Liturgical Colour : Green
Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, today as we listened to the words of the Lord as contained in the Scriptures, we are presented with the sins that we have often committed in life, as shown in what the people of Israel had done in the past, and how God is freeing us all from the bondage to those attachments to evil, wickedness and sin. Through Christ, His beloved Son, Our Lord and Saviour, God had brought His salvation and grace upon us, and He has shown us the path towards eternal life and joy through Him. Now, the question is for us Christians, is how do we respond then to His call for us? Are we going to embrace God’s call with faith or will we instead turn away from Him and seek what is evil in the world around us?
In our first reading today, we heard from the Book of the prophet Hosea on all the wickedness that the Israelites in the northern kingdom centred at Samaria had done, in their rebellion against God. The kings and the people chose to worship pagan idols, the golden calf of king Jeroboam, the first to mislead the Israelites into sin, and then Baal and Asherah and many other Canaanite gods, on top of persecuting the many prophets and messengers that God had patiently sent into their midst to help them to rediscover the right path in life. They stubbornly refused the Lord and His messengers, and shut the doors of their hearts and minds against Him, persecuting and oppressing those prophets and messengers for correcting and reminding them.
Thus, through what we heard in our reading passage today, we are all reminded that while God’s mercy, compassion and love are truly vast and boundless, and while God is ever patient, but He also wants us to know that sin has no place before Him, and we cannot ignore those sins, or else they will threaten to drag us off the path towards God’s salvation. Sin is a terrible force that corrupts us and makes us defiled and unworthy of God, and God alone can heal us from this affliction through His forgiveness and grace. Yet, it also depends on us accepting and embracing His love and mercy. Without that active participation from us in embracing the great and generous mercy of God, then His mercy will not avail us and we will not have embraced the full extent of that mercy, love and kindness.
In our Gospel passage today, we heard the Lord speaking to the Pharisees and to His disciples at the time when He was accused by the Pharisees of colluding with the prince of demons in His miraculous healing and exorcism of the man who was possessed by evil spirits. Those Pharisees and the teachers of the Law were among the most educated and influential members of the community, but they were also those who were the most vocal in their opposition against God, against His works and efforts. Despite everything that the prophets had proclaimed and spoken regarding Him, many of the Pharisees and the teachers of the Law failed to see the truth as they were too preoccupied with their own prejudices and ideals that they refused to listen to the truth that God has brought unto them through His own Son.
And they also refused to open their hearts and minds to believe in God, much as how the people of Israel at the time of the prophet Hosea and before that had been unfaithful, stubborn and wicked in their actions. Much of this can be attributed to pride, ego and greed, all of which had often led mankind to their fall, all throughout history. Nonetheless, the Lord continued to persevere through His mission, reaching out to the people, who were described in our Gospel today, as likened to a flock of sheep without a shepherd. The Lord took pity of them, loving them and showed them His truth, teaching them and guiding them to the right path, sending them all His own beloved Son in the end to show us all the path towards the everlasting life in Him.
Brothers and sisters in Christ, through what we have heard in our Scripture passages today, therefore we are all reminded that all of us must be ever vigilant against sin, and we have to always be wary that we do not fall into the temptations to turn away from God and His path. We should not allow the pressures and the coercions of this world and the allures of sin to force us to embrace the ways of the world. There will be plenty of avenues through which Satan and his followers will try to strike at us, trying to turn us towards the path of sin and evil. We have to resist them and entrust ourselves in the Lord, and follow Him with commitment and faith, in doing what is right and just in His Presence at all times.
As Christians, as those whom God had called and chosen, and those who have responded with faith to His call, let us all therefore seek to humble ourselves more, turn away from the path of pride and from the vices of the world, resisting and rejecting the various temptations and pressures which had brought down many among our ancestors and predecessors. We should always remember everything that the Lord had done for our sake, in how He has reached out to us with love and mercy, and keep in mind that none of us are perfect, and none of us are truly better than the others around us, and therefore, instead of having a selfish and self-serving attitude, thinking that we are better than others, let us all begin from ourselves, by realising our sinfulness and strive to seek and embrace wholeheartedly God’s mercy and forgiveness, and love Him and our fellow mankind with the same kind of love that God has shown us all first.
May the Lord, our most loving, compassionate and merciful God continue to guide and strengthen us all in our paths in life so that we may continue to walk ever more faithfully in His path and in His loving Presence, becoming great source of inspiration and hope for everyone around us. May He bless our every good deeds, efforts and endeavours, in everything that we do for His greater glory, now and always. Amen.