15th Sunday in Ordinary Time
This Sunday we celebrate the 15th Sunday of Ordinary Time. In our First Reading Moses told the people that God’s commandments are not beyond their reach; they are close and in their hearts, ready to be followed with all their heart and soul. In the Second Reading Christ shows us God, created everything, holds everything together, leads the church, and reconciles all things through his death on the cross. In our Gospel reading Jesus is asked the question ‘who is my neighbor” and this is a good question to ask ourselves in the current situation of Immigration with the resulting opportunities and problems that arise .
When I was a youngster your neighbors were the people that lived next door to you or those who lived in your street or road they were the families you would go to when you ran out of milk or sugar to borrow some or to share the news about the people and happenings in the area. Sadly this is not the case today as we live in a world where you might not know your neighbour or who they are. The Gospel story tells us about the Good Samaritan it is a story that all of us are familiar with. It was the Samaritan who stopped with the man who was lying on the side of the road it was the Samaritan who was moved with compassion to help him. The Priest and the Levite walked on and passed by on the other side of the road because they felt that it was beneath their dignity to help the man when they should have been doing exactly that. Our Gospel story tells us what we should be doing in 2025 to show our love for our neighbors. First, it tells us that we must be willing to help even if others brought trouble on themselves for whatever reason. Second, our concern to help others must be practical. And lastly, our love for others must be as wide and as inclusive as God’s all encompassing love for us.
We remember that God excludes no one from his love and care. At all times we must be ready to do good to others just as God is good to us we must be good to others. Jesus not only taught God’s way of love, he also showed how far God was willing to go to share in our suffering and to restore our wholeness in life and happiness. Jesus overcame sin, suffering, and death through his victory on the cross on Good Friday. True compassion not only identifies and empathizes with the one who is in pain, it also takes that pain on in order to bring freedom and restoration. Our world is moving towards ways of doing things that hurt more and more people time after time instead of restoring them. We are in this world so we cannot pretend that it’s got nothing to do with us for it has everything to do with us as we are Christians. In these days with a lot of turmoil and confusion going on around us the words of the first reading ring in our ears obey the voice of the Lord and we ask ourselves what is the Lord asking us to do? We are being asked to reach out in order to show friendship to our neighbors and those who have come to be our neighbors as migrants from other countries.
At the end of the Gospel Jesus askes the Lawyer Which of these three, do you think, proved himself a neighbor to the man who fell into the brigands‘ hands?’ ‘The one who took pity on him’ the lawyer replied. Jesus said to him, ‘Go, and do the same yourself.’ And he says exactly the same to us today here and now in 2025, so let us go now and do the same.
