Site icon Archdiocese of Wellington

33nd Sunday in Ordinary Time C

VeronicaSep00.jpg Forty years ago, there was no Sydney Opera House. A hundred years ago, there was no Harbour Bridge. It is hard for an Australian to imagine a time when these monuments didn’t exist or a time when they’ll cease to be, such is the status they have acquired over a very short span of history. They are a source of wonder for tourists and locals alike. They have their counterparts elsewhere in our contemporary world.

A few years ago, New York’s World Trade Centre was another such icon, seemingly indestructible and holding the pride of an economically and politically dominant nation, even if less aesthetically engaging than Sydney’s monuments.

In first century Palestine, the newly refurbished Jerusalem Temple, like the Opera House, was both aesthetically stunning and symbolically charged. Unlike the Opera House, it functioned primarily as the centre of religious worship. It was also an important locus of financial and political power. Its significance can hardly be exaggerated and its destruction at the hands of the Romans in 70CE was a devastating blow for the Jewish people.

Luke is writing two decades or so after this event. He knows that the world did not end with the destruction of the Temple, though that’s how it might have seemed at the time. There was life to be lived and struggles to be endured before God’s final judgment. Luke wants to offer hope and encouragement in the face of ongoing conflict and persecution and family division. No one can claim to know the time [ kairos] of God’s visitation.

Like Jesus, disciples can expect to be ‘handed over’ and brought before religious and political authorities. They are to find in this an opportunity to give witness or ‘to testify’. In his second volume, Luke has Jesus commissioning the disciples to be his witnesses ‘in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and to the ends of the earth’ (Acts 1:8).

They don’t have to worry about what to say in their own defence: ‘I will give you words and wisdom that none of your opponents will be able to withstand or contradict.’ Endurance or patience is the way to life. The Greek term for endurance evokes the parable of the sower: ‘ as for that [the seed] in the good soil, these are the ones who, when they hear the word, hold it fast in an honest and good heart, and bear fruit with patient endurance’ (Luke 8:15].

As we approach the end of the liturgical year, we are called to witness to a gospel way of life, to hold the word of God fast in honest and good hearts, and to trust that we are not alone in the everyday struggles of life, even when the world seems to be collapsing around us.

 

Exit mobile version