In yesterday’s Gospel Jesus utters a
warning: “Strive to enter through the narrow
gate.” Jesus’ warnings have a purpose: they are meant to keep us from hardening
our hearts. Hardness of heart is the one thing that can block mercy, because it
refuses mercy to others. Jesus uses the sharp edge of mercy; he speaks the
truth in love– to gather us back from the dead-end of self-sufficiency and into
the company of those who realize their need for mercy.
And it is the Spirit’s task to make the
face of mercy present in our midst. In the Church the Word of God punctures our
hardened hearts to soften them up; in the Church the Spirit makes a new start
possible in the Sacrament of Confession; through the Church the Spirit gathers
the most diverse set of human beings imaginable so that he can smooth out our
rough edges.
But for those who still may have difficulty
finding God’s mercy in the Church, the Spirit brings forth another face– the
face of Mary. In her we see what the Church is meant to be and will be. This
humble woman entered through the narrow gate of mercy, enduring the trials
which are part of being merciful. She is blessed, because she was merciful,
first to her son, even to the cross, then to the frightened disciples, and
finally to all of us in our every need. She continues the gathering of God’s
children, as a merciful mother but also as one who knows and tells us the
demands of the cross.
Photo by Br. Brian. Excerpts from Fr. Vincent's homily for the Twenty-first Sunday of the Year.
Photo by Br. Brian. Excerpts from Fr. Vincent's homily for the Twenty-first Sunday of the Year.