Sunday 23 February 2020

HOMILY ON PHIL 3: 8, AND LUKE 15:1-10


TITLE: THE MYSTERIOUS BEAUTY OF GOD’S LOVE

INTRODUCTION

God goes to extraordinary lengths to rescue the lost. The grace of salvation is directed toward those who need to be saved. If anyone is going to level a judgment on another, it must be the judgment of love. What kind of shepherd would leave 99 sheep alone in the wilderness to find just one which is lost? Thus I title this homily “the mysterious beauty of God’s love.

BODY

My dear people of God, the love of Christ for us is amazing, it knows no bounds. Searching for the lost sheep of the house of Israel is the principal mission of Christ and of Christianity. Jesus desires that no one should be lost. In the gospel of Luke 19:10 He says “the son of man has come to seek and to save what had been lost”, and in the gospel of John18:9 it was affirmed that he didn’t loss any of those given to him. Christ cares for the repentance of the sinner, He says in the gospel of Luke5:32, He has come not to call the just, but to call the sinners to repentance. Unfortunately, there is a school of thought in today’s version of Christianity that thinks otherwise. They insist on over-bloating the rules and demands of Christianity and end up scattering the sheep with sanctions rather than gathering them.

The parable of the lost sheep is very applicable to the great work of man’s redemption. The lost sheep represents the sinner as departed from God, and exposed to certain ruin if not brought back to him, yet not desirous to return. Christ is earnest in bringing sinners home. In the parable of the lost piece of silver, that which is lost is one piece, of small value compared with the rest. Yet the woman seeks diligently till she finds it.

Through the two short parables, Jesus presents the essential nature of our God: benevolent in his love, generous in his mercy, kind towards the wayward, extravagant in his celebration when the lost one is found. For God, when it comes to his children, one is equal to ninety-nine. He does not wish that even one of his children gets lost. St Paul is one of those who experienced the joy of being ‘lost’ and ‘found’ and so is able to say: “indeed I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord”.

God always seek to find us when we stray but on our part, we must realize that we are lost and recognize our need for God and begin the journey home to the embraced by divine mercy. When God’s offer of mercy is met by our repentance, all in heaven rejoices. God’s feast is about rejoicing over the repentant sinners. Today the lord beckons us to be found by him through the sacrament of reconciliation.

CONCLUSION

Occasionally we develop a feeling of self righteousness which may cause us to look down on others for not reaching the level of spiritual heights that we have reached. Another extreme is when we are too conscious of our failings and live in extreme self condemnation; we feel we have no right to God’s love. However, the gospel of today tells us what makes God beautiful and different: God does not abandon us when we stray but rather he does everything possible to bring us back to his love and fold. As Christians who know the worth of the Father’s love for us, we should sign up for the attitude of St Paul; we should be ready to count everything as loss just to gain the love and knowledge of Christ.

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