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, and with all your soul,
and with all your strength” with its complementary law from Leviticus
19:18: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Thus, Jesus
proclaims that true religion is to love God both
directly and as living in our neighbor. Jesus underlines the
principle that we are to love our neighbor as we love ourselves because both of
us bear God’s image. For, to honor God’s image is to honor both Him Who made it
and Him Whom it resembles. Besides, our neighbors, too, are the children of God
our Father, redeemed by the Blood of Jesus. Love for our neighbor is a
matter, not of feelings, but of deeds by which we share with others the
unmerited love that God lavishes on us. This is the agape love
for neighbor that God commands in His Law. Jesus then uses the parable of the
Good Samaritan, as reported in Luke’s Gospel, to show them what God means
by “neighbor.”
Life Messages: 1) We need to love
God whole-heartedly: Loving God with all our heart, soul, mind, and
strength, means that we should place God’s will ahead of our own, seek the
Lord’s will in all things, and make it paramount in our lives. It also
means that we must find time to adore Him, to present our needs before Him, and
to ask His pardon and forgiveness for our sins. 2) God’s will is that we
should love everyone, seeing Him in our neighbor. This means we have
to help, support, encourage, forgive, and pray for everyone without regard to
color, race, gender, age wealth, social status, intelligence, education, or
charm. Fr. Tony (https://frtonyshomilies.com/)
June 5 Friday: St. Boniface,
Bishop and Martyr Mk 12: 35-37:
The context: Today’s Gospel describes how
Jesus catches the Pharisees in their own rabbinic reasoning by quoting David’s
Psalm 110 in which the psalmist has David call the Messiah his “Lord.”
How can Christ be the son of David
and his Lord? Based
on 2 Sm 7:13 (“I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever”),
the Jews believed that the Messiah would be a descendent of King David. Since
children were supposed to be less than their father, especially if the father
were somebody like the great King David, Jesus asks the scholars, “How is it
possible that David would call his descendant “Lord?” In other
words, how could King David proclaim that his future heir would be both Messiah (Christ), and
his Lord? How is the Messiah, the Son of David, greater than
David?
The answer: Jesus was known as being of the
line of King David. Joseph was of the house of David. So, too, probably, was
Mary because people often married within their own tribe. Hence, Jesus was son
of David by the flesh, but Lord of David by his divinity, just as Jesus is both
son of Mary and Son of God, her Lord. That is why at the Annunciation,
Mary received this message: “And the Lord God will give him the
throne of David his father, and he will rule over the house of Jacob forever,
and of his kingdom there will be no end” (Lk 1:32-33).
Paul notes that Jesus is, “His Son, descended from David according to the
flesh, but established as Son of God in power” (Rom 1:3-4).
Life messages: We need to accept Jesus as our Lord
and Savior in our daily lives.
How? 1) We have to invite him to be the king of our heart
and the ruler of our thoughts, relationships, and actions. 2) Then we
should give Jesus free rein in every area of our lives. 3)
Finally, we should surrender our lives to him serving others
humbly, lovingly and selflessly. Fr. Tony (https://frtonyshomilies.com/)
June 6 Saturday: St. Norbert.
Bishop Mk 12:38-44:
Jesus here confronts the Temple
authorities and challenges the abuses in the “organized religion” of
his time. After engaging in debate with the Sadducees, the Pharisees, the
Scribes, and the Herodians,
Jesus contrasts the external signs of honor sought by the scribes with the
humble, sacrificial offering of a poor widow and declares that she has
found true honor in God’s eyes because of her total commitment to
God’s service with a humble and generous heart.
The attack on pride and hypocrisy: The scribes of Jesus’ day
were experts in the Law of Moses, scholars to whom people turned for a proper
understanding of God’s will as revealed in Scripture. But in today’s
Gospel, Jesus moves from the scribes’ erroneous theology to their bankrupt
ethics, reflected in their craving for pre-eminence both in the synagogues and
in the market places and banquet halls. The scribes considered that the respect
given to them by the common people in public places was their right because of
their learning in the Law, and this made them arrogant and proud. So
Jesus publicly criticizes their behavior as a ceaseless grasping for honor.
Jesus also accuses the scribes of offering long prayers to
God as a means of asserting their superior piety. Jesus denounces the shameless
profiteering of the scribes at the expense of widows. They often acted as
trustees for the estates of wealthy widows and diverted the Temple fund
intended for the support of poor widows to buy expensive robes and temple
decorations.
The widow’s mite: While
sitting in the Court of Women, watching how rich people
put their offerings for the support of Temple worship and the poor,
Jesus publicly expressed his admiration for a poor widow who put in her tiny
gift of two leptons as her offering. While the rich put in
much, and the moderately well-off put in a decent amount, this poor widow
offered to God everything she had. In other words, she gave herself totally
into God’s hands with the sure conviction that He would give her the support
she needed.
Life messages: 1) We need to appreciate, support, and encourage the widows of our parish because they are often active participants in all the liturgical celebrations and parish organizations, and volunteers in visiting and serving the sick and the shut-ins. 2) While we judge people by what they possess, Jesus measures us on the basis of our inner motives and the intentions hidden behind our actions. He evaluates us on the basis of the sacrifices we make for others and on the degree of our surrender to His holy will, gifts that cost us more than just opening our purses.
Fr. Tony (https://frtonyshomilies.com/)