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Ordinary Time

Jan 16 2025

Come to the Table Worthily

A newspaper columnist expressed his chagrin at friends not responding to his  “e-vites” (e-mail invitations), even after repeated requests. He speculated that  some might have held off responding in case “something better” came along. 

Jesus tells a tale of invited guests refusing to come to a wedding feast for a  king’s son. This parable is aimed once again at the religious leaders, confronting  them with their refusal to accept him as one sent by God. Matthew’s violent version of the parable differs from Luke’s peaceful one (14:16–24), since it reflects  the destruction of Jerusalem that happened decades later. But it reminded both  communities that the invitation to the kingdom of God could be refused. 

Matthew also includes the expulsion of a man who comes in without a wedding  garment. This seems seem a little strange since people had been called in off  the streets. It serves as a reminder that showing up is not enough. The grace of  being invited to the Lord’s table, then as now, does not excuse us from wearing  the appropriate garment—that is, “putting on” Christ. 

Every Eucharist tells us that we have a place at the table, and this table prepares us for another table at the end of time, when all peoples will gather and the  Lord will move among us, wiping every tear away, and death shall be no more.  We are a people of many tables—of the word, the Eucharist, the world, and the  kingdom of God. 

Consider/Discuss

  • Do you see yourself as one who has been invited to have a place at  many tables? 
  • What does “putting on Christ” mean to you? 
  • How do you think about the end time when all will gather? 

Responding to the Word

We pray to respond wholeheartedly to God’s invitation to that final gathering  place where rich food and choice wines will be served and our shepherd God,  who even now spreads a table before us, will move among us. We can ask the  Spirit to help us wear Christ well.

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Jan 16 2025

Scripture Study for

Isaiah depicts a scene of permanent victory, abundant feasting, and life without end. He sees a high mountain on which a sumptuous feast, probably the  banquet of the end of time, is prepared for all people. It is also on this mountain  that God destroys death. Once death is destroyed there will be no cause for  tears. Instead, there will be rejoicing. On that day of fulfillment, the people will  acclaim the God to whom they looked for salvation. The hand of God, the symbol  of God’s power, will rest on this holy mountain, bringing to fulfillment all of God’s  promises and blessings. 

Paul is not speaking here of the ordinary trials and sufferings that invade every  life. He is talking about the tribulations that will engulf all people at the onslaught  of the end time, the suffering known as the “birth pangs of the Messiah.” For Paul,  the burdens of his ministry form the avenue by which he enters this time of tribulation. He does not make light of the help that the Philippians must have offered him.  Acting this way, they actually participated in his ministerial endeavors, and he is  grateful. For this reason, they too are promised a share in the glory of the new age. 

Once again Jesus is in confrontation with the leaders of the people. The apocalyptic character of the parable he tells is unmistakable. The metaphor of a banquet  to describe the delights of the age of fulfillment can be traced as far back as the  ancient prophets (see Isaiah 25:6). An interim exists between the initial invitation  to the wedding banquet and the announcement that the banquet is ready. This  interim resembles the period of time between the invitation to participate in the  age of fulfillment and one’s entrance into that age. The point of the parable is clear:  enjoyment of the time of fulfillment is open to all, but guaranteed to none. 

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Jan 15 2025

Bearing Fruit: Not Just for Vineyards

God’s relationship with people is at the heart of both the first reading and the  Gospel, but there is a difference. In Isaiah, destruction comes to the vineyard; in  the Gospel, it comes to those entrusted with the care of the vineyard. 

Isaiah’s song highlights the people’s failure—the house of Israel and the  people of Judah—to bear fruit, to provide the Lord who has lovingly tended this  vineyard with anything more than wild grapes, that is, bloodshed and violence  against each other. Because of this, the owner will turn his back on them, no longer giving care but letting it be trampled underfoot, no longer pruning or hoeing,  but allowing thorns and briers to take over. This song is demanding conversion. In Jesus’ parable, the focus is on those entrusted with the care of the vineyard.  Jesus addresses the chief priests and the elders in Jerusalem, not only criticizing  their failure to care for the people adequately, but also their rejection of those  God sent to call them to conversion. The parable calls all religious leaders to  remember that authority is for service. 

Bearing fruit in our lives, being true and honorable, just and pure, lovely and  gracious is the fruit God desires from all, as Paul reminds the Philippians. God’s  people, but especially their leaders, have a responsibility to bear fruit. No one  is let off the hook. God expects a return for love so lavishly given.

Consider/Discuss

  • Have you ever tended a plant or grown a garden? What did this  experience teach you? 
  • What fruitfulness God is asking of you? 
  • Is there anything that prevents you from making a return to God for  all that has been given to you? 

Responding to the Word

St. Paul calls us to set aside anxiety and to make known to God any requests  we have for more fruitful lives. In prayer we will find that “the peace of God that  surpasses all understanding will guard our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.”

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Jan 15 2025

Scripture Study for

The first reading tells a story about a vineyard. The vine dresser diligently  performed each step of the process to produce grapes. However, not only was  there no abundant harvest, but wild, useless grapes sprang forth. This unnatural  yield was not due to poor cultivation. Rather, the vineyard itself had failed. It  becomes clear that the prophet is really talking about the Israelites. Judgment is  now passed on the vineyard (the people). God invested so much in the future of  this people, and they scorned the attention of the vineyard owner. What began  as a poem about friendship and devotion ends as a message of doom. 

The tenderness with which Paul regards the Philippians is evident here. They are anxious and Paul offers them encouragement and direction. Rather than be  anxious, they are admonished to turn to God in prayer. Paul is not advising some  kind of magical exercise that will right every wrong, but an openness to God that  itself can help people bear trying circumstances. They will then know the peace  that only God can give, the peace that surpasses all understanding. He then  exhorts them to live lives patterned after Christ. Christian thinking and behavior  will open the believer to the kind of peace that only God can give. 

Jesus too tells a story about a vineyard. When he is finished, he turns to the  leaders and asks them to provide a legal ruling on the situation. They must have  known that the parable was highlighting their own resistance to God’s directives,  and they also would have known that whatever judgment they might suggest  would fall on their heads as well. The sentence they passed was quite harsh, but  it was actually no harsher than the conduct of the tenants. Just as the vineyard is  taken from the wicked tenants and given to others, so the kingdom of God will be  taken from the leaders and given to people who will produce fruits. 

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Jan 15 2025

Doing “Yes”

In The Secret Life of Bees, August, an older black woman, is talking about “the  problem with people” to Lily, a younger white woman who has run away from  an abusive father. Lily has said that people don’t really know what matters. But  August says the deeper problem is that people do know what matters, but don’t  choose it. 

God tells Ezekiel that virtue’s proof is in choosing to do the right thing. What  you choose to do matters. So be careful not to go off the right path at the end of  your days. On the other hand, you might be off the right path for years, but end  up hopping back on at the very end, and you will have life. It doesn’t sound very  fair; nevertheless, it’s where you are when the end comes that counts. And you  don’t know when the end will come. 

Jesus confronts the religious leaders with a parable. A father asks his two sons  to do some work in the vineyard. One talks a good game but never makes it  into the field; the other refuses outright, but then goes and does what his father  asked. In telling this parable, Jesus compares these leaders unfavorably to the  tax collectors and prostitutes. The elders must have been shocked. 

 “Have in you that same attitude that is also in Christ Jesus,” writes Paul to his  beloved Philippians. The attitude he urged on them was giving oneself for the  sake of others—even unto death. In this way, we not only speak but also do “Yes.”  Choose to live Christ. 

Consider/Discuss

  • Can you think of a time when you said yes to someone’s request but  did not carry it out? 
  • Do you think of Jesus as one who emptied himself, even of life, trusting his Father to fill him? 
  • How is God calling you to empty yourself at this time, doing “nothing out of selfishness, but regarding others as more important than  yourselves”? 

Responding to the Word

In the Our Father we pray that God will not lead us into temptation but deliver  us from evil. We pray that we will be obedient to the Father’s will to the point of  death so that we will be raised into eternal life and join in the song of exaltation,  confessing Jesus Christ as Lord.

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