Fourth Sunday of
Lent Year C
This is a story of Napoleon Bonaparte, the
great general and Emperor, who almost conquered the whole of Europe, styling
himself as the new Charlemagne or Alexander the great. Napoleon was known to be
brilliant battle strategist as well as a stern leader who understood the
importance of swift justice in order to maintain the morale of his troops. He
had a practice of sending out a battalion of troops to hunt down and arrest any
run-aways and defectors. The captured soldier would then be summarily executed
the following morning. On one occasion, the captured run-away awaiting death
row happened to be his own cook’s son. The poor old woman came before the
general pleading for the life of her son. The great general told the distraught
mother, “You son does not deserve mercy. He deserves to die.” The old woman
replied, “Sir, you are right. It would not be mercy, if he deserved it.” The
emperor was so touched by the astute response of the mother that he pardoned
the soldier unreservedly. Yes, mercy is never deserved or earned. It is a
gratuitous gift given from the heart. If we truly get what we deserve, it is
justice.
However, so few understand this simple
principle. We are a society which has grown acutely sensitive of our rights and
sense of entitlement.
Older people feel entitled to certain benefits from the government. Middle-aged
people feel entitled to generous health and retirement benefits from their
employers. Younger adults feel entitled to immediately enjoy the same standard
of living their parents took years to achieve. And young people feel entitled
to whatever material luxuries they desire. It surely seems appropriate in our
culture where we believe we are now entitled to a whole host of things in
life. Church going people are no different. Many Catholics believe that
they are entitled to a whole range of benefits just by being members of the
parish. Any perceived curtailment of any
of these rights or the denial of entitlements and you may have a riot on your
hands.
Today’s gospel presents us with three very
different perception of mercy, and by extension justice. Both sons in today’s
famous parable had the impression that their father’s inheritance was a sort of
entitlement. In their eyes, mercy is getting what they thought they deserved. The
younger son's sense of entitlement is obvious: he demands his inheritance so he
can live as he pleases. He is claiming his birth ‘right’ – his argument is
based purely on the strength of lineage. But the older brother displays a
similar sense of entitlement in his condemnation and rejection of his brother.
He believes that his hard work and good behaviour had earned him the right to
the economic benefits and stability of his father's love. Both felt that the
father ‘owed’ it to them. Both were deeply flawed.
Competition, bitter rivalry, envy and
destructive conflict often arises from this entitlement mentality, the
mentality that believes the world or someone or something owes it to us. People
often fail to recognise that whenever the discussion of any issue descends to
the level of mere assertion of personal rights, we often find ourselves trapped
in a selfish self-serving delusional world blind to the needs of others. It is
literally saying that our needs are more important than those of others. Few
people understand that when someone asserts a right to something, very often someone
else’s right is infringed. For example, let’s say that you and I are
neighbours. You lead a group of rock musicians who can practice only in the
evenings; while I, on the other hand, enjoy nothing more than quiet evenings.
Presumably, you have a right to pursue your musical career, and I have a right
quietly to enjoy my property. The problem is that your right is incompatible
with mine. As a priest having the
care of two large parishes with a multitude of parishioners with conflicting
interests, I often find myself caught in endless debates about entitlement. The
conversation often gets so wrapped up in the championing of rights and
entitlements that we quickly lose sight of grace.
This leads us back to consider the beautiful
parable of the Prodigal Son, and especially the character of the father. The
father expresses the gratuitousness of mercy – it is given to those who do not
merit it nor earned it. It is wholly the gift of the father; he does not ‘owe’
it to his sons. The
“Father” in this story is undoubtedly characteristic of our Heavenly Father who
forgives and restores us back to relationship with Him. Thus the gospel helps us
understand who God truly is. He is the Merciful Father who in Jesus loves us
beyond all measure. To the world, the father seems like a foolish foggy old man
madden with love for his two sons – one an ingrate wastrel and the other, a
resentful and reluctant worker. The errors committed by his sons do not corrode
the fidelity of the old man’s love for them. In this way, he provides for us
the example of how to liberate ourselves from the entitlement trap. We do so
whenever we begin to consider the needs of the other, apart from our own rights
and entitlements. The father invites us to move from a ‘give me’ mentality to
that of personal responsibility. While there's a time and place for discussing
rights, what's most helpful is the reminder that we need to extend grace to
others, even to those who don’t seem to deserve it.
During this season of Lent, the Heavenly Father
invites us to return home, Holy Mother Church pleads with us to return home. Let us make this inner pilgrimage freely and
without reservation. Christ wishes to set us truly free from the bondage of
sin, of selfishness, of material illusions and addictions. We come without
pretences, acknowledging that we are undeserving, not entitled to the graces we
ask from him. We come with humility recognising that only when we have returned
to the Father, both inwardly and outwardly, can we experience true freedom of
the soul. Let us come to him to celebrate the feast prepared for us, for the
one who is lost is now found, the one who is dead is now alive once more.
It is God’s great
mercy that leads us to salvation. It is His mercy that, through the cross
of Jesus Christ, saves those who deserve hell. His mercy works in us to
make us a part of His living covenant community, the Church. God in His
mercy sent Jesus to seek and save the lost and that is what He does. So,
never say that someone does not deserve mercy. Mercy is never deserved. If it
were, it would be justice. And yet, it is mercy which Jesus now offers us and
we are forever grateful for that.
Father, Beautiful.
ReplyDeleteA very clear message!
ReplyDeleteA meaningful story at the beginning.
the message means lot. I wish many would go trough reading and reflecting it. Thank you, Fr. God bless you.