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RELIGION LITURGY AND LIFE

26th Sunday of Ordinary Time

This weekend we begin the month long synod on synodality being held in Rome during October which is the first of 2 synodal meetings the next will be held in 2024. There have been many arguments on various things that people believe this synod will do or not do and those people will find that they are wrong as our God is a God of surprises. Above all else we have to pray that all those who are at the synod will have wise heads and give proper consideration to all the points raised in the meetings that will take place. In our Gospel reading for this weekend we hear the story of the two sons. The first son, who said no to his father but then went out and did what his father wanted. And then the second  son, who says yes to the father but does not deliver . The first son “thought the better of it.” He was open to change. The second son was set and closed. The ability to change one’s mind is essential to all healthy relationships.  

A mind that is closed, whether from pride, stubbornness or stupidity, tends to destroy all relationships, e.g., when we refuse to admit a mistake, when we are unwilling to apologise and change our ways, when we persist in prejudice against a person or group, when we think we know it all when we don’t.  Jesus surprises the people around him by responding favorably to the actions of the tax collectors and prostitutes who may have gotten it wrong at first but have since repented and come back.   Too many of us are down on ourselves for our past lives. Many of us can truthfully say, “I have made mistakes.” But we are here now. We are doing our best to follow the Lord. We try our best to receive the strength of Christ, the power of the Gospel, and integrate this into our daily lives. This Gospel passage points out something very important about faith and religion. Sometimes the terms faith and religion are taken to be the same. But they are not at all the same. The difference between them be seen more clearly if we speak of religious practices rather than religion. There is of a close relationship between religious practice and faith.

 Religious practices have to be based on and animated by faith It is easy to say that we are going to do something to please someone. If we really want to honour our God, we must find ways to do the will of God. Sometimes it won’t be easy, sometimes it will put us out.  The Lord calls us to a living faith whereby we enter into a living relationship with God. That involves something more than adherence to a system of ideas or obedience to a collection of rules or the practice of certain rites. It requires an authentic desire to follow Christ, whatever the costs to us material or otherwise. Through this parable of “the second chance,” grace is given to enable us “to change our minds.” We can start anew. This parable is Good News indeed, for those who think it is too late to change, or can’t change. Jesus  who tells this parable to us today assures us we have his help to redirect our lives – to say “Yes” to the God who calls and enables us to change our hearts and our minds in order to bring about his kingdom in our world where we are today.

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