Twenty Second
Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C
Some of you may remember this inspirational movie that hit
our silver screens over a decade ago. I believe you can catch the reruns on
Astro. “Pay It Forward.” It is a movie about a seventh grader’s ingenious plan
to make a difference in the world. On the first day of school, the protagonist
and his classmates are challenged by their social studies teacher to change the
world. Written on the blackboard; the challenge reads, “Think of an idea to change our world—and put
it into action.” While most children disinterestedly slouch in their desks,
this young man is mesmerised by the possibility of changing the world. Given
the fact that his life was way down the garbage heap, living with an alcoholic
mother, a grandmother who lives on the streets, an abusive and absent father,
the prospect of just getting off the dump pile was most appealing.
The little boy explains to his class his amazing project of
changing the world, which he called, “paying it forward,” as opposed to “paying
back.” To explain his plan, he draws a circle and exclaims, “That’s me.”
Underneath it, he draws three other circles, saying, “Those are three other
people. I’m going to help them, but it has to be something really big—something
they can’t do for themselves. So I do it for them, and they do it for three
other people. That’s nine people.” And nine lives turn into 27. There you have
it, the catalyst of a pyramid system where good deeds are not meant to earn
rewards or incur debts that need to be paid back, but targeted to change lives
and the world. Thus the tagline of the
movie, “When someone does you a big favour, don't pay it back... PAY IT
FORWARD!”
In today’s gospel
reading, Our Lord Jesus Christ provides his audience with a similar advice, “When
you give a lunch or a dinner, do not ask your friends, brothers, relations or
rich neighbours, for fear they repay your courtesy by inviting you in return.
No; when you have a party, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind,
that they cannot pay you back means that you are fortunate, because, repayment
will be made to you when the virtuous rise again.”
The setting for today’s gospel is that of a Sabbath meal. As
usual, the movements and speech of Our Lord were constantly being observed by
both his fans, as well as his detractors. But in today’s gospel, Our Lord would
turn the tables on them. He is the one who is the careful observer. He makes a careful and poignant observation
about the public behaviour of the Pharisees, who though wishing to be seen as
self-effacing and altruistic, were actually quite ambitious and self-serving.
After witnessing their jockeying around for the coveted seats, Our Lord began
to teach.
Jesus raises two important points, one for the guests and
another for the host. Firstly, he warns the guests against an undue sense of
superiority. Similar to our East Asian society, the Jewish culture was pretty
much shame driven. On the one level, the suggestion of Jesus was a simple and
universal advice on etiquette, never presume to take places of honour less you
suffer the embarrassment of being relegated to a lower position. But here, Our
Lord was not merely concerned with good manners nor should His sayings be
reduced to advice about social graces. Rather, it is clear from the subsequent
verses that Our Lord was trying to lift the attention of his audience from
etiquette to eschatology; not just
places at the dining table, but places in Heaven. More important than their
social status in the eyes of others, was their good standing in the eyes of
God.
The key to truly gaining honour and earning the pleasure of
God lies in humility. As the first reading reminds us, “the greater you are,
the more you should behave humbly, and then you will find favour with the Lord,
for great though the power of the Lord is, he accepts the homage of the
humble.” The person who asserts his or her own importance has already been
rewarded with the fleeting and dubious dignity that self-assertion brings. But
a single moment of limelight may cost one to suffer a lifetime or even worse,
an eternity of derision. Once again, the sin of presumption is their undoing.
Again, Ecclesiasticus warns us, that “there is no cure for the proud man’s
malady, since an evil growth has taken root in him.” The honest person,
however, who recognises the greatness of God as well as his or her own
lowliness and needs, will one day share the honour of union with the Lord at
the heavenly banquet that never ends.
After having admonished the guests, Our Lord turns his
attention to the host. No one is spared, not even the good host who had just
feted the Lord. Most likely, the Pharisee into whose home Jesus had been
invited, had invited others like himself: friends, relatives and those with
wealth who presence would reflect well on the host and his household. Nothing
wrong with that. Moreover, all those invited would have been able, and indeed,
would have been expected to reciprocate the favour by inviting the host to dine
at their respective homes. In the light of this social give-and-take, Jesus’
advice must have seemed shocking and even ridiculous. To invite the beggars,
the crippled, the blind and the lame would be to entertain those from whom one
could expect no recompense or reciprocation. Such persons would not have
brought prestige to the household by their presence. In fact, they would have
brought shame to the host, who would be seen as associating himself with the
dregs and outcasts of society.
What is the common denominator that links both advices, the first
to the guests and the second to the host? Both humility and giving should take
the focus off ourselves. It’s not about us. The focus should always be on the
Lord. Therefore, to take the lowest place is never just to earn honour, respect
or even praise from others. To take the lowest place, would be, to find
ourselves in that very place where Christ had chosen to sit, He who is God,
assumed the lowest position of a worthless slave. To give without expecting
anything in return would mean that we do not serve, or give, to derive some
earthly gain and benefit from our investment, but rather, be assured that what
often seems to be a thankless job will receive its reward from God in heaven.
Indeed, this is the one single idea that can not only change the world, but
also save it.
The Kingdom of God does not follow the rules and logic of
any culture. God’s ways cannot be understood in human terms. In the Kingdom
which is one continuous wedding banquet, titles, positions and wealth do not
count. What counts is fidelity to Jesus’ law of love that embraces even, and
specially, the outcasts of society. They are the ones who will be exalted in
the kingdom of God. Having nothing but their ability to trust in God, they will
be rewarded in heaven, far above those who had position, honour and wealth in
the earthly kingdom.
Our Lord,
therefore, provides us with some good advice about ways
to be a guest and ways to be a host. As God’s guests in this world, we should
act humbly and remember that we are always in the presence of Someone greater
than ourselves. As hosts of God's people, we should offer hospitality to those
who cannot reward us. Surely, we do not have to leave out our friends and
families. But neither should we leave out the poor and the marginalised, who though
denied of human hospitality, are always beneficiaries of God’s Divine
Providence. Finally, give when you aren’t asked. Offer a quid without expecting
a pro quo. Pay it forward as opposed to pay it back. Give without
expecting anything in return, give even when it seems to be a thankless job,
“because repayment will be made to you when the virtuous rise again.”
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