Getting God Wrong
why some are first who will be last
Announcements for August 20, 2022:
If you need anything at all, please be in touch with me.
Our Women’s Group will meet this Tuesday, August 23rd. To join this vibrant, loving group of women in prayer and fellowship, simply come as you are to the church at 7:00pm.
In the middle of a global pandemic, OLMC parishioners launched Lumen Gentium Academy, a high school founded on the strength and successes of OLMC School. Join us on Thursday, August 24th at 6:30pm to see what all the buzz is about. Visit LGA's website to register. Come and see how to Let Your Light Shine at LGA!
Visit the OLMC Parishioner Portal for all of our recent announcements.
Dear Saints,
This weekend's Gospel passage is one of the most harrowing in all of Scripture. In response to the question, "Lord, will only a few people be saved?" Jesus eventually offers:
And there will be wailing and grinding of teeth when you see Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and all the prophets in the kingdom of God and you yourselves cast out... For behold, some are last who will be first, and some are first who will be last.
I'll explore it in a little more depth this weekend, but let me draw out the main point of application for us.
So much of life seems to be about jockeying for position. That must be the sense with which Jesus heard the question about how many will be saved. But God's Kingdom - God's loving, healing, and saving rule - doesn't work like that.
Friendship with God, membership in the Body of Christ, etc. is pure gift. We did nothing to merit God's love; it is ours, simply, to be transformed by it. So when we start to see ourselves as "better than him/her" or "more deserving of this/that than she/he is," it is clear that we're getting God and his purposes wrong.
We might look first (or even "blessed") to ourselves and all the world besides, but if our lives aren't bringing God's blessing to others we're dead last. And if we look like we're coming in last because we live to love and serve the stragglers, then we're winning.
I love you, my friends, and I look forward to seeing you soon.
Christ's Peace,
Father Daniel
δοῦλος Χριστοῦ Ἰησοῦ
PS Yes, I'm home this weekend! :)
Preparing for Mass?
Check out this weekend's readings:
Twenty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time
The Betrayal of Christ
Guercino, 1621