Homily - 33rd Sunday in OT - Year
A
Buzzword - Lost Opportunities! Everyone wants to live life to the
full! Why, then, are so many disappointed? Could it be because we set ourselves
impossible goals? Or is it because we neglect opportunities offered to us?
Today's readings touch on this matter of "win/ lose" situations.
Proverbs 31:10-13, 19-20,30-31: tells of the character who courted and won a treasure for a wife, no doubt against stiff competition! Then, as now, "faint heart never won fair lady"!
Thessalonians 5: 1-6: Paul warns that time is slipping by while they argue over when Christ will come the second time.
Gospel Matt.
25: 14-30: Jesus is quite blunt in his advice - use your talents or
else!!!!
Introduction: I think we all recognise
that "hindsight is a wonderful gift"! "If only I knew then what I know now" -
how different life would be. When "Xerox" first announced its marvellous new
technique for copying documents, instead of asking "what's wrong with carbon
paper?" I would have bought into the company! Or IBM! or Microsoft! But that's
life for most of us. "We are constantly bolting the stable door after the horse
has bolted"! And if we ask why is this, it would seem that it is either because
we have become disillusioned about our ability to pick winners -"once bit, twice
shy"; or, we simply hold off, waiting for a favourable time to make a move.
Either way, we neglect to live in the here and now.
Point 1: Inside each of us there exist two
different characters - the would-be gambler and the bet-hedger; and most of us
live caught between these two characters. We take very few chances and often
miscalculate when we do; but, if we are to avoid total stagnation, we must learn
to take some risks. The authentically human life is one that maintains a balance
between the gambler and the bet-hedger.
This is the challenge that Jesus is laying down in today's gospel reading. The
religious leaders of the time, the Scribes and the Pharisees, had become
obsessively cautious. Any change, any development, any alteration, anything new
was anathema. Their approach had induced a religious paralysis which Christ was
determined to challenge. For Christ, there is no place for the closed mind in
religious thinking. His statement is that to each has been given different
abilities which will contribute to the growth of the Kingdom - to one is given
five, another two, and another one. Although people are not equal in talent, it
is expected that they will be equal in effort - five makes five; two makes two.
It is expected that each will work to the best of one's ability. But the person
who does not even make an effort is in serious trouble. Christ makes no bones
about it - "Use it or lose it"!
Point 2: Why is it that a person holds back from
having a punt in the Heavenly Stakes? For some it is the "if only" syndrome "if
only I had known...."; "if only I had listened"; "If only I had studied
harder...". For others, it is the "but" word - "I hear what you are saying,
but...."; I could have done that, but....". Others hold back for fear of being
criticised, usually by those who are doing nothing! All such excuses stifle the
present moment, and the possibilities that are at hand are lost. Omar Ibn Al-Halif,
ancient Persian sage, commented that "four things come not back - the spoken
word; the sped arrow; time past; the neglected opportunity". Fortunately, with
Christ, there are second chances.
Conclusion: The big question is - in what areas
of life are we expected to show this constant growth? Essentially it is in our
religious development where it is expected that our Faith in and acceptance of
Christ, will continue to grow. Consequently, as we grow stronger in our Faith,
our sense of Hope in the promises given by Christ becomes more real; as these
two basic virtues strengthen and grow, the virtue of Love grows commensurately
until Love motivates us rather than Fear. Such an attitude will, of necessity,
have impact on our every day lives and relationships. It is at this point that
we have a better understanding of the opportunities that come our way to use our
talents..
We have been given a life time of opportunity; for some this time is longer than
for others. But, short or long, what is given is time enough for God's purpose.
All that is required of us is that we use the opportunities that come our way.
Scriptural reference: We must work the works of him who sent me while it is
day; night is coming when no one can work. [John 9:4]