OT XXVI [A] (Ez
18:25-28; Phil 2:1-11; Mt 21:28-32)
In the
eleventh century, King Henry III of Bavaria grew tired of court life and the
pressures of being a monarch. He made application to Prior Richard at a local
monastery, asking to be accepted as a contemplative and spend the rest of his
life in the monastery. “Your Majesty,” said Prior Richard, “do
you understand that the pledge here is one of obedience? That will be hard
because you have been a king?” “I understand,” said Henry. “The
rest of my life I will be obedient to you, as Christ leads you.” “Then I
will tell you what to do,” said Prior Richard. “Go back to your
throne and serve faithfully in the place where God has put you.” When King
Henry died, a statement was written, “The King learned to rule by being
obedient.” Christ was obedient to the will of his Father unto death, even death
on the cross. As his disciples, we, too, are called to be obedient to the will
of God.
This
passage from the gospel sets before us a picture of two very
imperfect sets of people, of whom one set were none the less better
than the other. Neither son in the story was the kind of son to bring full
joy to his father. Both were unsatisfactory; but the one who in the end
obeyed was incalculably better than the other.
The Gospel
tells us that there are two very common classes of people in this world. First,
there are the people whose profession is much better than their practice. They
will promise anything. They make great protestations of piety and fidelity.
They fight for the rights of the church. They collect together the down-
trodden to fight for their rights. But, their practices lag behind. At least
some of us fall into this category. Our charity; our compassion; our holy rites
are only demonstrations without the element of sincerity. We sometimes profess
their faith but never practice.
Second, there are those whose practice is far better than their profession.
They are fond of doing kind and generous things, almost in secret.
But the real good man is the man in whom profession and practice meet
and match.
This parable
teaches that promises can never take the place of performance, and fine words
are not substitute for fine deeds. The world has many preachers, but it is
still looking for performers; the world is keen to have a Florence
Nightingale; a Gandhiji or a Mother Theresa.
It is common in
today's world to find Catholics who openly disagree with core Catholic
teaching. We all know people who say that they are Catholic, but who
don't come to Mass on Sunday - they only come on Christmas and
Easter, if they come at all.
We all have
heard or read about politicians who say that they are ardent and
practicing Catholics, but who publicly support laws that go directly
against some of the most basic tenets of morality as taught by
the Catholic Church.
We call ourselves
practicing Catholics, and yet we spend more time working on our
favorite hobbies than on our prayer life, and we spend more
time becoming an expert in our profession than in
our faith, and we tolerate in our own lives hidden habits of
selfishness and sin while we criticize other people for their more visible faults.
If we think
about it a little bit, we see very clearly that this contradiction between what
we believe and how we live is not a good thing. It is like
the second son in today's parable. He impressed his dad
with fancy words and a good show of healthy obedience, but underneath
the surface he was still living for his own self-centered
gratification, not for the greater good of his mission in
the Father's kingdom.
When we fall
into that contradiction, it is no wonder that we don't grow in
our experience of Christ's love and grace, and it is no wonder that
we don't grow in wisdom, interior peace, and the deep Christian joy that
we thirst for. Faith, if it's real, makes a real impact on
our lives. When it doesn't, our spiritual growth is stunted.
The surest
way to banish hypocrisy from our lives is to adopt as our personal
motto the phrase that Jesus taught us in the Our Father: "Thy Kingdom
come, thy will be done." God's will is dependable and truthful, and
when we make it our highest priority, we too become dependable and
truthful. And unlike followers of some other religions, as Christians we
have an objective standard for God's will that protects us from
doing evil and calling it "the will of God."
God's
commandments, the responsibilities of our state in life, and the inspirations
of the Holy Spirit: this is the threefold path to a truthful,
fulfilling life, free from the poison of hypocrisy.
Today let’s
ask ourselves: Which son am I ? Do my actions indicate my obedience to God’s
will? Am I ready to change my attitudes and behavior?
The
challenge is to be like a third son: Jesus, who was always faithful. St. Paul
reminds us “Have in you the same attitude that is also in Christ Jesus, who..
humbled himself, becoming obedient unto the point of death.
Today, let's
make Christ's motto our motto: Thy Kingdom come, Lord, and thy will be done, in
my life, just as it is in heaven.