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Sunday Scripture Readings: Sept. 2, 2007

By Sharon K. Perkins
Catholic News Service

September 2, Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary Time.

Cycle C. Readings:

1) Sirach 3:17-18, 20, 28-29

Psalms 68:4-7, 10-11

2) Hebrews 12:18-19, 22-24a

3) Gospel: Luke 14:1, 7-14

A few years ago I was invited to be one of the vocal soloists at the wedding of the daughter of my second cousin. Although I knew her mother fairly well, I had actually never met the bride, so at the reception hall I seated myself at a table with the other wedding guests. I had just begun to join the long buffet line when my cousin sought me out and invited me to the head table. I proceeded with some surprise to my new seat, where there was not only a place card with my name on it, but attentive wait staff standing by to bring me the food I had prepared to wait in line for.

The unexpected honor that day reminded me of today's parable in which Jesus imparts some commonsense advice on social etiquette but also teaches more profoundly about those who are to be included at the table of the reign of God. True to form, he names those in his culture who would be least expected to receive an invitation -- the "poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind." Clearly this is no abstract or imaginary banquet but one that should occur with regularity, as he instructs his host, "when you hold a lunch or a dinner." God's inclusiveness, praised by the psalmist as giving a "home to the forsaken," is brought about by those in a position to do the inviting without expectation of return.

This approach is at the heart of the "new covenant" which Jesus "mediates," according to the writer of Hebrews. While mediation is usually thought of in terms of reconciling two parties in conflict, it also can describe a "medium" that transfers something from one place to another. Ever the generous host, Jesus becomes the mediating means of extending God's justice and merciful love beyond the children of Abraham to an entirely new group of people. Likewise, by thinking and acting outside my limited comfort zone, I can be a means of bringing God's embrace to one who might not normally expect to receive it. And by practicing humility, I might even experience God's love coming to me in new, unexpected and surprising ways.

QUESTIONS:

When did you last move beyond your "comfort zone" to extend God's love to another? When have you been surprised by God's unexpected graciousness to you?

SCRIPTURE TO BE ILLUSTRATED:

"The one who humbles himself will be exalted" (Luke 14:11).

END



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