Sunday, June 08, 2008

Dead Or Alive?


Message from Fr. Jose Koluthara, CMI

Lord Jesus,
help me translate my piety into a sincere and compassionate caring for one another.

Scottish biblical scholar, William Barclay (1907-1978) included the following anecdote in one of his sermons: A minister was called to assume the pastorate of a church in the Americas. Although he had been warned that the congregation was, for all practical purposes, “dead”, he regarded the call as a challenge and decided to accept it. Soon after his arrival, he discovered that his congregation was indeed “dead”. No planning, no exhortation could kindle a spark of life or waken a hint of a response.

One Sunday, the new pastor announced from pulpit that since the congregation was dead, he was going to carry out the funeral of the church. On the appointed day, a coffin was brought into the church and placed in the centre aisle; the church was decked with mourning wreaths.

When the time for the “burial service” arrived, the church was crowded as it had not been in years. Solemnly, the pastor proceeded with the service, at the conclusion of which, he invited all present to file past the coffin. As they did so they received a shock. The coffin was open and empty. But the bottom of the coffin was not wood; it was a mirror. As each person peered into the coffin of the dead church, each saw his/her own face.

In a certain sense, the prophet Hosea (6:3-6) and the evangelist Matthew (9:9-13) are delivering a similar message to the praying assembly gathered for today’s liturgy, viz., a congregation is dead, that is, its members are dead if the ritual they celebrate is empty… if there is sacrifice but no mercy… if there is private profession of piety but no public expression of that piety in mutual love and service; if, when gathered round the altar, they dare to call upon God as Abba – Daddy and then they go forth from the altar and fail to recognize and care for others as brothers and sisters.

The first reading and the gospel frame our liturgy today with the challenge to remember that ours is a God-centred and people oriented piety. Without both, i.e., without a focus in God that is translated in a sincere and compassionate caring for one another, piety is “like a morning cloud, like the dew that passes early away” (Hosea) and the one who practices such piety is, indeed, dead.

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