Homily
Twenty-fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time
September 13, 2020
St. Patrick Cathedral
Fort Worth, Texas
Sirach 27:30-28:7
Psalm 103:1-4, 9-12
Romans 14:7-9
Matthew 18:21-35
“Wrath and anger are hateful things, yet the sinner hugs them tight.” This passage from the Book of Sirach today is a reflection on anger, vengeance, and forgiveness. Wrath and anger are destructive forces, and we tend to let them overtake us and drive us away from reason. We remember insults and injuries we have received and feel justified in returning the same. Unfortunately, our anger not only hurts others, but make us bitter and resentful and increasingly irrational. The offensive civil discourse of today is neither civil nor discourse because anger has taken over many of us and has foisted disorder into our shared common society.
The extreme positions of the political
left and political right currently have something in common: anger and the
refusal to accept accountability for one’s actions and responsibilities. They
each have the desire to develop a system of government that does not require
human beings to become morally virtuous. Both extremes foist upon the people a
notion of government in which the government becomes the agent whereby the
people become entitled to take little, if any, responsibility for their own
actions or the actions of the society of which they are a part. This includes
both the statist approach of the socialists and the laissez faire
approach of government espoused by contemporary conservatism.
For us to say that individuals are
distinct persons does not mean that they are selfish egoists. Rather,
individuals can only flourish in a community through cooperation with one
another with responsibility for their own behavior and the consequences of
their behavior. This means that persons must cooperate with each other to
survive physically, emotionally, spiritually; or we will end up interacting
with each other as objects to suit our own selfish purposes. Cooperation is
necessary also in the sense that the well-being and moral development of one’s
own person is inherently linked to other persons’ well-being, and without other
persons’ well-being, one’s own well-being would be substantively incomplete.
This
is what comes into focus in the Gospel for this Sunday’s Mass — the parable of
the unforgiving or unmerciful servant. Without excusing the unmerciful servant
for his actions, we wonder how we often imitate those actions. How often do we
forget how God has blessed us? How often do we not even realize what He has
given us? Do we ever ask ourselves how we might repay God’s generosity to us? When
Jesus commands us to forgive seventy-seven times, He is asking for perfection
in forgiveness. Forgiveness takes time and involves our healing and grief of
the pain that we have suffered from the injustice and harm done to us by
another person. Remembering what we have been given and how often we have been
forgiven allows the Holy Spirit to enter and change our hearts. After that,
miracles can happen. And supreme among those miracles is mercy — given and
received. This is the very thing that the unmerciful servant forgot in his
dealings with his fellow servant who owed him so much less (literally, 100 days’
wages) than what he had owed his lord and master, who in showing him mercy,
forgave him the entire debt (literally, 150,000 years’ wages.
It
is important to remember that mercy is not the suspension of the moral order. Mercy
does not ignore wrongdoing and sin. When we receive mercy and when we offer it
to others we are reintroduced to the accountability of the children of God,
just as the prodigal son was so reintroduced by his merciful father. This
accountability maintains a structure of right order beginning with what we owe
God but also involving human beings with a definite hierarchy with rights and
responsibilities.
The
fourth commandment is the duty one has to one’s parents: “Honor your father and
your mother.” The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that “the
fourth commandment is addressed expressly to children in their relationship to
their father and mother, because this relationship is the most universal.” But
it also states that the fourth commandment “extends to the duties of pupils to
teachers, employees to employers, subordinates to leaders, citizens to their
country, and to those who administer or govern it.” Furthermore, “this
commandment includes and presupposes the duties of parents, instructors,
teachers, leaders, magistrates, those who govern, all who exercise authority
over others or over a community of persons” (CCC §2199).
The
Catechism calls us to consider that the fourth commandment establishes
the foundation and order for the subsequent commandments revealed to
Moses. These commandments not only serve for the salvation of the world,
but also articulate human rights; among these are the right to life, the
integrity of human sexuality and marriage, the right to property, the right to
be told the truth, and the right to a good name. Thus, the fourth commandment
“constitutes one of the foundations of the social doctrine of the Church”
(CCC §2198).
It
is important to note that the first three commandments articulate what we as
human beings justly owe God, which is the virtue of piety. The fourth
commandment follows upon this debt to God with what we owe other human beings,
which is the virtue of justice. This human debt begins with our parents, father,
and mother, and what follows in the subsequent commandments are the just
delineations of other human relationships within and with society.
We
must remember that the commandments are the Covenant first made by God with
Moses which makes the disparate group of refugee slaves into one chosen people
— God’s chosen people on pilgrimage to the Promised Land. The Commandments
are not an arbitrarily placed list of single and distinct imperatives united
only in that they are ordered by God and intended for human obedience. As
the Covenant, they are binding and follow each other in a clearly ordered and
inherently united sense. Within God’s Covenant, each Commandment follows
the previous one by drawing God’s people more deeply into the loving and just
relationship of belonging to Him and to each other. The Commandments
belong to each other in both substance and order; God’s people belong to each
other in both the substance of family life and an order of political life, language,
and culture.
For us to understand consciously and live well with each other as a nation we should recall that the Ten Commandments undergird our rights and responsibilities in an ordered manner, including the responsibility to forgive. Our civic responsibility as citizens also depends upon our understanding of forgiveness and mercy. This is the forgiveness and mercy we have received from God and the forgiveness and mercy that we are called to give to one another. This is the only path to freedom for us and the development of our consciences as faithful and not just angry citizens.