July 10, 2009

Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time / Msgr. Owen F. Campion

The Sunday Readings

Msgr. Owen CampionThe Book of Amos is the source of this weekend’s first reading.

Amos is one of the relatively few prophets of whom something is known. Many prophets give some details about themselves, but not many give more than a few personal details.

By contrast, it is known that Amos was from Tekoa, a small village about 10 miles south of Jerusalem in Judea. He herded sheep and tended fig trees. He obviously was intelligent, and knew the traditions of his ancestors.

He wrote during the reign of King Uzziah of Judah, or between the years 783 and 742 B.C. It was a time of prosperity and national security.

Even so, as often has been the case in history, the poor still were in want. The gap between the rich and the less fortunate was evident.

Amos saw himself as an authentic prophet. The other prophets of his time, he thought, were hired by the king ultimately to strengthen the king’s rule over the people. Under such arrangements, the other prophets could not be trusted to preach the undefiled word of God.

This weekend’s reading reports a clash between Amos and a priest in the Jerusalem temple. Amos reasserts his role, insisting that he was called by God to be a prophet.

St. Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians provides the second reading.

In the first century A.D., Ephesus was a major commercial center in the Roman Empire and an important port on the Mediterranean Sea. Shifts in the soil and collections of sediment have left the ruins of Ephesus in present-day Turkey a distance from the seashore.

Ephesus was a center for the vices and fast business usually associated with such ports.

In addition, it was one of the most popular religious shrines in the empire. Its great temple, dedicated to Diana, the Greek goddess of the moon, was one of the marvels of the ancient world.

Pilgrims came from everywhere in the empire to venerate the goddess. Accommodating these pilgrims was itself a big business in Ephesus.

St. Paul sought in the epistle to reinforce the Christian commitment of the followers of Christ in the city. He did this by reminding the Christians in Ephesus that Jesus died for them, and that in faith they are one with the Lord.

St. Mark’s Gospel furnishes the last reading.

In this reading, Jesus summons the “Twelve,” the Apostles whom the Lord called by name. Jesus sends them out into the highways and byways. He tells them not to burden themselves with supplies or provisions because God will supply what they need.

They obediently went out into the countryside and preached what Jesus had taught them. They possessed the Lord’s power. They drove devils away. They anointed the sick, using that ancient gesture of healing and strengthening mentioned elsewhere in the Bible, and they cured the sick.

Reflection

The reading from St. Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians is the centerpiece of this weekend’s Liturgy of the Word.

Originally, it was written for a group of believers surrounded on all sides by paganism and hostility.

St. Paul reassured them, and this weekend the reading reassures us. We have been redeemed. Our knowledge of Christ is neither accidental nor coincidental. God has chosen us. Christ is with us.

Still, we need nourishment and guidance as we continue to live on Earth. God did not abandon the Chosen People in ancient times. He sent prophets to them.

This divine concern endures today. God sends us messengers, in the person of the Twelve, and in the persons of the bishops in the Church who bring us the words of the Gospels even now.

Through the Apostles and their successors, God heals us in Christ. Healed and renewed, we move forward to eternal life. We will not die. †

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