Sixteenth Sunday
in Ordinary Time Year C
“From Hostility to Hospitality”. A few years ago, our
parish adopted this tagline as one of two focal projects for our parish
transformation and renewal. When I first mooted it, I could sense the reticence
and tension within the room. Should I even be surprised by this response if
“hostility” were not an accurate assessment of our parish condition? How have
we fared since then? Well, I jokingly tell Fr Dominic and some of the leaders,
instead of growth in hospitality, after repeated goading and “instigation” from
the Parish Priest, we seem to have made progress, “From Hostility to Greater
Hostility.” I acknowledge that I must also take some blame for this, for either
causing more hostility through my policies or words, or failing, through
omission, to handle the hostility in a more expedient or prudent manner.
It is interesting how hospitality and hostility sound
so much alike but yet are so different. Other than the first three letters,
they are clearly opposites. “Hospitality” conjures up the context of guests,
visitors, putting on meals for them, providing board and lodging, and making
the stranger feel “at home.” Hostility, on the other hand, is about keeping the
other at a safe distance and even putting up barriers and walls to keep them
out. Yes, it is easy to be hospitable towards those who are being hospitable
towards us. However, in these past few years as a priest, I have been reminded
that being hospitable to those who are being hostile is difficult and
challenging.
In today’s gospel scene, we see both hostility and
hospitality. Martha is resentful. She is hostile towards her sister’s
lackadaisical attitude for leaving her to do all the work. Most of us would
emphatise with poor Martha. We can understand her resentment - some seem to be
doing an unfair share of the work whilst others seem to be lazing around or are
able to find all sorts of excuses to escape work. The irony of this story is
that this tension or hostility arises between the two sisters as a result of
their different ways of showing hospitality to the Lord who has come visiting.
Martha shows it by her busy-ness in the kitchen whereas Mary displays her form
of hospitality by sitting at the feet of the Lord. Sound of light banter and
even cheerful laughter drifting into the kitchen where Martha was busy slaving
over the stove, would have incensed even a saint.
Martha had not chosen anything bad. In fact, she had
chosen something very good. But yet our Lord commended Mary for having made the
better choice. Yes, serving others is a characteristic feature of being a
disciple of Christ. But there is more to this. Listening to our Lord, being
attentive to the saving words of the Lord, the Word Incarnate, being “served”
by Him, is far more important. That is why the Lord chided Martha with these
seemingly harsh words, “you worry and fret about so many things, and yet few
are needed, indeed only one.” Only one thing that is needful and Mary had
chosen that one crucial, absolutely necessary thing. She sat at His feet and
listened with great eagerness, affection and pleasure. Mary chose to listen not
just to the words of Jesus but to the life-giving, death defying, saving
Incarnate Word of God. It is by sitting at Jesus' feet that we learn that He is
the one who has come to serve and not be served. It is at His feet that we
truly grasp His work of redemption – by taking our sins of inhospitality, by
dying for the ones who rejected Him and refused hospitality to Him, He offered
us the hospitality of heaven. It is at the feet of our Lord that we learn the
real lesson of hospitality from the One who is the perfect host. To do other
things at the expense of sitting at the Lord’s feet is to let good things get
in the way of better things.
Here is the true paradox of the story – whilst Martha
was asking what she could do for the Lord, Mary knew the correct question
should be “what can the Lord do for her?” The host becomes the guest and the
guest the host. It is interesting to note that the Italian word “ospite”
can mean both “guest” and “host.” This certainly presents us English-speakers
with some confusion. How can we make the distinction when we are talking about
the host (the one who welcomes you in his home, the one who is busy in the
kitchen as the rest of us sit at the table) and the guest (the one who rings
the doorbell and waits for the door to be opened, the one who waits to be
served, the one who needs directions to find the bathroom)? After all, don't we
need a word that distinguishes the one who gives hospitality from the one who
receives hospitality? But in this story, we are reminded that there should be
such confusion. The author to the Hebrews tells us “let mutual love continue.
Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that some have
entertained angels without knowing it” (Heb 13:1-2). Hospitality flows both
ways. No hosts, no guests, only “ospiti” - hospitality.
The host becomes the guest and the guest becomes the
host. This is the power of biblical hospitality. God’s call to love the
stranger is an invitation to experience God in a new way. It is a way that
brings about radical transformation, changes lives and introduces surprises.
People usually don't expect surprises. Yet biblical hospitality, the call to
love the stranger, guarantees that a surprise is just around the corner. The
guest becomes the host. Givers receive more than they give. This is the story
of Abraham welcoming three guests, who turned out to be divine visitors. In
return, God shows hospitality to Abraham by rewarding Sarah with a son.
The story of Martha and Mary and Jesus therefore
should be considered in this same light. Here, we are not celebrating the
hospitality of a man (or a woman), but the very hospitality of God. In fact, St
Luke portrays the life and ministry of Jesus as a divine “visitation” to the
world, seeking hospitality. The One who comes as visitor and guest becomes host
and offers a hospitality in which the entire world can become truly human, be
at home, and know salvation in the depths of their hearts. Those in St Luke's
Gospel who readily offer hospitality - chiefly the sinner, the marginalised and
the poor - find themselves drawn into a much deeper sphere of hospitality, the
hospitality of God. They may have welcomed the Lord into their homes and to
their tables, but it is the Lord who has welcomed them into His heart as they
opened their hearts to Him. They are challenged by the Lord to conversion so
that no one may be left out of the banquet of life to which God calls all mankind.
In a culture of hectic schedules and the relentless
pursuit of productivity, we are tempted to measure our worth by how busy we
are, by how much we accomplish, or by how well we meet the expectations of
others. Sometimes, we believe that we can earn God’s favour through the
busyness of our devotion and service. Such activity often leaves us anxious and
troubled and we end up with a kind of service that is devoid of love and joy
and resentful of others. But then we are reminded once again by the story of
Martha, Mary and our Lord that what is ultimately important is not what you can
do for the Lord but, what can He do, or what has He done for you. And that is
only possible when we are able to transcend our busy and distracted lives and
enter into prayerful contemplation of His Word. We can never claim to be able
to offer true hospitality to a stranger or even our neighbour or family member,
if we continue to be aliens to the hospitality of God. God is always inviting,
patiently waiting for us to sit at His feet.
At His feet, we are reassured once again that we are
His children, we are renewed in faith and strengthened for service. God wants
to play host to us. Our Lord offers us the hospitality of His grace. In Him, we
find ourselves now to be, the enemy who has been forgiven, the sinner who is
saved, the stranger who is welcomed, the alienated one who has found a home. In
Him, and only in Him, can hostility become hospitality.
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