Liturgical Colour : Green
Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, this Sunday all of us are presented with the readings from the Sacred Scriptures in which we are all reminded first of all of the great and ever enduring love which the Lord our God has for each and every one of us, of His patience in seeking us out and in helping us to find our way back to Him. He has always been sending out His servants and disciples to reach out to us, to help and guide us in our journey back to Him. Through all that He has done for us, God has opened for us the path to eternal life and true happiness through Him, and all of us should then remember of every efforts that He had done in loving us despite all of our rebellious behaviours and disobedience against Him.
In our first reading this Sunday, we heard from the Book of the prophet Amos in which the interactions between King Amaziah of the northern kingdom of Israel and the prophet Amos, who hailed from the land of Judah, is presented to us. At that time, both the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, the two kingdoms where the people of Israel, the chosen people of God lived in, had been separated for a long time, for about a few centuries. The northern kingdom of Israel came to be because many of the Israelites rebelled against the House of David after the reign of King Solomon because they were taxed and exploited, which made them to declare independence under a new king, who then also led the people into sin because he established an independent centre of worship in Bethel.
Why was that so? Understanding this will be important to understand the conflict and friction between the King of Israel and the prophet Amos, God’s prophet who had been sent to the Israelites from the land of Judah. The king of the northern kingdom of Israel ever since the first one, Jeroboam, up to that of Amaziah had been carrying out the worship of idols in the temple built in Bethel, in opposition to God’s Law, which stated that the people of God, the Israelites, must go to Jerusalem, to the Temple of God there where the Lord’s Holy Presence resided, to worship Him. Jeroboam established instead a golden calf idol, which was reminiscence of what the Israelites did during their Exodus from Egypt, in rebellion against God.
In addition to that, King Jeroboam also established a new order of priesthood not in accordance with God’s Law which decreed that the priests were to be selected only from among the Levites. As such, ever since, the people of Israel had disobeyed the Lord, committed great sins against Him. Yet, despite all of that, the Lord still loved His people and cared for them all nonetheless, as He continued to sent prophets after prophets to help and guide them all in their paths. The Lord continued to try to reach out to them even when they continued to close their hearts and minds against Him, like how King Amaziah of Israel attempted to harass the prophet Amos to go back to the land of Judah. But Amos stood his ground and told the king that God had sent him to the land of Israel to do His will, to bring His people back to Him.
In our second reading today, we then heard from the Epistle of St. Paul the Apostle to the Church and the faithful in the city of Ephesus where the Apostle spoke of the great love of God which He has always shown and poured down upon us as he wrote about all the grace, love, kindness, wisdom and all the things He has revealed to us, especially through His beloved Son, Our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ. St. Paul told the faithful people of God and hence reminded us all of the intentions which the Lord, our loving God and Master has always had for us from the very beginning. God has created all of us as the most perfect and beloved ones among all that He had created. He has intended for us to share in the fullness of His overflowing and ever generous love.
Unfortunately, through our disobedience and refusal to listen to Him, we have spurned God’s love and squandered everything which He has prepared and intended to give to us. That is why we have been cast out of the Gardens of Eden, from God’s Holy Presence. It was not because God despised us or hated us, and it was not because God intended or wanted us all to suffer in this world from all the various sufferings and hardships, and less still from the unavoidable fate of death. Rather, it was our own disobedience and sins which had led us into this fate, our conscious rejection of God’s love and grace, choosing to allow Satan to tempt us and to persuade us to turn away from God and His path of righteousness and virtue. We chose to listen to his lies and sweet false promises, rather than to trust in God.
In our Gospel passage today, the Lord Jesus sent out His disciples in mission to the places that He Himself would be going to, in order to reach out to more people and to call more and more people to God’s path and loving embrace once again. Through all that He had told the disciples to do, in bringing only what they needed and to trust in the Lord, and most importantly in the missions and works that they had carried out, in healing the people and performing great signs and miracles, casting out demons and proclaiming the Good News of God, once again we have been shown the great love of God which had indeed been manifested through His Son, Jesus Christ, Our Lord and Saviour, Whom St. Paul had been writing about in our second reading this Sunday.
Therefore, brothers and sisters in Christ, let us all stop our stubborn attitudes and behaviours, and strive from now on to recognise just how beloved and fortunate we are to have received God’s love and grace. We must be thankful that God has always remembered us and put us first and foremost in His thoughts, and He has always been kind and generous to us in all things. All of us must also continue to do our part to love Him and put Him as the most important one in our lives, the One Who we all should be committed to in each and every moments of our lives. And as Christians, as God’s disciples and followers, we should also follow in the footsteps of the Apostles and disciples of the Lord, in proclaiming His Good News and truth, showing His love and compassion for all of us through our own worthy lives and actions.
May the Lord, our most loving, compassionate and merciful God and Father continue to watch over us and be gracious to us. May He continue to be patient in loving and caring for us all, His often wayward children, who have often disobeyed and angered Him by our many sins and wickedness. Let us all commit ourselves to turn away from those sins and reject this path of evil, and commit ourselves anew to the path of righteousness and virtue from now on. May God be with us all, and may He empower us all so that we can continue to be courageous to live our lives worthily as His disciples and followers, and as His beloved ones, now and always. Amen.