As I was walking
down the street one day
A man came up to me and asked me what the time was
A man came up to me and asked me what the time was
That was on my
watch.
And I said:
Does anybody
really know what time it is?
Does anybody really care?
Does anybody really care?
Lyrics from a hit song by
a group named Chicago nearly 50 years
ago.
But the observation is
still true today.
Just as it was 2000 years
ago.
Some things seem to never
change.
In Jesus’ time there were
men waiting, some standing idle all day.
Today, if you drive up to certain places, like Home Depot or Lowes,
You’ll see laborers
waiting to be hired for the day.
Some are hired early in
the morning.
Others are still waiting
in the afternoon.
If you drive past certain
parks or corners or liquor stores
You’ll see men (maybe some
women) gathered together, standing idle.
Those who have given up on
being hired.
What do we think about
those un-utilized, idle people?
Do we look down on them?
Is it okay if they and
their children go without basic needs?
Are they getting what they
deserve?
Jesus’s parable is, on the
surface, about worldly labor and reward.
And most of us here might feel
deserving on that level.
But just below the surface,
The story is about
spiritual labor and reward.
If we’re at all
self-aware, we won’t feel quite so deserving there.
We’ll see that there’s a
lot of work we’ve left undone.
We’ll see that we haven’t
been faithfully laboring since dawn.
We’ll see that we should
start really caring about what time it is.
And how much time is left.
We’ve heard a lot the past
few weeks about forgiveness and mercy.
Those fundamental gifts of
God to us.
And our fundamental duty
to others.
Do I deserve more than my
brother or sister?
How many times must I
forgive them?
Should I judge them?
How do I want to be judged?
As my friend and spiritual
guide, Fr Joe, always used to say,
You can’t deserve
God’s love.
There’s nothing you can do
to earn it.
God freely lavishes his
love and mercy on all his children.
It’s easy for those of us
who have been working since 3:00
To look down on those who
didn’t start until 5:00.
And those who started at
Noon to think they deserve a greater reward Than those who started at 3:00.
And we certainly
understand that those who started at dawn
Would feel that justice demands they receive more
Than those who started at dusk.
But if we accept that view, we’re
thinking as man does, not as God does.
That’s not too surprising,
after all, we are human—not God.
But we do have the word of God, delivered through His Son.
We have that instruction
to help us recognize and overcome
Our human knee-jerk
inclinations.
When we’re tempted to
judge someone
On how much work we think they’ve done,
We can catch ourselves and
remember that we don’t really know.
We don’t really know what
gifts they’ve been given to work with.
What obstacles they’ve
been given to deal with.
What they’ve paid in
diminished satisfaction and joy and self-esteem.
And we can remember our
own failures.
We can’t earn God’s love,
but we are expected to return it.
To spread it around, to
share it.
How well have we been
working to love our neighbors as ourselves?
What material and
spiritual support are we giving others?
Have we really been
faithfully laboring since dawn?
What time is it anyway?
With those thoughts in
mind,
Do we want a reward based
on justice?
Or do we want a reward based on God’s great love
and mercy?
25th Sunday of Ordinary Time
Mt 20:1-16 Read this Scripture @usccb.org