Moses Before the Burning Bush, Domenico Fetti [Web Gallery of Art]
Exodus 3:1-8a, 13-15, First Reading
Readings
(New American Bible:
Philippines, USA)
Readings
(Jerusalem Bible: Australia,
England & Wales, India [optional], Ireland, New Zealand, Pakistan,
Scotland, South Africa)
Gospel Luke 13:1-9 (New Revised Standard
Version, Anglicised Catholic Edition)
At that very time there
were some present who told Jesus about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had
mingled with their sacrifices. He asked them, ‘Do you
think that because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse sinners
than all other Galileans? No, I tell you; but
unless you repent, you will all perish as they did. Or those eighteen who were killed when the tower of Siloam
fell on them—do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others
living in Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but
unless you repent, you will all perish just as they did.’
Then he told this
parable: ‘A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard; and he came looking for
fruit on it and found none. So he said to the
gardener, “See here! For three years I have come looking for fruit on this fig
tree, and still I find none. Cut it down! Why should it be wasting the soil?” He replied, “Sir, let it alone for one more year, until I
dig round it and put manure on it. If it bears fruit next
year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.”’
+++
The Gospel in Filipino Sign Language
The parable in today's gospel reminds me of an incident on Thursday of Easter Week 1970 in Mount Vernon, Kentucky. I had driven the 1,200 or so kms from New York on Wednesday of Holy Week with a group of students from Manhattanville College, Purchase, New York, where I was studying music at the time. My car was an old Nash Rambler that I had bought for one dollar from Irish friends, Doug and Maeve Devlin, the previous year when they moved back to Dublin. (They now live in Nova Scotia, Canada, where I'm preparing this.) The car was more than 15 years on the road and the doors didn't lock. But it had a great engine.
Our Lady of Mount Vernon Church
However,
the day before we were about to drive back to New York something was preventing
the car from going at more than about 30 kph. I took it to a local garage. The
mechanics tried for an hour or so trying to loosen what was too tight, without
success. I was almost resigned, somewhat like the owner of the fig tree, to
leaving the car, forgetting about it and travelling by bus back to New York.
However, the 'vinedresser' in me said to the mechanics, 'Try just once more'.
They did. And whatever the problem was, it disappeared.
A few months later I gave the car to my mechanic in White Plains, New York, a Belgian named Joe Brody. When I had first brought the car to Joe the previous year he said, 'This is OK for driving around town'. 'I'm driving to Kentucky tomorrow', I told him. And the car, which I jokingly called 'The Irish Rover', served me well in its latter days.
A few months later I gave the car to my mechanic in White Plains, New York, a Belgian named Joe Brody. When I had first brought the car to Joe the previous year he said, 'This is OK for driving around town'. 'I'm driving to Kentucky tomorrow', I told him. And the car, which I jokingly called 'The Irish Rover', served me well in its latter days.
The parable of Jesus doesn't tell us whether or not
the tree bore fruit the following year, just as the parable of the prodigal
son, read at Mass on Saturday of the Second Week of Lent doesn't tell us
whether or not the older brother joined the celebration.
What the parable does tell us is that
God doesn't give up on us.
It also tells us that what is 'waste'
in our lives - our sins, our failures to cooperate with God's grace and so on -
can bring about fruitfulness when we let go of it. Manure is bodily waste - but
it has the potential to bring about new life in plants.
The first part of the gospel reminds us
starkly that we can perish unless we repent. God has given us free will. We can
choose to accept God's love or we can choose to reject it. God will not give up
on us till our dying breath.
But Lent is a special grace to the
whole Church and to each member so that we won't leave it till our dying breath
to turn away from sin.
We have many examples of saints who
were once far from God. Perhaps St Augustine is the best known of these. But
his very 'past' has been a grace to the Church ever since he turned back to
God, largely because of the prayers of his mother St Monica. Not only did God
not give up on St Augustine but he called him to be a source of hope to other
sinners. And he called St Monica to be a source of hope to persons close to God
who suffer as they see their loved ones far from God, like the father in the
parable of the prodigal son.
St Augustine's wasted years are not
really wasted. They are part of the 'manure' that a loving God uses to nurture
life in others leading fruitless lives.
The fig tree in the parable didn't have
a will of its own but each of us has. It is possible for us to choose to reject
God's love. The Catechism of the Catholic Church, No 1033, says:
We cannot be united with God unless we
freely choose to love him. But we cannot love God if we sin gravely against
him, against our neighbor or against ourselves: 'He who does not love remains
in death. Anyone who hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no
murderer has eternal life abiding in him.' Our Lord warns us that we shall be
separated from him if we fail to meet the serious needs of the poor and the
little ones who are his brethren. To die in mortal sin without repenting and
accepting God's merciful love means remaining separated from him for ever by
our own free choice. This state of definitive self-exclusion from communion
with God and the blessed is called 'hell'.
Pope Benedict XVI [Wikipedia]
And in a homily on 25 March 2007 in the Roman parish of St
Felicity and her Children, Martyrs, where there are many Filipino parishioners
as he noted, Pope Benedict, preaching on the gospel of the woman caught in
adultery, said:
Jesus does not enter into a theoretical discussion
with his interlocutors on this section of Mosaic Law; he is not concerned with
winning an academic dispute about an interpretation of Mosaic Law, but his goal
is to save a soul and reveal that salvation is only found in God's love. This
is why he came down to the earth, this is why he was to die on the Cross and
why the Father was to raise him on the third day. Jesus came to tell us that he
wants us all in Paradise and that hell, about which little is said in our time,
exists and is eternal for those who close their hearts to his love.
Pope Benedict added: Dear brothers
and sisters, on the Lenten journey we are taking, which is rapidly reaching its
end, we are accompanied by the certainty that God never abandons us and that
his love is a source of joy and peace; it is a powerful force that impels us on
the path of holiness, if necessary even to martyrdom. This is what happened to
the children and then to their brave mother, Felicity, the patron Saints of your
Parish.
May we never take God's love for granted but may we
never lose hope in his unconditional love for each of us.
A postscript
Main Street, Mount Vernon, Kentucky [Wikipedia]
The church in Mount Vernon was still very
new when I went there. In earlier years Mass had been celebrated in the home
of Mom and Pop Reynolds. At the time there was only a handful of Catholics in
the area and many people had strange ideas about them. When I arrived in Holy
Week 1970 I discovered that Mom Reynolds, an elderly woman, had been bedridden
for months due to a broken hip. She hadn't received the Sacrament of the
Sick and I asked her if she would like to. She was delighted. Her husband was
present and looked as fit as the proverbial fiddle. I brought Holy Communion
almost every day to Mrs Reynolds.
On Friday of Easter Week as I was having lunch just
before we were to drive back to New York Mom Reynolds phoned to tell me that
her husband had been taken to hospital and asked me if I could give him the
last rites. I went immediately. He was in a coma and I anointed him.
When I
came back the following summer to Mount Vernon I went to the home of the
Reynolds couple, but only Mom was there. She told me that her husband had died
shortly after I had left for New York. She also told me that he had felt 'left
out' when I had anointed her during Holy Week! I was a young priest at the time
and it was still very soon after Vatican II and the notion that the Sacrament
of the Sick was only for the dying was still prevalent, as I learned from
95-year-old Mrs Murphy in the same parish. She was housebound but when I
suggested the Sacrament of the Sick she nearly threw me out! However, she was
very happy to receive Holy Communion almost every day while I was there.
God showed his love to Pop Reynolds in a very
'thoughtful' way at the end of his life. And this gave great consolation to his
wife. Both of them had been faithful Catholics all their years and, in a very
real way, missionaries by their faithfulness and by making their home available
for Mass in a community that to some extent was hostile to Catholics. (By the
time I was there that hostility had nearly disappeared.)
Antiphona ad introitum Entrance Antiphon Ps 25:15-16
Oculi mei semper ad Dominum,
My eyes are always on the Lord,
quia ipse evellet de laqueo pedes meos:
quia ipse evellet de laqueo pedes meos:
for he rescues my feet from the snare.
respice in me, et miserere mei,
Turn to me and have mercy on me,
quoniam unicus et pauper sum ego.
quoniam unicus et pauper sum ego.
for I am alone and poor.
Ad te, Domine, levavi animam meam:
To you, O Lord,
I lift up my soul.
Deus meus, in te confido, non erubescam.
O my God, in you I trust; do not let me be put
to shame.
Gloria Patri et Filii et Spiritui sancto
Gloria Patri et Filii et Spiritui sancto
Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy
Spirit
Sicut erat in principio et nunc et semper
Sicut erat in principio et nunc et semper
As it was in the beginning, is now
Et in saecula saeculorum. Amen.
And will be for ever. Amen.
Oculi mei semper ad Dominum,
My eyes are always on the Lord,
quia ipse evellet de laqueo pedes meos:
quia ipse evellet de laqueo pedes meos:
for he rescues my feet from the snare.
respice in me, et miserere mei,
Turn to me and have mercy on me,
quoniam unicus et pauper sum ego.
quoniam unicus et pauper sum ego.
for I am alone and poor.
The video has the longer version of the Entrance Antiphon, in Latin and English, as
used in the Mass in the Extraordinary Form, often referred to as 'The
Traditional Latin Mass' or 'TLM'. The text used in the Ordinary Form of the
Mass, the 'New Mass', is in bold.
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